[Cyropaedia by Xenophon]@TWC D-Link book
Cyropaedia

BOOK VIII
101/102

Some scholars have also thought the style unlike Xenophon's, but it is clear from his marginal notes that Mr.
Dakyns did not lean towards this view.

To stress the degeneracy of the Persians is, no doubt, to make a curious comment on the institutions of "the born ruler," but on the other hand the preceding chapter (C7) is full of grave warnings, and, throughout, Xenophon has been at pains to insist that everything depends on the continuous and united effort of the ruling classes towards virtue and self-control.

Again, as Mr.Dakyns pointed out (in his _Sketch of Xenophon's Life_, Works, Vol.

I.p.
cxxxvii.), the epilogue bears a marked analogy to the account of Spartan degeneracy in c.xiv.of the _Laconian Polity_ (see Vol.II.p.

322), a chapter he took to be genuine.


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