<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LXIV">CHAPTER LXIV<br/> <span class="subhead">THE SENTENCE OF DEATH</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">In</span> the fourth year of the Peloponnesian War the city of
Mytilene threw off the yoke of Athens. Mytilene was the
capital of Lesbos, an island near the coast of Asia. The city
had belonged to the Delian league, and when the league
became the empire of Athens, the city remained faithful
to the empire. But as time passed the Mytileneans
became afraid lest Athens should treat them as she had
treated the Samians, and should make them subjects
instead of allies.</p>
<p>While Athens was at war with Sparta she would have
little time, thought the Mytileneans, to trouble about their
small island, so they revolted and asked the Spartans to
support them, if that should be necessary. The Spartans
promised to help the Mytileneans if the Athenians should
punish their disloyalty, but, as so often happened, they
did not attempt to keep their promise until it was too
late.</p>
<p>Athens was angry when she heard of the revolt at
Mytilene. Although she could ill spare the men, she sent an
army under a general named Paches to blockade the town
by sea and by land and so to starve her into submission. At
all costs Mytilene must not fall into the hands of Sparta.</p>
<p>Before long, so strict was the blockade, food began to
run short in the hapless island, and the Spartans failed to
send the help they had promised.</p>
<p>But when the citizens were desperate with hunger, a
messenger from Sparta reached the town. He had passed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_215">215</span>
the Athenian army unnoticed and had entered Mytilene, to
the delight of the starving people. When he assured them
that ships laden with corn were on the way and would reach
them soon, their joy was unbounded.</p>
<p>Day after day, week after week passed, but the Spartan
ships did not come, and hope began to die out of the hearts
of the Mytileneans. It was plain that they must either
surrender or starve to death; so they determined to
surrender.</p>
<p>They sent for Paches, and agreed to give up the city, and
to leave their fate to be decided by the Athenian assembly.
In the meantime about one thousand of the inhabitants were
sent as prisoners to Athens.</p>
<p>The Athenians had been bitterly angry with the
Mytileneans for revolting when their hands were already
full with war at home and with the misery caused by the
plague. They were in no mood now to deal mercifully
with them.</p>
<p>Cleon, a leather-merchant, who by his own efforts had
risen to a high position in the State, roused the temper of the
people by his rough and noisy eloquence, and Pericles was
no longer alive to restrain it, as he had so often done, by
his wiser, calmer speech.</p>
<p>When the assembly met, it was Cleon who proposed that
all those able to bear arms should be put to death, and that
the women and children should be sold as slaves. In its
angry mood the assembly voted as Cleon wished.</p>
<p>No sooner was the sentence of death passed, than a ship
was despatched to the island to bid Paches, the Athenian
general, carry out the terrible decision of the assembly.</p>
<p>But a little later, when the assembly broke up and
escaped from the influence of Cleon’s eloquence, the members
began to be ashamed of their cold-blooded sentence.</p>
<p>Ambassadors from Mytilene had come to Athens to plead
the cause of their people. When they saw that the Athenians
were uneasy, they persuaded them to call another meeting of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_216">216</span>
the assembly the following morning, to reconsider the sentence
that they had passed.</p>
<p>Cleon had felt no regret at the fate of the rebels, and he
was indignant that the assembly should dream of revoking
its decree. When it met on the following day he spoke even
more vehemently than before, urging the members to see
that the sentence was carried out.</p>
<p>But Diodotus, a noble Athenian, whose name has never
been forgotten, spoke as well as Cleon. So wise were his
words that those who had already wished to alter the sentence
for pity’s sake, were now sure that wisdom also demanded
that the Mytileneans should be spared. Diodotus won the
day, for Cleon was defeated by a small majority.</p>
<p>No sooner was the sentence revoked than in hot haste a
ship was manned, and the crew was bidden to do its utmost
to overtake the vessel which was carrying the sentence of
doom to Mytilene. Already it was twenty-four hours since
the ship had left Athens. Was it possible to carry the good
news in time?</p>
<p>The ambassadors promised large rewards to the oarsmen
if they reached the city before the terrible sentence had been
carried out. In their anxiety they provided barley, wine,
oil for the crew.</p>
<p>There was no lack of zeal on the part of the sailors. They
rowed with all their strength, taking but scant rest, and
eating the barley, which had been soaked in wine and oil
and made into cakes, as they sat at their oars. They
knew that on their speed depended the life or death of
thousands.</p>
<p>Swifter and swifter flashed the oars of the second ship.
In the first vessel the sailors pulled slowly, for they were in
no haste to deliver the dread tidings which they carried.
And it was well that they had no heart for their task, for
with every muscle strained to the utmost the crew of the
second boat reached Mytilene only just in time.</p>
<p>The death sentence had already reached Paches, and he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span>
was preparing to carry it out, when with a glad, triumphant
shout the second boat swung into the harbour, and the
Mytileneans were saved.</p>
<p>But even so they paid heavily for their rebellion, for
about thirty of their leading citizens were executed, their
fleet was taken by the Athenians, and the walls of their city
were destroyed.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />