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[40]

Now if he had distinguished himself in unimportant ways only, he would fittingly be thought worthy also of praise of like nature: but as it is, all would admit that of all blessings whether human or divine supreme power is the greatest, the most august, and the object of greatest strife. That man, therefore, who has most gloriously acquired the most glorious of possessions, what poet or what artificer of words1 could raise in a manner worthy of his deeds?

1 λόγων εὑρετής is found also in Isoc. 5.144. It means “prose-writer,” and refers especially to composers of “set discourses” or “show-pieces.”

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  • Commentary references to this page (3):
    • Edward S. Forster, Isocrates Cyprian Orations, 17
    • Edward S. Forster, Isocrates Cyprian Orations, 34
    • Edward S. Forster, Isocrates Cyprian Orations, 42
  • Cross-references in notes from this page (1):
    • Isocrates, To Philip, 144
  • Cross-references in general dictionaries to this page (1):
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