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Phocion the Good
Diogenes Laertius, Book 6 §76
<blockquote>When, thirdly, the father himself arrived, he was just as much attracted to the pursuit of philosophy as his sons and joined the circle – so magical was the spell which the discourses of Diogenes exerted. Amongst his hearers was Phocion surnamed the Honest, and Stilpo the Megarian, and many other men prominent in political life.
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Suda, Phi 362
<blockquote>Of Aigina [Myth, Place]. He came to Athens on a sightseeing trip but heard Diogenes [lecturing] and became a philosopher. His father sent his brother out after him, who himself had the same experience; and when their father returned to look for the pair of them, he also became a philosopher. Another associate of his was Phokion the Good. After his death [Diogenes] was buried in Corinth, and there is a dog on his gravestone. And he was honoured in Sinope with a statue and an epigram [which read]: “time makes even gold grow old; but your renown, Diogenes, not all eternity will destroy. For you alone showed mortals the glory of a self-sufficient life and the easiest path of existence.”
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Aelian, Varia Historia XIII.41
<blockquote>Chap. XLI. Of Phocion. They who are to die with Phocion making lamentation ; Phocion said, “Then you are not proud, ô Thudippus, of dying with Phocion.”
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