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[8] I marvel also at those men who have ability in action or in speech that it has never occurred to them seriously to take to heart the conditions which affect all Greeks alike, or even to feel pity for the evil plight of Hellas, so shameful and dreadful, no part of which now remains that is not teeming full of war, uprisings, slaughter, and evils innumerable.1 The greatest share of these ills is the lot of the dwellers along the seaboard of Asia, whom by the treaty2 we have delivered one and all into the hands, not only of the barbarians, but also of those Greeks who, though they share our speech, yet adhere to the ways of the barbarians.
1 For this same complaint see Isoc. 4.170-171.
2 The Peace of Antalcidas, 387 B.C.