128 On tie Englijh Conjunction 7" 00, 



In this example, by means of ft, each fucceeding article is re- 

 prefented as TO, /. e. additional to the preceding article. " Se- 

 " ven tripods ten talents of gold TOO" /'. e. " Ten talents of 

 " gold additional to the feven tripods." This inflance is pre- 

 cifely nmilar to that formerly qtvoted from DEN HAM, except 

 that the object governed by ft, and to which the fucceeding 

 article is added, is not repeated along with Si. In DEN HAM 

 it is, 



" Wifdom he has, and, TO bis wifdonl, courage" 



which, if expreffed according to the Greek idiom, in the exam- 

 ple quoted from HOMER, would be, 



" Wifdom he has, and courage TOO." 



In the above example, then, the word ft is ufed in the fpecial 

 meaning of additional to, and the object which it governs is not 

 formally Jlated, but is collected from a preceding noun. 



Again, XENOPHON, defcribing the Perfian polity, fays, 



" AiJa<r>s<r TB; TrutSag iruqtgotvt/W jtjWxgg-t AE irnfifo^ roif fj80-." 



" They teach the children temperance ; they teach them, TOO, 

 " obedience to the magiftrates." In this example, by means of 

 St, their teaching the children obedience to the magiftrates is repre- 

 fented as additional to their teaching them temperance. Here alfb the 

 object governed by S\ is not expreffed ; it is collected from the 

 preceding propojition SiS<rxs<ri -rat ir*i$t <rwpfo<ruviK. It is the amount 

 of that propofition, taken as a fubftantive. So HOMER, in the 

 beginning of the Iliad, fays, that the anger of ACHILLES 



A* ipS'i/xas; v)/ u X* { *'^ 



In this paffage, firft one event is Mated, " The anger of ACHIL- 

 '* LES brought numberlefs woes upon the Greeks ;" then another, 



