i 7, 6
naturam at regioncm pravivwz'ae tuae.
naturam at regioncm pravivwz'ae tuae.
Demosthenese - First Philippic and the Olynthiacs
Gr.
ii ? 354 c.
259. 169w 'yevfio'e'rai: 8 ? 22. 5 mipos 'rciv qupd'rwv,
'the ways and means of the supply,' 14 ? 24 inre? p 61'1 xpnnd-rwv
Kai 1re? pov.
260. Mia>>: not synonymous with dva-yvu'monai, as Demo-
sthenes doubtless accompanied the reading of the items of his
'statement of ways and means' with explanatory remarks
(EMiiller). The two words are contrasted in 21 ? 130. Grote
(viii 64) observes that the scheme 'must have been more or
less complicated in its details ; not a simple proposition for an
elo? opd or property-tax, which would have been announced in
a sentence of the orator's specch. ' The details were probably
given in the speech itself 'as originally published. If Demo-
sthenes had himself desired to withhold them, it is improbable
that he would have retained such an ambiguous phrase as 3. new
1'7 ,ueis x'rh. (Hartel Dem. AmmIge p. 524).
? 30 l. 261. insets, 'my friends and I,' referring either to
certain financial officers, or to political friends like Lycurgus.
Demosthenes never uses iypei's of himself alone. Dionysius of
Halicarnassus regards this section as the beginning-of a new
speech.
Ep. 1 ad Am'maeum c. 10 Exam (after Theophilns, archon of 01. 108,
1 = 348--7 13. 0. ), Genia'roxhi; (347--6 B. C. ), ? ? ' of: 1411/ E'me 76v mini Qikimrov
Swan-yep;er dmjyyuke Ar; ov0? vns wepl. 'rfis ? vA? Kfis 15w mum-n:er Kai. 16:]!
iv 'EM "6w? rniAewv, 9 Early zip ii. ne? v fipeis--rafi'r' 517111. The
views 0'} Dionysius are also indica ed in a schol. on the text of Demov
sthenes I--Evru'rOe'v #401 Amviio'io: . . Ere'pov A6701: ell/m. dpxfiv, Irpooi'plov
61', #1176151, 0"": 5X", e'neidi; Sevrcpohoyia. s'rr-n'v, ill at; all; ('wl. 'ril wheiwov
01'": Eon npooima. of: Ae'yu. 8E dAnOfi- inaB-'rl rip din-:09! inre'vxe-m mp1
To"; mipou Xpnmirwv eiire'iv, vim 101710 Germain, Kai. EG'TLII {barre im'Ao'yos.
Dionysius has obviously made several mistakesz--(l) fiaving already
mentioned ' four Philippics,' of which ? ? 1-29 is (in his view) the/mirth, he
describes ? ? 80-51 as the sixth Philippic. By this he must mean the fiflh,
for he mentions the speech de I'nre immediately afterwards, and then
describes Phil. ii as the seventh Philip ic. (2) His description of the
topics of ? ? 30-51 is inaccurate. (3) Tie opening words of ? 80 could
not possibly belong to the beginning of a speech. (4) The result of this
severance would be that ? ? 1--29 would have no proper conclusion, and
? ? 80~51 no proper beginning. rafl'r' e'zr-riv clearly refers to what has
gone before, like ref/m in 1 ? 19 and 70570 in 2 5 18. Besides, the latter
part contains references to the former (? ? 82, 43 to $19; 5 33 to ? 24),
and cannot be separated from it (Dinrlorf, ed. 1846, v pp. 108~9).
It has been coniectured that 61 pet; may include members of the Council.
Now, supposing Dionysius had found in the authority he was following
(probably the Atthidographer Philochorus) that in 01. 108, 2 (847-6 8. 0. )
Demosthenes delivered a speech in the Assembly 'on the protection of the
islanders and of the cities in the Hellespont,' it has been suggested that
in so doing he was acting on behalf of the Council, of which he was an
influential member in that year. Dionysius, in his search for a speech
corresponding to this description, may have fixed on the latter part of the
? ? 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
? 102 FIRST PHILIPPIO' IV ? ? 30, 31
present speech, especially as several islands happen to be mentioned in
? 32 (Seebeck in ASchaefer Dam. ii2 68).
It has also been suggested that Demosthenes, as a member of the
Council in 347 13. 0. , returned to his scheme of a standing force, which was
still more urgently needed owing to the increasing danger in which Athens
was then placed. He may have brought this scheme before the Council in
a revised form, and after receiving its preliminary sanction, may have
addressed the Assembly on the subject. Philochorns may have mentioned
some such fact, and Dionysius may have been led thereby to assign
? ? 30'51 to a later (late than ? ? 1--30 (Blass Attische Beredsmnkeit iii 1, 304 ).
Blass is prompted to make this suggestion by a chronological difficulty
recently raised as to ? 35 l. 313.
The unity of the speech has been opposed by Schott (1603), Fabricius
(1705), Leland (1756), Forbiger (1822), Wachsmuth (1826), Held (1831),
Flathe (1832), Seebeck (1838), and Eichler (1883). It has been maintained
by Tourreil (1701), Mounteney (1731), Reiske (1764-9), Auger (1700), Niebuhr
(1805), AGBecker (1815, 1834), Bremi and Weiske (1819), Zimmermann
(1828), Voemel and Winiewski (1829), Westermann (1833), Bruckner (1837),
Bohneeke (1843), Clinton (1851), ASchaefer (1856), Haedicke (1858), Doehle
(1866), Baran (1884), Muther (1887), Schmied, ESchwartz and May (1894),
and Schefczik (1895).
262. e? rrende 8' e? wtxeuporovfire--X? Lpo'rovfio'e-r? , 'when you
rate upon (not 'sanotion by vote,' L & S) the resolutions, (if you
approve of them) you will pass them. ' 18 ? 248 6 617,110: . . 16. :
e? /uis 'yva'mas e? xfipo'rbva, 19 ? 70 6. 11 fioe? hno'Oe xetpoTozlfia'e-rs. e? -lrL-
Xflporove'ii/ is only found in two other passages of Demosthenes,
24 ? 6 (Tons ve? aous) e? rexelporovficrwre, ' voted 0n,' lit. 'put to the
vote' (by means of your agents, the 1rp655pol), and ib. 84 (robs
1rpoe? 6pous) e? mxetporove'iu, ' to put the question to the vote. '
263. Ev {In-Iv dpe'ch-n: alienum a consil'io Denwsthenis, diversas
sententias, quas populus sequi possit, conzmcmomre (8. av \'1 Iv zipe'a'xn
vulgo), suam commendat, da sua loquitur (av {will e? pe'o'xn). aup e Ep.
Crit. ' p. 43. Up. 9 ? 70"54' B'ov'ArprQe', Kup'o-rowjo'ers,'14\? 145. 1: {min ape? aifg,
\r'ln? L? EO'OlI-L, Prooem. 29 we, ow new va apeo'x-n, Kau. 'ra. Aoura. 8L8amcw, l .
33 {me'repov 5' dxov'o'avras Kpi'vm, Kay 0'. e'mqq, Xpfio-Oai, ib. 36 vxe'lllaa'ae 6'
fixation-V119, Kali {will dpe? mqq, Xpfiaaofie ( auppe).
264. e? v--Tais e? 'rrw-rohais: ? ? 19, 20, 45. Livy xxxi 44
Athenienses quiem Zittcris oerbisque, quibus salis Talent, bellum
adversus Philippum gerebant (of Philip V, 200 B. o. ) Rufinianus
de figuris p. 199 R 'Cato apud Athenienses: Antiochus epis-
tolis bellum gerit, calamo ct atranwnto militat. '
? 311. 266. Sokei're . . 61v . . Bovksoe'au'eauz Goodwin JIIT.
? 220, Cobet NL. 362 f. The personal construction of fierce? >>
is preferred wherever possible.
268. 're? -n'ov, '(geographicab position. ' 23 ? 182 d50'1rep yap
XahKis 11;: 'rb'quu Ti}: Eirflolas 1rpos Tfis Borw'rlas Ke'i-rac, oih'w
Xeppovfio'ov KEI-ral. 1rpos Ti): Gpe? km 7'7 Kapdzavifiv mix". 5):! fly e? xet
"rd-Irov Bans older 1';an K'rh. , 18 ? 146, C10. ad Fam.
i 7, 6
naturam at regioncm pravivwz'ae tuae.
269. ivaup'qeet'q're : ? 14 I. 129 6uv110efaev.
? ? 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
? IV ? ? 31, 32 FIRST PHILIPPIG 103
270. mefipna'w: explained by e'rnaias: dipals, by Xeipfiwa.
Cp. 2 ? 23 anfie? va. Kaipbv ,wqo' d'ipav rapahel'rrwv. 'rd.
woW--Smwpe? m-e'rm, 'eii'ects his purpose by getting the
start in most of his operations. ' (Of Philip) 2 ? 9 rpoezh'q-
(that, and 8 ? 11 1rp6-repos 1rpos ro'is rpdy/mm 'yl'yvea'OaL.
272. chukdgas, 'by watching for,' Thuc. ii 2, 3; c . iv 20, 4
mpefv. 'roi'as Prue-(as: sc. dve? aovs, 'thc tra e-winds,'
8 ? 14 (of Philip) repzaelvas roi'ls e? rna'las, and 8 ? 17 ; northerly
winds blowing in the Aegean from the end of July to the latter
part of September.
Aristotle Meteor. ii 5, 5 oi 6' Emuim. Irve'ovm. p. 516. 'r 1rd: KlI-l- Inn/b;
e'm'rokvjv (July 24), ? 7 flope'au . . oi}; KMOQIMEV ima'ias, tigoMurldo 4 ? 13
yigw exovn; 'n'bv 'r' irrh n3; a'px-rov ? s pcvaw Kai. ? e lipwv, anr. V 742
etesia flubra. aquilonum, Cic. de Nat. cor. ii 131. Tiey are 'in reality
northern winds, but occasionally point obliquely both towards the west
and towards the east' (St. John's Ancient Greece iii 322). They must have
been blowing from the NE. when they carried Miltiades from the Thracian
Chersonesus to Lemnos (Herod. vi 140), and also when they prevented a
Sicilian fleet from rounding Males. (ib. vii 168). In any case it would be
difficult to sail from Athens to the Northern Aegean while they were
blowing, and Philip took advantage of this fact in his operations in Thrace
and Macedonia. ' Thc obstinacy and violence of the Etesian winds in J Mg
and August . . are well known to those who have had to struggle wit
them in the Aegean in that season ' (Leake's Northern Greece iv 426). Sec
especially Neninann und Partsch Physikalische Geographic von Grieche'nlaml
pp. 96'100.
xeip6v(a. ): when the sea was closed to sailors. Andoc. 1
? 137 1! ; Wm Klvdvvos ,u. ei? 'wv dv0pdi1rois '1) Xeipufwos dipq rheiv
'r-hv OdM-r-rav ; In 3 ? 4 Philip is described as besieging a
Thracian fortress in November ; cp. 9 ? 50 (name? ) Oe? pos Kal
xechdn/a, u'is 0175611 5m? e? pez, 066' 6'0er egaipe-ros Ebpa. ns fir 6w. -
hehret, and 2 ? 23. See especially Holm's Greek History vol.
iii 0. 18 note 9.
273. file' av . . in) Swat 6(a) ink, "when we are unable
(he thinks) to reach the spot. mi points to Philip's purpose;
cp. ,unfiels in 2? 16. I'omisset scribere hle' a" dumb/Leda, at de
conditione, sifors tulcrit, facile redelmtc. Sal quum cogitatione
Philippi rcferat, adhibuit optatirum (Voemel). Xen. One. 11,
14 drier-(1. 00m . . slaw/. 4411. 'ilulk' <8. v> 51': {116011 Karaha/Lfldvoim,
a! Two. 6? 6fL? V09 lde'z'v Tu'yxdvozm (where dv was first added by
GHSchaefer). On conditional relative clauses containing a
potential Opt. with (in see Goodwin M T. ? ? 557, 506, and cp.
? 18 61 ,m') nozfio'arr' in 70010.
? 32 l. 274. Boqeeims, 'hasty levies,' auxilia, repentina;
opp. to (275) napacxevfi o'uvexei no. 1. Swirl-21. , 'a permanent
force and power. ' Op. 8 ? 47. '
275. {la-reptofipev . . Iii-Irriv-rmv, 'we shall (only) be too late for
everything,' ? 35 ; see esp. 8 ? 12.
? ? 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
? 104 FIRST PHILIPPIO' IV ? 32, 33
277. Xapasttp: Te? mp e? qb' 05 d1! TL; dfivavro X? l/. L(:W0? gyms-
opaieaaflai (Etym. Magn. ), 'as winter-quarters,' in app. to Annual
K-rA. Op. predicative use of rapafiel'yaam (? 3). 'rfi Swap-a:
Dat. commodi, ? 28 ; 1 ? 22 T02: Ee? vozs, 3 ? 27 e? Kelvozs.
A we: ? 27. This island, first won for Athens by Miltiades,
h (like Imbros and Scyros) long been in her possession,
being occupied by Athenian Kknpofixm. All the three islands
had been abandoned at the close of the Peloponnesian war
(Andoc. de Paee ? 12), but were reoccupied before the rights of
Athens were formally recognised by the peace of Antalcidas,
387 (Gilbert Gk. Coast. Ant. i 5022 f=446 f, Eng]. ed. ) Lemnos
is nearly divided into two peninsulas by two deep bays on the
N. and S. , the latter being a large and convenient harbour,
suitable for winter-quarters.
278. 66. 019: then dependent on Athens, [7] ? 15, [12] ? 2.
Its capital, N. of the island, possessed two ports. The modern
port of Lime? na is little more than an open roadstead, but is
protected by a headland to the E. and by the Thracian coast to
the N. (Tozer's Islands of the Aegean 283). End"; : 8 ? 36,
one of the subject allies of Athens, paying her an annual tribute
of only 200(11'. To the SE. of the island is an excellent
harbour. Tats--vfio'ots: e. g. Peparethos (18 ? 70) and
Scyros ([7] ? 4). Diodorus xv 30 (377 8.
ii ? 354 c.
259. 169w 'yevfio'e'rai: 8 ? 22. 5 mipos 'rciv qupd'rwv,
'the ways and means of the supply,' 14 ? 24 inre? p 61'1 xpnnd-rwv
Kai 1re? pov.
260. Mia>>: not synonymous with dva-yvu'monai, as Demo-
sthenes doubtless accompanied the reading of the items of his
'statement of ways and means' with explanatory remarks
(EMiiller). The two words are contrasted in 21 ? 130. Grote
(viii 64) observes that the scheme 'must have been more or
less complicated in its details ; not a simple proposition for an
elo? opd or property-tax, which would have been announced in
a sentence of the orator's specch. ' The details were probably
given in the speech itself 'as originally published. If Demo-
sthenes had himself desired to withhold them, it is improbable
that he would have retained such an ambiguous phrase as 3. new
1'7 ,ueis x'rh. (Hartel Dem. AmmIge p. 524).
? 30 l. 261. insets, 'my friends and I,' referring either to
certain financial officers, or to political friends like Lycurgus.
Demosthenes never uses iypei's of himself alone. Dionysius of
Halicarnassus regards this section as the beginning-of a new
speech.
Ep. 1 ad Am'maeum c. 10 Exam (after Theophilns, archon of 01. 108,
1 = 348--7 13. 0. ), Genia'roxhi; (347--6 B. C. ), ? ? ' of: 1411/ E'me 76v mini Qikimrov
Swan-yep;er dmjyyuke Ar; ov0? vns wepl. 'rfis ? vA? Kfis 15w mum-n:er Kai. 16:]!
iv 'EM "6w? rniAewv, 9 Early zip ii. ne? v fipeis--rafi'r' 517111. The
views 0'} Dionysius are also indica ed in a schol. on the text of Demov
sthenes I--Evru'rOe'v #401 Amviio'io: . . Ere'pov A6701: ell/m. dpxfiv, Irpooi'plov
61', #1176151, 0"": 5X", e'neidi; Sevrcpohoyia. s'rr-n'v, ill at; all; ('wl. 'ril wheiwov
01'": Eon npooima. of: Ae'yu. 8E dAnOfi- inaB-'rl rip din-:09! inre'vxe-m mp1
To"; mipou Xpnmirwv eiire'iv, vim 101710 Germain, Kai. EG'TLII {barre im'Ao'yos.
Dionysius has obviously made several mistakesz--(l) fiaving already
mentioned ' four Philippics,' of which ? ? 1-29 is (in his view) the/mirth, he
describes ? ? 80-51 as the sixth Philippic. By this he must mean the fiflh,
for he mentions the speech de I'nre immediately afterwards, and then
describes Phil. ii as the seventh Philip ic. (2) His description of the
topics of ? ? 30-51 is inaccurate. (3) Tie opening words of ? 80 could
not possibly belong to the beginning of a speech. (4) The result of this
severance would be that ? ? 1--29 would have no proper conclusion, and
? ? 80~51 no proper beginning. rafl'r' e'zr-riv clearly refers to what has
gone before, like ref/m in 1 ? 19 and 70570 in 2 5 18. Besides, the latter
part contains references to the former (? ? 82, 43 to $19; 5 33 to ? 24),
and cannot be separated from it (Dinrlorf, ed. 1846, v pp. 108~9).
It has been coniectured that 61 pet; may include members of the Council.
Now, supposing Dionysius had found in the authority he was following
(probably the Atthidographer Philochorus) that in 01. 108, 2 (847-6 8. 0. )
Demosthenes delivered a speech in the Assembly 'on the protection of the
islanders and of the cities in the Hellespont,' it has been suggested that
in so doing he was acting on behalf of the Council, of which he was an
influential member in that year. Dionysius, in his search for a speech
corresponding to this description, may have fixed on the latter part of the
? ? 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
? 102 FIRST PHILIPPIO' IV ? ? 30, 31
present speech, especially as several islands happen to be mentioned in
? 32 (Seebeck in ASchaefer Dam. ii2 68).
It has also been suggested that Demosthenes, as a member of the
Council in 347 13. 0. , returned to his scheme of a standing force, which was
still more urgently needed owing to the increasing danger in which Athens
was then placed. He may have brought this scheme before the Council in
a revised form, and after receiving its preliminary sanction, may have
addressed the Assembly on the subject. Philochorns may have mentioned
some such fact, and Dionysius may have been led thereby to assign
? ? 30'51 to a later (late than ? ? 1--30 (Blass Attische Beredsmnkeit iii 1, 304 ).
Blass is prompted to make this suggestion by a chronological difficulty
recently raised as to ? 35 l. 313.
The unity of the speech has been opposed by Schott (1603), Fabricius
(1705), Leland (1756), Forbiger (1822), Wachsmuth (1826), Held (1831),
Flathe (1832), Seebeck (1838), and Eichler (1883). It has been maintained
by Tourreil (1701), Mounteney (1731), Reiske (1764-9), Auger (1700), Niebuhr
(1805), AGBecker (1815, 1834), Bremi and Weiske (1819), Zimmermann
(1828), Voemel and Winiewski (1829), Westermann (1833), Bruckner (1837),
Bohneeke (1843), Clinton (1851), ASchaefer (1856), Haedicke (1858), Doehle
(1866), Baran (1884), Muther (1887), Schmied, ESchwartz and May (1894),
and Schefczik (1895).
262. e? rrende 8' e? wtxeuporovfire--X? Lpo'rovfio'e-r? , 'when you
rate upon (not 'sanotion by vote,' L & S) the resolutions, (if you
approve of them) you will pass them. ' 18 ? 248 6 617,110: . . 16. :
e? /uis 'yva'mas e? xfipo'rbva, 19 ? 70 6. 11 fioe? hno'Oe xetpoTozlfia'e-rs. e? -lrL-
Xflporove'ii/ is only found in two other passages of Demosthenes,
24 ? 6 (Tons ve? aous) e? rexelporovficrwre, ' voted 0n,' lit. 'put to the
vote' (by means of your agents, the 1rp655pol), and ib. 84 (robs
1rpoe? 6pous) e? mxetporove'iu, ' to put the question to the vote. '
263. Ev {In-Iv dpe'ch-n: alienum a consil'io Denwsthenis, diversas
sententias, quas populus sequi possit, conzmcmomre (8. av \'1 Iv zipe'a'xn
vulgo), suam commendat, da sua loquitur (av {will e? pe'o'xn). aup e Ep.
Crit. ' p. 43. Up. 9 ? 70"54' B'ov'ArprQe', Kup'o-rowjo'ers,'14\? 145. 1: {min ape? aifg,
\r'ln? L? EO'OlI-L, Prooem. 29 we, ow new va apeo'x-n, Kau. 'ra. Aoura. 8L8amcw, l .
33 {me'repov 5' dxov'o'avras Kpi'vm, Kay 0'. e'mqq, Xpfio-Oai, ib. 36 vxe'lllaa'ae 6'
fixation-V119, Kali {will dpe? mqq, Xpfiaaofie ( auppe).
264. e? v--Tais e? 'rrw-rohais: ? ? 19, 20, 45. Livy xxxi 44
Athenienses quiem Zittcris oerbisque, quibus salis Talent, bellum
adversus Philippum gerebant (of Philip V, 200 B. o. ) Rufinianus
de figuris p. 199 R 'Cato apud Athenienses: Antiochus epis-
tolis bellum gerit, calamo ct atranwnto militat. '
? 311. 266. Sokei're . . 61v . . Bovksoe'au'eauz Goodwin JIIT.
? 220, Cobet NL. 362 f. The personal construction of fierce? >>
is preferred wherever possible.
268. 're? -n'ov, '(geographicab position. ' 23 ? 182 d50'1rep yap
XahKis 11;: 'rb'quu Ti}: Eirflolas 1rpos Tfis Borw'rlas Ke'i-rac, oih'w
Xeppovfio'ov KEI-ral. 1rpos Ti): Gpe? km 7'7 Kapdzavifiv mix". 5):! fly e? xet
"rd-Irov Bans older 1';an K'rh. , 18 ? 146, C10. ad Fam.
i 7, 6
naturam at regioncm pravivwz'ae tuae.
269. ivaup'qeet'q're : ? 14 I. 129 6uv110efaev.
? ? 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
? IV ? ? 31, 32 FIRST PHILIPPIG 103
270. mefipna'w: explained by e'rnaias: dipals, by Xeipfiwa.
Cp. 2 ? 23 anfie? va. Kaipbv ,wqo' d'ipav rapahel'rrwv. 'rd.
woW--Smwpe? m-e'rm, 'eii'ects his purpose by getting the
start in most of his operations. ' (Of Philip) 2 ? 9 rpoezh'q-
(that, and 8 ? 11 1rp6-repos 1rpos ro'is rpdy/mm 'yl'yvea'OaL.
272. chukdgas, 'by watching for,' Thuc. ii 2, 3; c . iv 20, 4
mpefv. 'roi'as Prue-(as: sc. dve? aovs, 'thc tra e-winds,'
8 ? 14 (of Philip) repzaelvas roi'ls e? rna'las, and 8 ? 17 ; northerly
winds blowing in the Aegean from the end of July to the latter
part of September.
Aristotle Meteor. ii 5, 5 oi 6' Emuim. Irve'ovm. p. 516. 'r 1rd: KlI-l- Inn/b;
e'm'rokvjv (July 24), ? 7 flope'au . . oi}; KMOQIMEV ima'ias, tigoMurldo 4 ? 13
yigw exovn; 'n'bv 'r' irrh n3; a'px-rov ? s pcvaw Kai. ? e lipwv, anr. V 742
etesia flubra. aquilonum, Cic. de Nat. cor. ii 131. Tiey are 'in reality
northern winds, but occasionally point obliquely both towards the west
and towards the east' (St. John's Ancient Greece iii 322). They must have
been blowing from the NE. when they carried Miltiades from the Thracian
Chersonesus to Lemnos (Herod. vi 140), and also when they prevented a
Sicilian fleet from rounding Males. (ib. vii 168). In any case it would be
difficult to sail from Athens to the Northern Aegean while they were
blowing, and Philip took advantage of this fact in his operations in Thrace
and Macedonia. ' Thc obstinacy and violence of the Etesian winds in J Mg
and August . . are well known to those who have had to struggle wit
them in the Aegean in that season ' (Leake's Northern Greece iv 426). Sec
especially Neninann und Partsch Physikalische Geographic von Grieche'nlaml
pp. 96'100.
xeip6v(a. ): when the sea was closed to sailors. Andoc. 1
? 137 1! ; Wm Klvdvvos ,u. ei? 'wv dv0pdi1rois '1) Xeipufwos dipq rheiv
'r-hv OdM-r-rav ; In 3 ? 4 Philip is described as besieging a
Thracian fortress in November ; cp. 9 ? 50 (name? ) Oe? pos Kal
xechdn/a, u'is 0175611 5m? e? pez, 066' 6'0er egaipe-ros Ebpa. ns fir 6w. -
hehret, and 2 ? 23. See especially Holm's Greek History vol.
iii 0. 18 note 9.
273. file' av . . in) Swat 6(a) ink, "when we are unable
(he thinks) to reach the spot. mi points to Philip's purpose;
cp. ,unfiels in 2? 16. I'omisset scribere hle' a" dumb/Leda, at de
conditione, sifors tulcrit, facile redelmtc. Sal quum cogitatione
Philippi rcferat, adhibuit optatirum (Voemel). Xen. One. 11,
14 drier-(1. 00m . . slaw/. 4411. 'ilulk' <8. v> 51': {116011 Karaha/Lfldvoim,
a! Two. 6? 6fL? V09 lde'z'v Tu'yxdvozm (where dv was first added by
GHSchaefer). On conditional relative clauses containing a
potential Opt. with (in see Goodwin M T. ? ? 557, 506, and cp.
? 18 61 ,m') nozfio'arr' in 70010.
? 32 l. 274. Boqeeims, 'hasty levies,' auxilia, repentina;
opp. to (275) napacxevfi o'uvexei no. 1. Swirl-21. , 'a permanent
force and power. ' Op. 8 ? 47. '
275. {la-reptofipev . . Iii-Irriv-rmv, 'we shall (only) be too late for
everything,' ? 35 ; see esp. 8 ? 12.
? ? 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
? 104 FIRST PHILIPPIO' IV ? 32, 33
277. Xapasttp: Te? mp e? qb' 05 d1! TL; dfivavro X? l/. L(:W0? gyms-
opaieaaflai (Etym. Magn. ), 'as winter-quarters,' in app. to Annual
K-rA. Op. predicative use of rapafiel'yaam (? 3). 'rfi Swap-a:
Dat. commodi, ? 28 ; 1 ? 22 T02: Ee? vozs, 3 ? 27 e? Kelvozs.
A we: ? 27. This island, first won for Athens by Miltiades,
h (like Imbros and Scyros) long been in her possession,
being occupied by Athenian Kknpofixm. All the three islands
had been abandoned at the close of the Peloponnesian war
(Andoc. de Paee ? 12), but were reoccupied before the rights of
Athens were formally recognised by the peace of Antalcidas,
387 (Gilbert Gk. Coast. Ant. i 5022 f=446 f, Eng]. ed. ) Lemnos
is nearly divided into two peninsulas by two deep bays on the
N. and S. , the latter being a large and convenient harbour,
suitable for winter-quarters.
278. 66. 019: then dependent on Athens, [7] ? 15, [12] ? 2.
Its capital, N. of the island, possessed two ports. The modern
port of Lime? na is little more than an open roadstead, but is
protected by a headland to the E. and by the Thracian coast to
the N. (Tozer's Islands of the Aegean 283). End"; : 8 ? 36,
one of the subject allies of Athens, paying her an annual tribute
of only 200(11'. To the SE. of the island is an excellent
harbour. Tats--vfio'ots: e. g. Peparethos (18 ? 70) and
Scyros ([7] ? 4). Diodorus xv 30 (377 8.