Chap.

 1  Pausan|              designs, fell under the suspicion of the Lacedaemonians. In
 2  Pausan|             but was not cleared from suspicion, for the belief still prevailed,
 3  Pausan|         eminent and famous a man, on suspicion only, but that they must
 4  Pausan|          Artabazus, and conceiving a suspicion that there was something
 5   Alcib| Lacedaemonians, IV.----Falling under suspicion among them, he flees to
 6   Alcib|            the people's liberty. The suspicion of this seemed chiefly to
 7    Dion|         persons, prompted by a false suspicion, killed the |358 innocent
 8   Datam|              should raise in him any suspicion of treachery), he neither
 9   Datam|            lest he should excite any suspicion), returned to the same place,
10  Epamin|           for Meneclidas lay under a suspicion of making too free with
11   Pelop|              their journey with less suspicion. Having arrived at the very
12  Agesil|              them, but even raised a suspicion that he must be a man not
13   Eumen|             the smoke of his camp, a suspicion was hinted to Eumenes that
14   Eumen|         usages of a camp, to raise a suspicion in the enemy that there
15 Phocion|    exasperated against him, from the suspicion that he had betrayed the
16  Hannib|         render Hannibal an object of suspicion to the king (as if, being
17   Attic|            since he avoided even the suspicion of evil practices. Hence
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