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Alcibiades (31.6-32.1)

urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg015.perseus-eng2:31.6-32.1
Refs {'start': {'reference': '31.6', 'human_reference': 'Chapter 31 Section 6'}, 'end': {'reference': '32.1', 'human_reference': 'Chapter 32 Section 1'}}
Ancestors [{'reference': '31'}]
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and that the provisions already in the city were being consumed by Peloponnesians and Boeotians, while the Byzantians were starving, together with their wives and children. He had, therefore, not betrayed the city to its enemies, but set it free from war and its horrors, therein imitating the noblest Lacedaemonians, in whose eyes the one unqualifiedly honorable and righteous thing is their countrys good. The Lacedaemonians, on hearing this, were moved with sincere respect, and acquitted the men.

But Alcibiades, yearning at last to see his home, and still more desirous of being seen by his fellow citizens, now that he had conquered their enemies so many times, set sail.[*] His Attic triremes were adorned all round with many shields and spoils of war; many that he had captured in battle were towed along in his wake; and still more numerous were the figure-heads he carried of triremes which had been overwhelmed and destroyed by him. There were not less than two hundred of these all together.

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