vm:
resources
in general,
19 ?
19 ?
Demosthenese - First Philippic and the Olynthiacs
17.
203. Mpe? vas: 2 ? 9. Mooney: the Opt. Fut. is ofteuer
found in Xenophon than in the Attic orators. Cp. however 23
gm, 24 ? ? 155, 15s; 31 ? 2, 36 ? 6, 50 ? ? 44, 50, 56; 52 ? ? s,
22 ; 53 ? 8, 57 ? 16, 59 ? 38 (Rehdantz Index). Goodwin MT.
? 128.
204. Kup'lroiia'om, 'enjoy the revenue of. ' The Thessalians
had granted Philip their harbour and market dues in gratitude
for his services, and in compensation for the cost of his aid
against the tyrants of Pherae. Grote c. 87 viii 55.
205. Mon : independent Opt. continuing the quotation intro-
duced by Cos. Cp. Thuc. ii 72, 3, Xen. Anab. vii 3, 13, Good-
win M T. ? 675.
206. dronepfic'e-rm: this Fut. is also found in 24 ? 10,
39 ? 11, 40 ? 10. U'T? P'/]0'? TGL occurs in 20 ? 40. (i1roa-rep110-r'1-
O'ETGL has little support in Attic prose, Lys. 12 ? 70 ; in Isocr.
7 ? 34 it is the reading of one MS (I') only. It is sometimes
supposed that Futures in ~1101? aoaai or -w0fio'o,u. az are not Attic.
In the present instance that Fut. is unnecessary, as drowsprj-
(lg/Lat, like drourepofi/sm, has a Perfect sense. Kiihner G'r. Gr.
i 2, 112.
207. sis flevbv . . KG'I'GO'T'fiO'fl'G-L, 'will be straitencd. '
mi. 7115 rpmbfis, ' the means of support. '
208. ge? vms: Dat. after Tpo? 1]"s. [53] ? 29 Tpo? ds [. L'rrrpi, 3
? 20 @505le 101's a'rpa-revo/Le? vms, 4 ? 28 a'vrnpe? o'wv 1"? ) 50111641. ".
? 23 l. 208. ye: often combined with transitional particles,
such as 6M6. pfiv, to emphasise a new point; Kal . . 76 (2
? 10), 006. 4 76 (5 ? ? 16, 24; [7] ? 28). 76V . . Halovu. . .
'rbv 'Mupte? v: the chiefs of Paeonia and Illyria (cp. Tau Kapa.
5 ? 25, 16v Gpfixa 23 ? 133, 6 Kbkxos Herod. i 2, 6 Au56s ib. 80),
and not the tribes themselves (as in Thuc. vi 79 Thu 'AO-qmiov,
106 vaaxoalou, and 81 6 xamaflag). The tribes were doubtless
eager to be afire? voaoi, but could hardly be described (like their
chiefs) as dviflm 100 Kara/coziew TWOS.
209. inrMis, 'in general. ' Toa'rrous: chiefs in Thrace,
Epirus, etc. (Sauppe).
Diodor. xvi 2 (359 13m. ) 01 8E Aouroi. (MastI/es) Ka-rmnsrrkq'ypte'vol. 'ni:
113v 'IAAupuIn/ Swain"; 1repi? oflot KaQew-nixcwav Kal. 1rpr 1i: dianohcpe'iv
691mm; eixov. {ma 6% 761/ 1101511 Kaupbv Haiove; ue? v, rquu-[ov rfie Maxe-
doviaa oixofiwes, e? mipeovv Thy Xuipav, Kararjapovof/vn; 751v Musoe? vmv.
? ? 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
? 150 FIRST 0L YNTHIAO I ? 23, 24
211. dfiens 'roi: Kafaxoliew : 21 ? 134, 29 ? 17 (Goodwin MT.
? 798).
212. iaBpw-rfis, 63s duo-w: 4 ? 9.
213. TB ydp e5 wpti'r'rew--ylyvmu 23 ? 113, Thuc. iii 39, 4
ei'wOe 5% T1311 ne? hewv ais 6. 11 ude-ra Kai 61' e? haxio'rou 6. 1rp0066-
my'ros elirpaEia ? )fiy, e? : iifipw Tpe? -rrcw.
214. 111196. Tfiv 6. 56am: 2 ? 8. d? oppfi Mk, 'a source
of infatuation'; Kamiis 4>poveiv, 'folly'; a frequent phrase in
Greek Tragedy. 81. 61119 : 3 ? 19.
(idiopwfi means (1) a starting-plane, u commcmz'menl, a base of operations,
Thuc. i 90 uvaxe? prla-iv 1e mt unpoppall/I hence the cause, occasion, pretext of
a thing, Isocr. 4 ? 61, Eur. H20. 1239 Ae? ymv 6450 uni, Dem. 18 ? 156 6 vii;
4i? opmi? mum: Kai. 76. ; flpb? dd? |$ napaaxdw: 2) the means with which
one begins a thing, 3 ? 33 adaopuais s1ri. 1d e? 'Ew 16w ii-yue? hiv, [13] ? 19 r'qv
11"; woken>>; 86501 ddznppfiyv e? 'xmv: means of any kind, 21 ? 137 ri'v d? opluiv
('wealth '), finep io-xvpbv nomi- . 'rov'rovi, lb. 98 Tip! 61? . 81' iv beL? u,
ib. ii? opn? 7v ('resources') e? ? ' uni; dam->9 6e8me?
vm: resources in general,
19 ? 343 xpfi/Jm'u. 8651! ! drpoppfiv, 24 ? 52 1b 8511794" Kai. "z'ni'a'uydmpa:
inc-review e'xov-ra; ddmppniv ('advantage wwans of support, [61] ? 6 Ti;
noun"; ? 1Mas dipopmiv, ib. 22 rAzinI/G a? opiuis (' materials fur') Ae? ywv, 2
? 22 1n\u'ou9 Mopudq (' claims') :1; Ti) 1311! 1mpd. raw OQIBII divouw Exew, and
[11] ? 16, Ep. 1 4 d? 06vovs iiqSopmi; (' means of discussing') bu {an-Map}! de
a'vmbe'psw w;in means of war, such as money, men and ships, 4 ? 29, 9
? 70, 14 ? ? 29, 30; 18 ? 233, 20 ? 68, 23 ? 71; 8. 150 capital 36 ? 11 61 iv
281a n; d? opniq mm, 1rpr 111'" rpmre? g'y, 'had he had any wpitnl of his
own invested in the bank,' lb. 44 via-1L: dipopuiy "GUI-BI! ? u~n psyim wpb:
pfl'Afl-TLflfl-e? v, 'l'or money-making the best capital of all is good credit';
ll). ? ? 12, 13, 14; 45 ? ? 5, 47.
216. woMe? KLs--eivut: 20 ? 50 1611 781p dv0pdnrwv oi. whe'iaroi
K112111741: ,ue? v 76. 70. 06. 1'93 K0. th fiovheiieo'fiaz Kai 111786116: Ira-ra-
(ppm/sill, ? vhd716w 6' 017K e'ae? houm 70? ; (1010? : 'rpb1rocs. Xen. Oyr.
vii 5, 76. The converse of this 'yvu'mn is cited in 2 ? 26.
16 dmhdgm: Art. with Infi, used as subject, especially with
e? avlu. See also 2 ? 20 To Ka-ropfiofiv (Goodwin MT. ? ? 790, 745).
? 24 l. 218. Tfiv duo. uplav--xutpbv--vopla-uwas, 'regarding
his difficulty as your opportunity'; 45 ? 70, Lys. 31 ? 17
of: 'rd b/Le? rspa duo'ruxvina-ra sii'ruxvi/Lara e? 'ye'ye? va, Livy iv 58
tanlmn abfuit ut ex "incomnwdo alieno sua awasio peteratu'r,
Plancus in Oic. 11d Fam. x 4, 4 ne . . nostm male suam patent
occasioncm. Whiston quotes O'Connell's saying England's meal
is Ireland's opportunity.
219. e? 'roipws o'vve? puo-Qm. in)>>, 'readily help in bearing the
burden of war'; Thuc. iv 10 (ii/6pc: oi invapdnsvor 'rofide 106
Kwde? vou, Eur. 07'. 757 (Tuvnpd/mv ? 6vou 0'01 #:111pr 01'" 1'17 1'qu
is supplied by the schol.
220. wpec'fievope? vovs, 'sending envoys'; Thuc. i 92, iv 45,
vi 104, viii 5. Hf 8. Sci (ad iwgotia cumnda quae curari
? ? 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
? I ? ? 24-26 FIRST OLYNTHIAG 151
oportot GHSchaefcr): sc. rpeofieueadal. ? 2, 2 ? 11: 'ero
required ' ( K. ) seems less correct.
222. hoyugope? vovs, el. K'rh. : 21 ? 209.
224. wpbs rfige? pq: sc. Ti) hue-re? pa, 'on our frontier,' 4 ? 32.
miss av_ 96v: a direct question vividly used instead
of a"; dv--e? 'hdot (as in 20 ? 87), cp. 21 ? 209 51101416006 . . 'rlvo:
o'u'ryvdmns . . Tuxefv 8. 11 ol'ea'de. m3; . . oico'fls): 6 ? 20.
225. {Pl-(0. ), 'and then,' 2 ? 26, 4 ? 43, 6 ? 35, 8 ? 20, 9 ? ?
13, 18, etc. p. 118") must be taken with the Inf. TI'OLfiU'dL.
226. el. Se? vavr' ixeivos, 'if he had the power' to make you
suffer (implied in mieorr' (iv). rail-re. resumes the pre-
ceding 6. .
227. o": 'rohpfio'ere; the construction has here changed
from p. 118") into 06. After 'rui'n'n. 'Il'Otfid'Gl- Kmpbv {Xovres we
may imagine that the orator pauses, and, abandoning the
previous construction, breaks off with the energetic question
01': 'rohpfic'ere; But for this change of construction, 01': would
not have been used. The transition to the interrogative is less
violent in Lys. 12 ? 36 06K 0171! (Sandy, cl 'roi'ls ,ue? v arpar'q'yoz'ls
Gard-up e? fi'n/sie? o'a'rc, Tori-revs de? 51'7 . . 015K fipa xpi] al'rroz'zs Kal. 'rol'ls
raidas Kohdfeo'flcu ;
? 25 l. 281. dv-re? xn, 'hold out'; 2 ? 10.
233. Tfiv \'rlre? pxouo'av Kal. 'rfiv olxelav rafimv, 'this land
which is already ours and is our very own. ' Thuc. vi 69, 3
'AO-qva'ioz p. 611 1repi T6 11']: dhhm-plas oiKelav 0X62" . . 'Ap'yel'm oe?
"rip! urdpxouo'av 0'1];ch warpida . . miluv e? moeiv. The text
refers to Attica (not to Macedonia, as held by Voemel). The
Art. is repeated for additional emphasis; 19 ? 311 Thu bola. >>
Kai 1'1'711 ducalav ? fi? oln
234. 6.
203. Mpe? vas: 2 ? 9. Mooney: the Opt. Fut. is ofteuer
found in Xenophon than in the Attic orators. Cp. however 23
gm, 24 ? ? 155, 15s; 31 ? 2, 36 ? 6, 50 ? ? 44, 50, 56; 52 ? ? s,
22 ; 53 ? 8, 57 ? 16, 59 ? 38 (Rehdantz Index). Goodwin MT.
? 128.
204. Kup'lroiia'om, 'enjoy the revenue of. ' The Thessalians
had granted Philip their harbour and market dues in gratitude
for his services, and in compensation for the cost of his aid
against the tyrants of Pherae. Grote c. 87 viii 55.
205. Mon : independent Opt. continuing the quotation intro-
duced by Cos. Cp. Thuc. ii 72, 3, Xen. Anab. vii 3, 13, Good-
win M T. ? 675.
206. dronepfic'e-rm: this Fut. is also found in 24 ? 10,
39 ? 11, 40 ? 10. U'T? P'/]0'? TGL occurs in 20 ? 40. (i1roa-rep110-r'1-
O'ETGL has little support in Attic prose, Lys. 12 ? 70 ; in Isocr.
7 ? 34 it is the reading of one MS (I') only. It is sometimes
supposed that Futures in ~1101? aoaai or -w0fio'o,u. az are not Attic.
In the present instance that Fut. is unnecessary, as drowsprj-
(lg/Lat, like drourepofi/sm, has a Perfect sense. Kiihner G'r. Gr.
i 2, 112.
207. sis flevbv . . KG'I'GO'T'fiO'fl'G-L, 'will be straitencd. '
mi. 7115 rpmbfis, ' the means of support. '
208. ge? vms: Dat. after Tpo? 1]"s. [53] ? 29 Tpo? ds [. L'rrrpi, 3
? 20 @505le 101's a'rpa-revo/Le? vms, 4 ? 28 a'vrnpe? o'wv 1"? ) 50111641. ".
? 23 l. 208. ye: often combined with transitional particles,
such as 6M6. pfiv, to emphasise a new point; Kal . . 76 (2
? 10), 006. 4 76 (5 ? ? 16, 24; [7] ? 28). 76V . . Halovu. . .
'rbv 'Mupte? v: the chiefs of Paeonia and Illyria (cp. Tau Kapa.
5 ? 25, 16v Gpfixa 23 ? 133, 6 Kbkxos Herod. i 2, 6 Au56s ib. 80),
and not the tribes themselves (as in Thuc. vi 79 Thu 'AO-qmiov,
106 vaaxoalou, and 81 6 xamaflag). The tribes were doubtless
eager to be afire? voaoi, but could hardly be described (like their
chiefs) as dviflm 100 Kara/coziew TWOS.
209. inrMis, 'in general. ' Toa'rrous: chiefs in Thrace,
Epirus, etc. (Sauppe).
Diodor. xvi 2 (359 13m. ) 01 8E Aouroi. (MastI/es) Ka-rmnsrrkq'ypte'vol. 'ni:
113v 'IAAupuIn/ Swain"; 1repi? oflot KaQew-nixcwav Kal. 1rpr 1i: dianohcpe'iv
691mm; eixov. {ma 6% 761/ 1101511 Kaupbv Haiove; ue? v, rquu-[ov rfie Maxe-
doviaa oixofiwes, e? mipeovv Thy Xuipav, Kararjapovof/vn; 751v Musoe? vmv.
? ? 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
? 150 FIRST 0L YNTHIAO I ? 23, 24
211. dfiens 'roi: Kafaxoliew : 21 ? 134, 29 ? 17 (Goodwin MT.
? 798).
212. iaBpw-rfis, 63s duo-w: 4 ? 9.
213. TB ydp e5 wpti'r'rew--ylyvmu 23 ? 113, Thuc. iii 39, 4
ei'wOe 5% T1311 ne? hewv ais 6. 11 ude-ra Kai 61' e? haxio'rou 6. 1rp0066-
my'ros elirpaEia ? )fiy, e? : iifipw Tpe? -rrcw.
214. 111196. Tfiv 6. 56am: 2 ? 8. d? oppfi Mk, 'a source
of infatuation'; Kamiis 4>poveiv, 'folly'; a frequent phrase in
Greek Tragedy. 81. 61119 : 3 ? 19.
(idiopwfi means (1) a starting-plane, u commcmz'menl, a base of operations,
Thuc. i 90 uvaxe? prla-iv 1e mt unpoppall/I hence the cause, occasion, pretext of
a thing, Isocr. 4 ? 61, Eur. H20. 1239 Ae? ymv 6450 uni, Dem. 18 ? 156 6 vii;
4i? opmi? mum: Kai. 76. ; flpb? dd? |$ napaaxdw: 2) the means with which
one begins a thing, 3 ? 33 adaopuais s1ri. 1d e? 'Ew 16w ii-yue? hiv, [13] ? 19 r'qv
11"; woken>>; 86501 ddznppfiyv e? 'xmv: means of any kind, 21 ? 137 ri'v d? opluiv
('wealth '), finep io-xvpbv nomi- . 'rov'rovi, lb. 98 Tip! 61? . 81' iv beL? u,
ib. ii? opn? 7v ('resources') e? ? ' uni; dam->9 6e8me?
vm: resources in general,
19 ? 343 xpfi/Jm'u. 8651! ! drpoppfiv, 24 ? 52 1b 8511794" Kai. "z'ni'a'uydmpa:
inc-review e'xov-ra; ddmppniv ('advantage wwans of support, [61] ? 6 Ti;
noun"; ? 1Mas dipopmiv, ib. 22 rAzinI/G a? opiuis (' materials fur') Ae? ywv, 2
? 22 1n\u'ou9 Mopudq (' claims') :1; Ti) 1311! 1mpd. raw OQIBII divouw Exew, and
[11] ? 16, Ep. 1 4 d? 06vovs iiqSopmi; (' means of discussing') bu {an-Map}! de
a'vmbe'psw w;in means of war, such as money, men and ships, 4 ? 29, 9
? 70, 14 ? ? 29, 30; 18 ? 233, 20 ? 68, 23 ? 71; 8. 150 capital 36 ? 11 61 iv
281a n; d? opniq mm, 1rpr 111'" rpmre? g'y, 'had he had any wpitnl of his
own invested in the bank,' lb. 44 via-1L: dipopuiy "GUI-BI! ? u~n psyim wpb:
pfl'Afl-TLflfl-e? v, 'l'or money-making the best capital of all is good credit';
ll). ? ? 12, 13, 14; 45 ? ? 5, 47.
216. woMe? KLs--eivut: 20 ? 50 1611 781p dv0pdnrwv oi. whe'iaroi
K112111741: ,ue? v 76. 70. 06. 1'93 K0. th fiovheiieo'fiaz Kai 111786116: Ira-ra-
(ppm/sill, ? vhd716w 6' 017K e'ae? houm 70? ; (1010? : 'rpb1rocs. Xen. Oyr.
vii 5, 76. The converse of this 'yvu'mn is cited in 2 ? 26.
16 dmhdgm: Art. with Infi, used as subject, especially with
e? avlu. See also 2 ? 20 To Ka-ropfiofiv (Goodwin MT. ? ? 790, 745).
? 24 l. 218. Tfiv duo. uplav--xutpbv--vopla-uwas, 'regarding
his difficulty as your opportunity'; 45 ? 70, Lys. 31 ? 17
of: 'rd b/Le? rspa duo'ruxvina-ra sii'ruxvi/Lara e? 'ye'ye? va, Livy iv 58
tanlmn abfuit ut ex "incomnwdo alieno sua awasio peteratu'r,
Plancus in Oic. 11d Fam. x 4, 4 ne . . nostm male suam patent
occasioncm. Whiston quotes O'Connell's saying England's meal
is Ireland's opportunity.
219. e? 'roipws o'vve? puo-Qm. in)>>, 'readily help in bearing the
burden of war'; Thuc. iv 10 (ii/6pc: oi invapdnsvor 'rofide 106
Kwde? vou, Eur. 07'. 757 (Tuvnpd/mv ? 6vou 0'01 #:111pr 01'" 1'17 1'qu
is supplied by the schol.
220. wpec'fievope? vovs, 'sending envoys'; Thuc. i 92, iv 45,
vi 104, viii 5. Hf 8. Sci (ad iwgotia cumnda quae curari
? ? 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
? I ? ? 24-26 FIRST OLYNTHIAG 151
oportot GHSchaefcr): sc. rpeofieueadal. ? 2, 2 ? 11: 'ero
required ' ( K. ) seems less correct.
222. hoyugope? vovs, el. K'rh. : 21 ? 209.
224. wpbs rfige? pq: sc. Ti) hue-re? pa, 'on our frontier,' 4 ? 32.
miss av_ 96v: a direct question vividly used instead
of a"; dv--e? 'hdot (as in 20 ? 87), cp. 21 ? 209 51101416006 . . 'rlvo:
o'u'ryvdmns . . Tuxefv 8. 11 ol'ea'de. m3; . . oico'fls): 6 ? 20.
225. {Pl-(0. ), 'and then,' 2 ? 26, 4 ? 43, 6 ? 35, 8 ? 20, 9 ? ?
13, 18, etc. p. 118") must be taken with the Inf. TI'OLfiU'dL.
226. el. Se? vavr' ixeivos, 'if he had the power' to make you
suffer (implied in mieorr' (iv). rail-re. resumes the pre-
ceding 6. .
227. o": 'rohpfio'ere; the construction has here changed
from p. 118") into 06. After 'rui'n'n. 'Il'Otfid'Gl- Kmpbv {Xovres we
may imagine that the orator pauses, and, abandoning the
previous construction, breaks off with the energetic question
01': 'rohpfic'ere; But for this change of construction, 01': would
not have been used. The transition to the interrogative is less
violent in Lys. 12 ? 36 06K 0171! (Sandy, cl 'roi'ls ,ue? v arpar'q'yoz'ls
Gard-up e? fi'n/sie? o'a'rc, Tori-revs de? 51'7 . . 015K fipa xpi] al'rroz'zs Kal. 'rol'ls
raidas Kohdfeo'flcu ;
? 25 l. 281. dv-re? xn, 'hold out'; 2 ? 10.
233. Tfiv \'rlre? pxouo'av Kal. 'rfiv olxelav rafimv, 'this land
which is already ours and is our very own. ' Thuc. vi 69, 3
'AO-qva'ioz p. 611 1repi T6 11']: dhhm-plas oiKelav 0X62" . . 'Ap'yel'm oe?
"rip! urdpxouo'av 0'1];ch warpida . . miluv e? moeiv. The text
refers to Attica (not to Macedonia, as held by Voemel). The
Art. is repeated for additional emphasis; 19 ? 311 Thu bola. >>
Kai 1'1'711 ducalav ? fi? oln
234. 6.
