10 Grundy, , 1 230Google Scholar n.l, infers from Thucydides’ silence on Eukles’ fate that he was not banished. But then Thucydides mentions his own exile only in a quite different context and for a different reason, so that his silence cannot be given much weight. Grundy also notes that the Oinobios of Dekeleia who was a strategos in 410 (Meiggs & Lewis, Greek Historical Inscriptions No. 89, line 47) may have been a son of Eukles, and the son’s political success would be unlikely were his father in disgrace. This might be a useful point did it not rest on the most speculative of identifications.