His breeds of horses were famous the world over, and so was the number of his racing-chariots. No one else ever entered seven of these at the Olympic games—neither commoner nor king—but he alone. And his coming off first, second, and fourth victor (as Thucydides says;1 third, according to Euripides), transcends in the splendor of its renown all that ambition can aspire to in this field.
1 In a speech of Alcibiades, Thuc. 6.16.2.
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