Chapter
Six
Beginning of the Peloponnesian
War -First Invasion of Attica -Funeral Oration of Pericles
The war between the Athenians and
Peloponnesians and the allies on either side now really begins. For now
all intercourse except through the medium of heralds ceased, and hostilities
were commenced and prosecuted without intermission. The history follows
the chronological order of events by summers and winters.
The thirty years' truce which was
entered into after the conquest of Euboea lasted fourteen years. In the
fifteenth, in the forty-eighth year of the priestess-ship of Chrysis at
Argos, in the ephorate of Aenesias at Sparta, in the last month but two
of the archonship of Pythodorus at Athens, and six months after the battle
of Potidaea, just at the beginning of spring, a Theban force a little over
three hundred strong, under the command of their Boeotarchs, Pythangelus,
son of Phyleides, and Diemporus, son of Onetorides, about the first watch
of the night, made an armed entry into Plataea, a town of Boeotia in alliance
with Athens. The gates were opened to them by a Plataean called Naucleides,
who, with his party, had invited them in, meaning to put to death the citizens
of the opposite party, bring over the city to Thebes, and thus obtain power
for themselves. This was arranged through Eurymachus, son of Leontiades,
a person of great influence at Thebes. For Plataea had always been at variance
with Thebes; and the latter, foreseeing that war was at hand, wished to
surprise her old enemy in time of peace, before hostilities had actually
broken out. Indeed this was how they got in so easily without being observed,
as no guard had been posted. After the soldiers had grounded arms in the
market-place, those who had invited them in wished them to set to work
at once and go to their enemies' houses. This, however, the Thebans refused
to do, but determined to make a conciliatory proclamation, and if possible
to come to a friendly understanding with the citizens. Their herald accordingly
invited any who wished to resume their old place in the confederacy of
their countrymen to ground arms with them, for they thought that in this
way the city would readily join them.
On becoming aware of the presence
of the Thebans within their gates, and of the sudden occupation of the
town, the Plataeans concluded in their alarm that more had entered than
was really the case, the night preventing their seeing them. They accordingly
came to terms and, accepting the proposal, made no movement; especially
as the Thebans offered none of them any violence. But somehow or other,
during the negotiations, they discovered the scanty numbers of the Thebans,
and decided that they could easily attack and overpower them; the mass
of the Plataeans being averse to revolting from Athens. At all events they
resolved to attempt it. Digging through the party walls of the houses,
they thus managed to join each other without being seen going through the
streets, in which they placed wagons without the beasts in them, to serve
as a barricade, and arranged everything else as seemed convenient for the
occasion. When everything had been done that circumstances permitted, they
watched their opportunity and went out of their houses against the enemy.
It was still night, though daybreak was at hand: in daylight it was thought
that their attack would be met by men full of courage and on equal terms
with their assailants, while in darkness it would fall upon panic-stricken
troops, who would also be at a disadvantage from their enemy's knowledge
of the locality. So they made their assault at once, and came to close
quarters as quickly as they could.
The Thebans, finding themselves outwitted,
immediately closed up to repel all attacks made upon them. Twice or thrice
they beat back their assailants. But the men shouted and charged them,
the women and slaves screamed and yelled from the houses and pelted them
with stones and tiles; besides, it had been raining hard all night; and
so at last their courage gave way, and they turned and fled through the
town. Most of the fugitives were quite ignorant of the right ways out,
and this, with the mud, and the darkness caused by the moon being in her
last quarter, and the fact that their pursuers knew their way about and
could easily stop their escape, proved fatal to many. The only gate open
was the one by which they had entered, and this was shut by one of the
Plataeans driving the spike of a javelin into the bar instead of the bolt;
so that even here there was no longer any means of exit. They were now
chased all over the town. Some got on the wall and threw themselves over,
in most cases with a fatal result. One party managed to find a deserted
gate, and obtaining an axe from a woman, cut through the bar; but as they
were soon observed only a few succeeded in getting out. Others were cut
off in detail in different parts of the city. The most numerous and compact
body rushed into a large building next to the city wall: the doors on the
side of the street happened to be open, and the Thebans fancied that they
were the gates of the town, and that there was a passage right through
to the outside. The Plataeans, seeing their enemies in a trap, now consulted
whether they should set fire to the building and burn them just as they
were, or whether there was anything else that they could do with them;
until at length these and the rest of the Theban survivors found wandering
about the town agreed to an unconditional surrender of themselves and their
arms to the Plataeans.
While such was the fate of the party
in Plataea, the rest of the Thebans who were to have joined them with all
their forces before daybreak, in case of anything miscarrying with the
body that had entered, received the news of the affair on the road, and
pressed forward to their succour. Now Plataea is nearly eight miles from
Thebes, and their march delayed by the rain that had fallen in the night,
for the river Asopus had risen and was not easy of passage; and so, having
to march in the rain, and being hindered in crossing the river, they arrived
too late, and found the whole party either slain or captive. When they
learned what had happened, they at once formed a design against the Plataeans
outside the city. As the attack had been made in time of peace, and was
perfectly unexpected, there were of course men and stock in the fields;
and the Thebans wished if possible to have some prisoners to exchange against
their countrymen in the town, should any chance to have been taken alive.
Such was their plan. But the Plataeans suspected their intention almost
before it was formed, and becoming alarmed for their fellow citizens outside
the town, sent a herald to the Thebans, reproaching them for their unscrupulous
attempt to seize their city in time of peace, and warning them against
any outrage on those outside. Should the warning be disregarded, they threatened
to put to death the men they had in their hands, but added that, on the
Thebans retiring from their territory, they would surrender the prisoners
to their friends. This is the Theban account of the matter, and they say
that they had an oath given them. The Plataeans, on the other hand, do
not admit any promise of an immediate surrender, but make it contingent
upon subsequent negotiation: the oath they deny altogether. Be this as
it may, upon the Thebans retiring from their territory without committing
any injury, the Plataeans hastily got in whatever they had in the country
and immediately put the men to death. The prisoners were a hundred and
eighty in number; Eurymachus, the person with whom the traitors had negotiated,
being one.
This done, the Plataeans sent a messenger
to Athens, gave back the dead to the Thebans under a truce, and arranged
things in the city as seemed best to meet the present emergency. The Athenians
meanwhile, having had word of the affair sent them immediately after its
occurrence, had instantly seized all the Boeotians in Attica, and sent
a herald to the Plataeans to forbid their proceeding to extremities with
their Theban prisoners without instructions from Athens. The news of the
men's death had of course not arrived; the first messenger having left
Plataea just when the Thebans entered it, the second just after their defeat
and capture; so there was no later news. Thus the Athenians sent orders
in ignorance of the facts; and the herald on his arrival found the men
slain. After this the Athenians marched to Plataea and brought in provisions,
and left a garrison in the place, also taking away the women and children
and such of the men as were least efficient.
After the affair at Plataea, the
treaty had been broken by an overt act, and Athens at once prepared for
war, as did also Lacedaemon and her allies. They resolved to send embassies
to the King and to such other of the barbarian powers as either party could
look to for assistance, and tried to ally themselves with the independent
states at home. Lacedaemon, in addition to the existing marine, gave orders
to the states that had declared for her in Italy and Sicily to build vessels
up to a grand total of five hundred, the quota of each city being determined
by its size, and also to provide a specified sum of money. Till these were
ready they were to remain neutral and to admit single Athenian ships into
their harbours. Athens on her part reviewed her existing confederacy, and
sent embassies to the places more immediately round Peloponnese- Corcyra,
Cephallenia, Acarnania, and Zacynthus- perceiving that if these could be
relied on she could carry the war all round Peloponnese.
And if both sides nourished the boldest
hopes and put forth their utmost strength for the war, this was only natural.
Zeal is always at its height at the commencement of an undertaking; and
on this particular occasion Peloponnese and Athens were both full of young
men whose inexperience made them eager to take up arms, while the rest
of Hellas stood straining with excitement at the conflict of its leading
cities. Everywhere predictions were being recited and oracles being chanted
by such persons as collect them, and this not only in the contending cities.
Further, some while before this, there was an earthquake at Delos, for
the first time in the memory of the Hellenes. This was said and thought
to be ominous of the events impending; indeed, nothing of the kind that
happened was allowed to pass without remark. The good wishes of men made
greatly for the Lacedaemonians, especially as they proclaimed themselves
the liberators of Hellas. No private or public effort that could help them
in speech or action was omitted; each thinking that the cause suffered
wherever he could not himself see to it. So general was the indignation
felt against Athens, whether by those who wished to escape from her empire,
or were apprehensive of being absorbed by it. Such were the preparations
and such the feelings with which the contest opened.
The allies of the two belligerents
were the following. These were the allies of Lacedaemon: all the Peloponnesians
within the Isthmus except the Argives and Achaeans, who were neutral; Pellene
being the only Achaean city that first joined in the war, though her example
was afterwards followed by the rest. Outside Peloponnese the Megarians,
Locrians, Boeotians, Phocians, Ambraciots, Leucadians, and Anactorians.
Of these, ships were furnished by the Corinthians, Megarians, Sicyonians,
Pellenians, Eleans, Ambraciots, and Leucadians; and cavalry by the Boeotians,
Phocians, and Locrians. The other states sent infantry. This was the Lacedaemonian
confederacy. That of Athens comprised the Chians, Lesbians, Plataeans,
the Messenians in Naupactus, most of the Acarnanians, the Corcyraeans,
Zacynthians, and some tributary cities in the following countries, viz.,
Caria upon the sea with her Dorian neighbours, Ionia, the Hellespont, the
Thracian towns, the islands lying between Peloponnese and Crete towards
the east, and all the Cyclades except Melos and Thera. Of these, ships
were furnished by Chios, Lesbos, and Corcyra, infantry and money by the
rest. Such were the allies of either party and their resources for the
war.
Immediately after the affair at Plataea,
Lacedaemon sent round orders to the cities in Peloponnese and the rest
of her confederacy to prepare troops and the provisions requisite for a
foreign campaign, in order to invade Attica. The several states were ready
at the time appointed and assembled at the Isthmus: the contingent of each
city being two-thirds of its whole force. After the whole army had mustered,
the Lacedaemonian king, Archidamus, the leader of the expedition, called
together the generals of all the states and the principal persons and officers,
and exhorted them as follows:
"Peloponnesians and allies, our fathers
made many campaigns both within and without Peloponnese, and the elder
men among us here are not without experience in war. Yet we have never
set out with a larger force than the present; and if our numbers and efficiency
are remarkable, so also is the power of the state against which we march.
We ought not then to show ourselves inferior to our ancestors, or unequal
to our own reputation. For the hopes and attention of all Hellas are bent
upon the present effort, and its sympathy is with the enemy of the hated
Athens. Therefore, numerous as the invading army may appear to be, and
certain as some may think it that our adversary will not meet us in the
field, this is no sort of justification for the least negligence upon the
march; but the officers and men of each particular city should always be
prepared for the advent of danger in their own quarters. The course of
war cannot be foreseen, and its attacks are generally dictated by the impulse
of the moment; and where overweening self-confidence has despised preparation,
a wise apprehension often been able to make head against superior numbers.
Not that confidence is out of place in an army of invasion, but in an enemy's
country it should also be accompanied by the precautions of apprehension:
troops will by this combination be best inspired for dealing a blow, and
best secured against receiving one. In the present instance, the city against
which we are going, far from being so impotent for defence, is on the contrary
most excellently equipped at all points; so that we have every reason to
expect that they will take the field against us, and that if they have
not set out already before we are there, they will certainly do so when
they see us in their territory wasting and destroying their property. For
men are always exasperated at suffering injuries to which they are not
accustomed, and on seeing them inflicted before their very eyes; and where
least inclined for reflection, rush with the greatest heat to action. The
Athenians are the very people of all others to do this, as they aspire
to rule the rest of the world, and are more in the habit of invading and
ravaging their neighbours' territory, than of seeing their own treated
in the like fashion. Considering, therefore, the power of the state against
which we are marching, and the greatness of the reputation which, according
to the event, we shall win or lose for our ancestors and ourselves, remember
as you follow where you may be led to regard discipline and vigilance as
of the first importance, and to obey with alacrity the orders transmitted
to you; as nothing contributes so much to the credit and safety of an army
as the union of large bodies by a single discipline."
With this brief speech dismissing
the assembly, Archidamus first sent off Melesippus, son of Diacritus, a
Spartan, to Athens, in case she should be more inclined to submit on seeing
the Peloponnesians actually on the march. But the Athenians did not admit
into the city or to their assembly, Pericles having already carried a motion
against admitting either herald or embassy from the Lacedaemonians after
they had once marched out.
The herald was accordingly sent away
without an audience, and ordered to be beyond the frontier that same day;
in future, if those who sent him had a proposition to make, they must retire
to their own territory before they dispatched embassies to Athens. An escort
was sent with Melesippus to prevent his holding communication with any
one. When he reached the frontier and was just going to be dismissed, he
departed with these words: "This day will be the beginning of great misfortunes
to the Hellenes." As soon as he arrived at the camp, and Archidamus learnt
that the Athenians had still no thoughts of submitting, he at length began
his march, and advanced with his army into their territory. Meanwhile the
Boeotians, sending their contingent and cavalry to join the Peloponnesian
expedition, went to Plataea with the remainder and laid waste the country.
While the Peloponnesians were still
mustering at the Isthmus, or on the march before they invaded Attica, Pericles,
son of Xanthippus, one of the ten generals of the Athenians, finding that
the invasion was to take place, conceived the idea that Archidamus, who
happened to be his friend, might possibly pass by his estate without ravaging
it. This he might do, either from a personal wish to oblige him, or acting
under instructions from Lacedaemon for the purpose of creating a prejudice
against him, as had been before attempted in the demand for the expulsion
of the accursed family. He accordingly took the precaution of announcing
to the Athenians in the assembly that, although Archidamus was his friend,
yet this friendship should not extend to the detriment of the state, and
that in case the enemy should make his houses and lands an exception to
the rest and not pillage them, he at once gave them up to be public property,
so that they should not bring him into suspicion. He also gave the citizens
some advice on their present affairs in the same strain as before. They
were to prepare for the war, and to carry in their property from the country.
They were not to go out to battle, but to come into the city and guard
it, and get ready their fleet, in which their real strength lay. They were
also to keep a tight rein on their allies- the strength of Athens being
derived from the money brought in by their payments, and success in war
depending principally upon conduct and capital. had no reason to despond.
Apart from other sources of income, an average revenue of six hundred talents
of silver was drawn from the tribute of the allies; and there were still
six thousand talents of coined silver in the Acropolis, out of nine thousand
seven hundred that had once been there, from which the money had been taken
for the porch of the Acropolis, the other public buildings, and for Potidaea.
This did not include the uncoined gold and silver in public and private
offerings, the sacred vessels for the processions and games, the Median
spoils, and similar resources to the amount of five hundred talents. To
this he added the treasures of the other temples. These were by no means
inconsiderable, and might fairly be used. Nay, if they were ever absolutely
driven to it, they might take even the gold ornaments of Athene herself;
for the statue contained forty talents of pure gold and it was all removable.
This might be used for self-preservation, and must every penny of it be
restored. Such was their financial position- surely a satisfactory one.
Then they had an army of thirteen thousand heavy infantry, besides sixteen
thousand more in the garrisons and on home duty at Athens. This was at
first the number of men on guard in the event of an invasion: it was composed
of the oldest and youngest levies and the resident aliens who had heavy
armour. The Phaleric wall ran for four miles, before it joined that round
the city; and of this last nearly five had a guard, although part of it
was left without one, viz., that between the Long Wall and the Phaleric.
Then there were the Long Walls to Piraeus, a distance of some four miles
and a half, the outer of which was manned. Lastly, the circumference of
Piraeus with Munychia was nearly seven miles and a half; only half of this,
however, was guarded. Pericles also showed them that they had twelve hundred
horse including mounted archers, with sixteen hundred archers unmounted,
and three hundred galleys fit for service. Such were the resources of Athens
in the different departments when the Peloponnesian invasion was impending
and hostilities were being commenced. Pericles also urged his usual arguments
for expecting a favourable issue to the war.
The Athenians listened to his advice,
and began to carry in their wives and children from the country, and all
their household furniture, even to the woodwork of their houses which they
took down. Their sheep and cattle they sent over to Euboea and the adjacent
islands. But they found it hard to move, as most of them had been always
used to live in the country.
From very early times this had been
more the case with the Athenians than with others. Under Cecrops and the
first kings, down to the reign of Theseus, Attica had always consisted
of a number of independent townships, each with its own town hall and magistrates.
Except in times of danger the king at Athens was not consulted; in ordinary
seasons they carried on their government and settled their affairs without
his interference; sometimes even they waged war against him, as in the
case of the Eleusinians with Eumolpus against Erechtheus. In Theseus, however,
they had a king of equal intelligence and power; and one of the chief features
in his organization of the country was to abolish the council-chambers
and magistrates of the petty cities, and to merge them in the single council-chamber
and town hall of the present capital. Individuals might still enjoy their
private property just as before, but they werehenceforth compelled to have
only one political centre, viz., Athens; which thus counted all the inhabitants
of Attica among her citizens, so that when Theseus died he left a great
state behind him. Indeed, from him dates the Synoecia, or Feast of Union;
which is paid for by the state, and which the Athenians still keep in honour
of the goddess. Before this the city consisted of the present citadel and
the district beneath it looking rather towards the south. This is shown
by the fact that the temples of the other deities, besides that of Athene,
are in the citadel; and even those that are outside it are mostly situated
in this quarter of the city, as that of the Olympian Zeus, of the Pythian
Apollo, of Earth, and of Dionysus in the Marshes, the same in whose honour
the older Dionysia are to this day celebrated in the month of Anthesterion
not only by the Athenians but also by their Ionian descendants. There are
also other ancient temples in this quarter. The fountain too, which, since
the alteration made by the tyrants, has been called Enneacrounos, or Nine
Pipes, but which, when the spring was open, went by the name of Callirhoe,
or Fairwater, was in those days, from being so near, used for the most
important offices. Indeed, the old fashion of using the water before marriage
and for other sacred purposes is still kept up. Again, from their old residence
in that quarter, the citadel is still known among Athenians as the city.
The Athenians thus long lived scattered
over Attica in independent townships. Even after the centralization of
Theseus, old habit still prevailed; and from the early times down to the
present war most Athenians still lived in the country with their families
and households, and were consequently not at all inclined to move now,
especially as they had only just restored their establishments after the
Median invasion. Deep was their trouble and discontent at abandoning their
houses and the hereditary temples of the ancient constitution, and at having
to change their habits of life and to bid farewell to what each regarded
as his native city.
When they arrived at Athens, though
a few had houses of their own to go to, or could find an asylum with friends
or relatives, by far the greater number had to take up their dwelling in
the parts of the city that were not built over and in the temples and chapels
of the heroes, except the Acropolis and the temple of the Eleusinian Demeter
and such other Places as were always kept closed. The occupation of the
plot of ground lying below the citadel called the Pelasgian had been forbidden
by a curse; and there was also an ominous fragment of a Pythian oracle
which said:
Leave the Pelasgian parcel desolate,
Woe worth the day that men inhabit it! Yet this too was now built over
in the necessity of the moment. And in my opinion, if the oracle proved
true, it was in the opposite sense to what was expected. For the misfortunes
of the state did not arise from the unlawful occupation, but the necessity
of the occupation from the war; and though the god did not mention this,
he foresaw that it would be an evil day for Athens in which the plot came
to be inhabited. Many also took up their quarters in the towers of the
walls or wherever else they could. For when they were all come in, the
city proved too small to hold them; though afterwards they divided the
Long Walls and a great part of Piraeus into lots and settled there. All
this while great attention was being given to the war; the allies were
being mustered, and an armament of a hundred ships equipped for Peloponnese.
Such was the state of preparation at Athens.
Meanwhile the army of the Peloponnesians
was advancing. The first town they came to in Attica was Oenoe, where they
to enter the country. Sitting down before it, they prepared to assault
the wall with engines and otherwise. Oenoe, standing upon the Athenian
and Boeotian border, was of course a walled town, and was used as a fortress
by the Athenians in time of war. So the Peloponnesians prepared for their
assault, and wasted some valuable time before the place. This delay brought
the gravest censure upon Archidamus. Even during the levying of the war
he had credit for weakness and Athenian sympathies by the half measures
he had advocated; and after the army had assembled he had further injured
himself in public estimation by his loitering at the Isthmus and the slowness
with which the rest of the march had been conducted. But all this was as
nothing to the delay at Oenoe. During this interval the Athenians were
carrying in their property; and it was the belief of the Peloponnesians
that a quick advance would have found everything still out, had it not
been for his procrastination. Such was the feeling of the army towards
Archidamus during the siege. But he, it is said, expected that the Athenians
would shrink from letting their land be wasted, and would make their submission
while it was still uninjured; and this was why he waited.
But after he had assaulted Oenoe,
and every possible attempt to take it had failed, as no herald came from
Athens, he at last broke up his camp and invaded Attica. This was about
eighty days after the Theban attempt upon Plataea, just in the middle of
summer, when the corn was ripe, and Archidamus, son of Zeuxis, king of
Lacedaemon, was in command. Encamping in Eleusis and the Thriasian plain,
they began their ravages, and putting to flight some Athenian horse at
a place called Rheiti, or the Brooks, they then advanced, keeping Mount
Aegaleus on their right, through Cropia, until they reached Acharnae, the
largest of the Athenian demes or townships. Sitting down before it, they
formed a camp there, and continued their ravages for a long while.
The reason why Archidamus remained
in order of battle at Acharnae during this incursion, instead of descending
into the plain, is said to have been this. He hoped that the Athenians
might possibly be tempted by the multitude of their youth and the unprecedented
efficiency of their service to come out to battle and attempt to stop the
devastation of their lands. Accordingly, as they had met him at Eleusis
or the Thriasian plain, he tried if they could be provoked to a sally by
the spectacle of a camp at Acharnae. He thought the place itself a good
position for encamping; and it seemed likely that such an important part
of the state as the three thousand heavy infantry of the Acharnians would
refuse to submit to the ruin of their property, and would force a battle
on the rest of the citizens. On the other hand, should the Athenians not
take the field during this incursion, he could then fearlessly ravage the
plain in future invasions, and extend his advance up to the very walls
of Athens. After the Acharnians had lost their own property they would
be less willing to risk themselves for that of their neighbours; and so
there would be division in the Athenian counsels. These were the motives
of Archidamus for remaining at Acharnae.
In the meanwhile, as long as the
army was at Eleusis and the Thriasian plain, hopes were still entertained
of its not advancing any nearer. It was remembered that Pleistoanax, son
of Pausanias, king of Lacedaemon, had invaded Attica with a Peloponnesian
army fourteen years before, but had retreated without advancing farther
than Eleusis and Thria, which indeed proved the cause of his exile from
Sparta, as it was thought he had been bribed to retreat. But when they
saw the army at Acharnae, barely seven miles from Athens, they lost all
patience. The territory of Athens was being ravaged before the very eyes
of the Athenians, a sight which the young men had never seen before and
the old only in the Median wars; and it was naturally thought a grievous
insult, and the determination was universal, especially among the young
men, to sally forth and stop it. Knots were formed in the streets and engaged
in hot discussion; for if the proposed sally was warmly recommended, it
was also in some cases opposed. Oracles of the most various import were
recited by the collectors, and found eager listeners in one or other of
the disputants. Foremost in pressing for the sally were the Acharnians,
as constituting no small part of the army of the state, and as it was their
land that was being ravaged. In short, the whole city was in a most excited
state; Pericles was the object of general indignation; his previous counsels
were totally forgotten; he was abused for not leading out the army which
he commanded, and was made responsible for the whole of the public suffering.
He, meanwhile, seeing anger and infatuation
just now in the ascendant, and of his wisdom in refusing a sally, would
not call either assembly or meeting of the people, fearing the fatal results
of a debate inspired by passion and not by prudence. Accordingly he addressed
himself to the defence of the city, and kept it as quiet as possible, though
he constantly sent out cavalry to prevent raids on the lands near the city
from flying parties of the enemy. There was a trifling affair at Phrygia
between a squadron of the Athenian horse with the Thessalians and the Boeotian
cavalry; in which the former had rather the best of it, until the heavy
infantry advanced to the support of the Boeotians, when the Thessalians
and Athenians were routed and lost a few men, whose bodies, however, were
recovered the same day without a truce. The next day the Peloponnesians
set up a trophy. Ancient alliance brought the Thessalians to the aid of
Athens; those who came being the Larisaeans, Pharsalians, Cranonians, Pyrasians,
Gyrtonians, and Pheraeans. The Larisaean commanders were Polymedes and
Aristonus, two party leaders in Larisa; the Pharsalian general was Menon;
each of the other cities had also its own commander.
In the meantime the Peloponnesians,
as the Athenians did not come out to engage them, broke up from Acharnae
and ravaged some of the demes between Mount Parnes and Brilessus. While
they were in Attica the Athenians sent off the hundred ships which they
had been preparing round Peloponnese, with a thousand heavy infantry and
four hundred archers on board, under the command of Carcinus, son of Xenotimus,
Proteas, son of Epicles, and Socrates, son of Antigenes. This armament
weighed anchor and started on its cruise, and the Peloponnesians, after
remaining in Attica as long as their provisions lasted, retired through
Boeotia by a different road to that by which they had entered. As they
passed Oropus they ravaged the territory of Graea, which is held by the
Oropians from Athens, and reaching Peloponnese broke up to their respective
cities.
After they had retired the Athenians
set guards by land and sea at the points at which they intended to have
regular stations during the war. They also resolved to set apart a special
fund of a thousand talents from the moneys in the Acropolis. This was not
to be spent, but the current expenses of the war were to be otherwise provided
for. If any one should move or put to the vote a proposition for using
the money for any purpose whatever except that of defending the city in
the event of the enemy bringing a fleet to make an attack by sea, it should
be a capital offence. With this sum of money they also set aside a special
fleet of one hundred galleys, the best ships of each year, with their captains.
None of these were to be used except with the money and against the same
peril, should such peril arise.
Meanwhile the Athenians in the hundred
ships round Peloponnese, reinforced by a Corcyraean squadron of fifty vessels
and some others of the allies in those parts, cruised about the coasts
and ravaged the country. Among other places they landed in Laconia and
made an assault upon Methone; there being no garrison in the place, and
the wall being weak. But it so happened that Brasidas, son of Tellis, a
Spartan, was in command of a guard for the defence of the district. Hearing
of the attack, he hurried with a hundred heavy infantry to the assistance
of the besieged, and dashing through the army of the Athenians, which was
scattered over the country and had its attention turned to the wall, threw
himself into Methone. He lost a few men in making good his entrance, but
saved the place and won the thanks of Sparta by his exploit, being thus
the first officer who obtained this notice during the war. The Athenians
at once weighed anchor and continued their cruise. Touching at Pheia in
Elis, they ravaged the country for two days and defeated a picked force
of three hundred men that had come from the vale of Elis and the immediate
neighbourhood to the rescue. But a stiff squall came down upon them, and,
not liking to face it in a place where there was no harbour, most of them
got on board their ships, and doubling Point Ichthys sailed into the port
of Pheia. In the meantime the Messenians, and some others who could not
get on board, marched over by land and took Pheia. The fleet afterwards
sailed round and picked them up and then put to sea; Pheia being evacuated,
as the main army of the Eleans had now come up. The Athenians continued
their cruise, and ravaged other places on the coast.
About the same time the Athenians
sent thirty ships to cruise round Locris and also to guard Euboea; Cleopompus,
son of Clinias, being in command. Making descents from the fleet he ravaged
certain places on the sea-coast, and captured Thronium and took hostages
from it. He also defeated at Alope the Locrians that had assembled to resist
him.
During the summer the Athenians also
expelled the Aeginetans with their wives and children from Aegina, on the
ground of their having been the chief agents in bringing the war upon them.
Besides, Aegina lies so near Peloponnese that it seemed safer to send colonists
of their own to hold it, and shortly afterwards the settlers were sent
out. The banished Aeginetans found an asylum in Thyrea, which was given
to them by Lacedaemon, not only on account of her quarrel with Athens,
but also because the Aeginetans had laid her under obligations at the time
of the earthquake and the revolt of the Helots. The territory of Thyrea
is on the frontier of Argolis and Laconia, reaching down to the sea. Those
of the Aeginetans who did not settle here were scattered over the rest
of Hellas.
The same summer, at the beginning
of a new lunar month, the only time by the way at which it appears possible,
the sun was eclipsed after noon. After it had assumed the form of a crescent
and some of the stars had come out, it returned to its natural shape.
During the same summer Nymphodorus,
son of Pythes, an Abderite, whose sister Sitalces had married, was made
their proxenus by the Athenians and sent for to Athens. They had hitherto
considered him their enemy; but he had great influence with Sitalces, and
they wished this prince to become their ally. Sitalces was the son of Teres
and King of the Thracians. Teres, the father of Sitalces, was the first
to establish the great kingdom of the Odrysians on a scale quite unknown
to the rest of Thrace, a large portion of the Thracians being independent.
This Teres is in no way related to Tereus who married Pandion's daughter
Procne from Athens; nor indeed did they belong to the same part of Thrace.
Tereus lived in Daulis, part of what is now called Phocis, but which at
that time was inhabited by Thracians. It was in this land that the women
perpetrated the outrage upon Itys; and many of the poets when they mention
the nightingale call it the Daulian bird. Besides, Pandion in contracting
an alliance for his daughter would consider the advantages of mutual assistance,
and would naturally prefer a match at the above moderate distance to the
journey of many days which separates Athens from the Odrysians. Again the
names are different; and this Teres was king of the Odrysians, the first
by the way who attained to any power. Sitalces, his son, was now sought
as an ally by the Athenians, who desired his aid in the reduction of the
Thracian towns and of Perdiccas. Coming to Athens, Nymphodorus concluded
the alliance with Sitalces and made his son Sadocus an Athenian citizen,
and promised to finish the war in Thrace by persuading Sitalces to send
the Athenians a force of Thracian horse and targeteers. He also reconciled
them with Perdiccas, and induced them to restore Therme to him; upon which
Perdiccas at once joined the Athenians and Phormio in an expedition against
the Chalcidians. Thus Sitalces, son of Teres, King of the Thracians, and
Perdiccas, son of Alexander, King of the Macedonians, became allies of
Athens.
Meanwhile the Athenians in the hundred
vessels were still cruising round Peloponnese. After taking Sollium, a
town belonging to Corinth, and presenting the city and territory to the
Acarnanians of Palaira, they stormed Astacus, expelled its tyrant Evarchus,
and gained the place for their confederacy. Next they sailed to the island
of Cephallenia and brought it over without using force. Cephallenia lies
off Acarnania and Leucas, and consists of four states, the Paleans, Cranians,
Samaeans, and Pronaeans. Not long afterwards the fleet returned to Athens.
Towards the autumn of this year the Athenians invaded the Megarid with
their whole levy, resident aliens included, under the command of Pericles,
son of Xanthippus. The Athenians in the hundred ships round Peloponnese
on their journey home had just reached Aegina, and hearing that the citizens
at home were in full force at Megara, now sailed over and joined them.
This was without doubt the largest army of Athenians ever assembled, the
state being still in the flower of her strength and yet unvisited by the
plague. Full ten thousand heavy infantry were in the field, all Athenian
citizens, besides the three thousand before Potidaea. Then the resident
aliens who joined in the incursion were at least three thousand strong;
besides which there was a multitude of light troops. They ravaged the greater
part of the territory, and then retired. Other incursions into the Megarid
were afterwards made by the Athenians annually during the war, sometimes
only with cavalry, sometimes with all their forces. This went on until
the capture of Nisaea. Atalanta also, the desert island off the Opuntian
coast, was towards the end of this summer converted into a fortified post
by the Athenians, in order to prevent privateers issuing from Opus and
the rest of Locris and plundering Euboea. Such were the events of this
summer after the return of the Peloponnesians from Attica.
In the ensuing winter the Acarnanian
Evarchus, wishing to return to Astacus, persuaded the Corinthians to sail
over with forty ships and fifteen hundred heavy infantry and restore him;
himself also hiring some mercenaries. In command of the force were Euphamidas,
son of Aristonymus, Timoxenus, son of Timocrates, and Eumachus, son of
Chrysis, who sailed over and restored him and, after failing in an attempt
on some places on the Acarnanian coast which they were desirous of gaining,
began their voyage home. Coasting along shore they touched at Cephallenia
and made a descent on the Cranian territory, and losing some men by the
treachery of the Cranians, who fell suddenly upon them after having agreed
to treat, put to sea somewhat hurriedly and returned home.
In the same winter the Athenians
gave a funeral at the public cost to those who had first fallen in this
war. It was a custom of their ancestors, and the manner of it is as follows.
Three days before the ceremony, the bones of the dead are laid out in a
tent which has been erected; and their friends bring to their relatives
such offerings as they please. In the funeral procession cypress coffins
are borne in cars, one for each tribe; the bones of the deceased being
placed in the coffin of their tribe. Among these is carried one empty bier
decked for the missing, that is, for those whose bodies could not be recovered.
Any citizen or stranger who pleases, joins in the procession: and the female
relatives are there to wail at the burial. The dead are laid in the public
sepulchre in the Beautiful suburb of the city, in which those who fall
in war are always buried; with the exception of those slain at Marathon,
who for their singular and extraordinary valour were interred on the spot
where they fell. After the bodies have been laid in the earth, a man chosen
by the state, of approved wisdom and eminent reputation, pronounces over
them an appropriate panegyric; after which all retire. Such is the manner
of the burying; and throughout the whole of the war, whenever the occasion
arose, the established custom was observed. Meanwhile these were the first
that had fallen, and Pericles, son of Xanthippus, was chosen to pronounce
their eulogium. When the proper time arrived, he advanced from the sepulchre
to an elevated platform in order to be heard by as many of the crowd as
possible, and spoke as follows:
"Most of my predecessors in this
place have commended him who made this speech part of the law, telling
us that it is well that it should be delivered at the burial of those who
fall in battle. For myself, I should have thought that the worth which
had displayed itself in deeds would be sufficiently rewarded by honours
also shown by deeds; such as you now see in this funeral prepared at the
people's cost. And I could have wished that the reputations of many brave
men were not to be imperilled in the mouth of a single individual, to stand
or fall according as he spoke well or ill. For it is hard to speak properly
upon a subject where it is even difficult to convince your hearers that
you are speaking the truth. On the one hand, the friend who is familiar
with every fact of the story may think that some point has not been set
forth with that fullness which he wishes and knows it to deserve; on the
other, he who is a stranger to the matter may be led by envy to suspect
exaggeration if he hears anything above his own nature. For men can endure
to hear others praised only so long as they can severally persuade themselves
of their own ability to equal the actions recounted: when this point is
passed, envy comes in and with it incredulity. However, since our ancestors
have stamped this custom with their approval, it becomes my duty to obey
the law and to try to satisfy your several wishes and opinions as best
I may.
"I shall begin with our ancestors:
it is both just and proper that they should have the honour of the first
mention on an occasion like the present. They dwelt in the country without
break in the succession from generation to generation, and handed it down
free to the present time by their valour. And if our more remote ancestors
deserve praise, much more do our own fathers, who added to their inheritance
the empire which we now possess, and spared no pains to be able to leave
their acquisitions to us of the present generation. Lastly, there are few
parts of our dominions that have not been augmented by those of us here,
who are still more or less in the vigour of life; while the mother country
has been furnished by us with everything that can enable her to depend
on her own resources whether for war or for peace. That part of our history
which tells of the military achievements which gave us our several possessions,
or of the ready valour with which either we or our fathers stemmed the
tide of Hellenic or foreign aggression, is a theme too familiar to my hearers
for me to dilate on, and I shall therefore pass it by. But what was the
road by which we reached our position, what the form of government under
which
our greatness grew, what the national habits out of which it sprang; these
are questions which I may try to solve before I proceed to my panegyric
upon these men; since I think this to be a subject upon which on the present
occasion a speaker may properly dwell, and to which the whole assemblage,
whether citizens or foreigners, may listen with advantage.
"Our constitution does not copy the
laws of neighbouring states; we are rather a pattern to others than imitators
ourselves. Its administration favours the many instead of the few; this
is why it is called a democracy. If we look to the laws, they afford equal
justice to all in their private differences; if no social standing, advancement
in public life falls to reputation for capacity, class considerations not
being allowed to interfere with merit; nor again does poverty bar the way,
if a man is able to serve the state, he is not hindered by the obscurity
of his condition. The freedom which we enjoy in our government extends
also to our ordinary life. There, far from exercising a jealous surveillance
over each other, we do not feel called upon to be angry with our neighbour
for doing what he likes, or even to indulge in those injurious looks which
cannot fail to be offensive, although they inflict no positive penalty.
But all this ease in our private relations does not make us lawless as
citizens. Against this fear is our chief safeguard, teaching us to obey
the magistrates and the laws, particularly such as regard the protection
of the injured, whether they are actually on the statute book, or belong
to that code which, although unwritten, yet cannot be broken without acknowledged
disgrace.
"Further, we provide plenty of means
for the mind to refresh itself from business. We celebrate games and sacrifices
all the year round, and the elegance of our private establishments forms
a daily source of pleasure and helps to banish the spleen; while the magnitude
of our city draws the produce of the world into our harbour, so that to
the Athenian the fruits of other countries are as familiar a luxury as
those of his own.
"If we turn to our military policy,
there also we differ from our antagonists. We throw open our city to the
world, and never by alien acts exclude foreigners from any opportunity
of learning or observing, although the eyes of an enemy may occasionally
profit by our liberality; trusting less in system and policy than to the
native spirit of our citizens; while in education, where our rivals from
their very cradles by a painful discipline seek after manliness, at Athens
we live exactly as we please, and yet are just as ready to encounter every
legitimate danger. In proof of this it may be noticed that the Lacedaemonians
do not invade our country alone, but bring with them all their confederates;
while we Athenians advance unsupported into the territory of a neighbour,
and fighting upon a foreign soil usually vanquish with ease men who are
defending their homes. Our united force was never yet encountered by any
enemy, because we have at once to attend to our marine and to dispatch
our citizens by land upon a hundred different services; so that, wherever
they engage with some such fraction of our strength, a success against
a detachment is magnified into a victory over the nation, and a defeat
into a reverse suffered at the hands of our entire people. And yet if with
habits not of labour but of ease, and courage not of art but of nature,
we are still willing to encounter danger, we have the double advantage
of escaping the experience of hardships in anticipation and of facing them
in the hour of need as fearlessly as those who are never free from them.
"Nor are these the only points in
which our city is worthy of admiration. We cultivate refinement without
extravagance and knowledge without effeminacy; wealth we employ more for
use than for show, and place the real disgrace of poverty not in owning
to the fact but in declining the struggle against it. Our public men have,
besides politics, their private affairs to attend to, and our ordinary
citizens, though occupied with the pursuits of industry, are still fair
judges of public matters; for, unlike any other nation, regarding him who
takes no part in these duties not as unambitious but as useless, we Athenians
are able to judge at all events if we cannot originate, and, instead of
looking on discussion as a stumbling-block in the way of action, we think
it an indispensable preliminary to any wise action at all. Again, in our
enterprises we present the singular spectacle of daring and deliberation,
each carried to its highest point, and both united in the same persons;
although usually decision is the fruit of ignorance, hesitation of reflection.
But the palm of courage will surely be adjudged most justly to those, who
best know the difference between hardship and pleasure and yet are never
tempted to shrink from danger. In generosity we are equally singular, acquiring
our friends by conferring, not by receiving, favours. Yet, of course, the
doer of the favour is the firmer friend of the two, in order by continued
kindness to keep the recipient in his debt; while the debtor feels less
keenly from the very consciousness that the return he makes will be a payment,
not a free gift. And it is only the Athenians, who, fearless of consequences,
confer their benefits not from calculations of expediency, but in the confidence
of liberality.
"In short, I say that as a city we
are the school of Hellas, while I doubt if the world can produce a man
who, where he has only himself to depend upon, is equal to so many emergencies,
and graced by so happy a versatility, as the Athenian. And that this is
no mere boast thrown out for the occasion, but plain matter of fact, the
power of the state acquired by these habits proves. For Athens alone of
her contemporaries is found when tested to be greater than her reputation,
and alone gives no occasion to her assailants to blush at the antagonist
by whom they have been worsted, or to her subjects to question her title
by merit to rule. Rather, the admiration of the present and succeeding
ages will be ours, since we have not left our power without witness, but
have shown it by mighty proofs; and far from needing a Homer for our panegyrist,
or other of his craft whose verses might charm for the moment only for
the impression which they gave to melt at the touch of fact, we have forced
every sea and land to be the highway of our daring, and everywhere, whether
for evil or for good, have left imperishable monuments behind us. Such
is the Athens for which these men, in the assertion of their resolve not
to lose her, nobly fought and died; and well may every one of their survivors
be ready to suffer in her cause.
"Indeed if I have dwelt at some length
upon the character of our country, it has been to show that our stake in
the struggle is not the same as theirs who have no such blessings to lose,
and also that the panegyric of the men over whom I am now speaking might
be by definite proofs established. That panegyric is now in a great measure
complete; for the Athens that I have celebrated is only what the heroism
of these and their like have made her, men whose fame, unlike that of most
Hellenes, will be found to be only commensurate with their deserts. And
if a test of worth be wanted, it is to be found in their closing scene,
and this not only in cases in which it set the final seal upon their merit,
but also in those in which it gave the first intimation of their having
any. For there is justice in the claim that steadfastness in his country's
battles should be as a cloak to cover a man's other imperfections; since
the good action has blotted out the bad, and his merit as a citizen more
than outweighed his demerits as an individual. But none of these allowed
either
wealth with its prospect of future enjoyment to unnerve his spirit, or
poverty with its hope of a day of freedom and riches to tempt him to shrink
from danger. No, holding that vengeance upon their enemies was more to
be desired than any personal blessings, and reckoning this to be the most
glorious of hazards, they joyfully determined to accept the risk, to make
sure of their vengeance, and to let their wishes wait; and while committing
to hope the uncertainty of final success, in the business before them they
thought fit to act boldly and trust in themselves. Thus choosing to die
resisting, rather than to live submitting, they fled only from dishonour,
but met danger face to face, and after one brief moment, while at the summit
of their fortune, escaped, not from their fear, but from their glory.
"So died these men as became Athenians.
You, their survivors, must determine to have as unfaltering a resolution
in the field, though you may pray that it may have a happier issue. And
not contented with ideas derived only from words of the advantages which
are bound up with the defence of your country, though these would furnish
a valuable text to a speaker even before an audience so alive to them as
the present, you must yourselves realize the power of Athens, and feed
your eyes upon her from day to day, till love of her fills your hearts;
and then, when all her greatness shall break upon you, you must reflect
that it was by courage, sense of duty, and a keen feeling of honour in
action that men were enabled to win all this, and that no personal failure
in an enterprise could make them consent to deprive their country of their
valour, but they laid it at her feet as the most glorious contribution
that they could offer. For this offering of their lives made in common
by them all they each of them individually received that renown which never
grows old, and for a sepulchre, not so much that in which their bones have
been deposited, but that noblest of shrines wherein their glory is laid
up to be eternally remembered upon every occasion on which deed or story
shall call for its commemoration. For heroes have the whole earth for their
tomb; and in lands far from their own, where the column with its epitaph
declares it, there is enshrined in every breast a record unwritten with
no tablet to preserve it, except that of the heart. These take as your
model and, judging happiness to be the fruit of freedom and freedom of
valour, never decline the dangers of war. For it is not the miserable that
would most justly be unsparing of their lives; these have nothing to hope
for: it is rather they to whom continued life may bring reverses as yet
unknown, and to whom a fall, if it came, would be most tremendous in its
consequences. And surely, to a man of spirit, the degradation of cowardice
must be immeasurably more grievous than the unfelt death which strikes
him in the midst of his strength and patriotism!
"Comfort, therefore, not condolence,
is what I have to offer to the parents of the dead who may be here. Numberless
are the chances to which, as they know, the life of man is subject; but
fortunate indeed are they who draw for their lot a death so glorious as
that which has caused your mourning, and to whom life has been so exactly
measured as to terminate in the happiness in which it has been passed.
Still I know that this is a hard saying, especially when those are in question
of whom you will constantly be reminded by seeing in the homes of others
blessings of which once you also boasted: for grief is felt not so much
for the want of what we have never known, as for the loss of that to which
we have been long accustomed. Yet you who are still of an age to beget
children must bear up in the hope of having others in their stead; not
only will they help you to forget those whom you have lost, but will be
to the state at once a reinforcement and a security; for never can a fair
or just policy be expected of the citizen who does not, like his fellows,
bring to the decision the interests and apprehensions of a father. While
those of you who have passed your prime must congratulate yourselves with
the thought that the best part of your life was fortunate, and that the
brief span that remains will be cheered by the fame of the departed. For
it is only the love of honour that never grows old; and honour it is, not
gain, as some would have it, that rejoices the heart of age and helplessness.
"Turning to the sons or brothers
of the dead, I see an arduous struggle before you. When a man is gone,
all are wont to praise him, and should your merit be ever so transcendent,
you will still find it difficult not merely to overtake, but even to approach
their renown. The living have envy to contend with, while those who are
no longer in our path are honoured with a goodwill into which rivalry does
not enter. On the other hand, if I must say anything on the subject of
female excellence to those of you who will now be in widowhood, it will
be all comprised in this brief exhortation. Great will be your glory in
not falling short of your natural character; and greatest will be hers
who is least talked of among the men, whether for good or for bad.
"My task is now finished. I have
performed it to the best of my ability, and in word, at least, the requirements
of the law are now satisfied. If deeds be in question, those who are here
interred have received part of their honours already, and for the rest,
their children will be brought up till manhood at the public expense: the
state thus offers a valuable prize, as the garland of victory in this race
of valour, for the reward both of those who have fallen and their survivors.
And where the rewards for merit are greatest, there are found the best
citizens.
"And now that you have brought to
a close your lamentations for your relatives, you may depart."
Chapter
Seven
Second Year of the War - The Plague
of Athens -Position and Policy of Pericles - Fall of Potidaea
Such was the funeral that took place
during this winter, with which the first year of the war came to an end.
In the first days of summer the Lacedaemonians and their allies, with two-thirds
of their forces as before, invaded Attica, under the command of Archidamus,
son of Zeuxidamus, King of Lacedaemon, and sat down and laid waste the
country. Not many days after their arrival in Attica the plague first began
to show itself among the Athenians. It was said that it had broken out
in many places previously in the neighbourhood of Lemnos and elsewhere;
but a pestilence of such extent and mortality was nowhere remembered. Neither
were the physicians at first of any service, ignorant as they were of the
proper way to treat it, but they died themselves the most thickly, as they
visited the sick most often; nor did any human art succeed any better.
Supplications in the temples, divinations, and so forth were found equally
futile, till the overwhelming nature of the disaster at last put a stop
to them altogether.
It first began, it is said, in the
parts of Ethiopia above Egypt, and thence descended into Egypt and Libya
and into most of the King's country. Suddenly falling upon Athens, it first
attacked the population in Piraeus- which was the occasion of their saying
that the Peloponnesians had poisoned the reservoirs, there being as yet
no wells there- and afterwards appeared in the upper city, when the deaths
became much more frequent. All speculation as to its origin and its causes,
if causes can be found adequate to produce so great a disturbance, I leave
to other writers, whether lay or professional; for myself, I shall simply
set down its nature, and explain the symptoms by which perhaps it may be
recognized by the student, if it should ever break out again. This I can
the better do, as I had the disease myself, and watched its operation in
the case of others.
That year then is admitted to have
been otherwise unprecedentedly free from sickness; and such few cases as
occurred all determined in this. As a rule, however, there was no ostensible
cause; but people in good health were all of a sudden attacked by violent
heats in the head,and redness and inflammation in the eyes, the inward
parts, such as the throat or tongue, becoming bloody and emitting an unnatural
and fetid breath. These symptoms were followed by sneezing and hoarseness,
after which the pain soon reached the chest, and produced a hard cough.
When it fixed in the stomach, it upset it; and discharges of bile of every
kind named by physicians ensued, accompanied by very great distress. In
most cases also an ineffectual retching followed,producing violent spasms,
which in some cases ceased soon after, in others much later. Externally
the body was not very hot to the touch, nor pale in its appearance, but
reddish, livid, and breaking out into small pustules and ulcers. But internally
it burned so that the patient could not bear to have on him clothing or
linen even of the very lightest description; or indeed to be otherwise
than stark naked. What they would have liked best would have been to throw
themselves into cold water; as indeed was done by some of the neglected
sick, who plunged into the rain-tanks in their agonies of unquenchable
thirst; though it made no difference whether they drank little or much.
Besides this, the miserable feeling of not being able to rest or sleep
never ceased to torment them. The body meanwhile did not waste away so
long as the distemper was at its height, but held out to a marvel against
its ravages; so that when they succumbed, as in most cases, on the seventh
or eighth day to the internal inflammation, they had still some strength
in them. But if they passed this stage, and the disease descended further
into the bowels, inducing a violent ulceration there accompanied by severe
diarrhoea, this brought on a weakness which was generally fatal. For the
disorder first settled in the head, ran its course from thence through
the whole of the body, and, even where it did not prove mortal, it still
left its mark on the extremities; for it settled in the privy parts, the
fingers and the toes, and many escaped with the loss of these, some too
with that of their eyes. Others again were seized with an entire loss of
memory on their first recovery, and did not know either themselves or their
friends.
But while the nature of the distemper
was such as to baffle all description, and its attacks almost too grievous
for human nature to endure, it was still in the following circumstance
that its difference from all ordinary disorders was most clearly shown.
All the birds and beasts that prey upon human bodies, either abstained
from touching them (though there were many lying unburied), or died after
tasting them. In proof of this, it was noticed that birds of this kind
actually disappeared; they were not about the bodies, or indeed to be seen
at all. But of course the effects which I have mentioned could best be
studied in a domestic animal like the dog.
Such then, if we pass over the varieties
of particular cases which were many and peculiar, were the general features
of the distemper. Meanwhile the town enjoyed an immunity from all the ordinary
disorders; or if any case occurred, it ended in this. Some died in neglect,
others in the midst of every attention. No remedy was found that could
be used as a specific; for what did good in one case, did harm in another.
Strong and weak constitutions proved equally incapable of resistance, all
alike being swept away, although dieted with the utmost precaution. By
far the most terrible feature in the malady was the dejection which ensued
when any one felt himself sickening, for the despair into which they instantly
fell took away their power of resistance, and left them a much easier prey
to the disorder; besides which, there was the awful spectacle of men dying
like sheep, through having caught the infection in nursing each other.
This caused the greatest mortality. On the one hand, if they were afraid
to visit each other, they perished from neglect; indeed many houses were
emptied of their inmates for want of a nurse: on the other, if they ventured
to do so, death was the consequence. This was especially the case with
such as made any pretensions to goodness: honour made them unsparing of
themselves in their attendance in their friends' houses, where even the
members of the family were at last worn out by the moans of the dying,
and succumbed to the force of the disaster. Yet it was with those who had
recovered from the disease that the sick and the dying found most compassion.
These knew what it was from experience, and had now no fear for themselves;
for the same man was never attacked twice- never at least fatally. And
such persons not only received the congratulations of others, but themselves
also, in the elation of the moment, half entertained the vain hope that
they were for the future safe from any disease whatsoever.
An aggravation of the existing calamity
was the influx from the country into the city, and this was especially
felt by the new arrivals. As there were no houses to receive them, they
had to be lodged at the hot season of the year in stifling cabins, where
the mortality raged without restraint. The bodies of dying men lay one
upon another, and half-dead creatures reeled about the streets and gathered
round all the fountains in their longing for water. The sacred places also
in which they had quartered themselves were full of corpses of persons
that had died there, just as they were; for as the disaster passed all
bounds, men, not knowing what was to become of them, became utterly careless
of everything, whether sacred or profane. All the burial rites before in
use were entirely upset, and they buried the bodies as best they could.
Many from want of the proper appliances, through so many of their friends
having died already, had recourse to the most shameless sepultures: sometimes
getting the start of those who had raised a pile, they threw their own
dead body upon the stranger's pyre and ignited it; sometimes they tossed
the corpse which they were carrying on the top of another that was burning,
and so went off.
Nor was this the only form of lawless
extravagance which owed its origin to the plague. Men now coolly ventured
on what they had formerly done in a corner, and not just as they pleased,
seeing the rapid transitions produced by persons in prosperity suddenly
dying and those who before had nothing succeeding to their property. So
they resolved to spend quickly and enjoy themselves, regarding their lives
and riches as alike things of a day. Perseverance in what men called honour
was popular with none, it was so uncertain whether they would be spared
to attain the object; but it was settled that present enjoyment, and all
that contributed to it, was both honourable and useful. Fear of gods or
law of man there was none to restrain them. As for the first, they judged
it to be just the same whether they worshipped them or not, as they saw
all alike perishing; and for the last, no one expected to live to be brought
to trial for his offences, but each felt that a far severer sentence had
been already passed upon them all and hung ever over their heads, and before
this fell it was only reasonable to enjoy life a little.
Such was the nature of the calamity,
and heavily did it weigh on the Athenians; death raging within the city
and devastation without. Among other things which they remembered in their
distress was, very naturally, the following verse which the old men said
had long ago been uttered:
A Dorian war shall come and with
it death. So a dispute arose as to whether dearth and not death had not
been the word in the verse; but at the present juncture, it was of course
decided in favour of the latter; for the people made their recollection
fit in with their sufferings. I fancy, however, that if another Dorian
war should ever afterwards come upon us, and a dearth should happen to
accompany it, the verse will probably be read accordingly. The oracle also
which had been given to the Lacedaemonians was now remembered by those
who knew of it. When the god was asked whether they should go to war, he
answered that if they put their might into it, victory would be theirs,
and that he would himself be with them. With this oracle events were supposed
to tally. For the plague broke out as soon as the Peloponnesians invaded
Attica, and never entering Peloponnese (not at least to an extent worth
noticing), committed its worst ravages at Athens, and next to Athens, at
the most populous of the other towns. Such was the history of the plague.
After ravaging the plain, the Peloponnesians
advanced into the Paralian region as far as Laurium, where the Athenian
silver mines are, and first laid waste the side looking towards Peloponnese,
next that which faces Euboea and Andros. But Pericles, who was still general,
held the same opinion as in the former invasion, and would not let the
Athenians march out against them.
However, while they were still in
the plain, and had not yet entered the Paralian land, he had prepared an
armament of a hundred ships for Peloponnese, and when all was ready put
out to sea. On board the ships he took four thousand Athenian heavy infantry,
and three hundred cavalry in horse transports, and then for the first time
made out of old galleys; fifty Chian and Lesbian vessels also joining in
the expedition. When this Athenian armament put out to sea, they left the
Peloponnesians in Attica in the Paralian region. Arriving at Epidaurus
in Peloponnese they ravaged most of the territory, and even had hopes of
taking the town by an assault: in this however they were not successful.
Putting out from Epidaurus, they laid waste the territory of Troezen, Halieis,
and Hermione, all towns on the coast of Peloponnese, and thence sailing
to Prasiai, a maritime town in Laconia, ravaged part of its territory,
and took and sacked the place itself; after which they returned home, but
found the Peloponnesians gone and no longer in Attica.
During the whole time that the Peloponnesians
were in Attica and the Athenians on the expedition in their ships, men
kept dying of the plague both in the armament and in Athens. Indeed it
was actually asserted that the departure of the Peloponnesians was hastened
by fear of the disorder; as they heard from deserters that it was in the
city, and also could see the burials going on. Yet in this invasion they
remained longer than in any other, and ravaged the whole country, for they
were about forty days in Attica.
The same summer Hagnon, son of Nicias,
and Cleopompus, son of Clinias, the colleagues of Pericles, took the armament
of which he had lately made use, and went off upon an expedition against
the Chalcidians in the direction of Thrace and Potidaea, which was still
under siege. As soon as they arrived, they brought up their engines against
Potidaea and tried every means of taking it, but did not succeed either
in capturing the city or in doing anything else worthy of their preparations.
For the plague attacked them here also, and committed such havoc as to
cripple them completely, even the previously healthy soldiers of the former
expedition catching the infection from Hagnon's troops; while Phormio and
the sixteen hundred men whom he commanded only escaped by being no longer
in the neighbourhood of the Chalcidians. The end of it was that Hagnon
returned with his ships to Athens, having lost one thousand and fifty out
of four thousand heavy infantry in about forty days; though the soldiers
stationed there before remained in the country and carried on the siege
of Potidaea.
After the second invasion of the
Peloponnesians a change came over the spirit of the Athenians. Their land
had now been twice laid waste; and war and pestilence at once pressed heavy
upon them. They began to find fault with Pericles, as the author of the
war and the cause of all their misfortunes, and became eager to come to
terms with Lacedaemon, and actually sent ambassadors thither, who did not
however succeed in their mission. Their despair was now complete and all
vented itself upon Pericles. When he saw them exasperated at the present
turn of affairs and acting exactly as he had anticipated, he called an
assembly, being (it must be remembered) still general, with the double
object of restoring confidence and of leading them from these angry feelings
to a calmer and more hopeful state of mind. He accordingly came forward
and spoke as follows:
"I was not unprepared for the indignation
of which I have been the object, as I know its causes; and I have called
an assembly for the purpose of reminding you upon certain points, and of
protesting against your being unreasonably irritated with me, or cowed
by your sufferings. I am of opinion that national greatness is more for
the advantage of private citizens, than any individual well-being coupled
with public humiliation. A man may be personally ever so well off, and
yet if his country be ruined he must be ruined with it; whereas a flourishing
commonwealth always affords chances of salvation to unfortunate individuals.
Since then a state can support the misfortunes of private citizens, while
they cannot support hers, it is surely the duty of every one to be forward
in her defence, and not like you to be so confounded with your domestic
afflictions as to give up all thoughts of the common safety, and to blame
me for having counselled war and yourselves for having voted it. And yet
if you are angry with me, it is with one who, as I believe, is second to
no man either in knowledge of the proper policy, or in the ability to expound
it, and who is moreover not only a patriot but an honest one. A man possessing
that knowledge without that faculty of exposition might as well have no
idea at all on the matter: if he had both these gifts, but no love for
his country, he would be but a cold advocate for her interests; while were
his patriotism not proof against bribery, everything would go for a price.
So that if you thought that I was even moderately distinguished for these
qualities when you took my advice and went to war, there is certainly no
reason now why I should be charged with having done wrong.
"For those of course who have a free
choice in the matter and whose fortunes are not at stake, war is the greatest
of follies. But if the only choice was between submission with loss of
independence, and danger with the hope of preserving that independence,
in such a case it is he who will not accept the risk that deserves blame,
not he who will. I am the same man and do not alter, it is you who change,
since in fact you took my advice while unhurt, and waited for misfortune
to repent of it; and the apparent error of my policy lies in the infirmity
of your resolution, since the suffering that it entails is being felt by
every one among you, while its advantage is still remote and obscure to
all, and a great and sudden reverse having befallen you, your mind is too
much depressed to persevere in your resolves. For before what is sudden,
unexpected, and least within calculation, the spirit quails; and putting
all else aside, the plague has certainly been an emergency of this kind.
Born, however, as you are, citizens of a great state, and brought up, as
you have been, with habits equal to your birth, you should be ready to
face the greatest disasters and still to keep unimpaired the lustre of
your name. For the judgment of mankind is as relentless to the weakness
that falls short of a recognized renown, as it is jealous of the arrogance
that aspires higher than its due. Cease then to grieve for your private
afflictions, and address yourselves instead to the safety of the commonwealth.
"If you shrink before the exertions
which the war makes necessary, and fear that after all they may not have
a happy result, you know the reasons by which I have often demonstrated
to you the groundlessness of your apprehensions. If those are not enough,
I will now reveal an advantage arising from the greatness of your dominion,
which I think has never yet suggested itself to you, which I never mentioned
in my previous speeches, and which has so bold a sound that I should scarce
adventure it now, were it not for the unnatural depression which I see
around me. You perhaps think that your empire extends only over your allies;
I will declare to you the truth. The visible field of action has two parts,
land and sea. In the whole of one of these you are completely supreme,
not merely as far as you use it at present, but also to what further extent
you may think fit: in fine, your naval resources are such that your vessels
may go where they please, without the King or any other nation on earth
being able to stop them. So that although you may think it a great privation
to lose the use of your land and houses, still you must see that this power
is something widely different; and instead of fretting on their account,
you should really regard them in the light of the gardens and other accessories
that embellish a great fortune, and as, in comparison, of little moment.
You should know too that liberty preserved by your efforts will easily
recover for us what we have lost, while, the knee once bowed, even what
you have will pass from you. Your fathers receiving these possessions not
from others, but from themselves, did not let slip what their labour had
acquired, but delivered them safe to you; and in this respect at least
you must prove yourselves their equals, remembering that to lose what one
has got is more disgraceful than to be balked in getting, and you must
confront your enemies not merely with spirit but with disdain. Confidence
indeed a blissful ignorance can impart, ay, even to a coward's breast,
but disdain is the privilege of those who, like us, have been assured by
reflection of their superiority to their adversary. And where the chances
are the same, knowledge fortifies courage by the contempt which is its
consequence, its trust being placed, not in hope, which is the prop of
the desperate, but in a judgment grounded upon existing resources, whose
anticipations are more to be depended upon.
"Again, your country has a right
to your services in sustaining the glories of her position. These are a
common source of pride to you all, and you cannot decline the burdens of
empire and still expect to share its honours. You should remember also
that what you are fighting against is not merely slavery as an exchange
for independence, but also loss of empire and danger from the animosities
incurred in its exercise. Besides, to recede is no longer possible, if
indeed any of you in the alarm of the moment has become enamoured of the
honesty of such an unambitious part. For what you hold is, to speak somewhat
plainly, a tyranny; to take it perhaps was wrong, but to let it go is unsafe.
And men of these retiring views, making converts of others, would quickly
ruin a state; indeed the result would be the same if they could live independent
by themselves; for the retiring and unambitious are never secure without
vigorous protectors at their side; in fine, such qualities are useless
to an imperial city, though they may help a dependency to an unmolested
servitude.
"But you must not be seduced by citizens
like these or angry with me- who, if I voted for war, only did as you did
yourselves- in spite of the enemy having invaded your country and done
what you could be certain that he would do, if you refused to comply with
his demands; and although besides what we counted for, the plague has come
upon us- the only point indeed at which our calculation has been at fault.
It is this, I know, that has had a large share in making me more unpopular
than I should otherwise have been- quite undeservedly, unless you are also
prepared to give me the credit of any success with which chance may present
you. Besides, the hand of heaven must be borne with resignation, that of
the enemy with fortitude; this was the old way at Athens, and do not you
prevent it being so still. Remember, too, that if your country has the
greatest name in all the world, it is because she never bent before disaster;
because she has expended more life and effort in war than any other city,
and has won for herself a power greater than any hitherto known, the memory
of which will descend to the latest posterity; even if now, in obedience
to the general law of decay, we should ever be forced to yield, still it
will be remembered that we held rule over more Hellenes than any other
Hellenic state, that we sustained the greatest wars against their united
or separate powers, and inhabited a city unrivalled by any other in resources
or magnitude. These glories may incur the censure of the slow and unambitious;
but in the breast of energy they will awake emulation, and in those who
must remain without them an envious regret. Hatred and unpopularity at
the moment have fallen to the lot of all who have aspired to rule others;
but where odium must be incurred, true wisdom incurs it for the highest
objects. Hatred also is short-lived; but that which makes the splendour
of the present and the glory of the future remains for ever unforgotten.
Make your decision, therefore, for glory then and honour now, and attain
both objects by instant and zealous effort: do not send heralds to Lacedaemon,
and do not betray any sign of being oppressed by your present sufferings,
since they whose minds are least sensitive to calamity, and whose hands
are most quick to meet it, are the greatest men and the greatest communities."
Such were the arguments by which
Pericles tried to cure the Athenians of their anger against him and to
divert their thoughts from their immediate afflictions. As a community
he succeeded in convincing them; they not only gave up all idea of sending
to Lacedaemon, but applied themselves with increased energy to the war;
still as private individuals they could not help smarting under their sufferings,
the common people having been deprived of the little that they were possessed,
while the higher orders had lost fine properties with costly establishments
and buildings in the country, and, worst of all, had war instead of peace.
In fact, the public feeling against him did not subside until he had been
fined. Not long afterwards, however, according to the way of the multitude,
they again elected him general and committed all their affairs to his hands,
having now become less sensitive to their private and domestic afflictions,
and understanding that he was the best man of all for the public necessities.
For as long as he was at the head of the state during the peace, he pursued
a moderate and conservative policy; and in his time its greatness was at
its height. When the war broke out, here also he seems to have rightly
gauged the power of his country. He outlived its commencement two years
and six months, and the correctness of his previsions respecting it became
better known by his death. He told them to wait quietly, to pay attention
to their marine, to attempt no new conquests, and to expose the city to
no hazards during the war, and doing this, promised them a favourable result.
What they did was the very contrary, allowing private ambitions and private
interests, in matters apparently quite foreign to the war, to lead them
into projects unjust both to themselves and to their allies- projects whose
success would only conduce to the honour and advantage of private persons,
and whose failure entailed certain disaster on the country in the war.
The causes of this are not far to seek. Pericles indeed, by his rank, ability,
and known integrity, was enabled to exercise an independent control over
the multitude- in short, to lead them instead of being led by them; for
as he never sought power by improper means, he was never compelled to flatter
them, but, on the contrary, enjoyed so high an estimation that he could
afford to anger them by contradiction. Whenever he saw them unseasonably
and insolently elated, he would with a word reduce them to alarm; on the
other hand, if they fell victims to a panic, he could at once restore them
to confidence. In short, what was nominally a democracy became in his hands
government by the first citizen. With his successors it was different.
More on a level with one another, and each grasping at supremacy, they
ended by committing even the conduct of state affairs to the whims of the
multitude. This, as might have been expected in a great and sovereign state,
produced a host of blunders, and amongst them the Sicilian expedition;
though this failed not so much through a miscalculation of the power of
those against whom it was sent, as through a fault in the senders in not
taking the best measures afterwards to assist those who had gone out, but
choosing rather to occupy themselves with private cabals for the leadership
of the commons, by which they not only paralysed operations in the field,
but also first introduced civil discord at home. Yet after losing most
of their fleet besides other forces in Sicily, and with faction already
dominant in the city, they could still for three years make head against
their original adversaries, joined not only by the Sicilians, but also
by their own allies nearly all in revolt, and at last by the King's son,
Cyrus, who furnished the funds for the Peloponnesian navy. Nor did they
finally succumb till they fell the victims of their own intestine disorders.
So superfluously abundant were the resources from which the genius of Pericles
foresaw an easy triumph in the war over the unaided forces of the Peloponnesians.
During the same summer the Lacedaemonians
and their allies made an expedition with a hundred ships against Zacynthus,
an island lying off the coast of Elis, peopled by a colony of Achaeans
from Peloponnese, and in alliance with Athens. There were a thousand Lacedaemonian
heavy infantry on board, and Cnemus, a Spartan, as admiral. They made a
descent from their ships, and ravaged most of the country; but as the inhabitants
would not submit, they sailed back home.
At the end of the same summer the
Corinthian Aristeus, Aneristus, Nicolaus, and Stratodemus, envoys from
Lacedaemon, Timagoras, a Tegean, and a private individual named Pollis
from Argos, on their way to Asia to persuade the King to supply funds and
join in the war, came to Sitalces, son of Teres in Thrace, with the idea
of inducing him, if possible, to forsake the alliance of Athens and to
march on Potidaea then besieged by an Athenian force, and also of getting
conveyed by his means to their destination across the Hellespont to Pharnabazus,
who was to send them up the country to the King. But there chanced to be
with Sitalces some Athenian ambassadors- Learchus, son of Callimachus,
and Ameiniades, son of Philemon- who persuaded Sitalces' son, Sadocus,
the new Athenian citizen, to put the men into their hands and thus prevent
their crossing over to the King and doing their part to injure the country
of his choice. He accordingly had them seized, as they were travelling
through Thrace to the vessel in which they were to cross the Hellespont,
by a party whom he had sent on with Learchus and Ameiniades, and gave orders
for their delivery to the Athenian ambassadors, by whom they were brought
to Athens. On their arrival, the Athenians, afraid that Aristeus, who had
been notably the prime mover in the previous affairs of Potidaea and their
Thracian possessions, might live to do them still more mischief if he escaped,
slew them all the same day, without giving them a trial or hearing the
defence which they wished to offer, and cast their bodies into a pit; thinking
themselves justified in using in retaliation the same mode of warfare which
the Lacedaemonians had begun, when they slew and cast into pits all the
Athenian and allied traders whom they caught on board the merchantmen round
Peloponnese. Indeed, at the outset of the war, the Lacedaemonians butchered
as enemies all whom they took on the sea, whether allies of Athens or neutrals.
About the same time towards the close
of the summer, the Ambraciot forces, with a number of barbarians that they
had raised, marched against the Amphilochian Argos and the rest of that
country. The origin of their enmity against the Argives was this. This
Argos and the rest of Amphilochia were colonized by Amphilochus, son of
Amphiaraus. Dissatisfied with the state of affairs at home on his return
thither after the Trojan War, he built this city in the Ambracian Gulf,
and named it Argos after his own country. This was the largest town in
Amphilochia, and its inhabitants the most powerful. Under the pressure
of misfortune many generations afterwards, they called in the Ambraciots,
their neighbours on the Amphilochian border, to join their colony; and
it was by this union with the Ambraciots that they learnt their present
Hellenic speech, the rest of the Amphilochians being barbarians. After
a time the Ambraciots expelled the Argives and held the city themselves.
Upon this the Amphilochians gave themselves over to the Acarnanians; and
the two together called the Athenians, who sent them Phormio as general
and thirty ships; upon whose arrival they took Argos by storm, and made
slaves of the Ambraciots; and the Amphilochians and Acarnanians inhabited
the town in common. After this began the alliance between the Athenians
and Acarnanians. The enmity of the Ambraciots against the Argives thus
commenced with the enslavement of their citizens; and afterwards during
the war they collected this armament among themselves and the Chaonians,
and other of the neighbouring barbarians. Arrived before Argos, they became
masters of the country; but not being successful in their attacks upon
the town, returned home and dispersed among their different peoples.
Such were the events of the summer.
The ensuing winter the Athenians sent twenty ships round Peloponnese, under
the command of Phormio, who stationed himself at Naupactus and kept watch
against any one sailing in or out of Corinth and the Crissaean Gulf. Six
others went to Caria and Lycia under Melesander, to collect tribute in
those parts, and also to prevent the Peloponnesian privateers from taking
up their station in those waters and molesting the passage of the merchantmen
from Phaselis and Phoenicia and the adjoining continent. However, Melesander,
going up the country into Lycia with a force of Athenians from the ships
and the allies, was defeated and killed in battle, with the loss of a number
of his troops.
The same winter the Potidaeans at
length found themselves no longer able to hold out against their besiegers.
The inroads of the Peloponnesians into Attica had not had the desired effect
of making the Athenians raise the siege. Provisions there were none left;
and so far had distress for food gone in Potidaea that, besides a number
of other horrors, instances had even occurred of the people having eaten
one another. in this extremity they at last made proposals for capitulating
to the Athenian generals in command against them- Xenophon, son of Euripides,
Hestiodorus, son of Aristocleides, and Phanomachus, son of Callimachus.
The generals accepted their proposals, seeing the sufferings of the army
in so exposed a position; besides which the state had already spent two
thousand talents upon the siege. The terms of the capitulation were as
follows: a free passage out for themselves, their children, wives and auxiliaries,with
one garment apiece, the women with two, and a fixed sum of money for their
journey. Under this treaty they went out to Chalcidice and other places,
according as was their power. The Athenians, however, blamed the generals
for granting terms without instructions from home,being of opinion that
the place would have had to surrender at discretion. They afterwards sent
settlers of their own to Potidaea, and colonized it. Such were the events
of the winter and so ended the second year of this war of which Thucydides
was the historian.
Chapter
Eight
Third Year of the War - Investment
of Plataea -
Naval Victories of Phormio -
Thracian Irruption into Macedonia
under Sitalces
The next summer the Peloponnesians
and their allies, instead of invading Attica, marched against Plataea,
under the command of Archidamus, son of Zeuxidamus, king of the Lacedaemonians.
He had encamped his army and was about to lay waste the country, when the
Plataeans hastened to send envoys to him, and spoke as follows: "Archidamus
and Lacedaemonians, in invading the Plataean territory, you do what is
wrong in itself, and worthy neither of yourselves nor of the fathers who
begot you. Pausanias, son of Cleombrotus, your countryman, after freeing
Hellas from the Medes with the help of those Hellenes who were willing
to undertake the risk of the battle fought near our city, offered sacrifice
to Zeus the Liberator in the marketplace of Plataea, and calling all the
allies together restored to the Plataeans their city and territory, and
declared it independent and inviolate against aggression or conquest. Should
any such be attempted, the allies present were to help according to their
power. Your fathers rewarded us thus for the courage and patriotism that
we displayed at that perilous epoch; but you do just the contrary, coming
with our bitterest enemies, the Thebans, to enslave us. We appeal, therefore,
to the gods to whom the oaths were then made, to the gods of your ancestors,
and lastly to those of our country, and call upon you to refrain from violating
our territory or transgressing the oaths, and to let us live independent,
as Pausanias decreed."
The Plataeans had got thus far when
they were cut short by Archidamus saying: "There is justice, Plataeans,
in what you say, if you act up to your words. According, to the grant of
Pausanias, continue to be independent yourselves, and join in freeing those
of your fellow countrymen who, after sharing in the perils of that period,
joined in the oaths to you, and are now subject to the Athenians; for it
is to free them and the rest that all this provision and war has been made.
I could wish that you would share our labours and abide by the oaths yourselves;
if this is impossible, do what we have already required of you- remain
neutral, enjoying your own; join neither side, but receive both as friends,
neither as allies for the war. With this we shall be satisfied." Such were
the words of Archidamus. The Plataeans, after hearing what he had to say,
went into the city and acquainted the people with what had passed, and
presently returned for answer that it was impossible for them to do what
he proposed without consulting the Athenians, with whom their children
and wives now were; besides which they had their fears for the town. After
his departure, what was to prevent the Athenians from coming and taking
it out of their hands, or the Thebans, who would be included in the oaths,
from taking advantage of the proposed neutrality to make a second attempt
to seize the city? Upon these points he tried to reassure them by saying:
"You have only to deliver over the city and houses to us Lacedaemonians,
to point out the boundaries of your land, the number of your fruit-trees,
and whatever else can be numerically stated, and yourselves to withdraw
wherever you like as long as the war shall last. When it is over we will
restore to you whatever we received, and in the interim hold it in trust
and keep it in cultivation, paying you a sufficient allowance."
When they had heard what he had to
say, they re-entered the city, and after consulting with the people said
that they wished first to acquaint the Athenians with this proposal, and
in the event of their approving to accede to it; in the meantime they asked
him to grant them a truce and not to lay waste their territory. He accordingly
granted a truce for the number of days requisite for the journey, and meanwhile
abstained from ravaging their territory. The Plataean envoys went to Athens,
and consulted with the Athenians, and returned with the following message
to those in the city: "The Athenians say, Plataeans, that they never hitherto,
since we became their allies, on any occasion abandoned us to an enemy,
nor will they now neglect us, but will help us according to their ability;
and they adjure you by the oaths which your fathers swore, to keep the
alliance unaltered."
On the delivery of this message by
the envoys, the Plataeans resolved not to be unfaithful to the Athenians
but to endure, if it must be, seeing their lands laid waste and any other
trials that might come to them, and not to send out again, but to answer
from the wall that it was impossible for them to do as the Lacedaemonians
proposed. As soon as he had received this answer, King Archidamus proceeded
first to make a solemn appeal to the gods and heroes of the country in
words following: "Ye gods and heroes of the Plataean territory, be my witnesses
that not as aggressors originally, nor until these had first departed from
the common oath, did we invade this land, in which our fathers offered
you their prayers before defeating the Medes, and which you made auspicious
to the Hellenic arms; nor shall we be aggressors in the measures to which
we may now resort, since we have made many fair proposals but have not
been successful. Graciously accord that those who were the first to offend
may be punished for it, and that vengeance may be attained by those who
would righteously inflict it."
After this appeal to the gods Archidamus
put his army in motion. First he enclosed the town with a palisade formed
of the fruit-trees which they cut down, to prevent further egress from
Plataea; next they threw up a mound against the city, hoping that the largeness
of the force employed would ensure the speedy reduction of the place. They
accordingly cut down timber from Cithaeron, and built it up on either side,
laying it like lattice-work to serve as a wall to keep the mound from spreading
abroad, and carried to it wood and stones and earth and whatever other
material might help to complete it. They continued to work at the mound
for seventy days and nights without intermission, being divided into relief
parties to allow of some being employed in carrying while others took sleep
and refreshment; the Lacedaemonian officer attached to each contingent
keeping the men to the work. But the Plataeans, observing the progress
of the mound, constructed a wall of wood and fixed it upon that part of
the city wall against which the mound was being erected, and built up bricks
inside it which they took from the neighbouring houses. The timbers served
to bind the building together, and to prevent its becoming weak as it advanced
in height; it had also a covering of skins and hides, which protected the
woodwork against the attacks of burning missiles and allowed the men to
work in safety. Thus the wall was raised to a great height, and the mound
opposite made no less rapid progress. The Plataeans also thought of another
expedient; they pulled out part of the wall upon which the mound abutted,
and carried the earth into the city.
Discovering this the Peloponnesians
twisted up clay in wattles of reed and threw it into the breach formed
in the mound, in order to give it consistency and prevent its being carried
away like the soil. Stopped in this way the Plataeans changed their mode
of operation, and digging a mine from the town calculated their way under
the mound, and began to carry off its material as before. This went on
for a long while without the enemy outside finding it out, so that for
all they threw on the top their mound made no progress in proportion, being
carried away from beneath and constantly settling down in the vacuum. But
the Plataeans, fearing that even thus they might not be able to hold out
against the superior numbers of the enemy, had yet another invention. They
stopped working at the large building in front of the mound, and starting
at either end of it inside from the old low wall, built a new one in the
form of a crescent running in towards the town; in order that in the event
of the great wall being taken this might remain, and the enemy have to
throw up a fresh mound against it, and as they advanced within might not
only have their trouble over again, but also be exposed to missiles on
their flanks. While raising the mound the Peloponnesians also brought up
engines against the city, one of which was brought up upon the mound against
the great building and shook down a good piece of it, to the no small alarm
of the Plataeans. Others were advanced against different parts of the wall
but were lassoed and broken by the Plataeans; who also hung up great beams
by long iron chains from either extremity of two poles laid on the wall
and projecting over it, and drew them up at an angle whenever any point
was threatened by the engine, and loosing their hold let the beam go with
its chains slack, so that it fell with a run and snapped off the nose of
the battering ram.
After this the Peloponnesians, finding
that their engines effected nothing, and that their mound was met by the
counterwork, concluded that their present means of offence were unequal
to the taking of the city, and prepared for its circumvallation. First,
however, they determined to try the effects of fire and see whether they
could not, with the help of a wind, burn the town, as it was not a large
one; indeed they thought of every possible expedient by which the place
might be reduced without the expense of a blockade. They accordingly brought
faggots of brushwood and threw them from the mound, first into the space
between it and the wall; and this soon becoming full from the number of
hands at work, they next heaped the faggots up as far into the town as
they could reach from the top, and then lighted the wood by setting fire
to it with sulphur and pitch. The consequence was a fire greater than any
one had ever yet seen produced by human agency, though it could not of
course be compared to the spontaneous conflagrations sometimes known to
occur through the wind rubbing the branches of a mountain forest together.
And this fire was not only remarkable for its magnitude, but was also,
at the end of so many perils, within an ace of proving fatal to the Plataeans;
a great part of the town became entirely inaccessible, and had a wind blown
upon it, in accordance with the hopes of the enemy, nothing could have
saved them. As it was, there is also a story of heavy rain and thunder
having come on by which the fire was put out and the danger averted.
Failing in this last attempt the
Peloponnesians left a portion of their forces on the spot, dismissing the
rest, and built a wall of circumvallation round the town, dividing the
ground among the various cities present; a ditch being made within and
without the lines, from which they got their bricks. All being finished
by about the rising of Arcturus, they left men enough to man half the wall,
the rest being manned by the Boeotians, and drawing off their army dispersed
to their several cities. The Plataeans had before sent off their wives
and children and oldest men and the mass of the non-combatants to Athens;
so that the number of the besieged left in the place comprised four hundred
of their own citizens, eighty Athenians, and a hundred and ten women to
bake their bread. This was the sum total at the commencement of the siege,
and there was no one else within the walls, bond or free. Such were the
arrangements made for the blockade of Plataea.
The same summer and simultaneously
with the expedition against Plataea, the Athenians marched with two thousand
heavy infantry and two hundred horse against the Chalcidians in the direction
of Thrace and the Bottiaeans, just as the corn was getting ripe, under
the command of Xenophon, son of Euripides, with two colleagues. Arriving
before Spartolus in Bottiaea, they destroyed the corn and had some hopes
of the city coming over through the intrigues of a faction within. But
those of a different way of thinking had sent to Olynthus; and a garrison
of heavy infantry and other troops arrived accordingly. These issuing from
Spartolus were engaged by the Athenians in front of the town: the Chalcidian
heavy infantry, and some auxiliaries with them, were beaten and retreated
into Spartolus; but the Chalcidian horse and light troops defeated the
horse and light troops of the Athenians. The Chalcidians had already a
few targeteers from Crusis, and presently after the battle were joined
by some others from Olynthus; upon seeing whom the light troops from Spartolus,
emboldened by this accession and by their previous success, with the help
of the Chalcidian horse and the reinforcement just arrived again attacked
the Athenians, who retired upon the two divisions which they had left with
their baggage. Whenever the Athenians advanced, their adversary gave way,
pressing them with missiles the instant they began to retire. The Chalcidian
horse also, riding up and charging them just as they pleased, at last caused
a panic amongst them and routed and pursued them to a great distance. The
Athenians took refuge in Potidaea, and afterwards recovered their dead
under truce, and returned to Athens with the remnant of their army; four
hundred and thirty men and all the generals having fallen. The Chalcidians
and Bottiaeans set up a trophy, took up their dead, and dispersed to their
several cities.
The same summer, not long after this,
the Ambraciots and Chaonians, being desirous of reducing the whole of Acarnania
and detaching it from Athens, persuaded the Lacedaemonians to equip a fleet
from their confederacy and send a thousand heavy infantry to Acarnania,
representing that, if a combined movement were made by land and sea, the
coast Acarnanians would be unable to march, and the conquest of Zacynthus
and Cephallenia easily following on the possession of Acarnania, the cruise
round Peloponnese would be no longer so convenient for the Athenians. Besides
which there was a hope of taking Naupactus. The Lacedaemonians accordingly
at once sent off a few vessels with Cnemus, who was still high admiral,
and the heavy infantry on board; and sent round orders for the fleet to
equip as quickly as possible and sail to Leucas. The Corinthians were the
most forward in the business; the Ambraciots being a colony of theirs.
While the ships from Corinth, Sicyon, and the neighbourhood were getting
ready, and those from Leucas, Anactorium, and Ambracia, which had arrived
before, were walting for them at Leucas, Cnemus and his thousand heavy
infantry had run into the gulf, giving the slip to Phormio, the commander
of the Athenian squadron stationed off Naupactus, and began at once to
prepare for the land expedition. The Hellenic troops with him consisted
of the Ambraciots, Leucadians, and Anactorians, and the thousand Peloponnesians
with whom he came; the barbarian of a thousand Chaonians, who, belonging
to a nation that has no king, were led by Photys and Nicanor, the two members
of the royal family to whom the chieftainship for that year had been confided.
With the Chaonians came also some Thesprotians, like them without a king,
some Molossians and Atintanians led by Sabylinthus, the guardian of King
Tharyps who was still a minor, and some Paravaeans, under their king Oroedus,
accompanied by a thousand Orestians, subjects of King Antichus and placed
by him under the command of Oroedus. There were also a thousand Macedonians
sent by Perdiccas without the knowledge of the Athenians, but they arrived
too late. With this force Cnemus set out, without waiting for the fleet
from Corinth. Passing through the territory of Amphilochian Argos, and
sacking the open village of Limnaea, they advanced to Stratus the Acarnanian
capital; this once taken, the rest of the country, they felt convinced,
would speedily follow.
The Acarnanians, finding themselves
invaded by a large army by land, and from the sea threatened by a hostile
fleet, made no combined attempt at resistance, but remained to defend their
homes, and sent for help to Phormio, who replied that, when a fleet was
on the point of sailing from Corinth, it was impossible for him to leave
Naupactus unprotected. The Peloponnesians meanwhile and their allies advanced
upon Stratus in three divisions, with the intention of encamping near it
and attempting the wall by force if they failed to succeed by negotiation.
The order of march was as follows: the centre was occupied by the Chaonians
and the rest of the barbarians, with the Leucadians and Anactorians and
their followers on the right, and Cnemus with the Peloponnesians and Ambraciots
on the left; each division being a long way off from, and sometimes even
out of sight of, the others. The Hellenes advanced in good order, keeping
a look-out till they encamped in a good position; but the Chaonians, filled
with self-confidence, and having the highest character for courage among
the tribes of that part of the continent, without waiting to occupy their
camp, rushed on with the rest of the barbarians, in the idea that they
should take the town by assault and obtain the sole glory of the enterprise.
While they were coming on, the Stratians, becoming aware how things stood,
and thinking that the defeat of this division would considerably dishearten
the Hellenes behind it, occupied the environs of the town with ambuscades,
and as soon as they approached engaged them at close quarters from the
city and the ambuscades. A panic seizing the Chaonians, great numbers of
them were slain; and as soon as they were seen to give way the rest of
the barbarians turned and fled. Owing to the distance by which their allies
had preceded them, neither of the Hellenic divisions knew anything of the
battle, but fancied they were hastening on to encamp. However, when the
flying barbarians broke in upon them, they opened their ranks to receive
them, brought their divisions together, and stopped quiet where they were
for the day; the Stratians not offering to engage them, as the rest of
the Acarnanians had not yet arrived, but contenting themselves with slinging
at them from a distance, which distressed them greatly, as there was no
stirring without their armour. The Acarnanians would seem to excel in this
mode of warfare.
As soon as night fell, Cnemus hastily
drew off his army to the river Anapus, about nine miles from Stratus, recovering
his dead next day under truce, and being there joined by the friendly Oeniadae,
fell back upon their city before the enemy's reinforcements came up. From
hence each returned home; and the Stratians set up a trophy for the battle
with the barbarians.
Meanwhile the fleet from Corinth
and the rest of the confederates in the Crissaean Gulf, which was to have
co-operated with Cnemus and prevented the coast Acarnanians from joining
their countrymen in the interior, was disabled from doing so by being compelled
about the same time as the battle at Stratus to fight with Phormio and
the twenty Athenian vessels stationed at Naupactus. For they were watched,
as they coasted along out of the gulf, by Phormio, who wished to attack
in the open sea. But the Corinthians and allies had started for Acarnania
without any idea of fighting at sea, and with vessels more like transports
for carrying soldiers; besides which, they never dreamed of the twenty
Athenian ships venturing to engage their forty-seven. However, while they
were coasting along their own shore, there were the Athenians sailing along
in line with them; and when they tried to cross over from Patrae in Achaea
to the mainland on the other side, on their way to Acarnania, they saw
them again coming out from Chalcis and the river Evenus to meet them. They
slipped from their moorings in the night, but were observed, and were at
length compelled to fight in mid passage. Each state that contributed to
the armament had its own general; the Corinthian commanders were Machaon,
Isocrates, and Agatharchidas. The Peloponnesians ranged their vessels in
as large a circle as possible without leaving an opening, with the prows
outside and the sterns in; and placed within all the small craft in company,
and their five best sailers to issue out at a moment's notice and strengthen
any point threatened by the enemy.
The Athenians, formed in line, sailed
round and round them, and forced them to contract their circle, by continually
brushing past and making as though they would attack at once, having been
previously cautioned by Phormio not to do so till he gave the signal. His
hope was that the Peloponnesians would not retain their order like a force
on shore, but that the ships would fall foul of one another and the small
craft cause confusion; and if the wind should blow from the gulf (in expectation
of which he kept sailing round them, and which usually rose towards morning),
they would not, he felt sure, remain steady an instant. He also thought
that it rested with him to attack when he pleased, as his ships were better
sailers, and that an attack timed by the coming of the wind would tell
best. When the wind came down, the enemy's ships were now in a narrow space,
and what with the wind and the small craft dashing against them, at once
fell into confusion: ship fell foul of ship, while the crews were pushing
them off with poles, and by their shouting, swearing, and struggling with
one another, made captains' orders and boatswains' cries alike inaudible,
and through being unable for want of practice to clear their oars in the
rough water, prevented the vessels from obeying their helmsmen properly.
At this moment Phormio gave the signal, and the Athenians attacked. Sinking
first one of the admirals, they then disabled all they came across, so
that no one thought of resistance for the confusion, but fled for Patrae
and Dyme in Achaea. The Athenians gave chase and captured twelve ships,
and taking most of the men out of them sailed to Molycrium, and after setting
up a trophy on the promontory of Rhium and dedicating a ship to Poseidon,
returned to Naupactus. As for the Peloponnesians, they at once sailed with
their remaining ships along the coast from Dyme and Patrae to Cyllene,
the Eleian arsenal; where Cnemus, and the ships from Leucas that were to
have joined them, also arrived after the battle at Stratus.
The Lacedaemonians now sent to the
fleet to Cnemus three commissioners- Timocrates, Bradidas, and Lycophron-
with orders to prepare to engage again with better fortune, and not to
be driven from the sea by a few vessels; for they could not at all account
for their discomfiture, the less so as it was their first attempt at sea;
and they fancied that it was not that their marine was so inferior, but
that there had been misconduct somewhere, not considering the long experience
of the Athenians as compared with the little practice which they had had
themselves. The commissioners were accordingly sent in anger. As soon as
they arrived they set to work with Cnemus to order ships from the different
states, and to put those which they already had in fighting order. Meanwhile
Phormio sent word to Athens of their preparations and his own victory,
and desired as many ships as possible to be speedily sent to him, as he
stood in daily expectation of a battle. Twenty were accordingly sent, but
instructions were given to their commander to go first to Crete. For Nicias,
a Cretan of Gortys, who was proxenus of the Athenians, had persuaded them
to sail against Cydonia, promising to procure the reduction of that hostile
town; his real wish being to oblige the Polichnitans, neighbours of the
Cydonians. He accordingly went with the ships to Crete, and, accompanied
by the Polichnitans, laid waste the lands of the Cydonians; and, what with
adverse winds and stress of weather wasted no little time there.
While the Athenians were thus detained
in Crete, the Peloponnesians in Cyllene got ready for battle, and coasted
along to Panormus in Achaea, where their land army had come to support
them. Phormio also coasted along to Molycrian Rhium, and anchored outside
it with twenty ships, the same as he had fought with before. This Rhium
was friendly to the Athenians. The other, in Peloponnese, lies opposite
to it; the sea between them is about three-quarters of a mile broad, and
forms the mouth of the Crissaean gulf. At this, the Achaean Rhium, not
far off Panormus, where their army lay, the Peloponnesians now cast anchor
with seventy-seven ships, when they saw the Athenians do so. For six or
seven days they remained opposite each other, practising and preparing
for the battle; the one resolved not to sail out of the Rhia into the open
sea, for fear of the disaster which had already happened to them, the other
not to sail into the straits, thinking it advantageous to the enemy, to
fight in the narrows. At last Cnemus and Brasidas and the rest of the Peloponnesian
commanders, being desirous of bringing on a battle as soon as possible,
before reinforcements should arrive from Athens, and noticing that the
men were most of them cowed by the previous defeat and out of heart for
the business, first called them together and encouraged them as follows:
"Peloponnesians, the late engagement,
which may have made some of you afraid of the one now in prospect, really
gives no just ground for apprehension. Preparation for it, as you know,
there was little enough; and the object of our voyage was not so much to
fight at sea as an expedition by land. Besides this, the chances of war
were largely against us; and perhaps also inexperience had something to
do with our failure in our first naval action. It was not, therefore, cowardice
that produced our defeat, nor ought the determination which force has not
quelled, but which still has a word to say with its adversary, to lose
its edge from the result of an accident; but admitting the possibility
of a chance miscarriage, we should know that brave hearts must be always
brave, and while they remain so can never put forward inexperience as an
excuse for misconduct. Nor are you so behind the enemy in experience as
you are ahead of him in courage; and although the science of your opponents
would, if valour accompanied it, have also the presence of mind to carry
out at in emergency the lesson it has learnt, yet a faint heart will make
all art powerless in the face of danger. For fear takes away presence of
mind, and without valour art is useless. Against their superior experience
set your superior daring, and against the fear induced by defeat the fact
of your having been then unprepared; remember, too, that you have always
the advantage of superior numbers, and of engaging off your own coast,
supported by your heavy infantry; and as a rule, numbers and equipment
give victory. At no point, therefore, is defeat likely; and as for our
previous mistakes, the very fact of their occurrence will teach us better
for the future. Steersmen and sailors may, therefore, confidently attend
to their several duties, none quitting the station assigned to them: as
for ourselves, we promise to prepare for the engagement at least as well
as your previous commanders, and to give no excuse for any one misconducting
himself. Should any insist on doing so, he shall meet with the punishment
he deserves, while the brave shall be honoured with the appropriate rewards
of valour."
The Peloponnesian commanders encouraged
their men after this fashion. Phormio, meanwhile, being himself not without
fears for the courage of his men, and noticing that they were forming in
groups among themselves and were alarmed at the odds against them, desired
to call them together and give them confidence and counsel in the present
emergency. He had before continually told them, and had accustomed their
minds to the idea, that there was no numerical superiority that they could
not face; and the men themselves had long been persuaded that Athenians
need never retire before any quantity of Peloponnesian vessels. At the
moment, however, he saw that they were dispirited by the sight before them,
and wishing to refresh their confidence, called them together and spoke
as follows:
"I see, my men, that you are frightened
by the number of the enemy, and I have accordingly called you together,
not liking you to be afraid of what is not really terrible. In the first
place, the Peloponnesians, already defeated, and not even themselves thinking
that they are a match for us, have not ventured to meet us on equal terms,
but have equipped this multitude of ships against us. Next, as to that
upon which they most rely, the courage which they suppose constitutional
to them, their confidence here only arises from the success which their
experience in land service usually gives them, and which they fancy will
do the same for them at sea. But this advantage will in all justice belong
to us on this element, if to them on that; as they are not superior to
us in courage, but we are each of us more confident, according to our experience
in our particular department. Besides, as the Lacedaemonians use their
supremacy over their allies to promote their own glory, they are most of
them being brought into danger against their will, or they would never,
after such a decided defeat, have ventured upon a fresh engagement. You
need not, therefore, be afraid of their dash. You, on the contrary, inspire
a much greater and better founded alarm, both because of your late victory
and also of their belief that we should not face them unless about to do
something worthy of a success so signal. An adversary numerically superior,
like the one before us, comes into action trusting more to strength than
to resolution; while he who voluntarily confronts tremendous odds must
have very great internal resources to draw upon. For these reasons the
Peloponnesians fear our irrational audacity more than they would ever have
done a more commensurate preparation. Besides, many armaments have before
now succumbed to an inferior through want of skill or sometimes of courage;
neither of which defects certainly are ours. As to the battle, it shall
not be, if I can help it, in the strait, nor will I sail in there at all;
seeing that in a contest between a number of clumsily managed vessels and
a small, fast, well-handled squadron, want of sea room is an undoubted
disadvantage. One cannot run down an enemy properly without having a sight
of him a good way off, nor can one retire at need when pressed; one can
neither break the line nor return upon his rear, the proper tactics for
a fast sailer; but the naval action necessarily becomes a land one, in
which numbers must decide the matter. For all this I will provide as far
as can be. Do you stay at your posts by your ships, and be sharp at catching
the word of command, the more so as we are observing one another from so
short a distance; and in action think order and silence all-important-
qualities useful in war generally, and in naval engagements in particular;
and behave before the enemy in a manner worthy of your past exploits. The
issues you will fight for are great- to destroy the naval hopes of the
Peloponnesians or to bring nearer to the Athenians their fears for the
sea. And I may once more remind you that you have defeated most of them
already; and beaten men do not face a danger twice with the same determination."
Such was the exhortation of Phormio.
The Peloponnesians finding that the Athenians did not sail into the gulf
and the narrows, in order to lead them in whether they wished it or not,
put out at dawn, and forming four abreast, sailed inside the gulf in the
direction of their own country, the right wing leading as they had lain
at anchor. In this wing were placed twenty of their best sailers; so that
in the event of Phormio thinking that their object was Naupactus, and coasting
along thither to save the place, the Athenians might not be able to escape
their onset by getting outside their wing, but might be cut off by the
vessels in question. As they expected, Phormio, in alarm for the place
at that moment emptied of its garrison, as soon as he saw them put out,
reluctantly and hurriedly embarked and sailed along shore; the Messenian
land forces moving along also to support him. The Peloponnesians seeing
him coasting along with his ships in single file, and by this inside the
gulf and close inshore as they so much wished, at one signal tacked suddenly
and bore down in line at their best speed on the Athenians, hoping to cut
off the whole squadron. The eleven leading vessels, however, escaped the
Peloponnesian wing and its sudden movement, and reached the more open water;
but the rest were overtaken as they tried to run through, driven ashore
and disabled; such of the crews being slain as had not swum out of them.
Some of the ships the Peloponnesians lashed to their own, and towed off
empty; one they took with the men in it; others were just being towed off,
when they were saved by the Messenians dashing into the sea with their
armour and fighting from the decks that they had boarded.
Thus far victory was with the Peloponnesians,
and the Athenian fleet destroyed; the twenty ships in the right wing being
meanwhile in chase of the eleven Athenian vessels that had escaped their
sudden movement and reached the more open water. These, with the exception
of one ship, all outsailed them and got safe into Naupactus, and forming
close inshore opposite the temple of Apollo, with their prows facing the
enemy, prepared to defend themselves in case the Peloponnesians should
sail inshore against them. After a while the Peloponnesians came up, chanting
the paean for their victory as they sailed on; the single Athenian ship
remaining being chased by a Leucadian far ahead of the rest. But there
happened to be a merchantman lying at anchor in the roadstead, which the
Athenian ship found time to sail round, and struck the Leucadian in chase
amidships and sank her. An exploit so sudden and unexpected produced a
panic among the Peloponnesians; and having fallen out of order in the excitement
of victory, some of them dropped their oars and stopped their way in order
to let the main body come up- an unsafe thing to do considering how near
they were to the enemy's prows; while others ran aground in the shallows,
in their ignorance of the localities.
Elated at this incident, the Athenians
at one word gave a cheer, and dashed at the enemy, who, embarrassed by
his mistakes and the disorder in which he found himself, only stood for
an instant, and then fled for Panormus, whence he had put out. The Athenians
following on his heels took the six vessels nearest them, and recovered
those of their own which had been disabled close inshore and taken in tow
at the beginning of the action; they killed some of the crews and took
some prisoners. On board the Leucadian which went down off the merchantman,
was the Lacedaemonian Timocrates, who killed himself when the ship was
sunk, and was cast up in the harbour of Naupactus. The Athenians on their
return set up a trophy on the spot from which they had put out and turned
the day, and picking up the wrecks and dead that were on their shore, gave
back to the enemy their dead under truce. The Peloponnesians also set up
a trophy as victors for the defeat inflicted upon the ships they had disabled
in shore, and dedicated the vessel which they had taken at Achaean Rhium,
side by side with the trophy. After this, apprehensive of the reinforcement
expected from Athens, all except the Leucadians sailed into the Crissaean
Gulf for Corinth. Not long after their retreat, the twenty Athenian ships,
which were to have joined Phormio before the battle, arrived at Naupactus.
Thus the summer ended. Winter was
now at hand; but dispersing the fleet, which had retired to Corinth and
the Crissaean Gulf, Cnemus, Brasidas, and the other Peloponnesian captains
allowed themselves to be persuaded by the Megarians to make an attempt
upon Piraeus, the port of Athens, which from her decided superiority at
sea had been naturally left unguarded and open. Their plan was as follows:
The men were each to take their oar, cushion, and rowlock thong, and, going
overland from Corinth to the sea on the Athenian side, to get to Megara
as quickly as they could, and launching forty vessels, which happened to
be in the docks at Nisaea, to sail at once to Piraeus. There was no fleet
on the look-out in the harbour, and no one had the least idea of the enemy
attempting a surprise; while an open attack would, it was thought, never
be deliberately ventured on, or, if in contemplation, would be speedily
known at Athens. Their plan formed, the next step was to put it in execution.
Arriving by night and launching the vessels from Nisaea, they sailed, not
to Piraeus as they had originally intended, being afraid of the risk, besides
which there was some talk of a wind having stopped them, but to the point
of Salamis that looks towards Megara; where there was a fort and a squadron
of three ships to prevent anything sailing in or out of Megara. This fort
they assaulted, and towed off the galleys empty, and surprising the inhabitants
began to lay waste the rest of the island.
Meanwhile fire signals were raised
to alarm Athens, and a panic ensued there as serious as any that occurred
during the war. The idea in the city was that the enemy had already sailed
into Piraeus: in Piraeus it was thought that they had taken Salamis and
might at any moment arrive in the port; as indeed might easily have been
done if their hearts had been a little firmer: certainly no wind would
have prevented them. As soon as day broke, the Athenians assembled in full
force, launched their ships, and embarking in haste and uproar went with
the fleet to Salamis, while their soldiery mounted guard in Piraeus. The
Peloponnesians, on becoming aware of the coming relief, after they had
overrun most of Salamis, hastily sailed off with their plunder and captives
and the three ships from Fort Budorum to Nisaea; the state of their ships
also causing them some anxiety, as it was a long while since they had been
launched, and they were not water-tight. Arrived at Megara, they returned
back on foot to Corinth. The Athenians finding them no longer at Salamis,
sailed back themselves; and after this made arrangements for guarding Piraeus
more diligently in future, by closing the harbours, and by other suitable
precautions.
About the same time, at the beginning
of this winter, Sitalces, son of Teres, the Odrysian king of Thrace, made
an expedition against Perdiccas, son of Alexander, king of Macedonia, and
the Chalcidians in the neighbourhood of Thrace; his object being to enforce
one promise and fulfil another. On the one hand Perdiccas had made him
a promise, when hard pressed at the commencement of the war, upon condition
that Sitalces should reconcile the Athenians to him and not attempt to
restore his brother and enemy, the pretender Philip, but had not offered
to fulfil his engagement; on the other he, Sitalces, on entering into alliance
with the Athenians, had agreed to put an end to the Chalcidian war in Thrace.
These were the two objects of his invasion. With him he brought Amyntas,
the son of Philip, whom he destined for the throne of Macedonia, and some
Athenian envoys then at his court on this business, and Hagnon as general;
for the Athenians were to join him against the Chalcidians with a fleet
and as many soldiers as they could get together.
Beginning with the Odrysians, he
first called out the Thracian tribes subject to him between Mounts Haemus
and Rhodope and the Euxine and Hellespont; next the Getae beyond Haemus,
and the other hordes settled south of the Danube in the neighbourhood of
the Euxine, who, like the Getae, border on the Scythians and are armed
in the same manner, being all mounted archers. Besides these he summoned
many of the hill Thracian independent swordsmen, called Dii and mostly
inhabiting Mount Rhodope, some of whom came as mercenaries, others as volunteers;
also the Agrianes and Laeaeans, and the rest of the Paeonian tribes in
his empire, at the confines of which these lay, extending up to the Laeaean
Paeonians and the river Strymon, which flows from Mount Scombrus through
the country of the Agrianes and Laeaeans; there the empire of Sitalces
ends and the territory of the independent Paeonians begins. Bordering on
the Triballi, also independent, were the Treres and Tilataeans, who dwell
to the north of Mount Scombrus and extend towards the setting sun as far
as the river Oskius. This river rises in the same mountains as the Nestus
and Hebrus, a wild and extensive range connected with Rhodope.
The empire of the Odrysians extended
along the seaboard from Abdera to the mouth of the Danube in the Euxine.
The navigation of this coast by the shortest route takes a merchantman
four days and four nights with a wind astern the whole way: by land an
active man, travelling by the shortest road, can get from Abdera to the
Danube in eleven days. Such was the length of its coast line. Inland from
Byzantium to the Laeaeans and the Strymon, the farthest limit of its extension
into the interior, it is a journey of thirteen days for an active man.
The tribute from all the barbarian districts and the Hellenic cities, taking
what they brought in under Seuthes, the successor of Sitalces, who raised
it to its greatest height, amounted to about four hundred talents in gold
and silver. There were also presents in gold and silver to a no less amount,
besides stuff, plain and embroidered, and other articles, made not only
for the king, but also for the Odrysian lords and nobles. For there was
here established a custom opposite to that prevailing in the Persian kingdom,
namely, of taking rather than giving; more disgrace being attached to not
giving when asked than to asking and being refused; and although this prevailed
elsewhere in Thrace, it was practised most extensively among the powerful
Odrysians, it being impossible to get anything done without a present.
It was thus a very powerful kingdom; in revenue and general prosperity
surpassing all in Europe between the Ionian Gulf and the Euxine, and in
numbers and military resources coming decidedly next to the Scythians,
with whom indeed no people in Europe can bear comparison, there not being
even in Asia any nation singly a match for them if unanimous, though of
course they are not on a level with other races in general intelligence
and the arts of civilized life.
It was the master of this empire
that now prepared to take the field. When everything was ready, he set
out on his march for Macedonia, first through his own dominions, next over
the desolate range of Cercine that divides the Sintians and Paeonians,
crossing by a road which he had made by felling the timber on a former
campaign against the latter people. Passing over these mountains, with
the Paeonians on his right and the Sintians and Maedians on the left, he
finally arrived at Doberus, in Paeonia, losing none of his army on the
march, except perhaps by sickness, but receiving some augmentations, many
of the independent Thracians volunteering to join him in the hope of plunder;
so that the whole is said to have formed a grand total of a hundred and
fifty thousand. Most of this was infantry, though there was about a third
cavalry, furnished principally by the Odrysians themselves and next to
them by the Getae. The most warlike of the infantry were the independent
swordsmen who came down from Rhodope; the rest of the mixed multitude that
followed him being chiefly formidable by their numbers.
Assembling in Doberus, they prepared
for descending from the heights upon Lower Macedonia, where the dominions
of Perdiccas lay; for the Lyncestae, Elimiots, and other tribes more inland,
though Macedonians by blood, and allies and dependants of their kindred,
still have their own separate governments. The country on the sea coast,
now called Macedonia, was first acquired by Alexander, the father of Perdiccas,
and his ancestors, originally Temenids from Argos. This was effected by
the expulsion from Pieria of the Pierians, who afterwards inhabited Phagres
and other places under Mount Pangaeus, beyond the Strymon (indeed the country
between Pangaeus and the sea is still called the Pierian Gulf); of the
Bottiaeans, at present neighbours of the Chalcidians, from Bottia, and
by the acquisition in Paeonia of a narrow strip along the river Axius extending
to Pella and the sea; the district of Mygdonia, between the Axius and the
Strymon, being also added by the expulsion of the Edonians. From Eordia
also were driven the Eordians, most of whom perished, though a few of them
still live round Physca, and the Almopians from Almopia. These Macedonians
also conquered places belonging to the other tribes, which are still theirs-
Anthemus, Crestonia, Bisaltia, and much of Macedonia proper. The whole
is now called Macedonia, and at the time of the invasion of Sitalces, Perdiccas,
Alexander's son, was the reigning king.
These Macedonians, unable to take
the field against so numerous an invader, shut themselves up in such strong
places and fortresses as the country possessed. Of these there was no great
number, most of those now found in the country having been erected subsequently
by Archelaus, the son of Perdiccas, on his accession, who also cut straight
roads, and otherwise put the kingdom on a better footing as regards horses,
heavy infantry, and other war material than had been done by all the eight
kings that preceded him. Advancing from Doberus, the Thracian host first
invaded what had been once Philip's government, and took Idomene by assault,
Gortynia, Atalanta, and some other places by negotiation, these last coming
over for love of Philip's son, Amyntas, then with Sitalces. Laying siege
to Europus, and failing to take it, he next advanced into the rest of Macedonia
to the left of Pella and Cyrrhus, not proceeding beyond this into Bottiaea
and Pieria, but staying to lay waste Mygdonia, Crestonia, and Anthemus.
The Macedonians never even thought
of meeting him with infantry; but the Thracian host was, as opportunity
offered, attacked by handfuls of their horse, which had been reinforced
from their allies in the interior. Armed with cuirasses, and excellent
horsemen, wherever these charged they overthrew all before them, but ran
considerable risk in entangling themselves in the masses of the enemy,
and so finally desisted from these efforts, deciding that they were not
strong enough to venture against numbers so superior.
Meanwhile Sitalces opened negotiations
with Perdiccas on the objects of his expedition; and finding that the Athenians,
not believing that he would come, did not appear with their fleet, though
they sent presents and envoys, dispatched a large part of his army against
the Chalcidians and Bottiaeans, and shutting them up inside their walls
laid waste their country. While he remained in these parts, the people
farther south, such as the Thessalians, Magnetes, and the other tribes
subject to the Thessalians, and the Hellenes as far as Thermopylae, all
feared that the army might advance against them, and prepared accordingly.
These fears were shared by the Thracians beyond the Strymon to the north,
who inhabited the plains, such as the Panaeans, the Odomanti, the Droi,
and the Dersaeans, all of whom are independent. It was even matter of conversation
among the Hellenes who were enemies of Athens whether he might not be invited
by his ally to advance also against them. Meanwhile he held Chalcidice
and Bottice and Macedonia, and was ravaging them all; but finding that
he was not succeeding in any of the objects of his invasion, and that his
army was without provisions and was suffering from the severity of the
season, he listened to the advice of Seuthes, son of Spardacus, his nephew
and highest officer, and decided to retreat without delay. This Seuthes
had been secretly gained by Perdiccas by the promise of his sister in marriage
with a rich dowry. In accordance with this advice, and after a stay of
thirty days in all, eight of which were spent in Chalcidice, he retired
home as quickly as he could; and Perdiccas afterwards gave his sister Stratonice
to Seuthes as he had promised. Such was the history of the expedition of
Sitalces.
In the course of this winter, after
the dispersion of the Peloponnesian fleet, the Athenians in Naupactus,
under Phormio, coasted along to Astacus and disembarked, and marched into
the interior of Acarnania with four hundred Athenian heavy infantry and
four hundred Messenians. After expelling some suspected persons from Stratus,
Coronta, and other places, and restoring Cynes, son of Theolytus, to Coronta,
they returned to their ships, deciding that it was impossible in the winter
season to march against Oeniadae, a place which, unlike the rest of Acarnania,
had been always hostile to them; for the river Achelous flowing from Mount
Pindus through Dolopia and the country of the Agraeans and Amphilochians
and the plain of Acarnania, past the town of Stratus in the upper part
of its course, forms lakes where it falls into the sea round Oeniadae,
and thus makes it impracticable for an army in winter by reason of the
water. Opposite to Oeniadae lie most of the islands called Echinades, so
close to the mouths of the Achelous that that powerful stream is constantly
forming deposits against them, and has already joined some of the islands
to the continent, and seems likely in no long while to do the same with
the rest. For the current is strong, deep, and turbid, and the islands
are so thick together that they serve to imprison the alluvial deposit
and prevent its dispersing, lying, as they do, not in one line, but irregularly,
so as to leave no direct passage for the water into the open sea. The islands
in question are uninhabited and of no great size. There is also a story
that Alcmaeon, son of Amphiraus, during his wanderings after the murder
of his mother was bidden by Apollo to inhabit this spot, through an oracle
which intimated that he would have no release from his terrors until he
should find a country to dwell in which had not been seen by the sun, or
existed as land at the time he slew his mother; all else being to him polluted
ground. Perplexed at this, the story goes on to say, he at last observed
this deposit of the Achelous, and considered that a place sufficient to
support life upon, might have been thrown up during the long interval that
had elapsed since the death of his mother and the beginning of his wanderings.
Settling, therefore, in the district round Oeniadae, he founded a dominion,
and left the country its name from his son Acarnan. Such is the story we
have received concerning Alcmaeon.
The Athenians and Phormio putting
back from Acarnania and arriving at Naupactus, sailed home to Athens in
the spring, taking with them the ships that they had captured, and such
of the prisoners made in the late actions as were freemen; who were exchanged,
man for man. And so ended this winter, and the third year of this war,
of which Thucydides was the historian. |