[135]
and yet even he admitted that the laws must be as
binding upon him as upon people without influence, and he stayed in that
building for many years, until he had repaid the money in his possession which
was adjudged to be public property; nor did Callistratus, who was in power, and
who was his nephew, try to make new laws to meet his particular case. Or take
Myronides; he was the son of that Archinus who occupied Phyle, and whom, after the gods, we have
chiefly to thank for the restoration of popular government, and who had achieved
success on many occasions both as statesman and as commander.
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