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[15] If on the other hand, as you now maintain, you thought that he misrepresented the god and, out of partiality for certain persons, had made a false report to the people, rather than propose a decree disputing the dream you ought to have sent to Delphi, as the previous speaker said, and inquired the truth from the god. But instead of doing that, you proposed a decree, entirely conceived by yourself,1 against two tribes, a measure not only most unjust but self-contradictory also. This was what caused your conviction for illegal proposals. It was not the fault of Euxenippus.

1 I follow Colin's interpretation of the word αὐτοτελής in this passage, although it was often used technically to describe a decree laid before the people without previous consideration by the Council (see Hesychius, sv. αὐτοτελές ψήφισμα).

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