Chap.

 1 Miltiad|        such an age that his fellow citizens might not only hope well
 2 Miltiad|       Eretria, carried off all the citizens of the place,19 and sent
 3 Miltiad| aggrandizement of any one of their citizens. Miltiades having been much
 4 Themist|    increased the confidence of the citizens, not only as to the struggle
 5   Cimon|      thither ten thousand Athenian citizens as a colony. He also, in
 6 Thrasib|       death, a great number of the citizens whom |345 fortune had spared
 7  Epamin|            to observe what sort of citizens each city had produced,
 8  Epamin|            as the slaughter of the citizens continued, confined himself
 9   Attic|         other (the feelings of the citizens being divided, as some favoured
10   Attic|      sufficient hatred towards bad citizens. ~X. Being under the guidance
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