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                <requestUrn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg123.perseus-eng2:25</requestUrn>
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                <urn>urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg123.perseus-eng2:25</urn>
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                    <TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0"><text xml:lang="eng"><body><div type="translation" xml:lang="eng" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg123.perseus-eng2"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" n="25"><p rend="indent">In his Sixth Book, our author, discoursing of the Plataeans, — how they gave themselves to the Lacedaemonians, who exhorted them rather to have recourse to the Athenians, who were nearer to them and no bad defenders, — adds, not as a matter of suspicion or opinion, but as a thing certainly known by him, that the Lacedaemonians gave the Plataeans this advice, not so much for any good will, as through a desire to find work for the Athenians by engaging them with the Boeotians.<note resp="editor" place="unspecified" anchored="true">Herod. VI. 108.</note> If then Herodotus is not malicious, the Lacedaemonians must have been both fraudulent and spiteful; and the Athenians fools, in suffering themselves to be thus imposed on; and the Plataeans were brought into play, not for any good-will or respect, but as an occasion of war.</p></div></div></body></text></TEI>
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