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nydus/History of the Peloponnesian WarPublic

A contemporary history of the ancient Greek war between Athens and Sparta and their allies.

Page 90 of 691
Table of Contents

V

Now the Spartans had no tangible proof against him⁠—neither his enemies nor the nation⁠—of that indubitable kind required for the punishment of a member of the royal family, and at that moment in high office; he being regent for his first cousin King Pleistarchus, Leonidas’s son, who was still a minor. But by his contempt of the laws and imitation of the barbarians, he gave grounds for much suspicion of his being discontented with things established; all the occasions on which he had in any way departed from the regular customs were passed in review, and it was remembered that he had taken upon himself to have inscribed on the tripod at Delphi, which was dedicated by the Hellenes as the firstfruits of the spoil of the Medes, the following couplet:

The Mede defeated, great Pausanias raised This monument, that Phoebus might be praised.

At the time the Lacedaemonians had at once erased the couplet, and inscribed the names of the cities that had aided in the overthrow of the barbarian and dedicated the offering. Yet it was considered that Pausanias had here been guilty of a grave offence, which, interpreted by the light of the attitude which he had since assumed, gained a

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