Scaife ATLAS

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Comparison of Pelopidas and Marcellus (2.2-3.1)

urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg023.perseus-eng2:2.2-3.1
Refs {'start': {'reference': '2.2', 'human_reference': 'Chapter 2 Section 2'}, 'end': {'reference': '3.1', 'human_reference': 'Chapter 3 Section 1'}}
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unless, indeed, it should be said that this exploit belongs rather to Epaminondas than to Pelopidas, as well as the victory at Leuctra, while Marcellus shared with no one the glory of his achievements. For he took Syracuse all alone, and routed the Gauls without his colleague, and when no one would undertake the struggle against Hannibal, but all declined it, he took the field against him, changed the aspect of the war, and was the first leader to show daring.

I cannot, indeed, applaud the death of either of them, nay, I am distressed and indignant at their unreasonableness in the final disaster. And I admire Hannibal because, in battles so numerous that one would weary of counting them, he was not even wounded. I am delighted, too, with Chrysantes, in the Cyropaedeia,[*] who, though his blade was lifted on high and he was about to smite an enemy, when the trumpet sounded a retreat, let his man go, and retired with all gentleness and decorum.

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