Of his son, who was pert towards his mother, he said that the boy wielded more power than anybody else in Greece; for the Athenians ruled the Greeks, he himself ruled the Athenians, the boy's mother ruled himself, and the boy ruled the mother. 1
1 Cf. Moralia, 1 C; Plutarch's Life of Themistocles, chap. xviii. (121 B); and Life of Cato Major, chap. viii. (340 B).