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Near the votive offering of the Tarentines is a treasury of the Sicyonians, but there is no treasure to be seen either here or in any other of the treasuries. The Cnidians brought the following images to Delphi: Triopas, founder of Cnidus, standing by a horse, Leto, and Apollo and Artemis shooting arrows at Tityos, who has already been wounded in the body.
These stand by the treasury of the Sicyonians. The Siphnians too made a treasury, the reason being as follows. Their island contained gold mued to pay the tithe until greed made them omit the tribute, when the sea flooded their mines and hid them from sight.
The people of Lipara too dedicated statues to commemorate a naval victory over the Etruscans. These people were colonists from Cnidus, and the leader of the colony is said to have been a Cnidian, whose name was Pentathlus according to a statement made by the Syracusan Antiochus, son of Xenophanes, in his history of Sicily. He says also that they built a city on Cape Pachynum i
Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, Book 8, chapter 35 (search)
Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, Book 8, chapter 41 (search)
Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, Book 8, chapter 42 (search)
Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, Book 8, chapter 43 (search)
Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, Book 8, chapter 44 (search)
Thucydides, The Peloponnesian War, Book 8, chapter 52 (search)
After this Alcibiades set to work to persuade
Tissaphernes to become the friend of the Athenians.
Tissaphernes, although afraid of the Peloponnesians because they had more
ships in Asia than the Athenians, was yet disposed to be persuaded if he
could, especially after his quarrel with the Peloponnesians at Cnidus about
the treaty of Therimenes.
The quarrel had already taken place, as the Peloponnesians were by this
time actually at Rhodes; and in it the original argument of Alcibiades touching the liberation of
all the towns by the Lacedaemonians had been verified by the declaration of
Lichas, that it was impossible to submit to a convention which made the king
master of all the states at any former time ru
E. T. Merrill, Commentary on Catullus (ed. E. T. Merrill), Poem 36 (search)
C. Valerius Catullus, Carmina (ed. Sir Richard Francis Burton), ON "THE ANNALS "—A SO-CALLED POEM OF VOLUSIUS (search)
ON "THE ANNALS "—A SO-CALLED POEM OF VOLUSIUS
Volusius' Annals, paper scum-bewrayed!
Fulfil that promise erst my damsel made;
Who vowed to Holy Venus and her son,
Cupid, should I return to her anon
And cease to brandish iamb-lines accurst,
The writ selected erst of bards the worst
She to the limping Godhead would devote
With slowly-burning wood of illest note.
This was the vilest which my girl could find
With vow facetious to the Gods assigned.
Now, 0 Creation of the azure sea,
Holy Idalium, Urian havenry
Haunting, Ancona, Cnidos' reedy site,
Amathus, Golgos, and the tavern hight
Durrachium-thine Adrian abode—
The vow accepting, recognize the vowed
As not unworthy and unhandsome naught.
But do ye meanwhile to the fire be brought,
That teem with boorish jest of sorry blade,
Volusius' Annals, paper scum-bewrayed.