sponding to the ar pow poola in an ordinary suit. In the case of the γραφή παρανόμων this was called υπωμοσία, a word commonly meaning an affidavit on which to ground an application for the postponement of a trial. The propriety of the name consists in the effect produced by the commencement of the γραφή παραvouwv, by which all further action in respect of the contemplated measure was suspended till the suit should be decided. And in many cases the result was the practical overthrow of a proposal, its mover not caring to proceed further in the face of the threatened action. In such a case he was said εάν τον νόμον εν ÚT Wuoolą. If he determined to contest the point, he met the υπωμοσία by an ανθυπωμοσία, an affidavit that he meant to defend the action, and then it proceeded in due course to trial in the Heliastic court. If the prosecution was successful, the case being an åywv tiuntós, he and the defendant respectively named what each considered an adequate penalty, and the court imposed whichever of the two it thought the more suitable. If the action failed, the measure assailed could be proceeded with from the exact point which it had reached when the útwuoo la was sworn against it ; but if it were already vóuos, the prosecutor seems, from the speech against Leptines, to have been bound to propose an alternative measure in its place. If the prosecutor failed to obtain one-fifth part of the votes, he was subject to a fine of a thousand drachmae, and incapable of exercising civic rights (átimos) till this was paid. In the case of the law of Leptines we find advocates appointed by the State (oúvôlkol) to undertake its defence, of whom Leptines himself was probably one ; but this would be because his measure was already law, and as such, under the protection of the State till sufficient cause was shown against it. INDEX. The numbers, except where otherwise signified, refer to the Sections of the Speech. "Αγχιστεία, 102. | Aorist and present contrasted 87, 147, 167. Apsephion, 1, 145. Archebius, 60. Areopagus, 157. Aristodemus, 52. Aristophon, 146. Asyndeton, 151. Attraction, 18, 35, 87, 97, 151. Athens, corn supply of, 31. wills at, 102. with rel. and opt., 55. Βουλή of 500, Exce. ii. 3. Bosporus, 33. Byzantium, 60. Γελωτοποιοί, 146. Γερουσία, 106. Γραμματεύς, 94. Γραφή παρανόμων, 34, Ex. ii. 8. Γυμνασιαρχία, Exc. i. 4. Gelarchus, 149. Gelon, 161. Gorgopas, 76. Δείνα, 106. Δέον, γίγνεσθαι εις, 26, 41. Διά, 58, 123. Διαγράφεσθαι, 145. Ηγεμόνες των συμμοριών, Exc. i. 8. "Ηρμοστε, 66. "Ήρωες επώνυμοι, 94, Exc. ii. 2. Four Hundred, The, 48. Funeral orations, 141. 18, 69, 127, Exc. i. 1 and 9. Heracleides, 60. Hermes' busts, 112. Hierum, 36. θαυμάσι ήλίκα, 41. θεσμοθέται, 90, Exc. ii. 7. Thasos, 59. Theban character, 109. Themistocles, 73. Theodosia, 30. Thirty tyrants, the, 11, 149. Thrasybulus, 48, 60, 68. Thrasybulus of Syracuse, 161. Thrasyllus, 48. Ισοτελείς, 29. Infinitive in limiting proposi- tions, 18. with άν, 109. Καλώς ποιoύντες, 110. Κατασκευάζειν, 91. Κλεψύδρα, 27. Κρίσις, 107. Callisthenes, 33. Τάσχειν with acc., 47, 119. 146 , Cnidus, 68. Conjunctive, deliberative, 8, 117. Conon, 68. Corinth, battle of, 52. Ctesippus, 1, 75, 82. Λαμπαδαρχία, Exc. i. 4. Προεδροι, Exe. ii., 4. Προθεσμία, 144, Exc. ii. 8. Πρόξενος, 132. Πρός, 25, 31, 164. adverbial, 112. Προσήκει, 54, 119. Πρόσοδον γράφεσθαι, Exc. ii. 3. Προτιθέναι λόγον, Exc. ii. 4. Προυπάρχειν, 46. Parataxis, 9, 90. Perfect, force of, 1. Pollio, 77. Polystratus, 84. Praevaricator, 145. Prohibitions, constructions in 123. Σίτησις, 107. Σιτοφύλακες, 32. Σκαφηφορία, Exc. i. 10. Σπουδαίος, 75. and fut. ind. 62, 133. | Συκοφαντία, 152. Σύνδικοι, 146, 152, Exc. ii. 5 and 8. Συντέλεια, 23, Exc. i. 7 and 8. Sicilian expedition, 42, 112, 161, Exc. i. 6. Strabax, 84. Τι μαθών ; 127. Τιθέναι νόμον, 3, 55, Exe. ii. 4. Τιθέσθαι νόμον, 3. Τιμητός αγών, Exc. ii. 8. Τριηραρχία, 18, Exc. i. 6 to 8. Τριήραρχοί, voluntary, Exc. i. 7. |