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In general, he bore himself haughtily towards the Barbarians, and like one fully persuaded of his divine birth and parentage, but with the Greeks it was within limits and somewhat rarely that he assumed his own divinity. However, in writing to the Athenians concerning Samos, he said: ‘I cannot have given you that free and illustrious city; for ye received it from him who was then your master and was called my father,’ meaning Philip.

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