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<h2> CHAPTER XX </h2>
<p><i>Seventeenth and Eighteenth Years of the War—Inaction of the
Athenian Army—Alcibiades at Sparta—Investment of Syracuse</i></p>
<p>The Athenian generals left in Sicily now divided the armament into two
parts, and, each taking one by lot, sailed with the whole for Selinus and
Egesta, wishing to know whether the Egestaeans would give the money, and
to look into the question of Selinus and ascertain the state of the
quarrel between her and Egesta. Coasting along Sicily, with the shore on
their left, on the side towards the Tyrrhene Gulf they touched at Himera,
the only Hellenic city in that part of the island, and being refused
admission resumed their voyage. On their way they took Hyccara, a petty
Sicanian seaport, nevertheless at war with Egesta, and making slaves of
the inhabitants gave up the town to the Egestaeans, some of whose horse
had joined them; after which the army proceeded through the territory of
the Sicels until it reached Catana, while the fleet sailed along the coast
with the slaves on board. Meanwhile Nicias sailed straight from Hyccara
along the coast and went to Egesta and, after transacting his other
business and receiving thirty talents, rejoined the forces. They now sold
their slaves for the sum of one hundred and twenty talents, and sailed
round to their Sicel allies to urge them to send troops; and meanwhile
went with half their own force to the hostile town of Hybla in the
territory of Gela, but did not succeed in taking it.</p>
<p>Summer was now over. The winter following, the Athenians at once began to
prepare for moving on Syracuse, and the Syracusans on their side for
marching against them. From the moment when the Athenians failed to attack
them instantly as they at first feared and expected, every day that passed
did something to revive their courage; and when they saw them sailing far
away from them on the other side of Sicily, and going to Hybla only to
fail in their attempts to storm it, they thought less of them than ever,
and called upon their generals, as the multitude is apt to do in its
moments of confidence, to lead them to Catana, since the enemy would not
come to them. Parties also of the Syracusan horse employed in
reconnoitring constantly rode up to the Athenian armament, and among other
insults asked them whether they had not really come to settle with the
Syracusans in a foreign country rather than to resettle the Leontines in
their own.</p>
<p>Aware of this, the Athenian generals determined to draw them out in mass
as far as possible from the city, and themselves in the meantime to sail
by night alongshore, and take up at their leisure a convenient position.
This they knew they could not so well do, if they had to disembark from
their ships in front of a force prepared for them, or to go by land
openly. The numerous cavalry of the Syracusans (a force which they were
themselves without) would then be able to do the greatest mischief to
their light troops and the crowd that followed them; but this plan would
enable them to take up a position in which the horse could do them no hurt
worth speaking of, some Syracusan exiles with the army having told them of
the spot near the Olympieum, which they afterwards occupied. In pursuance
of their idea, the generals imagined the following stratagem. They sent to
Syracuse a man devoted to them, and by the Syracusan generals thought to
be no less in their interest; he was a native of Catana, and said he came
from persons in that place, whose names the Syracusan generals were
acquainted with, and whom they knew to be among the members of their party
still left in the city. He told them that the Athenians passed the night
in the town, at some distance from their arms, and that if the Syracusans
would name a day and come with all their people at daybreak to attack the
armament, they, their friends, would close the gates upon the troops in
the city, and set fire to the vessels, while the Syracusans would easily
take the camp by an attack upon the stockade. In this they would be aided
by many of the Catanians, who were already prepared to act, and from whom
he himself came.</p>
<p>The generals of the Syracusans, who did not want confidence, and who had
intended even without this to march on Catana, believed the man without
any sufficient inquiry, fixed at once a day upon which they would be
there, and dismissed him, and the Selinuntines and others of their allies
having now arrived, gave orders for all the Syracusans to march out in
mass. Their preparations completed, and the time fixed for their arrival
being at hand, they set out for Catana, and passed the night upon the
river Symaethus, in the Leontine territory. Meanwhile the Athenians no
sooner knew of their approach than they took all their forces and such of
the Sicels or others as had joined them, put them on board their ships and
boats, and sailed by night to Syracuse. Thus, when morning broke the
Athenians were landing opposite the Olympieum ready to seize their camping
ground, and the Syracusan horse having ridden up first to Catana and found
that all the armament had put to sea, turned back and told the infantry,
and then all turned back together, and went to the relief of the city.</p>
<p>In the meantime, as the march before the Syracusans was a long one, the
Athenians quietly sat down their army in a convenient position, where they
could begin an engagement when they pleased, and where the Syracusan
cavalry would have least opportunity of annoying them, either before or
during the action, being fenced off on one side by walls, houses, trees,
and by a marsh, and on the other by cliffs. They also felled the
neighbouring trees and carried them down to the sea, and formed a palisade
alongside of their ships, and with stones which they picked up and wood
hastily raised a fort at Daskon, the most vulnerable point of their
position, and broke down the bridge over the Anapus. These preparations
were allowed to go on without any interruption from the city, the first
hostile force to appear being the Syracusan cavalry, followed afterwards
by all the foot together. At first they came close up to the Athenian
army, and then, finding that they did not offer to engage, crossed the
Helorine road and encamped for the night.</p>
<p>The next day the Athenians and their allies prepared for battle, their
dispositions being as follows: Their right wing was occupied by the
Argives and Mantineans, the centre by the Athenians, and the rest of the
field by the other allies. Half their army was drawn up eight deep in
advance, half close to their tents in a hollow square, formed also eight
deep, which had orders to look out and be ready to go to the support of
the troops hardest pressed. The camp followers were placed inside this
reserve. The Syracusans, meanwhile, formed their heavy infantry sixteen
deep, consisting of the mass levy of their own people, and such allies as
had joined them, the strongest contingent being that of the Selinuntines;
next to them the cavalry of the Geloans, numbering two hundred in all,
with about twenty horse and fifty archers from Camarina. The cavalry was
posted on their right, full twelve hundred strong, and next to it the
darters. As the Athenians were about to begin the attack, Nicias went
along the lines, and addressed these words of encouragement to the army
and the nations composing it:</p>
<p>"Soldiers, a long exhortation is little needed by men like ourselves, who
are here to fight in the same battle, the force itself being, to my
thinking, more fit to inspire confidence than a fine speech with a weak
army. Where we have Argives, Mantineans, Athenians, and the first of the
islanders in the ranks together, it were strange indeed, with so many and
so brave companions in arms, if we did not feel confident of victory;
especially when we have mass levies opposed to our picked troops, and what
is more, Siceliots, who may disdain us but will not stand against us,
their skill not being at all commensurate to their rashness. You may also
remember that we are far from home and have no friendly land near, except
what your own swords shall win you; and here I put before you a motive
just the reverse of that which the enemy are appealing to; their cry being
that they shall fight for their country, mine that we shall fight for a
country that is not ours, where we must conquer or hardly get away, as we
shall have their horse upon us in great numbers. Remember, therefore, your
renown, and go boldly against the enemy, thinking the present strait and
necessity more terrible than they."</p>
<p>After this address Nicias at once led on the army. The Syracusans were not
at that moment expecting an immediate engagement, and some had even gone
away to the town, which was close by; these now ran up as hard as they
could and, though behind time, took their places here or there in the main
body as fast as they joined it. Want of zeal or daring was certainly not
the fault of the Syracusans, either in this or the other battles, but
although not inferior in courage, so far as their military science might
carry them, when this failed them they were compelled to give up their
resolution also. On the present occasion, although they had not supposed
that the Athenians would begin the attack, and although constrained to
stand upon their defence at short notice, they at once took up their arms
and advanced to meet them. First, the stone-throwers, slingers, and
archers of either army began skirmishing, and routed or were routed by one
another, as might be expected between light troops; next, soothsayers
brought forward the usual victims, and trumpeters urged on the heavy
infantry to the charge; and thus they advanced, the Syracusans to fight
for their country, and each individual for his safety that day and liberty
hereafter; in the enemy's army, the Athenians to make another's country
theirs and to save their own from suffering by their defeat; the Argives
and independent allies to help them in getting what they came for, and to
earn by victory another sight of the country they had left behind; while
the subject allies owed most of their ardour to the desire of
self-preservation, which they could only hope for if victorious; next to
which, as a secondary motive, came the chance of serving on easier terms,
after helping the Athenians to a fresh conquest.</p>
<p>The armies now came to close quarters, and for a long while fought without
either giving ground. Meanwhile there occurred some claps of thunder with
lightning and heavy rain, which did not fail to add to the fears of the
party fighting for the first time, and very little acquainted with war;
while to their more experienced adversaries these phenomena appeared to be
produced by the time of year, and much more alarm was felt at the
continued resistance of the enemy. At last the Argives drove in the
Syracusan left, and after them the Athenians routed the troops opposed to
them, and the Syracusan army was thus cut in two and betook itself to
flight. The Athenians did not pursue far, being held in check by the
numerous and undefeated Syracusan horse, who attacked and drove back any
of their heavy infantry whom they saw pursuing in advance of the rest; in
spite of which the victors followed so far as was safe in a body, and then
went back and set up a trophy. Meanwhile the Syracusans rallied at the
Helorine road, where they re-formed as well as they could under the
circumstances, and even sent a garrison of their own citizens to the
Olympieum, fearing that the Athenians might lay hands on some of the
treasures there. The rest returned to the town.</p>
<p>The Athenians, however, did not go to the temple, but collected their dead
and laid them upon a pyre, and passed the night upon the field. The next
day they gave the enemy back their dead under truce, to the number of
about two hundred and sixty, Syracusans and allies, and gathered together
the bones of their own, some fifty, Athenians and allies, and taking the
spoils of the enemy, sailed back to Catana. It was now winter; and it did
not seem possible for the moment to carry on the war before Syracuse,
until horse should have been sent for from Athens and levied among the
allies in Sicily—to do away with their utter inferiority in cavalry—and
money should have been collected in the country and received from Athens,
and until some of the cities, which they hoped would be now more disposed
to listen to them after the battle, should have been brought over, and
corn and all other necessaries provided, for a campaign in the spring
against Syracuse.</p>
<p>With this intention they sailed off to Naxos and Catana for the winter.
Meanwhile the Syracusans burned their dead and then held an assembly, in
which Hermocrates, son of Hermon, a man who with a general ability of the
first order had given proofs of military capacity and brilliant courage in
the war, came forward and encouraged them, and told them not to let what
had occurred make them give way, since their spirit had not been
conquered, but their want of discipline had done the mischief. Still they
had not been beaten by so much as might have been expected, especially as
they were, one might say, novices in the art of war, an army of artisans
opposed to the most practised soldiers in Hellas. What had also done great
mischief was the number of the generals (there were fifteen of them) and
the quantity of orders given, combined with the disorder and
insubordination of the troops. But if they were to have a few skilful
generals, and used this winter in preparing their heavy infantry, finding
arms for such as had not got any, so as to make them as numerous as
possible, and forcing them to attend to their training generally, they
would have every chance of beating their adversaries, courage being
already theirs and discipline in the field having thus been added to it.
Indeed, both these qualities would improve, since danger would exercise
them in discipline, while their courage would be led to surpass itself by
the confidence which skill inspires. The generals should be few and
elected with full powers, and an oath should be taken to leave them entire
discretion in their command: if they adopted this plan, their secrets
would be better kept, all preparations would be properly made, and there
would be no room for excuses.</p>
<p>The Syracusans heard him, and voted everything as he advised, and elected
three generals, Hermocrates himself, Heraclides, son of Lysimachus, and
Sicanus, son of Execestes. They also sent envoys to Corinth and Lacedaemon
to procure a force of allies to join them, and to induce the
Lacedaemonians for their sakes openly to address themselves in real
earnest to the war against the Athenians, that they might either have to
leave Sicily or be less able to send reinforcements to their army there.</p>
<p>The Athenian forces at Catana now at once sailed against Messina, in the
expectation of its being betrayed to them. The intrigue, however, after
all came to nothing: Alcibiades, who was in the secret, when he left his
command upon the summons from home, foreseeing that he would be outlawed,
gave information of the plot to the friends of the Syracusans in Messina,
who had at once put to death its authors, and now rose in arms against the
opposite faction with those of their way of thinking, and succeeded in
preventing the admission of the Athenians. The latter waited for thirteen
days, and then, as they were exposed to the weather and without
provisions, and met with no success, went back to Naxos, where they made
places for their ships to lie in, erected a palisade round their camp, and
retired into winter quarters; meanwhile they sent a galley to Athens for
money and cavalry to join them in the spring. During the winter the
Syracusans built a wall on to the city, so as to take in the statue of
Apollo Temenites, all along the side looking towards Epipolae, to make the
task of circumvallation longer and more difficult, in case of their being
defeated, and also erected a fort at Megara and another in the Olympieum,
and stuck palisades along the sea wherever there was a landing Place.
Meanwhile, as they knew that the Athenians were wintering at Naxos, they
marched with all their people to Catana, and ravaged the land and set fire
to the tents and encampment of the Athenians, and so returned home.
Learning also that the Athenians were sending an embassy to Camarina, on
the strength of the alliance concluded in the time of Laches, to gain, if
possible, that city, they sent another from Syracuse to oppose them. They
had a shrewd suspicion that the Camarinaeans had not sent what they did
send for the first battle very willingly; and they now feared that they
would refuse to assist them at all in future, after seeing the success of
the Athenians in the action, and would join the latter on the strength of
their old friendship. Hermocrates, with some others, accordingly arrived
at Camarina from Syracuse, and Euphemus and others from the Athenians; and
an assembly of the Camarinaeans having been convened, Hermocrates spoke as
follows, in the hope of prejudicing them against the Athenians:</p>
<p>"Camarinaeans, we did not come on this embassy because we were afraid of
your being frightened by the actual forces of the Athenians, but rather of
your being gained by what they would say to you before you heard anything
from us. They are come to Sicily with the pretext that you know, and the
intention which we all suspect, in my opinion less to restore the
Leontines to their homes than to oust us from ours; as it is out of all
reason that they should restore in Sicily the cities that they lay waste
in Hellas, or should cherish the Leontine Chalcidians because of their
Ionian blood and keep in servitude the Euboean Chalcidians, of whom the
Leontines are a colony. No; but the same policy which has proved so
successful in Hellas is now being tried in Sicily. After being chosen as
the leaders of the Ionians and of the other allies of Athenian origin, to
punish the Mede, the Athenians accused some of failure in military
service, some of fighting against each other, and others, as the case
might be, upon any colourable pretext that could be found, until they thus
subdued them all. In fine, in the struggle against the Medes, the
Athenians did not fight for the liberty of the Hellenes, or the Hellenes
for their own liberty, but the former to make their countrymen serve them
instead of him, the latter to change one master for another, wiser indeed
than the first, but wiser for evil.</p>
<p>"But we are not now come to declare to an audience familiar with them the
misdeeds of a state so open to accusation as is the Athenian, but much
rather to blame ourselves, who, with the warnings we possess in the
Hellenes in those parts that have been enslaved through not supporting
each other, and seeing the same sophisms being now tried upon ourselves—such
as restorations of Leontine kinsfolk and support of Egestaean allies—do
not stand together and resolutely show them that here are no Ionians, or
Hellespontines, or islanders, who change continually, but always serve a
master, sometimes the Mede and sometimes some other, but free Dorians from
independent Peloponnese, dwelling in Sicily. Or, are we waiting until we
be taken in detail, one city after another; knowing as we do that in no
other way can we be conquered, and seeing that they turn to this plan, so
as to divide some of us by words, to draw some by the bait of an alliance
into open war with each other, and to ruin others by such flattery as
different circumstances may render acceptable? And do we fancy when
destruction first overtakes a distant fellow countryman that the danger
will not come to each of us also, or that he who suffers before us will
suffer in himself alone?</p>
<p>"As for the Camarinaean who says that it is the Syracusan, not he, that is
the enemy of the Athenian, and who thinks it hard to have to encounter
risk in behalf of my country, I would have him bear in mind that he will
fight in my country, not more for mine than for his own, and by so much
the more safely in that he will enter on the struggle not alone, after the
way has been cleared by my ruin, but with me as his ally, and that the
object of the Athenian is not so much to punish the enmity of the
Syracusan as to use me as a blind to secure the friendship of the
Camarinaean. As for him who envies or even fears us (and envied and feared
great powers must always be), and who on this account wishes Syracuse to
be humbled to teach us a lesson, but would still have her survive, in the
interest of his own security the wish that he indulges is not humanly
possible. A man can control his own desires, but he cannot likewise
control circumstances; and in the event of his calculations proving
mistaken, he may live to bewail his own misfortune, and wish to be again
envying my prosperity. An idle wish, if he now sacrifice us and refuse to
take his share of perils which are the same, in reality though not in
name, for him as for us; what is nominally the preservation of our power
being really his own salvation. It was to be expected that you, of all
people in the world, Camarinaeans, being our immediate neighbours and the
next in danger, would have foreseen this, and instead of supporting us in
the lukewarm way that you are now doing, would rather come to us of your
own accord, and be now offering at Syracuse the aid which you would have
asked for at Camarina, if to Camarina the Athenians had first come, to
encourage us to resist the invader. Neither you, however, nor the rest
have as yet bestirred yourselves in this direction.</p>
<p>"Fear perhaps will make you study to do right both by us and by the
invaders, and plead that you have an alliance with the Athenians. But you
made that alliance, not against your friends, but against the enemies that
might attack you, and to help the Athenians when they were wronged by
others, not when as now they are wronging their neighbours. Even the
Rhegians, Chalcidians though they be, refuse to help to restore the
Chalcidian Leontines; and it would be strange if, while they suspect the
gist of this fine pretence and are wise without reason, you, with every
reason on your side, should yet choose to assist your natural enemies, and
should join with their direst foes in undoing those whom nature has made
your own kinsfolk. This is not to do right; but you should help us without
fear of their armament, which has no terrors if we hold together, but only
if we let them succeed in their endeavours to separate us; since even
after attacking us by ourselves and being victorious in battle, they had
to go off without effecting their purpose.</p>
<p>"United, therefore, we have no cause to despair, but rather new
encouragement to league together; especially as succour will come to us
from the Peloponnesians, in military matters the undoubted superiors of
the Athenians. And you need not think that your prudent policy of taking
sides with neither, because allies of both, is either safe for you or fair
to us. Practically it is not as fair as it pretends to be. If the
vanquished be defeated, and the victor conquer, through your refusing to
join, what is the effect of your abstention but to leave the former to
perish unaided, and to allow the latter to offend unhindered? And yet it
were more honourable to join those who are not only the injured party, but
your own kindred, and by so doing to defend the common interests of Sicily
and save your friends the Athenians from doing wrong.</p>
<p>"In conclusion, we Syracusans say that it is useless for us to demonstrate
either to you or to the rest what you know already as well as we do; but
we entreat, and if our entreaty fail, we protest that we are menaced by
our eternal enemies the Ionians, and are betrayed by you our fellow
Dorians. If the Athenians reduce us, they will owe their victory to your
decision, but in their own name will reap the honour, and will receive as
the prize of their triumph the very men who enabled them to gain it. On
the other hand, if we are the conquerors, you will have to pay for having
been the cause of our danger. Consider, therefore; and now make your
choice between the security which present servitude offers and the
prospect of conquering with us and so escaping disgraceful submission to
an Athenian master and avoiding the lasting enmity of Syracuse."</p>
<p>Such were the words of Hermocrates; after whom Euphemus, the Athenian
ambassador, spoke as follows:</p>
<p>"Although we came here only to renew the former alliance, the attack of
the Syracusans compels us to speak of our empire and of the good right we
have to it. The best proof of this the speaker himself furnished, when he
called the Ionians eternal enemies of the Dorians. It is the fact; and the
Peloponnesian Dorians being our superiors in numbers and next neighbours,
we Ionians looked out for the best means of escaping their domination.
After the Median War we had a fleet, and so got rid of the empire and
supremacy of the Lacedaemonians, who had no right to give orders to us
more than we to them, except that of being the strongest at that moment;
and being appointed leaders of the King's former subjects, we continue to
be so, thinking that we are least likely to fall under the dominion of the
Peloponnesians, if we have a force to defend ourselves with, and in strict
truth having done nothing unfair in reducing to subjection the Ionians and
islanders, the kinsfolk whom the Syracusans say we have enslaved. They,
our kinsfolk, came against their mother country, that is to say against
us, together with the Mede, and, instead of having the courage to revolt
and sacrifice their property as we did when we abandoned our city, chose
to be slaves themselves, and to try to make us so.</p>
<p>"We, therefore, deserve to rule because we placed the largest fleet and an
unflinching patriotism at the service of the Hellenes, and because these,
our subjects, did us mischief by their ready subservience to the Medes;
and, desert apart, we seek to strengthen ourselves against the
Peloponnesians. We make no fine profession of having a right to rule
because we overthrew the barbarian single-handed, or because we risked
what we did risk for the freedom of the subjects in question any more than
for that of all, and for our own: no one can be quarrelled with for
providing for his proper safety. If we are now here in Sicily, it is
equally in the interest of our security, with which we perceive that your
interest also coincides. We prove this from the conduct which the
Syracusans cast against us and which you somewhat too timorously suspect;
knowing that those whom fear has made suspicious may be carried away by
the charm of eloquence for the moment, but when they come to act follow
their interests.</p>
<p>"Now, as we have said, fear makes us hold our empire in Hellas, and fear
makes us now come, with the help of our friends, to order safely matters
in Sicily, and not to enslave any but rather to prevent any from being
enslaved. Meanwhile, let no one imagine that we are interesting ourselves
in you without your having anything to do with us, seeing that, if you are
preserved and able to make head against the Syracusans, they will be less
likely to harm us by sending troops to the Peloponnesians. In this way you
have everything to do with us, and on this account it is perfectly
reasonable for us to restore the Leontines, and to make them, not subjects
like their kinsmen in Euboea, but as powerful as possible, to help us by
annoying the Syracusans from their frontier. In Hellas we are alone a
match for our enemies; and as for the assertion that it is out of all
reason that we should free the Sicilian, while we enslave the Chalcidian,
the fact is that the latter is useful to us by being without arms and
contributing money only; while the former, the Leontines and our other
friends, cannot be too independent.</p>
<p>"Besides, for tyrants and imperial cities nothing is unreasonable if
expedient, no one a kinsman unless sure; but friendship or enmity is
everywhere an affair of time and circumstance. Here, in Sicily, our
interest is not to weaken our friends, but by means of their strength to
cripple our enemies. Why doubt this? In Hellas we treat our allies as we
find them useful. The Chians and Methymnians govern themselves and furnish
ships; most of the rest have harder terms and pay tribute in money; while
others, although islanders and easy for us to take, are free altogether,
because they occupy convenient positions round Peloponnese. In our
settlement of the states here in Sicily, we should therefore; naturally be
guided by our interest, and by fear, as we say, of the Syracusans. Their
ambition is to rule you, their object to use the suspicions that we excite
to unite you, and then, when we have gone away without effecting anything,
by force or through your isolation, to become the masters of Sicily. And
masters they must become, if you unite with them; as a force of that
magnitude would be no longer easy for us to deal with united, and they
would be more than a match for you as soon as we were away.</p>
<p>"Any other view of the case is condemned by the facts. When you first
asked us over, the fear which you held out was that of danger to Athens if
we let you come under the dominion of Syracuse; and it is not right now to
mistrust the very same argument by which you claimed to convince us, or to
give way to suspicion because we are come with a larger force against the
power of that city. Those whom you should really distrust are the
Syracusans. We are not able to stay here without you, and if we proved
perfidious enough to bring you into subjection, we should be unable to
keep you in bondage, owing to the length of the voyage and the difficulty
of guarding large, and in a military sense continental, towns: they, the
Syracusans, live close to you, not in a camp, but in a city greater than
the force we have with us, plot always against you, never let slip an
opportunity once offered, as they have shown in the case of the Leontines
and others, and now have the face, just as if you were fools, to invite
you to aid them against the power that hinders this, and that has thus far
maintained Sicily independent. We, as against them, invite you to a much
more real safety, when we beg you not to betray that common safety which
we each have in the other, and to reflect that they, even without allies,
will, by their numbers, have always the way open to you, while you will
not often have the opportunity of defending yourselves with such numerous
auxiliaries; if, through your suspicions, you once let these go away
unsuccessful or defeated, you will wish to see if only a handful of them
back again, when the day is past in which their presence could do anything
for you.</p>
<p>"But we hope, Camarinaeans, that the calumnies of the Syracusans will not
be allowed to succeed either with you or with the rest: we have told you
the whole truth upon the things we are suspected of, and will now briefly
recapitulate, in the hope of convincing you. We assert that we are rulers
in Hellas in order not to be subjects; liberators in Sicily that we may
not be harmed by the Sicilians; that we are compelled to interfere in many
things, because we have many things to guard against; and that now, as
before, we are come as allies to those of you who suffer wrong in this
island, not without invitation but upon invitation. Accordingly, instead
of making yourselves judges or censors of our conduct, and trying to turn
us, which it were now difficult to do, so far as there is anything in our
interfering policy or in our character that chimes in with your interest,
this take and make use of; and be sure that, far from being injurious to
all alike, to most of the Hellenes that policy is even beneficial. Thanks
to it, all men in all places, even where we are not, who either apprehend
or meditate aggression, from the near prospect before them, in the one
case, of obtaining our intervention in their favour, in the other, of our
arrival making the venture dangerous, find themselves constrained,
respectively, to be moderate against their will, and to be preserved
without trouble of their own. Do not you reject this security that is open
to all who desire it, and is now offered to you; but do like others, and
instead of being always on the defensive against the Syracusans, unite
with us, and in your turn at last threaten them."</p>
<p>Such were the words of Euphemus. What the Camarinaeans felt was this.
Sympathizing with the Athenians, except in so far as they might be afraid
of their subjugating Sicily, they had always been at enmity with their
neighbour Syracuse. From the very fact, however, that they were their
neighbours, they feared the Syracusans most of the two, and being
apprehensive of their conquering even without them, both sent them in the
first instance the few horsemen mentioned, and for the future determined
to support them most in fact, although as sparingly as possible; but for
the moment in order not to seem to slight the Athenians, especially as
they had been successful in the engagement, to answer both alike.
Agreeably to this resolution they answered that as both the contending
parties happened to be allies of theirs, they thought it most consistent
with their oaths at present to side with neither; with which answer the
ambassadors of either party departed.</p>
<p>In the meantime, while Syracuse pursued her preparations for war, the
Athenians were encamped at Naxos, and tried by negotiation to gain as many
of the Sicels as possible. Those more in the low lands, and subjects of
Syracuse, mostly held aloof; but the peoples of the interior who had never
been otherwise than independent, with few exceptions, at once joined the
Athenians, and brought down corn to the army, and in some cases even
money. The Athenians marched against those who refused to join, and forced
some of them to do so; in the case of others they were stopped by the
Syracusans sending garrisons and reinforcements. Meanwhile the Athenians
moved their winter quarters from Naxos to Catana, and reconstructed the
camp burnt by the Syracusans, and stayed there the rest of the winter.
They also sent a galley to Carthage, with proffers of friendship, on the
chance of obtaining assistance, and another to Tyrrhenia; some of the
cities there having spontaneously offered to join them in the war. They
also sent round to the Sicels and to Egesta, desiring them to send them as
many horses as possible, and meanwhile prepared bricks, iron, and all
other things necessary for the work of circumvallation, intending by the
spring to begin hostilities.</p>
<p>In the meantime the Syracusan envoys dispatched to Corinth and Lacedaemon
tried as they passed along the coast to persuade the Italiots to interfere
with the proceedings of the Athenians, which threatened Italy quite as
much as Syracuse, and having arrived at Corinth made a speech calling on
the Corinthians to assist them on the ground of their common origin. The
Corinthians voted at once to aid them heart and soul themselves, and then
sent on envoys with them to Lacedaemon, to help them to persuade her also
to prosecute the war with the Athenians more openly at home and to send
succours to Sicily. The envoys from Corinth having reached Lacedaemon
found there Alcibiades with his fellow refugees, who had at once crossed
over in a trading vessel from Thurii, first to Cyllene in Elis, and
afterwards from thence to Lacedaemon; upon the Lacedaemonians' own
invitation, after first obtaining a safe conduct, as he feared them for
the part he had taken in the affair of Mantinea. The result was that the
Corinthians, Syracusans, and Alcibiades, pressing all the same request in
the assembly of the Lacedaemonians, succeeded in persuading them; but as
the ephors and the authorities, although resolved to send envoys to
Syracuse to prevent their surrendering to the Athenians, showed no
disposition to send them any assistance, Alcibiades now came forward and
inflamed and stirred the Lacedaemonians by speaking as follows:</p>
<p>"I am forced first to speak to you of the prejudice with which I am
regarded, in order that suspicion may not make you disinclined to listen
to me upon public matters. The connection, with you as your proxeni, which
the ancestors of our family by reason of some discontent renounced, I
personally tried to renew by my good offices towards you, in particular
upon the occasion of the disaster at Pylos. But although I maintained this
friendly attitude, you yet chose to negotiate the peace with the Athenians
through my enemies, and thus to strengthen them and to discredit me. You
had therefore no right to complain if I turned to the Mantineans and
Argives, and seized other occasions of thwarting and injuring you; and the
time has now come when those among you, who in the bitterness of the
moment may have been then unfairly angry with me, should look at the
matter in its true light, and take a different view. Those again who
judged me unfavourably, because I leaned rather to the side of the
commons, must not think that their dislike is any better founded. We have
always been hostile to tyrants, and all who oppose arbitrary power are
called commons; hence we continued to act as leaders of the multitude;
besides which, as democracy was the government of the city, it was
necessary in most things to conform to established conditions. However, we
endeavoured to be more moderate than the licentious temper of the times;
and while there were others, formerly as now, who tried to lead the
multitude astray—the same who banished me—our party was that
of the whole people, our creed being to do our part in preserving the form
of government under which the city enjoyed the utmost greatness and
freedom, and which we had found existing. As for democracy, the men of
sense among us knew what it was, and I perhaps as well as any, as I have
the more cause to complain of it; but there is nothing new to be said of a
patent absurdity; meanwhile we did not think it safe to alter it under the
pressure of your hostility.</p>
<p>"So much then for the prejudices with which I am regarded: I now can call
your attention to the questions you must consider, and upon which superior
knowledge perhaps permits me to speak. We sailed to Sicily first to
conquer, if possible, the Siceliots, and after them the Italiots also, and
finally to assail the empire and city of Carthage. In the event of all or
most of these schemes succeeding, we were then to attack Peloponnese,
bringing with us the entire force of the Hellenes lately acquired in those
parts, and taking a number of barbarians into our pay, such as the
Iberians and others in those countries, confessedly the most warlike
known, and building numerous galleys in addition to those which we had
already, timber being plentiful in Italy; and with this fleet blockading
Peloponnese from the sea and assailing it with our armies by land, taking
some of the cities by storm, drawing works of circumvallation round
others, we hoped without difficulty to effect its reduction, and after
this to rule the whole of the Hellenic name. Money and corn meanwhile for
the better execution of these plans were to be supplied in sufficient
quantities by the newly acquired places in those countries, independently
of our revenues here at home.</p>
<p>"You have thus heard the history of the present expedition from the man
who most exactly knows what our objects were; and the remaining generals
will, if they can, carry these out just the same. But that the states in
Sicily must succumb if you do not help them, I will now show. Although the
Siceliots, with all their inexperience, might even now be saved if their
forces were united, the Syracusans alone, beaten already in one battle
with all their people and blockaded from the sea, will be unable to
withstand the Athenian armament that is now there. But if Syracuse falls,
all Sicily falls also, and Italy immediately afterwards; and the danger
which I just now spoke of from that quarter will before long be upon you.
None need therefore fancy that Sicily only is in question; Peloponnese
will be so also, unless you speedily do as I tell you, and send on board
ship to Syracuse troops that shall able to row their ships themselves, and
serve as heavy infantry the moment that they land; and what I consider
even more important than the troops, a Spartan as commanding officer to
discipline the forces already on foot and to compel recusants to serve.
The friends that you have already will thus become more confident, and the
waverers will be encouraged to join you. Meanwhile you must carry on the
war here more openly, that the Syracusans, seeing that you do not forget
them, may put heart into their resistance, and that the Athenians may be
less able to reinforce their armament. You must fortify Decelea in Attica,
the blow of which the Athenians are always most afraid and the only one
that they think they have not experienced in the present war; the surest
method of harming an enemy being to find out what he most fears, and to
choose this means of attacking him, since every one naturally knows best
his own weak points and fears accordingly. The fortification in question,
while it benefits you, will create difficulties for your adversaries, of
which I shall pass over many, and shall only mention the chief. Whatever
property there is in the country will most of it become yours, either by
capture or surrender; and the Athenians will at once be deprived of their
revenues from the silver mines at Laurium, of their present gains from
their land and from the law courts, and above all of the revenue from
their allies, which will be paid less regularly, as they lose their awe of
Athens and see you addressing yourselves with vigour to the war. The zeal
and speed with which all this shall be done depends, Lacedaemonians, upon
yourselves; as to its possibility, I am quite confident, and I have little
fear of being mistaken.</p>
<p>"Meanwhile I hope that none of you will think any the worse of me if,
after having hitherto passed as a lover of my country, I now actively join
its worst enemies in attacking it, or will suspect what I say as the fruit
of an outlaw's enthusiasm. I am an outlaw from the iniquity of those who
drove me forth, not, if you will be guided by me, from your service; my
worst enemies are not you who only harmed your foes, but they who forced
their friends to become enemies; and love of country is what I do not feel
when I am wronged, but what I felt when secure in my rights as a citizen.
Indeed I do not consider that I am now attacking a country that is still
mine; I am rather trying to recover one that is mine no longer; and the
true lover of his country is not he who consents to lose it unjustly
rather than attack it, but he who longs for it so much that he will go all
lengths to recover it. For myself, therefore, Lacedaemonians, I beg you to
use me without scruple for danger and trouble of every kind, and to
remember the argument in every one's mouth, that if I did you great harm
as an enemy, I could likewise do you good service as a friend, inasmuch as
I know the plans of the Athenians, while I only guessed yours. For
yourselves I entreat you to believe that your most capital interests are
now under deliberation; and I urge you to send without hesitation the
expeditions to Sicily and Attica; by the presence of a small part of your
forces you will save important cities in that island, and you will destroy
the power of Athens both present and prospective; after this you will
dwell in security and enjoy the supremacy over all Hellas, resting not on
force but upon consent and affection."</p>
<p>Such were the words of Alcibiades. The Lacedaemonians, who had themselves
before intended to march against Athens, but were still waiting and
looking about them, at once became much more in earnest when they received
this particular information from Alcibiades, and considered that they had
heard it from the man who best knew the truth of the matter. Accordingly
they now turned their attention to the fortifying of Decelea and sending
immediate aid to the Sicilians; and naming Gylippus, son of Cleandridas,
to the command of the Syracusans, bade him consult with that people and
with the Corinthians and arrange for succours reaching the island, in the
best and speediest way possible under the circumstances. Gylippus desired
the Corinthians to send him at once two ships to Asine, and to prepare the
rest that they intended to send, and to have them ready to sail at the
proper time. Having settled this, the envoys departed from Lacedaemon.</p>
<p>In the meantime arrived the Athenian galley from Sicily sent by the
generals for money and cavalry; and the Athenians, after hearing what they
wanted, voted to send the supplies for the armament and the cavalry. And
the winter ended, and with it ended the seventeenth year of the present
war of which Thucydides is the historian.</p>
<p>The next summer, at the very beginning of the season, the Athenians in
Sicily put out from Catana, and sailed along shore to Megara in Sicily,
from which, as I have mentioned above, the Syracusans expelled the
inhabitants in the time of their tyrant Gelo, themselves occupying the
territory. Here the Athenians landed and laid waste the country, and after
an unsuccessful attack upon a fort of the Syracusans, went on with the
fleet and army to the river Terias, and advancing inland laid waste the
plain and set fire to the corn; and after killing some of a small
Syracusan party which they encountered, and setting up a trophy, went back
again to their ships. They now sailed to Catana and took in provisions
there, and going with their whole force against Centoripa, a town of the
Sicels, acquired it by capitulation, and departed, after also burning the
corn of the Inessaeans and Hybleans. Upon their return to Catana they
found the horsemen arrived from Athens, to the number of two hundred and
fifty (with their equipments, but without their horses which were to be
procured upon the spot), and thirty mounted archers and three hundred
talents of silver.</p>
<p>The same spring the Lacedaemonians marched against Argos, and went as far
as Cleonae, when an earthquake occurred and caused them to return. After
this the Argives invaded the Thyreatid, which is on their border, and took
much booty from the Lacedaemonians, which was sold for no less than
twenty-five talents. The same summer, not long after, the Thespian commons
made an attack upon the party in office, which was not successful, but
succours arrived from Thebes, and some were caught, while others took
refuge at Athens.</p>
<p>The same summer the Syracusans learned that the Athenians had been joined
by their cavalry, and were on the point of marching against them; and
seeing that without becoming masters of Epipolae, a precipitous spot
situated exactly over the town, the Athenians could not, even if
victorious in battle, easily invest them, they determined to guard its
approaches, in order that the enemy might not ascend unobserved by this,
the sole way by which ascent was possible, as the remainder is lofty
ground, and falls right down to the city, and can all be seen from inside;
and as it lies above the rest the place is called by the Syracusans
Epipolae or Overtown. They accordingly went out in mass at daybreak into
the meadow along the river Anapus, their new generals, Hermocrates and his
colleagues, having just come into office, and held a review of their heavy
infantry, from whom they first selected a picked body of six hundred,
under the command of Diomilus, an exile from Andros, to guard Epipolae,
and to be ready to muster at a moment's notice to help wherever help
should be required.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Athenians, the very same morning, were holding a review,
having already made land unobserved with all the armament from Catana,
opposite a place called Leon, not much more than half a mile from
Epipolae, where they disembarked their army, bringing the fleet to anchor
at Thapsus, a peninsula running out into the sea, with a narrow isthmus,
and not far from the city of Syracuse either by land or water. While the
naval force of the Athenians threw a stockade across the isthmus and
remained quiet at Thapsus, the land army immediately went on at a run to
Epipolae, and succeeded in getting up by Euryelus before the Syracusans
perceived them, or could come up from the meadow and the review. Diomilus
with his six hundred and the rest advanced as quickly as they could, but
they had nearly three miles to go from the meadow before reaching them.
Attacking in this way in considerable disorder, the Syracusans were
defeated in battle at Epipolae and retired to the town, with a loss of
about three hundred killed, and Diomilus among the number. After this the
Athenians set up a trophy and restored to the Syracusans their dead under
truce, and next day descended to Syracuse itself; and no one coming out to
meet them, reascended and built a fort at Labdalum, upon the edge of the
cliffs of Epipolae, looking towards Megara, to serve as a magazine for
their baggage and money, whenever they advanced to battle or to work at
the lines.</p>
<p>Not long afterwards three hundred cavalry came to them from Egesta, and
about a hundred from the Sicels, Naxians, and others; and thus, with the
two hundred and fifty from Athens, for whom they had got horses from the
Egestaeans and Catanians, besides others that they bought, they now
mustered six hundred and fifty cavalry in all. After posting a garrison in
Labdalum, they advanced to Syca, where they sat down and quickly built the
Circle or centre of their wall of circumvallation. The Syracusans,
appalled at the rapidity with which the work advanced, determined to go
out against them and give battle and interrupt it; and the two armies were
already in battle array, when the Syracusan generals observed that their
troops found such difficulty in getting into line, and were in such
disorder, that they led them back into the town, except part of the
cavalry. These remained and hindered the Athenians from carrying stones or
dispersing to any great distance, until a tribe of the Athenian heavy
infantry, with all the cavalry, charged and routed the Syracusan horse
with some loss; after which they set up a trophy for the cavalry action.</p>
<p>The next day the Athenians began building the wall to the north of the
Circle, at the same time collecting stone and timber, which they kept
laying down towards Trogilus along the shortest line for their works from
the great harbour to the sea; while the Syracusans, guided by their
generals, and above all by Hermocrates, instead of risking any more
general engagements, determined to build a counterwork in the direction in
which the Athenians were going to carry their wall. If this could be
completed in time, the enemy's lines would be cut; and meanwhile, if he
were to attempt to interrupt them by an attack, they would send a part of
their forces against him, and would secure the approaches beforehand with
their stockade, while the Athenians would have to leave off working with
their whole force in order to attend to them. They accordingly sallied
forth and began to build, starting from their city, running a cross wall
below the Athenian Circle, cutting down the olives and erecting wooden
towers. As the Athenian fleet had not yet sailed round into the great
harbour, the Syracusans still commanded the seacoast, and the Athenians
brought their provisions by land from Thapsus.</p>
<p>The Syracusans now thought the stockades and stonework of their
counterwall sufficiently far advanced; and as the Athenians, afraid of
being divided and so fighting at a disadvantage, and intent upon their own
wall, did not come out to interrupt them, they left one tribe to guard the
new work and went back into the city. Meanwhile the Athenians destroyed
their pipes of drinking-water carried underground into the city; and
watching until the rest of the Syracusans were in their tents at midday,
and some even gone away into the city, and those in the stockade keeping
but indifferent guard, appointed three hundred picked men of their own,
and some men picked from the light troops and armed for the purpose, to
run suddenly as fast as they could to the counterwork, while the rest of
the army advanced in two divisions, the one with one of the generals to
the city in case of a sortie, the other with the other general to the
stockade by the postern gate. The three hundred attacked and took the
stockade, abandoned by its garrison, who took refuge in the outworks round
the statue of Apollo Temenites. Here the pursuers burst in with them, and
after getting in were beaten out by the Syracusans, and some few of the
Argives and Athenians slain; after which the whole army retired, and
having demolished the counterwork and pulled up the stockade, carried away
the stakes to their own lines, and set up a trophy.</p>
<p>The next day the Athenians from the Circle proceeded to fortify the cliff
above the marsh which on this side of Epipolae looks towards the great
harbour; this being also the shortest line for their work to go down
across the plain and the marsh to the harbour. Meanwhile the Syracusans
marched out and began a second stockade, starting from the city, across
the middle of the marsh, digging a trench alongside to make it impossible
for the Athenians to carry their wall down to the sea. As soon as the
Athenians had finished their work at the cliff they again attacked the
stockade and ditch of the Syracusans. Ordering the fleet to sail round
from Thapsus into the great harbour of Syracuse, they descended at about
dawn from Epipolae into the plain, and laying doors and planks over the
marsh, where it was muddy and firmest, crossed over on these, and by
daybreak took the ditch and the stockade, except a small portion which
they captured afterwards. A battle now ensued, in which the Athenians were
victorious, the right wing of the Syracusans flying to the town and the
left to the river. The three hundred picked Athenians, wishing to cut off
their passage, pressed on at a run to the bridge, when the alarmed
Syracusans, who had with them most of their cavalry, closed and routed
them, hurling them back upon the Athenian right wing, the first tribe of
which was thrown into a panic by the shock. Seeing this, Lamachus came to
their aid from the Athenian left with a few archers and with the Argives,
and crossing a ditch, was left alone with a few that had crossed with him,
and was killed with five or six of his men. These the Syracusans managed
immediately to snatch up in haste and get across the river into a place of
security, themselves retreating as the rest of the Athenian army now came
up.</p>
<p>Meanwhile those who had at first fled for refuge to the city, seeing the
turn affairs were taking, now rallied from the town and formed against the
Athenians in front of them, sending also a part of their number to the
Circle on Epipolae, which they hoped to take while denuded of its
defenders. These took and destroyed the Athenian outwork of a thousand
feet, the Circle itself being saved by Nicias, who happened to have been
left in it through illness, and who now ordered the servants to set fire
to the engines and timber thrown down before the wall; want of men, as he
was aware, rendering all other means of escape impossible. This step was
justified by the result, the Syracusans not coming any further on account
of the fire, but retreating. Meanwhile succours were coming up from the
Athenians below, who had put to flight the troops opposed to them; and the
fleet also, according to orders, was sailing from Thapsus into the great
harbour. Seeing this, the troops on the heights retired in haste, and the
whole army of the Syracusans re-entered the city, thinking that with their
present force they would no longer be able to hinder the wall reaching the
sea.</p>
<p>After this the Athenians set up a trophy and restored to the Syracusans
their dead under truce, receiving in return Lamachus and those who had
fallen with him. The whole of their forces, naval and military, being now
with them, they began from Epipolae and the cliffs and enclosed the
Syracusans with a double wall down to the sea. Provisions were now brought
in for the armament from all parts of Italy; and many of the Sicels, who
had hitherto been looking to see how things went, came as allies to the
Athenians: there also arrived three ships of fifty oars from Tyrrhenia.
Meanwhile everything else progressed favourably for their hopes. The
Syracusans began to despair of finding safety in arms, no relief having
reached them from Peloponnese, and were now proposing terms of
capitulation among themselves and to Nicias, who after the death of
Lamachus was left sole commander. No decision was come to, but, as was
natural with men in difficulties and besieged more straitly than before,
there was much discussion with Nicias and still more in the town. Their
present misfortunes had also made them suspicious of one another; and the
blame of their disasters was thrown upon the ill-fortune or treachery of
the generals under whose command they had happened; and these were deposed
and others, Heraclides, Eucles, and Tellias, elected in their stead.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Lacedaemonian, Gylippus, and the ships from Corinth were now
off Leucas, intent upon going with all haste to the relief of Sicily. The
reports that reached them being of an alarming kind, and all agreeing in
the falsehood that Syracuse was already completely invested, Gylippus
abandoned all hope of Sicily, and wishing to save Italy, rapidly crossed
the Ionian Sea to Tarentum with the Corinthian, Pythen, two Laconian, and
two Corinthian vessels, leaving the Corinthians to follow him after
manning, in addition to their own ten, two Leucadian and two Ambraciot
ships. From Tarentum Gylippus first went on an embassy to Thurii, and
claimed anew the rights of citizenship which his father had enjoyed;
failing to bring over the townspeople, he weighed anchor and coasted along
Italy. Opposite the Terinaean Gulf he was caught by the wind which blows
violently and steadily from the north in that quarter, and was carried out
to sea; and after experiencing very rough weather, remade Tarentum, where
he hauled ashore and refitted such of his ships as had suffered most from
the tempest. Nicias heard of his approach, but, like the Thurians,
despised the scanty number of his ships, and set down piracy as the only
probable object of the voyage, and so took no precautions for the present.</p>
<p>About the same time in this summer, the Lacedaemonians invaded Argos with
their allies, and laid waste most of the country. The Athenians went with
thirty ships to the relief of the Argives, thus breaking their treaty with
the Lacedaemonians in the most overt manner. Up to this time incursions
from Pylos, descents on the coast of the rest of Peloponnese, instead of
on the Laconian, had been the extent of their co-operation with the
Argives and Mantineans; and although the Argives had often begged them to
land, if only for a moment, with their heavy infantry in Laconia, lay
waste ever so little of it with them, and depart, they had always refused
to do so. Now, however, under the command of Phytodorus, Laespodius, and
Demaratus, they landed at Epidaurus Limera, Prasiae, and other places, and
plundered the country; and thus furnished the Lacedaemonians with a better
pretext for hostilities against Athens. After the Athenians had retired
from Argos with their fleet, and the Lacedaemonians also, the Argives made
an incursion into the Phlisaid, and returned home after ravaging their
land and killing some of the inhabitants.</p>
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