This text is part of:
View text chunked by:
- collection : letter : section
[9] These renegades, if we had any sense, we should not be permitting to come together into bands or, led by any chance leaders, to form armed contingents, composed of roving forces more numerous and powerful than are the troops of our own citizen forces. These armies do damage to only a small part of the domain of the king of Persia, but every Hellenic city they enter they utterly destroy, killing some, driving others into exile, and robbing still others of their possessions1;
1 See Introd. to Isoc. 4, Vol. I, p. 117; cf. Isoc. 4.167-168.