78 ARISTO TLE 'S POLZTICS.
K(Y;Iuas, sc. 6 lrokinjs gathered from the previous sentence.
6 ydp YQOS iuxb oi8cpiau ZXF; npbs rb db'dar djv rap6 rb c'80~,
TO~O 6' oh y;vcrai ri pj bd xpdvov a'hjdos, Surf rb ;gSios prraBdXXrru (II:
ri)v inapydvrou u6pov cis ;ripour uo'povs K~WO&S dudc6j lrorciv hi rrjv
70; udpov bhvap~v ,. Zxci pcyd'hqv Sta+pdv.
Cp. Plat. Laws i. 634 D, rt rtv KQAAIUT~V bv el? dpwu pi [qrc;v r&"
viov pq6iua F)&, lroia rtaxts ahtu +j pj rakis Zxci and Arist. Xet. ii.
3, 995 a. 3, j'hL~v 82 iuxh ~XFL rb u;uqeeE oi vdpm 8qho~uw, iu 0:s ~h
pv6'bSq ra'l lrarBaprb8q pFi[ov IUX&L roii y~u&uuc~u acp; oArirv 6d rb Zdos.
- 24, 25.
:xcr prydhqv Gra@opdv, lit. ' makes a great difference.'
In this chapter Aristotle tacitly assumes or perhaps acquiesces in
the popular belief that Lycurgus is the author of all Spartan insti-
tutions. He vas supposed to be the founder of the Spartan
constitution, as Solon of the Athenian, or as King Alfred of the
ancient English laws. The Ephoralty is apparently attributed to
him; yet elsewhere (v. 11. $8 2, 3) Theopompus, a later king of
Sparta, is said to have introduced this new power into the state.
0, I.
0, 1, cZ rr rpAs TI)Y C'addcorv Kal T~V rpdnov intvauriws T~S ~potctpr'~tp aGrois
ri rr, sc. wrvopo8;qrar : Ka'r rbv rpdnov following rppds T+ Grdb'EuLv.
npoxcipi'qs ahoir, i.e. I)* ' H iiich is proposed to the citizens,' nohirair
understood from noXrrr& supra; or 2) ' which legislators set before
themselves ' referring to vopo&'rai implied in vcvopodi'r~rar : cp. 4
iord8rars ro7 vopo8c'rou at the end of this chapter ($ 33).
lro'hrsrias.
- r$u rtu drayrtalov u,p'hjv.
' Leisure or relief from the necessary cares of life.' The constmc-
tion is singular and rare in prose, yet not really different from & TLVI
oxokjj KQKOG of Soph. Oed. Tyr. 1286. So Plat. Rep. ii. 370 C
drav cls h, uxohjv rtu akwu Zywu, rrp'pdwg.
- T< yip emahiu mufurcia lrohhdKls inib'cro roir Brmdois, 6poios 6i
Ka'l rok Ad~ouw 0: Ehms* Bump yhp w%pc;ovres rot drvxyrj,,mr
&aTtho;utv.
Cp. Laws vi. 776 C, D: 'I am not surprised, Megillus, for the
state of Helots among the Lacedaemonians is of all Hellenic forms
of slavery the most controverted and disputed about, some approving