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Aratus (3.2-3.3)

urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0007.tlg063.perseus-eng2:3.2-3.3
Refs {'start': {'reference': '3.2', 'human_reference': 'Chapter 3 Section 2'}, 'end': {'reference': '3.3', 'human_reference': 'Chapter 3 Section 3'}}
Ancestors [{'reference': '3'}]
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And indeed even his statues have plainly an athletic look, and the sagacity and majesty of his countenance do not altogether disown the athletes full diet and wielding of the mattock. Wherefore his cultivation of oratory was perhaps less intense than became a man in public life; and yet he is said to have been a more ornate speaker than some think who judge from the Commentaries which he left; these were a bye-work, and were composed in haste, off-hand, and in the words that first occurred to him in the heat of contest.

Some time after the escape of Aratus, Abantidas was slain by Deinias and Aristotle the logician. The tyrant was wont to attend all their public disputations in the market-place and to take part in them; they encouraged him in this practice, laid a plot, and took his life. Paseas also, the father of Abantidas, after assuming the supreme power, was treacherously slain by Nicocles, who then proclaimed himself tyrant.

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