Page:Essays and Addresses.djvu/454

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when it views his work from the artistic side. Thucydides must always hold his fame by a double right; not only as a thinker who, in an age of transitional scepticism, clearly apprehended the value of disciplined intelligence as a permanent force in practical politics, but also as a writer who knew how to make great events tell their own story greatly; and the dramatic power of the immortal History is heightened by its dramatic reserve.


TABLE OF THE SPEECHES.

[Asterisks mark those delivered at Athens before the exile of Thucydides.]

Book.   Date B.C.    
I. 32—36 433 Corcyrean
Envoys to the Athenian Ecclesia.*
37—43 Corinthian
68—72 432 Corinthian
Envoys in the first Congress at Sparta.
73—78 Athenian
80—85 King Archidamus
to the Spartan Assembly.
86 The Ephor Sthenelaidas
120—24 Corinthian Envoys in the second Congress at Sparta.
140—44 Pericles to the Athenian Ecclesia.*
II. 35—46 431 Funeral Oration of Pericles.*
60—64 430 Pericles to the Athenian Ecclesia.*
III. 9—14 428 Mitylenean Envoys to the Peloponnesians at Olympia.
37—40 427 Cleon
to the Athenian Ecclesia.*
42—48 Diodotus
53—59 Plataeans
to the Spartan Judges.
61—67 Thebans