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Book II - Wilbourhall.org

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200 eOYKYAIAOY fiTYTrPA^HS B.from all associations of time and circumstance. Cf. c. 87, 3.It is frequent in Euripides. wpbs . . . Karao-Tfjo-au—the ordinaryconstruction is is (see 2 above), but rpiireffdai has iiri,wp6s, is, and several verbs iwl or is in Thuc. Cf. c. 66, 9.KOTtto-rrjo-ai—sc. ttjv yvdfjLrjv. &\.^t—the Schol. labels thespeech h-qfi-qyopla HepiKKiovs irpbs 'A$r)valovs. The speech wasalso known in antiquity as i] oUela HepiKXiovs drjfirjyopla.to,60, 1.jjifvci) . . . Yey^t^Ttti—cf.Kal ... Kol — parataxis ;c. 3, 2. M.cf. c.T. 900.46, 1. -irpoo-Sexo-rfjs opyfis—* this outburst of wrath,' as to. rrjs tvxv^ ; see on c. 44, 2.^vvfiYttYov—the aor. of momentary action, as continually intragedy. Sirws—the subjun. is certainly to be preferred tothe fut. indie, here, as this is a pure final clause. M. T. 364(Situs is Thuc.'s favourite final particle, but is rare in otherErose authors, except Xen. ). A ti—he does not doubt it,ut softens the expression.60, 2. nXcCco—with th€\eiv. This sentence contains atriple antithesis. opOovp.^vnv . . o-(iXXo|ji^vt|v—the state ispersonified. Ka9' ?Ka

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