Go thy way, for a friend shalt thou be both to meThe vision being hard of interpretation, Astyphilus of Posidonia, an inspired man and an intimate of Cimon's, told him that it signified his death. He analyzed the vision thus: a dog is a foe of the man at whom it bays; to a foe, one cannot be a friend any better than by dying; the mixture of speech indicates that the enemy is the Mede, for the army of the Medes is a mixture of Hellenes and Barbarians.
and my puppies.
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He thought an angry bitch was baying at him, and that mingled with its baying it uttered a human voice, saying:—
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