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for this may fairly be added to the character which Stesimbrotus has given of him. They accused him, in his younger years, of cohabit- ing with his own sister Elpinice, who, indeed, otherwise had no very clear reputation, but was reported to have been over intimate with Polygnotus, the painter ; and hence, when he painted the Trojan women in the porch, then called the Plesianactium, and now the Poecile, he made Laodice a portrait of her. Polygnotus was not an ordinary mechanic, nor was he paid for this work, but out of a desire to please the Athenians, painted the por- tico for nothing. So it is stated by the historians, and in the following verses by the poet Melanthius : — Wrought by his hand the deeds of heroes grace At his own charge our temples and our Place.* Some affirm that Elpinice lived with her brother, not secretly, but as his married wife, her poverty excluding her from any suitable match. But afterward, when Cal- lias, one of the richest men of Athens, fell in love with her, and proffered to pay the fine the father was con- demned in, if he could obtain the daughter in marriage, with Elpinice's own consent, Cimon betrothed her to Cal- lias. There is no doubt but that Cimon was, in general, of an amorous temper. For Melanthius, in his elegies, rallies him on his attachment for Asteria of Salamis, and again for a certain Mnestra. And there can be no doubt of his unusually passionate affection for his lawful wife Isodice,
- The agora, the public meeting for example, at Venice, still gives
or market-place ; the place found the image of it. In northern towns, in every Greek town, where, as the shelter from the weather confines Persian noble scoffingly said, " they within doors much that in Greece met together to cheat each other " ; was done under the open sky, the scene, however, not of business or under colonnades ; yet the Ex- only, but of politics, law, and amuse- change, in some cases, shows a re- ment. The Place of the cities of semblance, southern Europe, that of St. Mark,