<TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:py="http://codespeak.net/lxml/objectify/pytype" py:pytype="TREE"><text><body><div type="translation" n="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0034.tlg001.perseus-eng2" xml:lang="eng"><div type="textpart" subtype="section" xml:base="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0034.tlg001.perseus-eng2" n="35"><p>Leocrates did nothing of the sort. Though he has condemned himself as a traitor to his
          country, a traitor to his gods and to the laws, he will ask you when you vote to
          contradict his own admissions and his own evidence. How can it be right, when a man has
          refused a fair offer and in many other ways also has robbed himself of the means of
          defence, for you to let him mislead your judgement on crimes to which he has confessed?
        </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" xml:base="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0034.tlg001.perseus-eng2" n="36"><p rend="align(indent)">So much for the challenge and the crime. I think you have
          been shown well enough, gentlemen, that that part is beyond dispute. I want now to remind
          you what emergencies, what great dangers the city was facing when Leocrates turned traitor
          to it. Please take the decree of Hyperides, clerk, and read it.
        </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" xml:base="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0034.tlg001.perseus-eng2" n="37"><p rend="align(center)"><label>Decree</label></p><p rend="align(indent)">You hear the decree, gentlemen. It provided that the
          Council of Five Hundred should go down to the <placeName key="perseus,Piraeus">Piraeus</placeName> armed, to consult for the protection of that harbor, and that it
          should hold itself ready to do whatever seemed to be in the people’s interest. And yet, if
          the men who had been exempted from military service so that they might deliberate upon the
          city’s affairs were then playing the part of soldiers, do you think that the alarms which
          had taken hold upon the city were any trivial or ordinary fears? </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" xml:base="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0034.tlg001.perseus-eng2" n="38"><p>Yet it was then that this man Leocrates made off himself—a runaway from the city; it was
          then that he conveyed to safety his available property and sent back for the sacred images
          of his family. To such a pitch did he carry his treason that, so far as his decision went,
          the temples were abandoned, the posts on the wall unmanned and the town and country left
          deserted. </p></div><div type="textpart" subtype="section" xml:base="urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0034.tlg001.perseus-eng2" n="39"><p>And yet in those days, gentlemen, who would not have pitied the city, even though he were
          not a citizen but only an alien who had lived among us in previous years? Surely there was
          no one whose hatred of the people or of <placeName key="perseus,Athens">Athens</placeName>
          was so intense that he could have endured to see himself remain outside the army. When the
          defeat and consequent disaster had been reported to the people and the city was tense with
          alarm at the news, the people’s hope of safety had come to rest with the men of over
          fifty. </p></div></div></body></text></TEI>