<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LIV">CHAPTER LIV<br/> <span class="subhead">THEMISTOCLES DECEIVES THE SPARTANS</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">After</span> the battle of Plataea, the Athenians brought their
wives and children back to the city, which the Persians had
again left in ruins. Not only were the temples and the
houses burned, but of the city wall scarce a trace was to be
found.</p>
<p>Themistocles encouraged the citizens to rebuild the city,
and this they did with good will. More beautiful temples,
better houses, soon sprang up under the eager hands of the
citizens.</p>
<p>The wall they determined to make so strong and so high
that they would be able to defend their city against any
attack rather than be compelled again to forsake her.</p>
<p>But Sparta was alarmed at her neighbour’s industry;
she was more than alarmed, she was suspicious and angry.
Athens was making herself too strong, the Spartans
murmured in ungenerous mood.</p>
<p>The wall had risen but a little way from the ground
when the Spartans sent to ask the Athenians not to go on
with their work. The reason they gave was a selfish one, for
they said, ‘If the Persians return and take a strongly walled
town so near to Peloponnesus, our cities will not be safe.’
They then promised to offer shelter to the Athenians, should
they again be forced to leave their city, but only on condition
that they would stop building a wall round Athens.
They even asked the Athenians to help them to destroy the
walls that already surrounded the other cities of Greece.</p>
<p>The Athenians were in a dilemma. They were determined<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
to finish the wall, yet they dared not anger the
Spartans, lest they attacked their city while the wall was still
unfinished.</p>
<p>In their perplexity they turned to Themistocles, who had
before now saved them by craft when open defiance threatened
to ruin them.</p>
<p>Themistocles was not long in solving the difficulty. He
said that he would go as an ambassador to Sparta to talk
over the matter. Other ambassadors were to follow him
only when the walls were nearly complete, and meanwhile
men, women and children, all must work day and night, so
that the wall might grow apace.</p>
<p>When Themistocles reached Sparta, he at once said to
the council that he could do nothing until his fellow
ambassadors arrived, and he pretended that he expected
them every day.</p>
<p>He refused to attend the council alone, and when the
Spartans grumbled, he assured them that the Athenians were
not going on with the wall. When they grew impatient he
amused them so well by his clever speeches that they forgot
for a little while to be angry with him.</p>
<p>But when day after day passed and still the other
ambassadors did not come, the Spartans did not hide their
suspicion that they were being deceived. When a rumour
reached them that the Athenians had never ceased to build
the wall, which was now nearly complete, they were angry
indeed, and going to Themistocles they demanded that he
should tell them the truth.</p>
<p>He still denied that the citizens had been building the
wall in his absence, but if they doubted his word, he bade
them send ambassadors to Athens, that they might see for
themselves whether he was deceiving them or not.</p>
<p>So the Spartans sent ambassadors to Athens, and then
Themistocles bade his colleagues join him, for he knew
that now both he and they would be safe. The Spartan
ambassadors would be hostages for their lives.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span></p>
<p>The first thing the Spartans saw as they approached
Athens was a high, strong wall. Then they knew that they
had been deceived, and they sent a messenger to tell their
countrymen that Themistocles had played them false.</p>
<p>Themistocles was no coward. He went into the council
and boldly told the Spartans that it was true he had
deceived them, so that the walls of Athens might be built
before they could interfere.</p>
<p>Indignant as the Spartans were and ashamed of their
own folly in being deceived by the crafty Athenian, they
dared not harm the ambassadors lest their own messengers
should not return in safety.</p>
<p>So they sent them away, and Themistocles and his fellows
returned in triumph to Athens.</p>
<p>Soon after this the city wall was finished, and
Themistocles then urged the people to build another great
wall round the Piraeus. When this was done, Athens had
the largest and safest harbour in Greece.</p>
<p>The other states now appointed her to be the head of the
allied fleet, and no one was more proud of this than
Themistocles. For it was he who had first persuaded the
Athenians to make themselves into a great sea-power.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span></p>
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