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[2] This period brought it to pass for the Athenians that they sinned against the divine powers to such an extent that, shortly before the Delphian affair,1 as Iphicrates was tarrying near Corcyra with a naval force and Dionysius the tyrant of Syracuse had shipped to Olympia and to Delphi statues cunningly wrought in gold and ivory, Iphicrates, chancing to fall in with the ships that were conveying these statues, seized them and sent word to the Athenian people inquiring what he should do with them; whereat the Athenians instructed him not to raise questions about what concerned the gods but to give his attention to seeing that his soldiers were well fed.

1 Perhaps on the occasion mentioned in Book 15.47.7.

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