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Again, in the Ctimemus' os Euripides : For Um Who tosis, God helpa; 'Md in the Minos of Sophocles :
And frem tho Alexander of Euripides:
And hom the Hipponos os Sophocles:
Abovo the gods' best inst in men ranis Wine, In meas e Munk; but in excisa the morat. no play bearing this namo is mentioned by any one esse, Various conjectures have been mado M to tho true reading; among Wbita are Clymene Temonoa or Temenides. Odysso, Tis. 187. In Theognis the quotation standa thua:
οἶνον τοι πίνειν πουλον κακόν, εν δε τις αυτὸν Πίνη επισταμένως, οὐ κακὰ ἀλλ' ἀγαθός.
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Besides, Callias the comic poet having Written :
And Antimachus of Teos having mid:
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As destined long to live, and yet nos long, Think of thyself, Euripides Writes:
Similarly also, the comic poet Diphilus having said:
ris life of men is prone to change,
man ol mortal mould his life has passed om suffering Dee. Nor to the end again Baa continued prospero .
Similarlyy speas to thee Plato, Writing of man as a creature subject to change.
Thero is no liso mesin has not iis own illa. Pains, cares, thesis, and anxieties, dismae; And Death, as a physician, coming, grues Rest to their victima in his quiet aloep.
Furthermore, Euripides having said:
The tragic poet Theodectes similarly Writes:
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Aristophanes, the comic poet, 'ites: old man to a young mila scita but sit. For Anacreon, having Written:
For lovo not only meu attachs, d momen; but disturbario socia ol goci above, and to the sea
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to adduce a se instances from them. For Alcmaeon os Crotona having said, It is easter to Mard against a manwho is an enemy than a friend. ' Sophocles Wroto in tho Antigone:
For What fore more grievous than a bad friend 7
d Xenophon inid: μ No man can injure enemies in anyoster Way than is appearing to be a triend. d Euripides having said in Telephus:
Thrasymachus, in the oration for the Larissaeans, says: Shali me be flaves to Archelaus Greolis to a Barbarian ' VAnd Orpheus haring said :
and Heraclitus, pulting together the expressiona from theselines, Writes thus:
And Athamas the Pythagorean having said, Thus Wasproduced the beginning of tho universe; and there are four motS-fire, Water, air, earth: ior from these is the origin tion os What is produced,V- Empedocles of Agrigentum
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Hyperides himself also says, Thero is no seatura os thomind impressed on the countenance of men.' Again, Stasinus having composed tho line :
Herodotus sus, Mother and sather being no more, I shallnot havo anothor brother.' In addition to these, The pompus having Written:
Αnd beforo him Sophocles in Peleus:
Antipho tho orator sm, For the nursing os the old is lihotho nursing of children.' Also the philosopher Plato sus, The old man then, as seems, Will be twico a child.' Further,
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Andocides the orator says, The preparation, gentiemen of the jury, and the ea rness of our enemies, almost ali ofyou know.' Similarly also Nicias, in tho speech on tho deposit, against Lysias, says, The preparation and tho sage nem os the adversaries, ye see, O gentiemen of the jury.' Astor him AEschines says, u see the preparation, o menos Athens, and the lino of batile.' Again, Demosthenes having said, What geni and what canvassing, O men os Athens, have been employod in this contest, I thinh almostali of you are aware ; V and Philinus similarly, What geat, What forming of tho lino of batile, gentiemen os the jurn have tahen placo in this contost, I thinh not one of you is ignorant.' Isocrates, again, having said, As it she wero related to his mealth, not him,' Lysias says in the Orphios, And ho was plainly related not to the persons, but to the
Insisad ol M in the teri, me read frem Thucydides
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Archinus sus, All men are bound to die eithor sooner orlater; ' and Demosthenes, To ali men death is the ond of lila, though ono fhould heep himself shut up in a coop. d Herodotus, again, having said, in his discondie about Glaucus tho Spartan, that the Pythian said, In the case os the Deitri in say and to do aro equivalent,r Aristophanes said:
For to think and to do are equivalent.
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Euripides transcribes in Chrysippua:
But nothing dies of thino that ars; but being dissolved,
And Plato haring said, in the Republie, that Women Were common, Euripides Writes in the Protesilaus
Further, Euripides having Written :
For to tho temperate enough suffcient ia,'
Epicurus expressib says, Suffciency is the greatest richusos ali Again, Aristophanes having Written :
Epicurus sus, The greatest fruit os righteousnem is tranquilliUILet these species, then, of Greeli plagiarism os sentimenta, being such, stanti as suffcient for a clear specimen to himwho is capille os perceiving. d not only have they been detected pirating and paraphrasing thoughis and expressions, as Will bo fhown; butthoy mill also be convicted of the possession of What isonti ly stolen. For stealing entirely What is the productionos othera, thoy havo publishod ii as their om; as Eugamonos Cyrene did tho entire book On the Thesprotians from Musaeus, and Pisander os Camirus tho Heraclea os Pisinusol Lindus, and Ρanyasis of Halicarnassus, tho capture ofoechalia frem Cleophilus of Samos. You mill also find that Homer, the great poet, tosi from
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Ma man imina a luxuriant inoot os olive. λ
And in tho Theogony, it is sald by Orpheus of Monos:
and so sortii, taking it mord for Word from the poet Musaeus. And Aristophanes the comic poet has, in the first of tho
ramophorioausor, transferred the wotas hom the Empia prament of Cratinus. And Plato the comic poet, and Aristophanes in Doedalus, steat i in one another. Coeat ,
composed by Araros,' the son os Aristophanes, Was by tho comic poet Ρhilemon altered, and made into the comedycallud Hypobolimaeu8. Eumelus and Acusilaus the historiographora changed the contents of Hesiod into prose, and published them as theirown. Gorgias of Leontium and Eudemus of Naxus, the historians, stole frona Melesagoras. And, besides, there is Bionos Proconnesus, Who epitomiged and transcribed the writingsos the ancient Cadmus, and Archilochus, and Aristocles, and Leandrus, and Hellanicus, and Hecataeus, und Androtion, and Philochorus. Dieuchidas os Megara transferred thebe nning of his troatise hom tho Detiealion of Ηellanicus. I pass ovor in silenco Heraclitus of Ephesus, Who took a very great deal srom Orpheus.
From 'thagoras Plato derived the immortali of thosoul ; and ho from the Egyptians. And many of the Platonisis composed books, in Which they shoW that the Stoics, as κε said in the beginning, and Aristolle, tooh thomost and principat os thela domas from Plato. Epicurus
Iliad, xvii. 53. i.e. Polyphemus, Odyss. ix. 372. According to the correction os Casauhon, Who, instein os αραρότως of the tot, reada 'Αραρώς. Othera ascribed the comedy to Aristophanea himsest.