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Against Aristogeiton I (68)

urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0014.tlg025.perseus-eng2:68
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Or because, as long as the present laws and constitution stand, he cannot clear himself of these reproaches? Then why is he well-disposed to you? It is because, in his own words, he is impudent. Why is the impudent man so called save because, being lost to a sense of shame, he dares to state what is not, and never will be, true? And that is precisely what the defendant does.

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