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<TEI.2><text><body><div1 type="book" n="6" org="uniform" sample="complete"><p><milestone unit="chapter" n="36" />

<milestone unit="section" n="1" />
<seg>"He is either a coward or not well affected to the state, whosoever he be, that wishes the Athenians not to be so mad as coming hither to fall into our power.</seg>
<seg>As for them that report such things as these and put you into fear, though I wonder not at their boldness, yet I wonder at their folly, if they think their ends not seen.</seg>

<milestone unit="section" n="2" />
<seg>For they that are afraid of anything themselves will put the city into affright that they may shadow their own with the common fear.</seg>
<seg>And this may the reports do at this time, not raised by chance, but framed on purpose by such as always trouble the state.</seg>

<milestone unit="section" n="3" />
<seg>But if you mean to deliberate wisely, make not your reckoning by the reports of these men but by that which wise men and men of great experience, such as I hold the Athenians to be, are likely to do.</seg>

<milestone unit="section" n="4" />
<seg>For it is not probable that, leaving the Peloponnesians and the war there not yet surely ended, they should willingly come hither to a new war no less the former, seeing, in my opinion, they may be glad that we invade not them, so many and so great cities as we are. </seg></p><p /></div1></body></text></TEI.2>