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Second Olynthiac (28)

urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0014.tlg002.perseus-eng2:28
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Why is it, think you, men of Athens, that all the generals you dispatchif I am to tell you something of the truth about themleave this war to itself and pursue little wars of their own? It is because in this war the prizes for which you contend are your own—(if, for instance, Amphipolis is captured, the immediate gain will be yours)—while the officers have all the dangers to themselves and no remuneration; but in the other case the risks are smaller and the prizes fall to the officers and the soldiersLampsacus, for example, and Sigeum, and the plunder of the merchant-ships. So they turn aside each to what pays him best.

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