fiav : with nine words
intervening, a comprehensive Ace.
intervening, a comprehensive Ace.
Demosthenese - First Philippic and the Olynthiacs
23 ?
148 oi) 11017;" e?
v
Mimi/cares #e? pez, and 2 ? 18. pepis . . of: pmpd, 'no
small aid' or 'advantage'; 21 ? 184 e? a-rw . . lie-7dth ro'is
ddtxoiicrw dmwl. [Lepls Kal rheoveilo, 1'] 1651/ finere? pwv 1p61rwv
rpabrns, and ib. ? 70.
129. inrfipfie: sc. ,uepls or? mxpd. It may also be taken
absolutely, praesto fuit, ium't, as in 18 ? 174 brapxe? vrwv
817/341. le 'DLM'mrtp, 19 ? 54 To Tell (Plhnr'lrov brdpxew ai'rroi's
wetafifivat, Xen. Amb. i 1, 4 Hapt'la'a'rzs . . urfipfe 71,8 Kupq'.
This is supported by the verbs in the parallel clauses, e? ? dv17
and (1501501706. ? 11 Tipofle? ov, 'in the time of (or 'under ')
Timotheus,' who was joined by Pcrdiccas, king of Macedonia,
in an expedition against the Olynthian confederation, in the
course of which he captured Poteidaea and Torone (364 11. 0. )
Diodor. xv 81 ; Grote c. 79 vii 263.
180. npbg Ho-rei8atav: ? 7, 1 ? 12. In the speech against Aristo-
crates (delivered 352 no. ) Demosthenes treats the capture of Poteidaca as
mainly the work of Philip (28 ? 107); in the second Olynthiac he speaks as
if Philip had been a secondary agent, a useful adjunct to the Olynthians in
the siege. The first representation, delivered two or three years before
the second, is doubtless the more correct (Grote c. 86 vii 667).
131. e? ddvq n, 'proved of some importance. ' roi'rro:
the Macedonian power. WWI-Md'IGPOV1 01'"! MM: 'ruu.
'yeve? aevov (schol); an exceptional sense (obviated by Madvig's
unctuation). In the only other passages in which it is found
in Demosthenes (3 ? 18, 19 ? 180) it is used in neut. pl. of two
things taken together. vwi: with past tense, 'quite
lately. ' Cp. Shilleto on 19 ? 65 p. 361 (in 11011 mpwbaeaa.
132. @errako'is: Dat. after may". voo'oiia-i, 'divided
by faction,' 9 ? ? 12, 50 ; 18 ? 45, Plato Rep. 470 c, 556 E, Aristot.
Coast. of Athens 6 ? 4. ? 1rl 'rfiv 'rupavvmfiv otxtav, 'the
ruling house ' of the tyrants of Pherae, as represented by
Lycophron and Peitholaiis, 1 ? 13.
'Such a reinforcement so completely altered the balance of Thessalian
power, that Lykophron in his turn was compelled to entreat aid from
Onomarchus and the Phokians' Grote c. 87 viii 19 (cp. 47 f). Thirlwall
v 279, ASchaefer i 506 9.
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-27 05:10 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/uc1. 31175009758841 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? II ? ? 14, 15 SECOND OLYNTHIAC' 169
133. 81ml. n5 dv 01pm wpowdfi : Goodwin MT. ? 218.
134. Kdv pmpc'w Silvapw, 'a force, however small'; Soph.
El. 1482 dhha'. ,uor 1rd. ch Kdv 0/1. ":pr el1re'iv. Kdv=Kal GM 11:
1rpoa0f] (Goodwin MT. ? 228). It is assumed that the forces
on both sides are practically equal to begin with. For the
general sense cp. Isocr. 4 ? 139 e? v 'yap 'rois Tome-rots Karpois
rohthLs #eral. dun/duets ,ue'ydhas ponds e? rolno'av. 1rd. v'r(u):
cogn. Acc. after (beheld, 'it gives every help,' ' helps deeisively,'
'is undoubtedly useful' (K. ), opp. to oilfie? v dupehs'i: cp.
3 ? 21 #176811 (i)? ? )\? ? V, and especially Xen. Cyrop. ii 2, 12 16v
wheiara . . drqfiehofivra (so Franks, GHSchaefer and Voemel).
"miv'ra is less satisfactorily taken (1) as the object of Gutexe'i, 'is
useful to the whole'; or (2) as Nom. , crmm'n, eel minim prosunt, (11mm
qliis adduntur (so Sauppe, Dindorf, Whiston and Weil); but this would
naturally be expressed by "an (WI/ants) teem.
135. m'rrfi . . xai)' airrfiv: opp. to e? v wpoafifixy (128).
? 161. 136. 051-05: Philip.
137. ois, 'in (or 'by ') which' ; 9 ? 40 01: (Iv ns lo'xfiew 16. :
woken Kplvor.
138. errwdmkwlre? pav, 'more insecure,' sc. rip: MaKedomK'hv
Silva/ml.
142. rein-(o) (To 5697: e? mfiuasiv) igfihwxev, 'has made this
his passion' ; 20 ? 30 1rp6vozav e? roreiro. . 'rfis 1rohrrelas, Kal . .
1repl rodrou . . e? aroddafi'ev. Kai. wpoflp'q-ral. Krk, 'has
deliberately chosen to suffer whatever may befall him, during
a life of action and adventure. ' For Inf. after rpoarpefaliar
cp. 3 ? 21, 4 ? 49.
This is better than taking Toii-r' e'fiwaev mi. wpofipn'ral. together, and
making rein-o refer to the subsequent "11061,, as though Philip's ambition
was 'to suffer everything. ' The punctuation adopted in the text (comma.
after E? 'Moxev and not after e? mflvnei) is supported by Rudiger in Philologus
18 (18627), 722 against Holzinger and Westermann'i.
143. av o'upfifi fl: 8 ? 41, 20? 50, 21 ? 112. wadeiv:
euphemistic for d1ro0avsi'u. dv @4435 TI. mee'iv is sometimes
taken together (e. g. by Westermann), as in 23? 59 a>> dpa.
(run/33? 71 10. 06711 e? Kelvqa, and 54 ? 25 el 1ra06'iv TI [40: awe? fln, but
this leaves 'II'PO'IIIP'IJ'I'GL with no construction after it, unless it is
coupled with 1091- e? lfihamev. fiv--Se?
fiav : with nine words
intervening, a comprehensive Ace. governing the Gen. of an
Inf. which itself takes an Acc. followed by a relative clause.
For other examples cp. 1 ? 13 (end), 5 ? 5, 6 ? 2 16 TI xpi)
1roreiv auaflouhsiiaal, and il). ? 29.
144. aneis: sc. dicrpdEa/ro. In quest of glory Philip
lost an eye at the siege of Methonc, broke his collar-bone in
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-27 05:10 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/uc1. 31175009758841 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 170 SECOND OLYNTHIAC II ? ? 15--17
Illyria, and damaged his thigh in Scythia (schol. on 18? 67
q. v. ) Cp. Theopompus (ap. Athen. 435 B), and Diodor. xv 3.
? 16 l. 146. (huho'rlplas: ? 3.
147. Komopevor: rahanrwpozinevoi (Hesych. ), 'harassed';
Prooem. 29 ? 3 lva . . ,unifl' l'm'iv e? voxluii ,u. r']1" elf/. 0. de Kerr-re:
(ib. 37 ? 2).
148. (two Kd-rl>>: 4 ? 41.
149. e? rrt: ? 12. rats Ipyous, 'their work,' especially
industrial or agricultural employments; Thuc. ii 40 ? 1,
Aeschin. 3 ? 8.
150. mi; oi:er Elms, 'their private aflairs' (in general).
Isocr. 3 ? 19 (citizens holding olfice under a democracy) 16v . .
nheio'rov xpiwov e? rrl 'ro'is 16104: ora-rpiflouo'w, Aristot. Pol.
1309" 6 1rpos rois Idiots dual and ib. 8, and 1318" 13 ora-rplfiew
1rpos 'ro'is e? 'p'yols, Rhol. ii 6, 20 oh i7 dia-rpifi'ly e? 1rl rais 're? 'w re? has
aaaprlais. Mpevou: rare in Passive; Thuc. i 142, 3 e? ao'o-
[. LGVOL, Isocr. 4 ? 97 eldfinoav.
151. 80" av wouficrww, ' the little they can produce ' ;
womb of ' producing' corn or wine, [42] ? 20, 31 and Aristoph.
Pan 1322. oiirws--Se? vmv'rm, ' with such difficulty as they
can ' ; 21 ? 140 81m: 66mm, Thuc. ii 52, 3 Li" e? 'mwros e? oziva-ro,
vii 67, 4 oil-rm: (irrws Borax/rat.
152. Smfle? o-eat, 'to dispose of' ; Xen. Anab. vi 6, 37.
nexhelpe? vuw 76v e? pnroplowz the blockade of the Macedonian
ports is mentioned in 19 ? ? 153, 315, and (at a later date)
18 ? 145.
? 17l. 154. 1H3; IXOWI. @LM'lrmp: [11] ? 10 1rd): didxcwrai
we; row <1>lhnr1rom For {xew with Adv. cp. 3 ? 8, 8 ? 73,
9 ? 46, 63, etc.
156. mZe? -raipot, 'body-guards,' ' the King's Own re iment of
infantry,' composed of Macedonians as contrasted wit foreign
mercenaries.
8(67I'01111'6? ($116111 an Ex 1rde niw Maxnicivwv s'rriMKroi oi ne'yw-rol.
xai. iuxvpo'm-rot e? fiopmtopovv rbv Bamhe? a. Kai. e'xaAoiJln-o 1re? e? nupo I. (schol)
'Avafins'v'q; iv a. (#thande irepl 'AAefzivSpov (elder brother of Philip)
Ae'ywv drqo'iv' " Errand. foiz; new ivSoSord'l-oue urrrfliuv o'vvsfioas iraz'pov:
1r oo'rrye? peuo'e, min. - 8% wholly-row; real. for}; 1rr? oi19 is Nixon; Kai. 5emi$ms Kill.
me 5AM" iipxli: Sic/\Zov ncg'eraipovs dve? naaev, 31m; e? kirspol. ps-re? xovrn
1'1]; flan-Mun); irmpiae npoflupe? raroi $iurcMBo'w Burl; " (Harpocr. ) Thirlwall
v 177 f, Grote c- 92 viii 294, ASchaefer ii 36 2.
157. c'u'yxexpo'mpe'vot, 'well-trained,' 'well-drilled'; lit.
'welded into one body. ' 21 ? 17 o'u'prore'iv Kal swam. >> row
xopbv, Thuc. viii 95 'Aflnvaioi Kara Taxes Kai dfu'ykpo'rfi'rou
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-27 05:10 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/uc1. 31175009758841 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 11 ? 17, 18 SECOND OL 1'1 'THIAC 171
whiypuiaao'w dua'yxaofle? vres xpr'lo'aadai, Xen. Hell. vi 2, 12 e? rrl
o'u'ykexporiyne? vas vaUs GlKfi replrrhefiaai, Polybius i 61 rhnpdi-
para cru'yKeror'qae? va.
158. . 6; . . fixouov: here, as elsewhere, Demosthenes gives
his authority for his facts. Cp. 1 ? 22, 23; 4 ? 9, 8? l4 dis
? amv. It is conjectured (by Blass) that his authority in the
present instance was the historian Theopompus, the future
author of the Philippica. Conversely, it has been suggested
that Theopompus borrowed part of his language from the
present passage of Demosthenes.
159. oiisd-Fo'is olou 're \IIE'I'JSGO'OGI-l 20 ? 23 xop'q'ys'iv olol re,
Prooem. 55 ? 2 ale! 1' e? voxhelv (without sum); 'utterly in-
capable of lying. ' Such a description may readily be applied
in Greek, as in English, to one who, owing to his moral
character, cannot possibly tell a lie. oYou rs, applied to
capability (1 ? 26 all); olol r' (Si/res ? v)\a'. -rrew), is in fact a
stronger term than ol'ou, applied to character (4 ? 9 00x ole? s
fem. . ,ue? vew). Thus 'capable of lying' is a stronger term
than 'likely to lie. '
'1 do not distinguish between a statement made by an official to the
Government and one made to the newspapers. I do not understand that
a man lies when he writes to the newspapers, and that he tells the truth
when he makes an official statement.
Mimi/cares #e? pez, and 2 ? 18. pepis . . of: pmpd, 'no
small aid' or 'advantage'; 21 ? 184 e? a-rw . . lie-7dth ro'is
ddtxoiicrw dmwl. [Lepls Kal rheoveilo, 1'] 1651/ finere? pwv 1p61rwv
rpabrns, and ib. ? 70.
129. inrfipfie: sc. ,uepls or? mxpd. It may also be taken
absolutely, praesto fuit, ium't, as in 18 ? 174 brapxe? vrwv
817/341. le 'DLM'mrtp, 19 ? 54 To Tell (Plhnr'lrov brdpxew ai'rroi's
wetafifivat, Xen. Amb. i 1, 4 Hapt'la'a'rzs . . urfipfe 71,8 Kupq'.
This is supported by the verbs in the parallel clauses, e? ? dv17
and (1501501706. ? 11 Tipofle? ov, 'in the time of (or 'under ')
Timotheus,' who was joined by Pcrdiccas, king of Macedonia,
in an expedition against the Olynthian confederation, in the
course of which he captured Poteidaea and Torone (364 11. 0. )
Diodor. xv 81 ; Grote c. 79 vii 263.
180. npbg Ho-rei8atav: ? 7, 1 ? 12. In the speech against Aristo-
crates (delivered 352 no. ) Demosthenes treats the capture of Poteidaca as
mainly the work of Philip (28 ? 107); in the second Olynthiac he speaks as
if Philip had been a secondary agent, a useful adjunct to the Olynthians in
the siege. The first representation, delivered two or three years before
the second, is doubtless the more correct (Grote c. 86 vii 667).
131. e? ddvq n, 'proved of some importance. ' roi'rro:
the Macedonian power. WWI-Md'IGPOV1 01'"! MM: 'ruu.
'yeve? aevov (schol); an exceptional sense (obviated by Madvig's
unctuation). In the only other passages in which it is found
in Demosthenes (3 ? 18, 19 ? 180) it is used in neut. pl. of two
things taken together. vwi: with past tense, 'quite
lately. ' Cp. Shilleto on 19 ? 65 p. 361 (in 11011 mpwbaeaa.
132. @errako'is: Dat. after may". voo'oiia-i, 'divided
by faction,' 9 ? ? 12, 50 ; 18 ? 45, Plato Rep. 470 c, 556 E, Aristot.
Coast. of Athens 6 ? 4. ? 1rl 'rfiv 'rupavvmfiv otxtav, 'the
ruling house ' of the tyrants of Pherae, as represented by
Lycophron and Peitholaiis, 1 ? 13.
'Such a reinforcement so completely altered the balance of Thessalian
power, that Lykophron in his turn was compelled to entreat aid from
Onomarchus and the Phokians' Grote c. 87 viii 19 (cp. 47 f). Thirlwall
v 279, ASchaefer i 506 9.
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-27 05:10 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/uc1. 31175009758841 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? II ? ? 14, 15 SECOND OLYNTHIAC' 169
133. 81ml. n5 dv 01pm wpowdfi : Goodwin MT. ? 218.
134. Kdv pmpc'w Silvapw, 'a force, however small'; Soph.
El. 1482 dhha'. ,uor 1rd. ch Kdv 0/1. ":pr el1re'iv. Kdv=Kal GM 11:
1rpoa0f] (Goodwin MT. ? 228). It is assumed that the forces
on both sides are practically equal to begin with. For the
general sense cp. Isocr. 4 ? 139 e? v 'yap 'rois Tome-rots Karpois
rohthLs #eral. dun/duets ,ue'ydhas ponds e? rolno'av. 1rd. v'r(u):
cogn. Acc. after (beheld, 'it gives every help,' ' helps deeisively,'
'is undoubtedly useful' (K. ), opp. to oilfie? v dupehs'i: cp.
3 ? 21 #176811 (i)? ? )\? ? V, and especially Xen. Cyrop. ii 2, 12 16v
wheiara . . drqfiehofivra (so Franks, GHSchaefer and Voemel).
"miv'ra is less satisfactorily taken (1) as the object of Gutexe'i, 'is
useful to the whole'; or (2) as Nom. , crmm'n, eel minim prosunt, (11mm
qliis adduntur (so Sauppe, Dindorf, Whiston and Weil); but this would
naturally be expressed by "an (WI/ants) teem.
135. m'rrfi . . xai)' airrfiv: opp. to e? v wpoafifixy (128).
? 161. 136. 051-05: Philip.
137. ois, 'in (or 'by ') which' ; 9 ? 40 01: (Iv ns lo'xfiew 16. :
woken Kplvor.
138. errwdmkwlre? pav, 'more insecure,' sc. rip: MaKedomK'hv
Silva/ml.
142. rein-(o) (To 5697: e? mfiuasiv) igfihwxev, 'has made this
his passion' ; 20 ? 30 1rp6vozav e? roreiro. . 'rfis 1rohrrelas, Kal . .
1repl rodrou . . e? aroddafi'ev. Kai. wpoflp'q-ral. Krk, 'has
deliberately chosen to suffer whatever may befall him, during
a life of action and adventure. ' For Inf. after rpoarpefaliar
cp. 3 ? 21, 4 ? 49.
This is better than taking Toii-r' e'fiwaev mi. wpofipn'ral. together, and
making rein-o refer to the subsequent "11061,, as though Philip's ambition
was 'to suffer everything. ' The punctuation adopted in the text (comma.
after E? 'Moxev and not after e? mflvnei) is supported by Rudiger in Philologus
18 (18627), 722 against Holzinger and Westermann'i.
143. av o'upfifi fl: 8 ? 41, 20? 50, 21 ? 112. wadeiv:
euphemistic for d1ro0avsi'u. dv @4435 TI. mee'iv is sometimes
taken together (e. g. by Westermann), as in 23? 59 a>> dpa.
(run/33? 71 10. 06711 e? Kelvqa, and 54 ? 25 el 1ra06'iv TI [40: awe? fln, but
this leaves 'II'PO'IIIP'IJ'I'GL with no construction after it, unless it is
coupled with 1091- e? lfihamev. fiv--Se?
fiav : with nine words
intervening, a comprehensive Ace. governing the Gen. of an
Inf. which itself takes an Acc. followed by a relative clause.
For other examples cp. 1 ? 13 (end), 5 ? 5, 6 ? 2 16 TI xpi)
1roreiv auaflouhsiiaal, and il). ? 29.
144. aneis: sc. dicrpdEa/ro. In quest of glory Philip
lost an eye at the siege of Methonc, broke his collar-bone in
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-27 05:10 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/uc1. 31175009758841 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 170 SECOND OLYNTHIAC II ? ? 15--17
Illyria, and damaged his thigh in Scythia (schol. on 18? 67
q. v. ) Cp. Theopompus (ap. Athen. 435 B), and Diodor. xv 3.
? 16 l. 146. (huho'rlplas: ? 3.
147. Komopevor: rahanrwpozinevoi (Hesych. ), 'harassed';
Prooem. 29 ? 3 lva . . ,unifl' l'm'iv e? voxluii ,u. r']1" elf/. 0. de Kerr-re:
(ib. 37 ? 2).
148. (two Kd-rl>>: 4 ? 41.
149. e? rrt: ? 12. rats Ipyous, 'their work,' especially
industrial or agricultural employments; Thuc. ii 40 ? 1,
Aeschin. 3 ? 8.
150. mi; oi:er Elms, 'their private aflairs' (in general).
Isocr. 3 ? 19 (citizens holding olfice under a democracy) 16v . .
nheio'rov xpiwov e? rrl 'ro'is 16104: ora-rpiflouo'w, Aristot. Pol.
1309" 6 1rpos rois Idiots dual and ib. 8, and 1318" 13 ora-rplfiew
1rpos 'ro'is e? 'p'yols, Rhol. ii 6, 20 oh i7 dia-rpifi'ly e? 1rl rais 're? 'w re? has
aaaprlais. Mpevou: rare in Passive; Thuc. i 142, 3 e? ao'o-
[. LGVOL, Isocr. 4 ? 97 eldfinoav.
151. 80" av wouficrww, ' the little they can produce ' ;
womb of ' producing' corn or wine, [42] ? 20, 31 and Aristoph.
Pan 1322. oiirws--Se? vmv'rm, ' with such difficulty as they
can ' ; 21 ? 140 81m: 66mm, Thuc. ii 52, 3 Li" e? 'mwros e? oziva-ro,
vii 67, 4 oil-rm: (irrws Borax/rat.
152. Smfle? o-eat, 'to dispose of' ; Xen. Anab. vi 6, 37.
nexhelpe? vuw 76v e? pnroplowz the blockade of the Macedonian
ports is mentioned in 19 ? ? 153, 315, and (at a later date)
18 ? 145.
? 17l. 154. 1H3; IXOWI. @LM'lrmp: [11] ? 10 1rd): didxcwrai
we; row <1>lhnr1rom For {xew with Adv. cp. 3 ? 8, 8 ? 73,
9 ? 46, 63, etc.
156. mZe? -raipot, 'body-guards,' ' the King's Own re iment of
infantry,' composed of Macedonians as contrasted wit foreign
mercenaries.
8(67I'01111'6? ($116111 an Ex 1rde niw Maxnicivwv s'rriMKroi oi ne'yw-rol.
xai. iuxvpo'm-rot e? fiopmtopovv rbv Bamhe? a. Kai. e'xaAoiJln-o 1re? e? nupo I. (schol)
'Avafins'v'q; iv a. (#thande irepl 'AAefzivSpov (elder brother of Philip)
Ae'ywv drqo'iv' " Errand. foiz; new ivSoSord'l-oue urrrfliuv o'vvsfioas iraz'pov:
1r oo'rrye? peuo'e, min. - 8% wholly-row; real. for}; 1rr? oi19 is Nixon; Kai. 5emi$ms Kill.
me 5AM" iipxli: Sic/\Zov ncg'eraipovs dve? naaev, 31m; e? kirspol. ps-re? xovrn
1'1]; flan-Mun); irmpiae npoflupe? raroi $iurcMBo'w Burl; " (Harpocr. ) Thirlwall
v 177 f, Grote c- 92 viii 294, ASchaefer ii 36 2.
157. c'u'yxexpo'mpe'vot, 'well-trained,' 'well-drilled'; lit.
'welded into one body. ' 21 ? 17 o'u'prore'iv Kal swam. >> row
xopbv, Thuc. viii 95 'Aflnvaioi Kara Taxes Kai dfu'ykpo'rfi'rou
? ? Generated for (University of Chicago) on 2014-12-27 05:10 GMT / http://hdl. handle. net/2027/uc1. 31175009758841 Public Domain, Google-digitized / http://www. hathitrust. org/access_use#pd-google
? 11 ? 17, 18 SECOND OL 1'1 'THIAC 171
whiypuiaao'w dua'yxaofle? vres xpr'lo'aadai, Xen. Hell. vi 2, 12 e? rrl
o'u'ykexporiyne? vas vaUs GlKfi replrrhefiaai, Polybius i 61 rhnpdi-
para cru'yKeror'qae? va.
158. . 6; . . fixouov: here, as elsewhere, Demosthenes gives
his authority for his facts. Cp. 1 ? 22, 23; 4 ? 9, 8? l4 dis
? amv. It is conjectured (by Blass) that his authority in the
present instance was the historian Theopompus, the future
author of the Philippica. Conversely, it has been suggested
that Theopompus borrowed part of his language from the
present passage of Demosthenes.
159. oiisd-Fo'is olou 're \IIE'I'JSGO'OGI-l 20 ? 23 xop'q'ys'iv olol re,
Prooem. 55 ? 2 ale! 1' e? voxhelv (without sum); 'utterly in-
capable of lying. ' Such a description may readily be applied
in Greek, as in English, to one who, owing to his moral
character, cannot possibly tell a lie. oYou rs, applied to
capability (1 ? 26 all); olol r' (Si/res ? v)\a'. -rrew), is in fact a
stronger term than ol'ou, applied to character (4 ? 9 00x ole? s
fem. . ,ue? vew). Thus 'capable of lying' is a stronger term
than 'likely to lie. '
'1 do not distinguish between a statement made by an official to the
Government and one made to the newspapers. I do not understand that
a man lies when he writes to the newspapers, and that he tells the truth
when he makes an official statement.