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Καλλατίας. For a discussion of this cannibalism and for modern instances cf. iv. 26 n.

The name Callatiae (from Sans Kâla = black) points to the aboriginal inhabitants of India; they are otherwise unknown except for a vague reference in Hecataeus (fr. 177, F. H. G. i. 12); perhaps they are the same as the Παδαῖοι of c. 99.

The passage from Pindar (fr. 169), which H. here quotes, is preserved in Plato, Gorg. 484 B, where it refers to a ‘natural law’ that ‘the stronger should rule the weaker’. νόμος πάντων βασιλεὺς θνατῶν τε καὶ ἀθανάτων:—οὗτος δὲ δή, φησίνἄγει δικαιῶν τὸ βιαιότατον ὑπερτάτᾳ χειρί. H., quoting from memory, gives the passage a more general sense. Myres, A. and C. p. 157, says that νόμος is ‘the formal expression of what actually happens . . .’, ‘it answers to our law of nature . . . a more or less accurate formulation of the actual course of events.’

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