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[3]

As it was, in the first place, a pestilential destruction fell upon them1 and devoured clean the prime of their youth and power. It weakened them in body and in spirit, and made them altogether wild against Pericles, so that, for all the world as the mad will attack a physician or a father, so they, in the delirium of the plague, attempted to do him harm, persuaded thereto by his enemies. These urged that the plague was caused by the crowding of the rustic multitudes together into the city,

1 430 B.C. Cf. Thuc. 2.47-54.

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