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When the spoils had been divided, the Greeks sailed to the Isthmus,
where a prize of valour was to be awarded to the man who, of all the
Greeks, had shown the most merit during the war. When the chiefs
were all come, they met at the altar of Neptune, and took the ballots
wherewith they were to give their votes for the first and for the second
in merit. Then each man gave himself the first vote, since each
considered that he was himself the worthiest; but the second votes were
given chiefly to Themistocies. In this way, while the others
received but one vote apiece, Themistocles had for the second prize a
large majority of the suffrages.
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