<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0026" id="link2HCH0026"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER XXVI </h2>
<p><i>Twenty-first Year of the War—Recall of Alcibiades to Samos—Revolt
of Euboea and Downfall of the Four Hundred—Battle of Cynossema</i></p>
<p>In the same summer, immediately after this, the Peloponnesians having
refused to fight with their fleet united, through not thinking themselves
a match for the enemy, and being at a loss where to look for money for
such a number of ships, especially as Tissaphernes proved so bad a
paymaster, sent off Clearchus, son of Ramphias, with forty ships to
Pharnabazus, agreeably to the original instructions from Peloponnese;
Pharnabazus inviting them and being prepared to furnish pay, and Byzantium
besides sending offers to revolt to them. These Peloponnesian ships
accordingly put out into the open sea, in order to escape the observation
of the Athenians, and being overtaken by a storm, the majority with
Clearchus got into Delos, and afterwards returned to Miletus, whence
Clearchus proceeded by land to the Hellespont to take the command: ten,
however, of their number, under the Megarian Helixus, made good their
passage to the Hellespont, and effected the revolt of Byzantium. After
this, the commanders at Samos were informed of it, and sent a squadron
against them to guard the Hellespont; and an encounter took place before
Byzantium between eight vessels on either side.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the chiefs at Samos, and especially Thrasybulus, who from the
moment that he had changed the government had remained firmly resolved to
recall Alcibiades, at last in an assembly brought over the mass of the
soldiery, and upon their voting for his recall and amnesty, sailed over to
Tissaphernes and brought Alcibiades to Samos, being convinced that their
only chance of salvation lay in his bringing over Tissaphernes from the
Peloponnesians to themselves. An assembly was then held in which
Alcibiades complained of and deplored his private misfortune in having
been banished, and speaking at great length upon public affairs, highly
incited their hopes for the future, and extravagantly magnified his own
influence with Tissaphernes. His object in this was to make the
oligarchical government at Athens afraid of him, to hasten the dissolution
of the clubs, to increase his credit with the army at Samos and heighten
their own confidence, and lastly to prejudice the enemy as strongly as
possible against Tissaphernes, and blast the hopes which they entertained.
Alcibiades accordingly held out to the army such extravagant promises as
the following: that Tissaphernes had solemnly assured him that if he could
only trust the Athenians they should never want for supplies while he had
anything left, no, not even if he should have to coin his own silver
couch, and that he would bring the Phoenician fleet now at Aspendus to the
Athenians instead of to the Peloponnesians; but that he could only trust
the Athenians if Alcibiades were recalled to be his security for them.</p>
<p>Upon hearing this and much more besides, the Athenians at once elected him
general together with the former ones, and put all their affairs into his
hands. There was now not a man in the army who would have exchanged his
present hopes of safety and vengeance upon the Four Hundred for any
consideration whatever; and after what they had been told they were now
inclined to disdain the enemy before them, and to sail at once for
Piraeus. To the plan of sailing for Piraeus, leaving their more immediate
enemies behind them, Alcibiades opposed the most positive refusal, in
spite of the numbers that insisted upon it, saying that now that he had
been elected general he would first sail to Tissaphernes and concert with
him measures for carrying on the war. Accordingly, upon leaving this
assembly, he immediately took his departure in order to have it thought
that there was an entire confidence between them, and also wishing to
increase his consideration with Tissaphernes, and to show that he had now
been elected general and was in a position to do him good or evil as he
chose; thus managing to frighten the Athenians with Tissaphernes and
Tissaphernes with the Athenians.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Peloponnesians at Miletus heard of the recall of Alcibiades
and, already distrustful of Tissaphernes, now became far more disgusted
with him than ever. Indeed after their refusal to go out and give battle
to the Athenians when they appeared before Miletus, Tissaphernes had grown
slacker than ever in his payments; and even before this, on account of
Alcibiades, his unpopularity had been on the increase. Gathering together,
just as before, the soldiers and some persons of consideration besides the
soldiery began to reckon up how they had never yet received their pay in
full; that what they did receive was small in quantity, and even that paid
irregularly, and that unless they fought a decisive battle or removed to
some station where they could get supplies, the ships' crews would desert;
and that it was all the fault of Astyochus, who humoured Tissaphernes for
his own private advantage.</p>
<p>The army was engaged in these reflections, when the following disturbance
took place about the person of Astyochus. Most of the Syracusan and
Thurian sailors were freemen, and these the freest crews in the armament
were likewise the boldest in setting upon Astyochus and demanding their
pay. The latter answered somewhat stiffly and threatened them, and when
Dorieus spoke up for his own sailors even went so far as to lift his baton
against him; upon seeing which the mass of men, in sailor fashion, rushed
in a fury to strike Astyochus. He, however, saw them in time and fled for
refuge to an altar; and they were thus parted without his being struck.
Meanwhile the fort built by Tissaphernes in Miletus was surprised and
taken by the Milesians, and the garrison in it turned out—an act
which met with the approval of the rest of the allies, and in particular
of the Syracusans, but which found no favour with Lichas, who said
moreover that the Milesians and the rest in the King's country ought to
show a reasonable submission to Tissaphernes and to pay him court, until
the war should be happily settled. The Milesians were angry with him for
this and for other things of the kind, and upon his afterwards dying of
sickness, would not allow him to be buried where the Lacedaemonians with
the army desired.</p>
<p>The discontent of the army with Astyochus and Tissaphernes had reached
this pitch, when Mindarus arrived from Lacedaemon to succeed Astyochus as
admiral, and assumed the command. Astyochus now set sail for home; and
Tissaphernes sent with him one of his confidants, Gaulites, a Carian, who
spoke the two languages, to complain of the Milesians for the affair of
the fort, and at the same time to defend himself against the Milesians,
who were, as he was aware, on their way to Sparta chiefly to denounce his
conduct, and had with them Hermocrates, who was to accuse Tissaphernes of
joining with Alcibiades to ruin the Peloponnesian cause and of playing a
double game. Indeed Hermocrates had always been at enmity with him about
the pay not being restored in full; and eventually when he was banished
from Syracuse, and new commanders—Potamis, Myscon, and Demarchus—had
come out to Miletus to the ships of the Syracusans, Tissaphernes, pressed
harder than ever upon him in his exile, and among other charges against
him accused him of having once asked him for money, and then given himself
out as his enemy because he failed to obtain it.</p>
<p>While Astyochus and the Milesians and Hermocrates made sail for
Lacedaemon, Alcibiades had now crossed back from Tissaphernes to Samos.
After his return the envoys of the Four Hundred sent, as has been
mentioned above, to pacify and explain matters to the forces at Samos,
arrived from Delos; and an assembly was held in which they attempted to
speak. The soldiers at first would not hear them, and cried out to put to
death the subverters of the democracy, but at last, after some difficulty,
calmed down and gave them a hearing. Upon this the envoys proceeded to
inform them that the recent change had been made to save the city, and not
to ruin it or to deliver it over to the enemy, for they had already had an
opportunity of doing this when he invaded the country during their
government; that all the Five Thousand would have their proper share in
the government; and that their hearers' relatives had neither outrage, as
Chaereas had slanderously reported, nor other ill treatment to complain
of, but were all in undisturbed enjoyment of their property just as they
had left them. Besides these they made a number of other statements which
had no better success with their angry auditors; and amid a host of
different opinions the one which found most favour was that of sailing to
Piraeus. Now it was that Alcibiades for the first time did the state a
service, and one of the most signal kind. For when the Athenians at Samos
were bent upon sailing against their countrymen, in which case Ionia and
the Hellespont would most certainly at once have passed into possession of
the enemy, Alcibiades it was who prevented them. At that moment, when no
other man would have been able to hold back the multitude, he put a stop
to the intended expedition, and rebuked and turned aside the resentment
felt, on personal grounds, against the envoys; he dismissed them with an
answer from himself, to the effect that he did not object to the
government of the Five Thousand, but insisted that the Four Hundred should
be deposed and the Council of Five Hundred reinstated in power: meanwhile
any retrenchments for economy, by which pay might be better found for the
armament, met with his entire approval. Generally, he bade them hold out
and show a bold face to the enemy, since if the city were saved there was
good hope that the two parties might some day be reconciled, whereas if
either were once destroyed, that at Samos, or that at Athens, there would
no longer be any one to be reconciled to. Meanwhile arrived envoys from
the Argives, with offers of support to the Athenian commons at Samos:
these were thanked by Alcibiades, and dismissed with a request to come
when called upon. The Argives were accompanied by the crew of the Paralus,
whom we left placed in a troopship by the Four Hundred with orders to
cruise round Euboea, and who being employed to carry to Lacedaemon some
Athenian envoys sent by the Four Hundred—Laespodias, Aristophon, and
Melesias—as they sailed by Argos laid hands upon the envoys, and
delivering them over to the Argives as the chief subverters of the
democracy, themselves, instead of returning to Athens, took the Argive
envoys on board, and came to Samos in the galley which had been confided
to them.</p>
<p>The same summer at the time that the return of Alcibiades coupled with the
general conduct of Tissaphernes had carried to its height the discontent
of the Peloponnesians, who no longer entertained any doubt of his having
joined the Athenians, Tissaphernes wishing, it would seem, to clear
himself to them of these charges, prepared to go after the Phoenician
fleet to Aspendus, and invited Lichas to go with him; saying that he would
appoint Tamos as his lieutenant to provide pay for the armament during his
own absence. Accounts differ, and it is not easy to ascertain with what
intention he went to Aspendus, and did not bring the fleet after all. That
one hundred and forty-seven Phoenician ships came as far as Aspendus is
certain; but why they did not come on has been variously accounted for.
Some think that he went away in pursuance of his plan of wasting the
Peloponnesian resources, since at any rate Tamos, his lieutenant, far from
being any better, proved a worse paymaster than himself: others that he
brought the Phoenicians to Aspendus to exact money from them for their
discharge, having never intended to employ them: others again that it was
in view of the outcry against him at Lacedaemon, in order that it might be
said that he was not in fault, but that the ships were really manned and
that he had certainly gone to fetch them. To myself it seems only too
evident that he did not bring up the fleet because he wished to wear out
and paralyse the Hellenic forces, that is, to waste their strength by the
time lost during his journey to Aspendus, and to keep them evenly balanced
by not throwing his weight into either scale. Had he wished to finish the
war, he could have done so, assuming of course that he made his appearance
in a way which left no room for doubt; as by bringing up the fleet he
would in all probability have given the victory to the Lacedaemonians,
whose navy, even as it was, faced the Athenian more as an equal than as an
inferior. But what convicts him most clearly, is the excuse which he put
forward for not bringing the ships. He said that the number assembled was
less than the King had ordered; but surely it would only have enhanced his
credit if he spent little of the King's money and effected the same end at
less cost. In any case, whatever was his intention, Tissaphernes went to
Aspendus and saw the Phoenicians; and the Peloponnesians at his desire
sent a Lacedaemonian called Philip with two galleys to fetch the fleet.</p>
<p>Alcibiades finding that Tissaphernes had gone to Aspendus, himself sailed
thither with thirteen ships, promising to do a great and certain service
to the Athenians at Samos, as he would either bring the Phoenician fleet
to the Athenians, or at all events prevent its joining the Peloponnesians.
In all probability he had long known that Tissaphernes never meant to
bring the fleet at all, and wished to compromise him as much as possible
in the eyes of the Peloponnesians through his apparent friendship for
himself and the Athenians, and thus in a manner to oblige him to join
their side.</p>
<p>While Alcibiades weighed anchor and sailed eastward straight for Phaselis
and Caunus, the envoys sent by the Four Hundred to Samos arrived at
Athens. Upon their delivering the message from Alcibiades, telling them to
hold out and to show a firm front to the enemy, and saying that he had
great hopes of reconciling them with the army and of overcoming the
Peloponnesians, the majority of the members of the oligarchy, who were
already discontented and only too much inclined to be quit of the business
in any safe way that they could, were at once greatly strengthened in
their resolve. These now banded together and strongly criticized the
administration, their leaders being some of the principal generals and men
in office under the oligarchy, such as Theramenes, son of Hagnon,
Aristocrates, son of Scellias, and others; who, although among the most
prominent members of the government (being afraid, as they said, of the
army at Samos, and most especially of Alcibiades, and also lest the envoys
whom they had sent to Lacedaemon might do the state some harm without the
authority of the people), without insisting on objections to the excessive
concentration of power in a few hands, yet urged that the Five Thousand
must be shown to exist not merely in name but in reality, and the
constitution placed upon a fairer basis. But this was merely their
political cry; most of them being driven by private ambition into the line
of conduct so surely fatal to oligarchies that arise out of democracies.
For all at once pretend to be not only equals but each the chief and
master of his fellows; while under a democracy a disappointed candidate
accepts his defeat more easily, because he has not the humiliation of
being beaten by his equals. But what most clearly encouraged the
malcontents was the power of Alcibiades at Samos, and their own disbelief
in the stability of the oligarchy; and it was now a race between them as
to which should first become the leader of the commons.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the leaders and members of the Four Hundred most opposed to a
democratic form of government—Phrynichus who had had the quarrel
with Alcibiades during his command at Samos, Aristarchus the bitter and
inveterate enemy of the commons, and Pisander and Antiphon and others of
the chiefs who already as soon as they entered upon power, and again when
the army at Samos seceded from them and declared for a democracy, had sent
envoys from their own body to Lacedaemon and made every effort for peace,
and had built the wall in Eetionia—now redoubled their exertions
when their envoys returned from Samos, and they saw not only the people
but their own most trusted associates turning against them. Alarmed at the
state of things at Athens as at Samos, they now sent off in haste Antiphon
and Phrynichus and ten others with injunctions to make peace with
Lacedaemon upon any terms, no matter what, that should be at all
tolerable. Meanwhile they pushed on more actively than ever with the wall
in Eetionia. Now the meaning of this wall, according to Theramenes and his
supporters, was not so much to keep out the army of Samos, in case of its
trying to force its way into Piraeus, as to be able to let in, at
pleasure, the fleet and army of the enemy. For Eetionia is a mole of
Piraeus, close alongside of the entrance of the harbour, and was now
fortified in connection with the wall already existing on the land side,
so that a few men placed in it might be able to command the entrance; the
old wall on the land side and the new one now being built within on the
side of the sea, both ending in one of the two towers standing at the
narrow mouth of the harbour. They also walled off the largest porch in
Piraeus which was in immediate connection with this wall, and kept it in
their own hands, compelling all to unload there the corn that came into
the harbour, and what they had in stock, and to take it out from thence
when they sold it.</p>
<p>These measures had long provoked the murmurs of Theramenes, and when the
envoys returned from Lacedaemon without having effected any general
pacification, he affirmed that this wall was like to prove the ruin of the
state. At this moment forty-two ships from Peloponnese, including some
Siceliot and Italiot vessels from Locri and Tarentum, had been invited
over by the Euboeans and were already riding off Las in Laconia preparing
for the voyage to Euboea, under the command of Agesandridas, son of
Agesander, a Spartan. Theramenes now affirmed that this squadron was
destined not so much to aid Euboea as the party fortifying Eetionia, and
that unless precautions were speedily taken the city would be surprised
and lost. This was no mere calumny, there being really some such plan
entertained by the accused. Their first wish was to have the oligarchy
without giving up the empire; failing this to keep their ships and walls
and be independent; while, if this also were denied them, sooner than be
the first victims of the restored democracy, they were resolved to call in
the enemy and make peace, give up their walls and ships, and at all costs
retain possession of the government, if their lives were only assured to
them.</p>
<p>For this reason they pushed forward the construction of their work with
posterns and entrances and means of introducing the enemy, being eager to
have it finished in time. Meanwhile the murmurs against them were at first
confined to a few persons and went on in secret, until Phrynichus, after
his return from the embassy to Lacedaemon, was laid wait for and stabbed
in full market by one of the Peripoli, falling down dead before he had
gone far from the council chamber. The assassin escaped; but his
accomplice, an Argive, was taken and put to the torture by the Four
Hundred, without their being able to extract from him the name of his
employer, or anything further than that he knew of many men who used to
assemble at the house of the commander of the Peripoli and at other
houses. Here the matter was allowed to drop. This so emboldened Theramenes
and Aristocrates and the rest of their partisans in the Four Hundred and
out of doors, that they now resolved to act. For by this time the ships
had sailed round from Las, and anchoring at Epidaurus had overrun Aegina;
and Theramenes asserted that, being bound for Euboea, they would never
have sailed in to Aegina and come back to anchor at Epidaurus, unless they
had been invited to come to aid in the designs of which he had always
accused the government. Further inaction had therefore now become
impossible. In the end, after a great many seditious harangues and
suspicions, they set to work in real earnest. The heavy infantry in
Piraeus building the wall in Eetionia, among whom was Aristocrates, a
colonel, with his own tribe, laid hands upon Alexicles, a general under
the oligarchy and the devoted adherent of the cabal, and took him into a
house and confined him there. In this they were assisted by one Hermon,
commander of the Peripoli in Munychia, and others, and above all had with
them the great bulk of the heavy infantry. As soon as the news reached the
Four Hundred, who happened to be sitting in the council chamber, all
except the disaffected wished at once to go to the posts where the arms
were, and menaced Theramenes and his party. Theramenes defended himself,
and said that he was ready immediately to go and help to rescue Alexicles;
and taking with him one of the generals belonging to his party, went down
to Piraeus, followed by Aristarchus and some young men of the cavalry. All
was now panic and confusion. Those in the city imagined that Piraeus was
already taken and the prisoner put to death, while those in Piraeus
expected every moment to be attacked by the party in the city. The older
men, however, stopped the persons running up and down the town and making
for the stands of arms; and Thucydides the Pharsalian, proxenus of the
city, came forward and threw himself in the way of the rival factions, and
appealed to them not to ruin the state, while the enemy was still at hand
waiting for his opportunity, and so at length succeeded in quieting them
and in keeping their hands off each other. Meanwhile Theramenes came down
to Piraeus, being himself one of the generals, and raged and stormed
against the heavy infantry, while Aristarchus and the adversaries of the
people were angry in right earnest. Most of the heavy infantry, however,
went on with the business without faltering, and asked Theramenes if he
thought the wall had been constructed for any good purpose, and whether it
would not be better that it should be pulled down. To this he answered
that if they thought it best to pull it down, he for his part agreed with
them. Upon this the heavy infantry and a number of the people in Piraeus
immediately got up on the fortification and began to demolish it. Now
their cry to the multitude was that all should join in the work who wished
the Five Thousand to govern instead of the Four Hundred. For instead of
saying in so many words "all who wished the commons to govern," they still
disguised themselves under the name of the Five Thousand; being afraid
that these might really exist, and that they might be speaking to one of
their number and get into trouble through ignorance. Indeed this was why
the Four Hundred neither wished the Five Thousand to exist, nor to have it
known that they did not exist; being of opinion that to give themselves so
many partners in empire would be downright democracy, while the mystery in
question would make the people afraid of one another.</p>
<p>The next day the Four Hundred, although alarmed, nevertheless assembled in
the council chamber, while the heavy infantry in Piraeus, after having
released their prisoner Alexicles and pulled down the fortification, went
with their arms to the theatre of Dionysus, close to Munychia, and there
held an assembly in which they decided to march into the city, and setting
forth accordingly halted in the Anaceum. Here they were joined by some
delegates from the Four Hundred, who reasoned with them one by one, and
persuaded those whom they saw to be the most moderate to remain quiet
themselves, and to keep in the rest; saying that they would make known the
Five Thousand, and have the Four Hundred chosen from them in rotation, as
should be decided by the Five Thousand, and meanwhile entreated them not
to ruin the state or drive it into the arms of the enemy. After a great
many had spoken and had been spoken to, the whole body of heavy infantry
became calmer than before, absorbed by their fears for the country at
large, and now agreed to hold upon an appointed day an assembly in the
theatre of Dionysus for the restoration of concord.</p>
<p>When the day came for the assembly in the theatre, and they were upon the
point of assembling, news arrived that the forty-two ships under
Agesandridas were sailing from Megara along the coast of Salamis. The
people to a man now thought that it was just what Theramenes and his party
had so often said, that the ships were sailing to the fortification, and
concluded that they had done well to demolish it. But though it may
possibly have been by appointment that Agesandridas hovered about
Epidaurus and the neighbourhood, he would also naturally be kept there by
the hope of an opportunity arising out of the troubles in the town. In any
case the Athenians, on receipt of the news immediately ran down in mass to
Piraeus, seeing themselves threatened by the enemy with a worse war than
their war among themselves, not at a distance, but close to the harbour of
Athens. Some went on board the ships already afloat, while others launched
fresh vessels, or ran to defend the walls and the mouth of the harbour.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Peloponnesian vessels sailed by, and rounding Sunium
anchored between Thoricus and Prasiae, and afterwards arrived at Oropus.
The Athenians, with revolution in the city, and unwilling to lose a moment
in going to the relief of their most important possession (for Euboea was
everything to them now that they were shut out from Attica), were
compelled to put to sea in haste and with untrained crews, and sent
Thymochares with some vessels to Eretria. These upon their arrival, with
the ships already in Euboea, made up a total of thirty-six vessels, and
were immediately forced to engage. For Agesandridas, after his crews had
dined, put out from Oropus, which is about seven miles from Eretria by
sea; and the Athenians, seeing him sailing up, immediately began to man
their vessels. The sailors, however, instead of being by their ships, as
they supposed, were gone away to purchase provisions for their dinner in
the houses in the outskirts of the town; the Eretrians having so arranged
that there should be nothing on sale in the marketplace, in order that the
Athenians might be a long time in manning their ships, and, the enemy's
attack taking them by surprise, might be compelled to put to sea just as
they were. A signal also was raised in Eretria to give them notice in
Oropus when to put to sea. The Athenians, forced to put out so poorly
prepared, engaged off the harbour of Eretria, and after holding their own
for some little while notwithstanding, were at length put to flight and
chased to the shore. Such of their number as took refuge in Eretria, which
they presumed to be friendly to them, found their fate in that city, being
butchered by the inhabitants; while those who fled to the Athenian fort in
the Eretrian territory, and the vessels which got to Chalcis, were saved.
The Peloponnesians, after taking twenty-two Athenian ships, and killing or
making prisoners of the crews, set up a trophy, and not long afterwards
effected the revolt of the whole of Euboea (except Oreus, which was held
by the Athenians themselves), and made a general settlement of the affairs
of the island.</p>
<p>When the news of what had happened in Euboea reached Athens, a panic
ensued such as they had never before known. Neither the disaster in
Sicily, great as it seemed at the time, nor any other had ever so much
alarmed them. The camp at Samos was in revolt; they had no more ships or
men to man them; they were at discord among themselves and might at any
moment come to blows; and a disaster of this magnitude coming on the top
of all, by which they lost their fleet, and worst of all Euboea, which was
of more value to them than Attica, could not occur without throwing them
into the deepest despondency. Meanwhile their greatest and most immediate
trouble was the possibility that the enemy, emboldened by his victory,
might make straight for them and sail against Piraeus, which they had no
longer ships to defend; and every moment they expected him to arrive.
This, with a little more courage, he might easily have done, in which case
he would either have increased the dissensions of the city by his
presence, or, if he had stayed to besiege it, have compelled the fleet
from Ionia, although the enemy of the oligarchy, to come to the rescue of
their country and of their relatives, and in the meantime would have
become master of the Hellespont, Ionia, the islands, and of everything as
far as Euboea, or, to speak roundly, of the whole Athenian empire. But
here, as on so many other occasions, the Lacedaemonians proved the most
convenient people in the world for the Athenians to be at war with. The
wide difference between the two characters, the slowness and want of
energy of the Lacedaemonians as contrasted with the dash and enterprise of
their opponents, proved of the greatest service, especially to a maritime
empire like Athens. Indeed this was shown by the Syracusans, who were most
like the Athenians in character, and also most successful in combating
them.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, upon receipt of the news, the Athenians manned twenty ships
and called immediately a first assembly in the Pnyx, where they had been
used to meet formerly, and deposed the Four Hundred and voted to hand over
the government to the Five Thousand, of which body all who furnished a
suit of armour were to be members, decreeing also that no one should
receive pay for the discharge of any office, or if he did should be held
accursed. Many other assemblies were held afterwards, in which law-makers
were elected and all other measures taken to form a constitution. It was
during the first period of this constitution that the Athenians appear to
have enjoyed the best government that they ever did, at least in my time.
For the fusion of the high and the low was effected with judgment, and
this was what first enabled the state to raise up her head after her
manifold disasters. They also voted for the recall of Alcibiades and of
other exiles, and sent to him and to the camp at Samos, and urged them to
devote themselves vigorously to the war.</p>
<p>Upon this revolution taking place, the party of Pisander and Alexicles and
the chiefs of the oligarchs immediately withdrew to Decelea, with the
single exception of Aristarchus, one of the generals, who hastily took
some of the most barbarian of the archers and marched to Oenoe. This was a
fort of the Athenians upon the Boeotian border, at that moment besieged by
the Corinthians, irritated by the loss of a party returning from Decelea,
who had been cut off by the garrison. The Corinthians had volunteered for
this service, and had called upon the Boeotians to assist them. After
communicating with them, Aristarchus deceived the garrison in Oenoe by
telling them that their countrymen in the city had compounded with the
Lacedaemonians, and that one of the terms of the capitulation was that
they must surrender the place to the Boeotians. The garrison believed him
as he was general, and besides knew nothing of what had occurred owing to
the siege, and so evacuated the fort under truce. In this way the
Boeotians gained possession of Oenoe, and the oligarchy and the troubles
at Athens ended.</p>
<p>To return to the Peloponnesians in Miletus. No pay was forthcoming from
any of the agents deputed by Tissaphernes for that purpose upon his
departure for Aspendus; neither the Phoenician fleet nor Tissaphernes
showed any signs of appearing, and Philip, who had been sent with him, and
another Spartan, Hippocrates, who was at Phaselis, wrote word to Mindarus,
the admiral, that the ships were not coming at all, and that they were
being grossly abused by Tissaphernes. Meanwhile Pharnabazus was inviting
them to come, and making every effort to get the fleet and, like
Tissaphernes, to cause the revolt of the cities in his government still
subject to Athens, founding great hopes on his success; until at length,
at about the period of the summer which we have now reached, Mindarus
yielded to his importunities, and, with great order and at a moment's
notice, in order to elude the enemy at Samos, weighed anchor with
seventy-three ships from Miletus and set sail for the Hellespont. Thither
sixteen vessels had already preceded him in the same summer, and had
overrun part of the Chersonese. Being caught in a storm, Mindarus was
compelled to run in to Icarus and, after being detained five or six days
there by stress of weather, arrived at Chios.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Thrasyllus had heard of his having put out from Miletus, and
immediately set sail with fifty-five ships from Samos, in haste to arrive
before him in the Hellespont. But learning that he was at Chios, and
expecting that he would stay there, he posted scouts in Lesbos and on the
continent opposite to prevent the fleet moving without his knowing it, and
himself coasted along to Methymna, and gave orders to prepare meal and
other necessaries, in order to attack them from Lesbos in the event of
their remaining for any length of time at Chios. Meanwhile he resolved to
sail against Eresus, a town in Lesbos which had revolted, and, if he
could, to take it. For some of the principal Methymnian exiles had carried
over about fifty heavy infantry, their sworn associates, from Cuma, and
hiring others from the continent, so as to make up three hundred in all,
chose Anaxander, a Theban, to command them, on account of the community of
blood existing between the Thebans and the Lesbians, and first attacked
Methymna. Balked in this attempt by the advance of the Athenian guards
from Mitylene, and repulsed a second time in a battle outside the city,
they then crossed the mountain and effected the revolt of Eresus.
Thrasyllus accordingly determined to go there with all his ships and to
attack the place. Meanwhile Thrasybulus had preceded him thither with five
ships from Samos, as soon as he heard that the exiles had crossed over,
and coming too late to save Eresus, went on and anchored before the town.
Here they were joined also by two vessels on their way home from the
Hellespont, and by the ships of the Methymnians, making a grand total of
sixty-seven vessels; and the forces on board now made ready with engines
and every other means available to do their utmost to storm Eresus.</p>
<p>In the meantime Mindarus and the Peloponnesian fleet at Chios, after
taking provisions for two days and receiving three Chian pieces of money
for each man from the Chians, on the third day put out in haste from the
island; in order to avoid falling in with the ships at Eresus, they did
not make for the open sea, but keeping Lesbos on their left, sailed for
the continent. After touching at the port of Carteria, in the Phocaeid,
and dining, they went on along the Cumaean coast and supped at Arginusae,
on the continent over against Mitylene. From thence they continued their
voyage along the coast, although it was late in the night, and arriving at
Harmatus on the continent opposite Methymna, dined there; and swiftly
passing Lectum, Larisa, Hamaxitus, and the neighbouring towns, arrived a
little before midnight at Rhoeteum. Here they were now in the Hellespont.
Some of the ships also put in at Sigeum and at other places in the
neighbourhood.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the warnings of the fire signals and the sudden increase in the
number of fires on the enemy's shore informed the eighteen Athenian ships
at Sestos of the approach of the Peloponnesian fleet. That very night they
set sail in haste just as they were, and, hugging the shore of the
Chersonese, coasted along to Elaeus, in order to sail out into the open
sea away from the fleet of the enemy.</p>
<p>After passing unobserved the sixteen ships at Abydos, which had
nevertheless been warned by their approaching friends to be on the alert
to prevent their sailing out, at dawn they sighted the fleet of Mindarus,
which immediately gave chase. All had not time to get away; the greater
number however escaped to Imbros and Lemnos, while four of the hindmost
were overtaken off Elaeus. One of these was stranded opposite to the
temple of Protesilaus and taken with its crew, two others without their
crews; the fourth was abandoned on the shore of Imbros and burned by the
enemy.</p>
<p>After this the Peloponnesians were joined by the squadron from Abydos,
which made up their fleet to a grand total of eighty-six vessels; they
spent the day in unsuccessfully besieging Elaeus, and then sailed back to
Abydos. Meanwhile the Athenians, deceived by their scouts, and never
dreaming of the enemy's fleet getting by undetected, were tranquilly
besieging Eresus. As soon as they heard the news they instantly abandoned
Eresus, and made with all speed for the Hellespont, and after taking two
of the Peloponnesian ships which had been carried out too far into the
open sea in the ardour of the pursuit and now fell in their way, the next
day dropped anchor at Elaeus, and, bringing back the ships that had taken
refuge at Imbros, during five days prepared for the coming engagement.</p>
<p>After this they engaged in the following way. The Athenians formed in
column and sailed close alongshore to Sestos; upon perceiving which the
Peloponnesians put out from Abydos to meet them. Realizing that a battle
was now imminent, both combatants extended their flank; the Athenians
along the Chersonese from Idacus to Arrhiani with seventy-six ships; the
Peloponnesians from Abydos to Dardanus with eighty-six. The Peloponnesian
right wing was occupied by the Syracusans, their left by Mindarus in
person with the best sailers in the navy; the Athenian left by Thrasyllus,
their right by Thrasybulus, the other commanders being in different parts
of the fleet. The Peloponnesians hastened to engage first, and outflanking
with their left the Athenian right sought to cut them off, if possible,
from sailing out of the straits, and to drive their centre upon the shore,
which was not far off. The Athenians perceiving their intention extended
their own wing and outsailed them, while their left had by this time
passed the point of Cynossema. This, however, obliged them to thin and
weaken their centre, especially as they had fewer ships than the enemy,
and as the coast round Point Cynossema formed a sharp angle which
prevented their seeing what was going on on the other side of it.</p>
<p>The Peloponnesians now attacked their centre and drove ashore the ships of
the Athenians, and disembarked to follow up their victory. No help could
be given to the centre either by the squadron of Thrasybulus on the right,
on account of the number of ships attacking him, or by that of Thrasyllus
on the left, from whom the point of Cynossema hid what was going on, and
who was also hindered by his Syracusan and other opponents, whose numbers
were fully equal to his own. At length, however, the Peloponnesians in the
confidence of victory began to scatter in pursuit of the ships of the
enemy, and allowed a considerable part of their fleet to get into
disorder. On seeing this the squadron of Thrasybulus discontinued their
lateral movement and, facing about, attacked and routed the ships opposed
to them, and next fell roughly upon the scattered vessels of the
victorious Peloponnesian division, and put most of them to flight without
a blow. The Syracusans also had by this time given way before the squadron
of Thrasyllus, and now openly took to flight upon seeing the flight of
their comrades.</p>
<p>The rout was now complete. Most of the Peloponnesians fled for refuge
first to the river Midius, and afterwards to Abydos. Only a few ships were
taken by the Athenians; as owing to the narrowness of the Hellespont the
enemy had not far to go to be in safety. Nevertheless nothing could have
been more opportune for them than this victory. Up to this time they had
feared the Peloponnesian fleet, owing to a number of petty losses and to
the disaster in Sicily; but they now ceased to mistrust themselves or any
longer to think their enemies good for anything at sea. Meanwhile they
took from the enemy eight Chian vessels, five Corinthian, two Ambraciot,
two Boeotian, one Leucadian, Lacedaemonian, Syracusan, and Pellenian,
losing fifteen of their own. After setting up a trophy upon Point
Cynossema, securing the wrecks, and restoring to the enemy his dead under
truce, they sent off a galley to Athens with the news of their victory.
The arrival of this vessel with its unhoped-for good news, after the
recent disasters of Euboea, and in the revolution at Athens, gave fresh
courage to the Athenians, and caused them to believe that if they put
their shoulders to the wheel their cause might yet prevail.</p>
<p>On the fourth day after the sea-fight the Athenians in Sestos having
hastily refitted their ships sailed against Cyzicus, which had revolted.
Off Harpagium and Priapus they sighted at anchor the eight vessels from
Byzantium, and, sailing up and routing the troops on shore, took the
ships, and then went on and recovered the town of Cyzicus, which was
unfortified, and levied money from the citizens. In the meantime the
Peloponnesians sailed from Abydos to Elaeus, and recovered such of their
captured galleys as were still uninjured, the rest having been burned by
the Elaeusians, and sent Hippocrates and Epicles to Euboea to fetch the
squadron from that island.</p>
<p>About the same time Alcibiades returned with his thirteen ships from
Caunus and Phaselis to Samos, bringing word that he had prevented the
Phoenician fleet from joining the Peloponnesians, and had made
Tissaphernes more friendly to the Athenians than before. Alcibiades now
manned nine more ships, and levied large sums of money from the
Halicarnassians, and fortified Cos. After doing this and placing a
governor in Cos, he sailed back to Samos, autumn being now at hand.
Meanwhile Tissaphernes, upon hearing that the Peloponnesian fleet had
sailed from Miletus to the Hellespont, set off again back from Aspendus,
and made all sail for Ionia. While the Peloponnesians were in the
Hellespont, the Antandrians, a people of Aeolic extraction, conveyed by
land across Mount Ida some heavy infantry from Abydos, and introduced them
into the town; having been ill-treated by Arsaces, the Persian lieutenant
of Tissaphernes. This same Arsaces had, upon pretence of a secret quarrel,
invited the chief men of the Delians to undertake military service (these
were Delians who had settled at Atramyttium after having been driven from
their homes by the Athenians for the sake of purifying Delos); and after
drawing them out from their town as his friends and allies, had laid wait
for them at dinner, and surrounded them and caused them to be shot down by
his soldiers. This deed made the Antandrians fear that he might some day
do them some mischief; and as he also laid upon them burdens too heavy for
them to bear, they expelled his garrison from their citadel.</p>
<p>Tissaphernes, upon hearing of this act of the Peloponnesians in addition
to what had occurred at Miletus and Cnidus, where his garrisons had been
also expelled, now saw that the breach between them was serious; and
fearing further injury from them, and being also vexed to think that
Pharnabazus should receive them, and in less time and at less cost perhaps
succeed better against Athens than he had done, determined to rejoin them
in the Hellespont, in order to complain of the events at Antandros and
excuse himself as best he could in the matter of the Phoenician fleet and
of the other charges against him. Accordingly he went first to Ephesus and
offered sacrifice to Artemis....</p>
<p>[When the winter after this summer is over the twenty-first year of this
war will be completed. ]</p>
<p>THE END <br/> <br/></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />