<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0027" id="link2H_4_0027"></SPAN></p>
<h2> BOOK VII </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XXI </h2>
<p><i>Eighteenth and Nineteenth Years of the War—Arrival of Gylippus at
Syracuse—Fortification of Decelea—Successes of the Syracusans</i></p>
<p>After refitting their ships, Gylippus and Pythen coasted along from
Tarentum to Epizephyrian Locris. They now received the more correct
information that Syracuse was not yet completely invested, but that it was
still possible for an army arriving at Epipolae to effect an entrance; and
they consulted, accordingly, whether they should keep Sicily on their
right and risk sailing in by sea, or, leaving it on their left, should
first sail to Himera and, taking with them the Himeraeans and any others
that might agree to join them, go to Syracuse by land. Finally they
determined to sail for Himera, especially as the four Athenian ships which
Nicias had at length sent off, on hearing that they were at Locris, had
not yet arrived at Rhegium. Accordingly, before these reached their post,
the Peloponnesians crossed the strait and, after touching at Rhegium and
Messina, came to Himera. Arrived there, they persuaded the Himeraeans to
join in the war, and not only to go with them themselves but to provide
arms for the seamen from their vessels which they had drawn ashore at
Himera; and they sent and appointed a place for the Selinuntines to meet
them with all their forces. A few troops were also promised by the Geloans
and some of the Sicels, who were now ready to join them with much greater
alacrity, owing to the recent death of Archonidas, a powerful Sicel king
in that neighbourhood and friendly to Athens, and owing also to the vigour
shown by Gylippus in coming from Lacedaemon. Gylippus now took with him
about seven hundred of his sailors and marines, that number only having
arms, a thousand heavy infantry and light troops from Himera with a body
of a hundred horse, some light troops and cavalry from Selinus, a few
Geloans, and Sicels numbering a thousand in all, and set out on his march
for Syracuse.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Corinthian fleet from Leucas made all haste to arrive; and
one of their commanders, Gongylus, starting last with a single ship, was
the first to reach Syracuse, a little before Gylippus. Gongylus found the
Syracusans on the point of holding an assembly to consider whether they
should put an end to the war. This he prevented, and reassured them by
telling them that more vessels were still to arrive, and that Gylippus,
son of Cleandridas, had been dispatched by the Lacedaemonians to take the
command. Upon this the Syracusans took courage, and immediately marched
out with all their forces to meet Gylippus, who they found was now close
at hand. Meanwhile Gylippus, after taking Ietae, a fort of the Sicels, on
his way, formed his army in order of battle, and so arrived at Epipolae,
and ascending by Euryelus, as the Athenians had done at first, now
advanced with the Syracusans against the Athenian lines. His arrival
chanced at a critical moment. The Athenians had already finished a double
wall of six or seven furlongs to the great harbour, with the exception of
a small portion next the sea, which they were still engaged upon; and in
the remainder of the circle towards Trogilus on the other sea, stones had
been laid ready for building for the greater part of the distance, and
some points had been left half finished, while others were entirely
completed. The danger of Syracuse had indeed been great.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Athenians, recovering from the confusion into which they had
been first thrown by the sudden approach of Gylippus and the Syracusans,
formed in order of battle. Gylippus halted at a short distance off and
sent on a herald to tell them that, if they would evacuate Sicily with bag
and baggage within five days' time, he was willing to make a truce
accordingly. The Athenians treated this proposition with contempt, and
dismissed the herald without an answer. After this both sides began to
prepare for action. Gylippus, observing that the Syracusans were in
disorder and did not easily fall into line, drew off his troops more into
the open ground, while Nicias did not lead on the Athenians but lay still
by his own wall. When Gylippus saw that they did not come on, he led off
his army to the citadel of the quarter of Apollo Temenites, and passed the
night there. On the following day he led out the main body of his army,
and, drawing them up in order of battle before the walls of the Athenians
to prevent their going to the relief of any other quarter, dispatched a
strong force against Fort Labdalum, and took it, and put all whom he found
in it to the sword, the place not being within sight of the Athenians. On
the same day an Athenian galley that lay moored off the harbour was
captured by the Syracusans.</p>
<p>After this the Syracusans and their allies began to carry a single wall,
starting from the city, in a slanting direction up Epipolae, in order that
the Athenians, unless they could hinder the work, might be no longer able
to invest them. Meanwhile the Athenians, having now finished their wall
down to the sea, had come up to the heights; and part of their wall being
weak, Gylippus drew out his army by night and attacked it. However, the
Athenians who happened to be bivouacking outside took the alarm and came
out to meet him, upon seeing which he quickly led his men back again. The
Athenians now built their wall higher, and in future kept guard at this
point themselves, disposing their confederates along the remainder of the
works, at the stations assigned to them. Nicias also determined to fortify
Plemmyrium, a promontory over against the city, which juts out and narrows
the mouth of the Great Harbour. He thought that the fortification of this
place would make it easier to bring in supplies, as they would be able to
carry on their blockade from a less distance, near to the port occupied by
the Syracusans; instead of being obliged, upon every movement of the
enemy's navy, to put out against them from the bottom of the great
harbour. Besides this, he now began to pay more attention to the war by
sea, seeing that the coming of Gylippus had diminished their hopes by
land. Accordingly, he conveyed over his ships and some troops, and built
three forts in which he placed most of his baggage, and moored there for
the future the larger craft and men-of-war. This was the first and chief
occasion of the losses which the crews experienced. The water which they
used was scarce and had to be fetched from far, and the sailors could not
go out for firewood without being cut off by the Syracusan horse, who were
masters of the country; a third of the enemy's cavalry being stationed at
the little town of Olympieum, to prevent plundering incursions on the part
of the Athenians at Plemmyrium. Meanwhile Nicias learned that the rest of
the Corinthian fleet was approaching, and sent twenty ships to watch for
them, with orders to be on the look-out for them about Locris and Rhegium
and the approach to Sicily.</p>
<p>Gylippus, meanwhile, went on with the wall across Epipolae, using the
stones which the Athenians had laid down for their own wall, and at the
same time constantly led out the Syracusans and their allies, and formed
them in order of battle in front of the lines, the Athenians forming
against him. At last he thought that the moment was come, and began the
attack; and a hand-to-hand fight ensued between the lines, where the
Syracusan cavalry could be of no use; and the Syracusans and their allies
were defeated and took up their dead under truce, while the Athenians
erected a trophy. After this Gylippus called the soldiers together, and
said that the fault was not theirs but his; he had kept their lines too
much within the works, and had thus deprived them of the services of their
cavalry and darters. He would now, therefore, lead them on a second time.
He begged them to remember that in material force they would be fully a
match for their opponents, while, with respect to moral advantages, it
were intolerable if Peloponnesians and Dorians should not feel confident
of overcoming Ionians and islanders with the motley rabble that
accompanied them, and of driving them out of the country.</p>
<p>After this he embraced the first opportunity that offered of again leading
them against the enemy. Now Nicias and the Athenians held the opinion that
even if the Syracusans should not wish to offer battle, it was necessary
for them to prevent the building of the cross wall, as it already almost
overlapped the extreme point of their own, and if it went any further it
would from that moment make no difference whether they fought ever so many
successful actions, or never fought at all. They accordingly came out to
meet the Syracusans. Gylippus led out his heavy infantry further from the
fortifications than on the former occasion, and so joined battle; posting
his horse and darters upon the flank of the Athenians in the open space,
where the works of the two walls terminated. During the engagement the
cavalry attacked and routed the left wing of the Athenians, which was
opposed to them; and the rest of the Athenian army was in consequence
defeated by the Syracusans and driven headlong within their lines. The
night following the Syracusans carried their wall up to the Athenian works
and passed them, thus putting it out of their power any longer to stop
them, and depriving them, even if victorious in the field, of all chance
of investing the city for the future.</p>
<p>After this the remaining twelve vessels of the Corinthians, Ambraciots,
and Leucadians sailed into the harbour under the command of Erasinides, a
Corinthian, having eluded the Athenian ships on guard, and helped the
Syracusans in completing the remainder of the cross wall. Meanwhile
Gylippus went into the rest of Sicily to raise land and naval forces, and
also to bring over any of the cities that either were lukewarm in the
cause or had hitherto kept out of the war altogether. Syracusan and
Corinthian envoys were also dispatched to Lacedaemon and Corinth to get a
fresh force sent over, in any way that might offer, either in merchant
vessels or transports, or in any other manner likely to prove successful,
as the Athenians too were sending for reinforcements; while the Syracusans
proceeded to man a fleet and to exercise, meaning to try their fortune in
this way also, and generally became exceedingly confident.</p>
<p>Nicias perceiving this, and seeing the strength of the enemy and his own
difficulties daily increasing, himself also sent to Athens. He had before
sent frequent reports of events as they occurred, and felt it especially
incumbent upon him to do so now, as he thought that they were in a
critical position, and that, unless speedily recalled or strongly
reinforced from home, they had no hope of safety. He feared, however, that
the messengers, either through inability to speak, or through failure of
memory, or from a wish to please the multitude, might not report the
truth, and so thought it best to write a letter, to ensure that the
Athenians should know his own opinion without its being lost in
transmission, and be able to decide upon the real facts of the case.</p>
<p>His emissaries, accordingly, departed with the letter and the requisite
verbal instructions; and he attended to the affairs of the army, making it
his aim now to keep on the defensive and to avoid any unnecessary danger.</p>
<p>At the close of the same summer the Athenian general Euetion marched in
concert with Perdiccas with a large body of Thracians against Amphipolis,
and failing to take it brought some galleys round into the Strymon, and
blockaded the town from the river, having his base at Himeraeum.</p>
<p>Summer was now over. The winter ensuing, the persons sent by Nicias,
reaching Athens, gave the verbal messages which had been entrusted to
them, and answered any questions that were asked them, and delivered the
letter. The clerk of the city now came forward and read out to the
Athenians the letter, which was as follows:</p>
<p>"Our past operations, Athenians, have been made known to you by many other
letters; it is now time for you to become equally familiar with our
present condition, and to take your measures accordingly. We had defeated
in most of our engagements with them the Syracusans, against whom we were
sent, and we had built the works which we now occupy, when Gylippus
arrived from Lacedaemon with an army obtained from Peloponnese and from
some of the cities in Sicily. In our first battle with him we were
victorious; in the battle on the following day we were overpowered by a
multitude of cavalry and darters, and compelled to retire within our
lines. We have now, therefore, been forced by the numbers of those opposed
to us to discontinue the work of circumvallation, and to remain inactive;
being unable to make use even of all the force we have, since a large
portion of our heavy infantry is absorbed in the defence of our lines.
Meanwhile the enemy have carried a single wall past our lines, thus making
it impossible for us to invest them in future, until this cross wall be
attacked by a strong force and captured. So that the besieger in name has
become, at least from the land side, the besieged in reality; as we are
prevented by their cavalry from even going for any distance into the
country.</p>
<p>"Besides this, an embassy has been dispatched to Peloponnese to procure
reinforcements, and Gylippus has gone to the cities in Sicily, partly in
the hope of inducing those that are at present neutral to join him in the
war, partly of bringing from his allies additional contingents for the
land forces and material for the navy. For I understand that they
contemplate a combined attack, upon our lines with their land forces and
with their fleet by sea. You must none of you be surprised that I say by
sea also. They have discovered that the length of the time we have now
been in commission has rotted our ships and wasted our crews, and that
with the entireness of our crews and the soundness of our ships the
pristine efficiency of our navy has departed. For it is impossible for us
to haul our ships ashore and careen them, because, the enemy's vessels
being as many or more than our own, we are constantly anticipating an
attack. Indeed, they may be seen exercising, and it lies with them to take
the initiative; and not having to maintain a blockade, they have greater
facilities for drying their ships.</p>
<p>"This we should scarcely be able to do, even if we had plenty of ships to
spare, and were freed from our present necessity of exhausting all our
strength upon the blockade. For it is already difficult to carry in
supplies past Syracuse; and were we to relax our vigilance in the
slightest degree it would become impossible. The losses which our crews
have suffered and still continue to suffer arise from the following
causes. Expeditions for fuel and for forage, and the distance from which
water has to be fetched, cause our sailors to be cut off by the Syracusan
cavalry; the loss of our previous superiority emboldens our slaves to
desert; our foreign seamen are impressed by the unexpected appearance of a
navy against us, and the strength of the enemy's resistance; such of them
as were pressed into the service take the first opportunity of departing
to their respective cities; such as were originally seduced by the
temptation of high pay, and expected little fighting and large gains,
leave us either by desertion to the enemy or by availing themselves of one
or other of the various facilities of escape which the magnitude of Sicily
affords them. Some even engage in trade themselves and prevail upon the
captains to take Hyccaric slaves on board in their place; thus they have
ruined the efficiency of our navy.</p>
<p>"Now I need not remind you that the time during which a crew is in its
prime is short, and that the number of sailors who can start a ship on her
way and keep the rowing in time is small. But by far my greatest trouble
is, that holding the post which I do, I am prevented by the natural
indocility of the Athenian seaman from putting a stop to these evils; and
that meanwhile we have no source from which to recruit our crews, which
the enemy can do from many quarters, but are compelled to depend both for
supplying the crews in service and for making good our losses upon the men
whom we brought with us. For our present confederates, Naxos and Catana,
are incapable of supplying us. There is only one thing more wanting to our
opponents, I mean the defection of our Italian markets. If they were to
see you neglect to relieve us from our present condition, and were to go
over to the enemy, famine would compel us to evacuate, and Syracuse would
finish the war without a blow.</p>
<p>"I might, it is true, have written to you something different and more
agreeable than this, but nothing certainly more useful, if it is desirable
for you to know the real state of things here before taking your measures.
Besides I know that it is your nature to love to be told the best side of
things, and then to blame the teller if the expectations which he has
raised in your minds are not answered by the result; and I therefore
thought it safest to declare to you the truth.</p>
<p>"Now you are not to think that either your generals or your soldiers have
ceased to be a match for the forces originally opposed to them. But you
are to reflect that a general Sicilian coalition is being formed against
us; that a fresh army is expected from Peloponnese, while the force we
have here is unable to cope even with our present antagonists; and you
must promptly decide either to recall us or to send out to us another
fleet and army as numerous again, with a large sum of money, and someone
to succeed me, as a disease in the kidneys unfits me for retaining my
post. I have, I think, some claim on your indulgence, as while I was in my
prime I did you much good service in my commands. But whatever you mean to
do, do it at the commencement of spring and without delay, as the enemy
will obtain his Sicilian reinforcements shortly, those from Peloponnese
after a longer interval; and unless you attend to the matter the former
will be here before you, while the latter will elude you as they have done
before."</p>
<p>Such were the contents of Nicias's letter. When the Athenians had heard it
they refused to accept his resignation, but chose him two colleagues,
naming Menander and Euthydemus, two of the officers at the seat of war, to
fill their places until their arrival, that Nicias might not be left alone
in his sickness to bear the whole weight of affairs. They also voted to
send out another army and navy, drawn partly from the Athenians on the
muster-roll, partly from the allies. The colleagues chosen for Nicias were
Demosthenes, son of Alcisthenes, and Eurymedon, son of Thucles. Eurymedon
was sent off at once, about the time of the winter solstice, with ten
ships, a hundred and twenty talents of silver, and instructions to tell
the army that reinforcements would arrive, and that care would be taken of
them; but Demosthenes stayed behind to organize the expedition, meaning to
start as soon as it was spring, and sent for troops to the allies, and
meanwhile got together money, ships, and heavy infantry at home.</p>
<p>The Athenians also sent twenty vessels round Peloponnese to prevent any
one crossing over to Sicily from Corinth or Peloponnese. For the
Corinthians, filled with confidence by the favourable alteration in
Sicilian affairs which had been reported by the envoys upon their arrival,
and convinced that the fleet which they had before sent out had not been
without its use, were now preparing to dispatch a force of heavy infantry
in merchant vessels to Sicily, while the Lacedaemonians did the like for
the rest of Peloponnese. The Corinthians also manned a fleet of
twenty-five vessels, intending to try the result of a battle with the
squadron on guard at Naupactus, and meanwhile to make it less easy for the
Athenians there to hinder the departure of their merchantmen, by obliging
them to keep an eye upon the galleys thus arrayed against them.</p>
<p>In the meantime the Lacedaemonians prepared for their invasion of Attica,
in accordance with their own previous resolve, and at the instigation of
the Syracusans and Corinthians, who wished for an invasion to arrest the
reinforcements which they heard that Athens was about to send to Sicily.
Alcibiades also urgently advised the fortification of Decelea, and a
vigorous prosecution of the war. But the Lacedaemonians derived most
encouragement from the belief that Athens, with two wars on her hands,
against themselves and against the Siceliots, would be more easy to
subdue, and from the conviction that she had been the first to infringe
the truce. In the former war, they considered, the offence had been more
on their own side, both on account of the entrance of the Thebans into
Plataea in time of peace, and also of their own refusal to listen to the
Athenian offer of arbitration, in spite of the clause in the former treaty
that where arbitration should be offered there should be no appeal to
arms. For this reason they thought that they deserved their misfortunes,
and took to heart seriously the disaster at Pylos and whatever else had
befallen them. But when, besides the ravages from Pylos, which went on
without any intermission, the thirty Athenian ships came out from Argos
and wasted part of Epidaurus, Prasiae, and other places; when upon every
dispute that arose as to the interpretation of any doubtful point in the
treaty, their own offers of arbitration were always rejected by the
Athenians, the Lacedaemonians at length decided that Athens had now
committed the very same offence as they had before done, and had become
the guilty party; and they began to be full of ardour for the war. They
spent this winter in sending round to their allies for iron, and in
getting ready the other implements for building their fort; and meanwhile
began raising at home, and also by forced requisitions in the rest of
Peloponnese, a force to be sent out in the merchantmen to their allies in
Sicily. Winter thus ended, and with it the eighteenth year of this war of
which Thucydides is the historian.</p>
<p>In the first days of the spring following, at an earlier period than
usual, the Lacedaemonians and their allies invaded Attica, under the
command of Agis, son of Archidamus, king of the Lacedaemonians. They began
by devastating the parts bordering upon the plain, and next proceeded to
fortify Decelea, dividing the work among the different cities. Decelea is
about thirteen or fourteen miles from the city of Athens, and the same
distance or not much further from Boeotia; and the fort was meant to annoy
the plain and the richest parts of the country, being in sight of Athens.
While the Peloponnesians and their allies in Attica were engaged in the
work of fortification, their countrymen at home sent off, at about the
same time, the heavy infantry in the merchant vessels to Sicily; the
Lacedaemonians furnishing a picked force of Helots and Neodamodes (or
freedmen), six hundred heavy infantry in all, under the command of
Eccritus, a Spartan; and the Boeotians three hundred heavy infantry,
commanded by two Thebans, Xenon and Nicon, and by Hegesander, a Thespian.
These were among the first to put out into the open sea, starting from
Taenarus in Laconia. Not long after their departure the Corinthians sent
off a force of five hundred heavy infantry, consisting partly of men from
Corinth itself, and partly of Arcadian mercenaries, placed under the
command of Alexarchus, a Corinthian. The Sicyonians also sent off two
hundred heavy infantry at same time as the Corinthians, under the command
of Sargeus, a Sicyonian. Meantime the five-and-twenty vessels manned by
Corinth during the winter lay confronting the twenty Athenian ships at
Naupactus until the heavy infantry in the merchantmen were fairly on their
way from Peloponnese; thus fulfilling the object for which they had been
manned originally, which was to divert the attention of the Athenians from
the merchantmen to the galleys.</p>
<p>During this time the Athenians were not idle. Simultaneously with the
fortification of Decelea, at the very beginning of spring, they sent
thirty ships round Peloponnese, under Charicles, son of Apollodorus, with
instructions to call at Argos and demand a force of their heavy infantry
for the fleet, agreeably to the alliance. At the same time they dispatched
Demosthenes to Sicily, as they had intended, with sixty Athenian and five
Chian vessels, twelve hundred Athenian heavy infantry from the
muster-roll, and as many of the islanders as could be raised in the
different quarters, drawing upon the other subject allies for whatever
they could supply that would be of use for the war. Demosthenes was
instructed first to sail round with Charicles and to operate with him upon
the coasts of Laconia, and accordingly sailed to Aegina and there waited
for the remainder of his armament, and for Charicles to fetch the Argive
troops.</p>
<p>In Sicily, about the same time in this spring, Gylippus came to Syracuse
with as many troops as he could bring from the cities which he had
persuaded to join. Calling the Syracusans together, he told them that they
must man as many ships as possible, and try their hand at a sea-fight, by
which he hoped to achieve an advantage in the war not unworthy of the
risk. With him Hermocrates actively joined in trying to encourage his
countrymen to attack the Athenians at sea, saying that the latter had not
inherited their naval prowess nor would they retain it for ever; they had
been landsmen even to a greater degree than the Syracusans, and had only
become a maritime power when obliged by the Mede. Besides, to daring
spirits like the Athenians, a daring adversary would seem the most
formidable; and the Athenian plan of paralysing by the boldness of their
attack a neighbour often not their inferior in strength could now be used
against them with as good effect by the Syracusans. He was convinced also
that the unlooked-for spectacle of Syracusans daring to face the Athenian
navy would cause a terror to the enemy, the advantages of which would far
outweigh any loss that Athenian science might inflict upon their
inexperience. He accordingly urged them to throw aside their fears and to
try their fortune at sea; and the Syracusans, under the influence of
Gylippus and Hermocrates, and perhaps some others, made up their minds for
the sea-fight and began to man their vessels.</p>
<p>When the fleet was ready, Gylippus led out the whole army by night; his
plan being to assault in person the forts on Plemmyrium by land, while
thirty-five Syracusan galleys sailed according to appointment against the
enemy from the great harbour, and the forty-five remaining came round from
the lesser harbour, where they had their arsenal, in order to effect a
junction with those inside and simultaneously to attack Plemmyrium, and
thus to distract the Athenians by assaulting them on two sides at once.
The Athenians quickly manned sixty ships, and with twenty-five of these
engaged the thirty-five of the Syracusans in the great harbour, sending
the rest to meet those sailing round from the arsenal; and an action now
ensued directly in front of the mouth of the great harbour, maintained
with equal tenacity on both sides; the one wishing to force the passage,
the other to prevent them.</p>
<p>In the meantime, while the Athenians in Plemmyrium were down at the sea,
attending to the engagement, Gylippus made a sudden attack on the forts in
the early morning and took the largest first, and afterwards the two
smaller, whose garrisons did not wait for him, seeing the largest so
easily taken. At the fall of the first fort, the men from it who succeeded
in taking refuge in their boats and merchantmen, found great difficulty in
reaching the camp, as the Syracusans were having the best of it in the
engagement in the great harbour, and sent a fast-sailing galley to pursue
them. But when the two others fell, the Syracusans were now being
defeated; and the fugitives from these sailed alongshore with more ease.
The Syracusan ships fighting off the mouth of the harbour forced their way
through the Athenian vessels and sailing in without any order fell foul of
one another, and transferred the victory to the Athenians; who not only
routed the squadron in question, but also that by which they were at first
being defeated in the harbour, sinking eleven of the Syracusan vessels and
killing most of the men, except the crews of three ships whom they made
prisoners. Their own loss was confined to three vessels; and after hauling
ashore the Syracusan wrecks and setting up a trophy upon the islet in
front of Plemmyrium, they retired to their own camp.</p>
<p>Unsuccessful at sea, the Syracusans had nevertheless the forts in
Plemmyrium, for which they set up three trophies. One of the two last
taken they razed, but put in order and garrisoned the two others. In the
capture of the forts a great many men were killed and made prisoners, and
a great quantity of property was taken in all. As the Athenians had used
them as a magazine, there was a large stock of goods and corn of the
merchants inside, and also a large stock belonging to the captains; the
masts and other furniture of forty galleys being taken, besides three
galleys which had been drawn up on shore. Indeed the first and chiefest
cause of the ruin of the Athenian army was the capture of Plemmyrium; even
the entrance of the harbour being now no longer safe for carrying in
provisions, as the Syracusan vessels were stationed there to prevent it,
and nothing could be brought in without fighting; besides the general
impression of dismay and discouragement produced upon the army.</p>
<p>After this the Syracusans sent out twelve ships under the command of
Agatharchus, a Syracusan. One of these went to Peloponnese with
ambassadors to describe the hopeful state of their affairs, and to incite
the Peloponnesians to prosecute the war there even more actively than they
were now doing, while the eleven others sailed to Italy, hearing that
vessels laden with stores were on their way to the Athenians. After
falling in with and destroying most of the vessels in question, and
burning in the Caulonian territory a quantity of timber for shipbuilding,
which had been got ready for the Athenians, the Syracusan squadron went to
Locri, and one of the merchantmen from Peloponnese coming in, while they
were at anchor there, carrying Thespian heavy infantry, took these on
board and sailed alongshore towards home. The Athenians were on the
look-out for them with twenty ships at Megara, but were only able to take
one vessel with its crew; the rest getting clear off to Syracuse. There
was also some skirmishing in the harbour about the piles which the
Syracusans had driven in the sea in front of the old docks, to allow their
ships to lie at anchor inside, without being hurt by the Athenians sailing
up and running them down. The Athenians brought up to them a ship of ten
thousand talents burden furnished with wooden turrets and screens, and
fastened ropes round the piles from their boats, wrenched them up and
broke them, or dived down and sawed them in two. Meanwhile the Syracusans
plied them with missiles from the docks, to which they replied from their
large vessel; until at last most of the piles were removed by the
Athenians. But the most awkward part of the stockade was the part out of
sight: some of the piles which had been driven in did not appear above
water, so that it was dangerous to sail up, for fear of running the ships
upon them, just as upon a reef, through not seeing them. However divers
went down and sawed off even these for reward; although the Syracusans
drove in others. Indeed there was no end to the contrivances to which they
resorted against each other, as might be expected between two hostile
armies confronting each other at such a short distance: and skirmishes and
all kinds of other attempts were of constant occurrence. Meanwhile the
Syracusans sent embassies to the cities, composed of Corinthians,
Ambraciots, and Lacedaemonians, to tell them of the capture of Plemmyrium,
and that their defeat in the sea-fight was due less to the strength of the
enemy than to their own disorder; and generally, to let them know that
they were full of hope, and to desire them to come to their help with
ships and troops, as the Athenians were expected with a fresh army, and if
the one already there could be destroyed before the other arrived, the war
would be at an end.</p>
<p>While the contending parties in Sicily were thus engaged, Demosthenes,
having now got together the armament with which he was to go to the
island, put out from Aegina, and making sail for Peloponnese, joined
Charicles and the thirty ships of the Athenians. Taking on board the heavy
infantry from Argos they sailed to Laconia, and, after first plundering
part of Epidaurus Limera, landed on the coast of Laconia, opposite
Cythera, where the temple of Apollo stands, and, laying waste part of the
country, fortified a sort of isthmus, to which the Helots of the
Lacedaemonians might desert, and from whence plundering incursions might
be made as from Pylos. Demosthenes helped to occupy this place, and then
immediately sailed on to Corcyra to take up some of the allies in that
island, and so to proceed without delay to Sicily; while Charicles waited
until he had completed the fortification of the place and, leaving a
garrison there, returned home subsequently with his thirty ships and the
Argives also.</p>
<p>This same summer arrived at Athens thirteen hundred targeteers, Thracian
swordsmen of the tribe of the Dii, who were to have sailed to Sicily with
Demosthenes. Since they had come too late, the Athenians determined to
send them back to Thrace, whence they had come; to keep them for the
Decelean war appearing too expensive, as the pay of each man was a drachma
a day. Indeed since Decelea had been first fortified by the whole
Peloponnesian army during this summer, and then occupied for the annoyance
of the country by the garrisons from the cities relieving each other at
stated intervals, it had been doing great mischief to the Athenians; in
fact this occupation, by the destruction of property and loss of men which
resulted from it, was one of the principal causes of their ruin.
Previously the invasions were short, and did not prevent their enjoying
their land during the rest of the time: the enemy was now permanently
fixed in Attica; at one time it was an attack in force, at another it was
the regular garrison overrunning the country and making forays for its
subsistence, and the Lacedaemonian king, Agis, was in the field and
diligently prosecuting the war; great mischief was therefore done to the
Athenians. They were deprived of their whole country: more than twenty
thousand slaves had deserted, a great part of them artisans, and all their
sheep and beasts of burden were lost; and as the cavalry rode out daily
upon excursions to Decelea and to guard the country, their horses were
either lamed by being constantly worked upon rocky ground, or wounded by
the enemy.</p>
<p>Besides, the transport of provisions from Euboea, which had before been
carried on so much more quickly overland by Decelea from Oropus, was now
effected at great cost by sea round Sunium; everything the city required
had to be imported from abroad, and instead of a city it became a
fortress. Summer and winter the Athenians were worn out by having to keep
guard on the fortifications, during the day by turns, by night all
together, the cavalry excepted, at the different military posts or upon
the wall. But what most oppressed them was that they had two wars at once,
and had thus reached a pitch of frenzy which no one would have believed
possible if he had heard of it before it had come to pass. For could any
one have imagined that even when besieged by the Peloponnesians entrenched
in Attica, they would still, instead of withdrawing from Sicily, stay on
there besieging in like manner Syracuse, a town (taken as a town) in no
way inferior to Athens, or would so thoroughly upset the Hellenic estimate
of their strength and audacity, as to give the spectacle of a people
which, at the beginning of the war, some thought might hold out one year,
some two, none more than three, if the Peloponnesians invaded their
country, now seventeen years after the first invasion, after having
already suffered from all the evils of war, going to Sicily and
undertaking a new war nothing inferior to that which they already had with
the Peloponnesians? These causes, the great losses from Decelea, and the
other heavy charges that fell upon them, produced their financial
embarrassment; and it was at this time that they imposed upon their
subjects, instead of the tribute, the tax of a twentieth upon all imports
and exports by sea, which they thought would bring them in more money;
their expenditure being now not the same as at first, but having grown
with the war while their revenues decayed.</p>
<p>Accordingly, not wishing to incur expense in their present want of money,
they sent back at once the Thracians who came too late for Demosthenes,
under the conduct of Diitrephes, who was instructed, as they were to pass
through the Euripus, to make use of them if possible in the voyage
alongshore to injure the enemy. Diitrephes first landed them at Tanagra
and hastily snatched some booty; he then sailed across the Euripus in the
evening from Chalcis in Euboea and disembarking in Boeotia led them
against Mycalessus. The night he passed unobserved near the temple of
Hermes, not quite two miles from Mycalessus, and at daybreak assaulted and
took the town, which is not a large one; the inhabitants being off their
guard and not expecting that any one would ever come up so far from the
sea to molest them, the wall too being weak, and in some places having
tumbled down, while in others it had not been built to any height, and the
gates also being left open through their feeling of security. The
Thracians bursting into Mycalessus sacked the houses and temples, and
butchered the inhabitants, sparing neither youth nor age, but killing all
they fell in with, one after the other, children and women, and even
beasts of burden, and whatever other living creatures they saw; the
Thracian race, like the bloodiest of the barbarians, being even more so
when it has nothing to fear. Everywhere confusion reigned and death in all
its shapes; and in particular they attacked a boys' school, the largest
that there was in the place, into which the children had just gone, and
massacred them all. In short, the disaster falling upon the whole town was
unsurpassed in magnitude, and unapproached by any in suddenness and in
horror.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Thebans heard of it and marched to the rescue, and
overtaking the Thracians before they had gone far, recovered the plunder
and drove them in panic to the Euripus and the sea, where the vessels
which brought them were lying. The greatest slaughter took place while
they were embarking, as they did not know how to swim, and those in the
vessels on seeing what was going on on on shore moored them out of
bowshot: in the rest of the retreat the Thracians made a very respectable
defence against the Theban horse, by which they were first attacked,
dashing out and closing their ranks according to the tactics of their
country, and lost only a few men in that part of the affair. A good number
who were after plunder were actually caught in the town and put to death.
Altogether the Thracians had two hundred and fifty killed out of thirteen
hundred, the Thebans and the rest who came to the rescue about twenty,
troopers and heavy infantry, with Scirphondas, one of the Boeotarchs. The
Mycalessians lost a large proportion of their population.</p>
<p>While Mycalessus thus experienced a calamity for its extent as lamentable
as any that happened in the war, Demosthenes, whom we left sailing to
Corcyra, after the building of the fort in Laconia, found a merchantman
lying at Phea in Elis, in which the Corinthian heavy infantry were to
cross to Sicily. The ship he destroyed, but the men escaped, and
subsequently got another in which they pursued their voyage. After this,
arriving at Zacynthus and Cephallenia, he took a body of heavy infantry on
board, and sending for some of the Messenians from Naupactus, crossed over
to the opposite coast of Acarnania, to Alyzia, and to Anactorium which was
held by the Athenians. While he was in these parts he was met by Eurymedon
returning from Sicily, where he had been sent, as has been mentioned,
during the winter, with the money for the army, who told him the news, and
also that he had heard, while at sea, that the Syracusans had taken
Plemmyrium. Here, also, Conon came to them, the commander at Naupactus,
with news that the twenty-five Corinthian ships stationed opposite to him,
far from giving over the war, were meditating an engagement; and he
therefore begged them to send him some ships, as his own eighteen were not
a match for the enemy's twenty-five. Demosthenes and Eurymedon,
accordingly, sent ten of their best sailers with Conon to reinforce the
squadron at Naupactus, and meanwhile prepared for the muster of their
forces; Eurymedon, who was now the colleague of Demosthenes, and had
turned back in consequence of his appointment, sailing to Corcyra to tell
them to man fifteen ships and to enlist heavy infantry; while Demosthenes
raised slingers and darters from the parts about Acarnania.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the envoys, already mentioned, who had gone from Syracuse to the
cities after the capture of Plemmyrium, had succeeded in their mission,
and were about to bring the army that they had collected, when Nicias got
scent of it, and sent to the Centoripae and Alicyaeans and other of the
friendly Sicels, who held the passes, not to let the enemy through, but to
combine to prevent their passing, there being no other way by which they
could even attempt it, as the Agrigentines would not give them a passage
through their country. Agreeably to this request the Sicels laid a triple
ambuscade for the Siceliots upon their march, and attacking them suddenly,
while off their guard, killed about eight hundred of them and all the
envoys, the Corinthian only excepted, by whom fifteen hundred who escaped
were conducted to Syracuse.</p>
<p>About the same time the Camarinaeans also came to the assistance of
Syracuse with five hundred heavy infantry, three hundred darters, and as
many archers, while the Geloans sent crews for five ships, four hundred
darters, and two hundred horse. Indeed almost the whole of Sicily, except
the Agrigentines, who were neutral, now ceased merely to watch events as
it had hitherto done, and actively joined Syracuse against the Athenians.</p>
<p>While the Syracusans after the Sicel disaster put off any immediate attack
upon the Athenians, Demosthenes and Eurymedon, whose forces from Corcyra
and the continent were now ready, crossed the Ionian Gulf with all their
armament to the Iapygian promontory, and starting from thence touched at
the Choerades Isles lying off Iapygia, where they took on board a hundred
and fifty Iapygian darters of the Messapian tribe, and after renewing an
old friendship with Artas the chief, who had furnished them with the
darters, arrived at Metapontium in Italy. Here they persuaded their allies
the Metapontines to send with them three hundred darters and two galleys,
and with this reinforcement coasted on to Thurii, where they found the
party hostile to Athens recently expelled by a revolution, and accordingly
remained there to muster and review the whole army, to see if any had been
left behind, and to prevail upon the Thurians resolutely to join them in
their expedition, and in the circumstances in which they found themselves
to conclude a defensive and offensive alliance with the Athenians.</p>
<p>About the same time the Peloponnesians in the twenty-five ships stationed
opposite to the squadron at Naupactus to protect the passage of the
transports to Sicily had got ready for engaging, and manning some
additional vessels, so as to be numerically little inferior to the
Athenians, anchored off Erineus in Achaia in the Rhypic country. The place
off which they lay being in the form of a crescent, the land forces
furnished by the Corinthians and their allies on the spot came up and
ranged themselves upon the projecting headlands on either side, while the
fleet, under the command of Polyanthes, a Corinthian, held the intervening
space and blocked up the entrance. The Athenians under Diphilus now sailed
out against them with thirty-three ships from Naupactus, and the
Corinthians, at first not moving, at length thought they saw their
opportunity, raised the signal, and advanced and engaged the Athenians.
After an obstinate struggle, the Corinthians lost three ships, and without
sinking any altogether, disabled seven of the enemy, which were struck
prow to prow and had their foreships stove in by the Corinthian vessels,
whose cheeks had been strengthened for this very purpose. After an action
of this even character, in which either party could claim the victory
(although the Athenians became masters of the wrecks through the wind
driving them out to sea, the Corinthians not putting out again to meet
them), the two combatants parted. No pursuit took place, and no prisoners
were made on either side; the Corinthians and Peloponnesians who were
fighting near the shore escaping with ease, and none of the Athenian
vessels having been sunk. The Athenians now sailed back to Naupactus, and
the Corinthians immediately set up a trophy as victors, because they had
disabled a greater number of the enemy's ships. Moreover they held that
they had not been worsted, for the very same reason that their opponent
held that he had not been victorious; the Corinthians considering that
they were conquerors, if not decidedly conquered, and the Athenians
thinking themselves vanquished, because not decidedly victorious. However,
when the Peloponnesians sailed off and their land forces had dispersed,
the Athenians also set up a trophy as victors in Achaia, about two miles
and a quarter from Erineus, the Corinthian station.</p>
<p>This was the termination of the action at Naupactus. To return to
Demosthenes and Eurymedon: the Thurians having now got ready to join in
the expedition with seven hundred heavy infantry and three hundred
darters, the two generals ordered the ships to sail along the coast to the
Crotonian territory, and meanwhile held a review of all the land forces
upon the river Sybaris, and then led them through the Thurian country.
Arrived at the river Hylias, they here received a message from the
Crotonians, saying that they would not allow the army to pass through
their country; upon which the Athenians descended towards the shore, and
bivouacked near the sea and the mouth of the Hylias, where the fleet also
met them, and the next day embarked and sailed along the coast touching at
all the cities except Locri, until they came to Petra in the Rhegian
territory.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Syracusans hearing of their approach resolved to make a
second attempt with their fleet and their other forces on shore, which
they had been collecting for this very purpose in order to do something
before their arrival. In addition to other improvements suggested by the
former sea-fight which they now adopted in the equipment of their navy,
they cut down their prows to a smaller compass to make them more solid and
made their cheeks stouter, and from these let stays into the vessels'
sides for a length of six cubits within and without, in the same way as
the Corinthians had altered their prows before engaging the squadron at
Naupactus. The Syracusans thought that they would thus have an advantage
over the Athenian vessels, which were not constructed with equal strength,
but were slight in the bows, from their being more used to sail round and
charge the enemy's side than to meet him prow to prow, and that the battle
being in the great harbour, with a great many ships in not much room, was
also a fact in their favour. Charging prow to prow, they would stave in
the enemy's bows, by striking with solid and stout beaks against hollow
and weak ones; and secondly, the Athenians for want of room would be
unable to use their favourite manoeuvre of breaking the line or of sailing
round, as the Syracusans would do their best not to let them do the one,
and want of room would prevent their doing the other. This charging prow
to prow, which had hitherto been thought want of skill in a helmsman,
would be the Syracusans' chief manoeuvre, as being that which they should
find most useful, since the Athenians, if repulsed, would not be able to
back water in any direction except towards the shore, and that only for a
little way, and in the little space in front of their own camp. The rest
of the harbour would be commanded by the Syracusans; and the Athenians, if
hard pressed, by crowding together in a small space and all to the same
point, would run foul of one another and fall into disorder, which was, in
fact, the thing that did the Athenians most harm in all the sea-fights,
they not having, like the Syracusans, the whole harbour to retreat over.
As to their sailing round into the open sea, this would be impossible,
with the Syracusans in possession of the way out and in, especially as
Plemmyrium would be hostile to them, and the mouth of the harbour was not
large.</p>
<p>With these contrivances to suit their skill and ability, and now more
confident after the previous sea-fight, the Syracusans attacked by land
and sea at once. The town force Gylippus led out a little the first and
brought them up to the wall of the Athenians, where it looked towards the
city, while the force from the Olympieum, that is to say, the heavy
infantry that were there with the horse and the light troops of the
Syracusans, advanced against the wall from the opposite side; the ships of
the Syracusans and allies sailing out immediately afterwards. The
Athenians at first fancied that they were to be attacked by land only, and
it was not without alarm that they saw the fleet suddenly approaching as
well; and while some were forming upon the walls and in front of them
against the advancing enemy, and some marching out in haste against the
numbers of horse and darters coming from the Olympieum and from outside,
others manned the ships or rushed down to the beach to oppose the enemy,
and when the ships were manned put out with seventy-five sail against
about eighty of the Syracusans.</p>
<p>After spending a great part of the day in advancing and retreating and
skirmishing with each other, without either being able to gain any
advantage worth speaking of, except that the Syracusans sank one or two of
the Athenian vessels, they parted, the land force at the same time
retiring from the lines. The next day the Syracusans remained quiet, and
gave no signs of what they were going to do; but Nicias, seeing that the
battle had been a drawn one, and expecting that they would attack again,
compelled the captains to refit any of the ships that had suffered, and
moored merchant vessels before the stockade which they had driven into the
sea in front of their ships, to serve instead of an enclosed harbour, at
about two hundred feet from each other, in order that any ship that was
hard pressed might be able to retreat in safety and sail out again at
leisure. These preparations occupied the Athenians all day until
nightfall.</p>
<p>The next day the Syracusans began operations at an earlier hour, but with
the same plan of attack by land and sea. A great part of the day the
rivals spent as before, confronting and skirmishing with each other; until
at last Ariston, son of Pyrrhicus, a Corinthian, the ablest helmsman in
the Syracusan service, persuaded their naval commanders to send to the
officials in the city, and tell them to move the sale market as quickly as
they could down to the sea, and oblige every one to bring whatever
eatables he had and sell them there, thus enabling the commanders to land
the crews and dine at once close to the ships, and shortly afterwards, the
selfsame day, to attack the Athenians again when they were not expecting
it.</p>
<p>In compliance with this advice a messenger was sent and the market got
ready, upon which the Syracusans suddenly backed water and withdrew to the
town, and at once landed and took their dinner upon the spot; while the
Athenians, supposing that they had returned to the town because they felt
they were beaten, disembarked at their leisure and set about getting their
dinners and about their other occupations, under the idea that they done
with fighting for that day. Suddenly the Syracusans had manned their ships
and again sailed against them; and the Athenians, in great confusion and
most of them fasting, got on board, and with great difficulty put out to
meet them. For some time both parties remained on the defensive without
engaging, until the Athenians at last resolved not to let themselves be
worn out by waiting where they were, but to attack without delay, and
giving a cheer, went into action. The Syracusans received them, and
charging prow to prow as they had intended, stove in a great part of the
Athenian foreships by the strength of their beaks; the darters on the
decks also did great damage to the Athenians, but still greater damage was
done by the Syracusans who went about in small boats, ran in upon the oars
of the Athenian galleys, and sailed against their sides, and discharged
from thence their darts upon the sailors.</p>
<p>At last, fighting hard in this fashion, the Syracusans gained the victory,
and the Athenians turned and fled between the merchantmen to their own
station. The Syracusan ships pursued them as far as the merchantmen, where
they were stopped by the beams armed with dolphins suspended from those
vessels over the passage. Two of the Syracusan vessels went too near in
the excitement of victory and were destroyed, one of them being taken with
its crew. After sinking seven of the Athenian vessels and disabling many,
and taking most of the men prisoners and killing others, the Syracusans
retired and set up trophies for both the engagements, being now confident
of having a decided superiority by sea, and by no means despairing of
equal success by land.</p>
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