Perseus · Tufts
All Greek and Roman Materials
Collections: Classics · Papyri · Renaissance · London · California · Upper Midwest · Chesapeake · Boyle · Tufts History
Configure display · Help · Tools · Copyright · FAQ · Publications · Collaborations · Support Perseus
Classics:
Classics collection contents
About the Classics collection

Greek Hist. Overview
Art & Arch. Catalogs

Other Tools & Lexica

Plot:
  • sites in this speech
  • sites in this document
  • dates in this document

    Display text chunked by:
    speech
    section (default)

    Contents:
  • Speech 21: Against Meidias
  • Speech 22: Against Androtion
  • Speech 23: Against Aristocrates
  • Speech 24: Against Timocrates
  • Speech 25: Against Aristogeiton 1
  • Speech 26: Against Aristogeiton 2
  • Speech 27: Against Aphobus 1
  • Speech 28: Against Aphobus 2
  • Speech 29: Against Aphobus 3
  • Speech 30: Against Onetor 1
  • Demosthenes, Speeches 21-30

    Against Meidias

    Editions and translations: Greek | English
    Your current position in the text is marked in red. Click anywhere on the line to jump to another position.
    speech=21:section=6 speech=21:section=15 speech=21:section=25 speech=21:section=34 speech=21:section=44 speech=21:section=52 speech=21:section=57 speech=21:section=66 speech=21:section=76 speech=21:section=85 speech=21:section=95 speech=21:section=104 speech=21:section=114 speech=21:section=123 speech=21:section=133 speech=21:section=142 speech=21:section=152 speech=21:section=161 speech=21:section=171 speech=21:section=180 speech=21:section=190 speech=21:section=199 speech=21:section=209 speech=21:section=218 speech=22 speech=22:section=8 speech=22:section=18 speech=22:section=27 speech=22:section=37 speech=22:section=46 speech=22:section=56 speech=22:section=65 speech=22:section=75 speech=23:section=4 speech=23:section=14 speech=23:section=23 speech=23:section=33 speech=23:section=42 speech=23:section=51 speech=23:section=61 speech=23:section=70 speech=23:section=80 speech=23:section=89 speech=23:section=99 speech=23:section=108 speech=23:section=118 speech=23:section=127 speech=23:section=137 speech=23:section=146 speech=23:section=156 speech=23:section=165 speech=23:section=175 speech=23:section=184 speech=23:section=194 speech=23:section=203 speech=23:section=213 speech=24 speech=24:section=10 speech=24:section=19 speech=24:section=29 speech=24:section=38 speech=24:section=48 speech=24:section=57 speech=24:section=67 speech=24:section=76 speech=24:section=86 speech=24:section=95 speech=24:section=105 speech=24:section=114 speech=24:section=124 speech=24:section=133 speech=24:section=143 speech=24:section=152 speech=24:section=162 speech=24:section=171 speech=24:section=181 speech=24:section=190 speech=24:section=199 speech=24:section=209 speech=24:section=218 speech=25:section=8 speech=25:section=17 speech=25:section=27 speech=25:section=36 speech=25:section=46 speech=25:section=55 speech=25:section=65 speech=25:section=74 speech=25:section=84 speech=25:section=93 speech=26 speech=26:section=9 speech=26:section=19 speech=27 speech=27:section=9 speech=27:section=18 speech=27:section=28 speech=27:section=37 speech=27:section=47 speech=27:section=56 speech=27:section=66 speech=28:section=4 speech=28:section=14 speech=28:section=23 speech=29:section=7 speech=29:section=16 speech=29:section=26 speech=29:section=35 speech=29:section=45 speech=29:section=54 speech=30:section=2 speech=30:section=11 speech=30:section=21 speech=30:section=30

    Table of ContentsGo to Previous Next

    [66] These and all similar acts, Athenians, are partly excusable in a chorus-master who is carried away by emulation; but to harass a man with one's hostility, deliberately and on every occasion, and to boast one's own power as superior to the laws, that, by Heaven! is cruel and unjust and contrary to your interests. For if each man when he becomes chorus-master could foresee this result: “If So-and-so is my enemy--Meidias for example or anyone else equally rich and unscrupulous--first I shall be robbed of my victory, even if I make a better show than any of my competitors next I shall be worsted at every point and exposed to repeated insults:” who is so irrational or such a poor creature that he would voluntarily consent to spend a single drachma?



    There are a total of 3 comments on and cross references to this page.

    Cross references from Sir Richard Jebb, Commentary on Sophocles: Electra:
    * [1398-1510]

    Cross references from William Watson Goodwin, Syntax of the Moods and Tenses of the Greek Verb:
    689 [Indirect Quotation of Complex Sentences.]

    Cross references from Basil Lanneau Gildersleeve, Syntax of Classical Greek:
    3, 2, 24 [Vocative in exclamations.]


    Preferred URL for linking to this page: http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Dem.+21+66

    The Annenberg CPB/Project provided support for entering this text.

    This text is based on the following book(s):
    Demosthenes. Demosthenes with an English translation by A. T. Murray, Ph.D., LL.D. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1939.
    OCLC: 10903477
    ISBN: 0674993306, 0674993519

    Buy a copy of this text (not necessarily the same edition) from Amazon.com: vol. 1; vol. 2

    Previous Next