<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LXIII">CHAPTER LXIII<br/> <span class="subhead">THE SIEGE OF PLATAEA</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> Peloponnesian War began with an attack upon the
little town of Plataea. Two years later, in the early summer
of 429 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, Plataea was again attacked, this time by the
Spartans, who were led by their king Archidamus. The
town, small though it was, was an Athenian fortress, so the
Spartans were eager to raze it to the ground.</p>
<p>But Plataea stood on sacred territory; for Pausanias,
after his great victory over the Persians, had declared that
in time of war it should ever be left undisturbed.</p>
<p>The Plataeans reminded the king of the promise of the
Spartan general, and begged him to withdraw his troops.</p>
<p>Archidamus would not lead his army away, but he
promised to do the Plataeans no harm if they would become
allies of Sparta, or if they would give up their alliance with
Athens and fight on neither side. But the Plataeans would
not agree to either of these plans.</p>
<p>Then the king offered to let them leave the town. He
promised that their homes, their orchards, their fields would
be kept in good order as long as the war lasted, and that they
would be given back to them when peace was made.</p>
<p>It was a generous offer, and the Plataeans begged to be
allowed to send to Athens to ask her advice. Her answer
speedily settled the matter.</p>
<p>‘Athens,’ so ran the message, ‘never deserted her allies,
and would not now neglect the Plataeans, but succour them
with all her might. Wherefore the alliance must stand and
the attack of the Spartans be withstood.’</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span></p>
<p>When Archidamus heard what Athens had said to the
Plataeans, he determined to besiege the town. The Thebans
who were with the Spartan army rejoiced that war was to
begin, for they were ever bitter enemies of the Plataeans.</p>
<p>The little town prepared to defend herself against the
enemy, sending away the women and children to a place of
safety. A hundred women slaves only were kept to cook and
wash for the garrison, which was small. Yet few in number
as they were, the doughty citizens withstood the attacks of
the Spartans for two years.</p>
<p>When Archidamus ordered his men to raise a mound as
high as the wall around the town, the Plataeans at once
added to the height of their defences. They also dug
beneath the mound of the enemy, and so undermined it
that it was continually sliding down.</p>
<p>Then lest the walls should at length be scaled by the
enemy, the citizens built an inner wall to protect the city yet
more strongly.</p>
<p>Often the little garrison looked wistfully for the help that
Athens had assured them would be sent, but month after
month passed and no help came from the plague-stricken
city. Yet the Plataeans did not dream of surrender.</p>
<p>Archidamus was in despair, for he knew that his soldiers
were seldom able to take a walled town. His pride was hurt
at the thought of being beaten by a mere handful of men.
He had with him the whole Peloponnesian army, yet a
garrison of five hundred had been able to defy all his efforts
to capture the city.</p>
<p>The king determined, since he could not take the town
by assault, to starve it into submission. So he now ordered
two great walls to be built round the city, placing on them
here and there towers or battlements. The walls were a
certain space apart, and this space was covered over, so that
the soldiers could live in it as in a camp, while armed sentinels
paced up and down on the roof.</p>
<p>When the second year of the siege began, food grew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span>
scarce in Plataea. Either the little garrison must force its
way out or die of hunger. To escape, the soldiers would
have to scale the wall, without attracting the attention of
the sentinels, and reach the ground on the other side.</p>
<p>More than half the garrison resolved to stay where it was,
but about two hundred determined to make the perilous
attempt.</p>
<p>So one cold, dark night in the month of December, when
the sentinels had retreated into the towers for shelter, the
brave two hundred stole out of the town, carrying ladders on
their backs. They wore little clothing, that they might
climb and run the easier. That they might step the more
quietly their right feet were bare, while on the left each
wore a shoe to keep him from slipping in the mud.</p>
<p>Stealthily they made their way across a ditch and reached
the wall unseen, unheard. Twelve of the bravest scaled the
wall and killed the sleepy sentinels, who had sought shelter in
the towers from a storm of wind and rain.</p>
<p>The others then mounted the wall, fixed their ladders on
the farther side and reached the ground in safety, while the
twelve, who had waited to the last, began to descend.</p>
<p>All would have been well, had not one man slipped and
knocked a tile off the top of the wall. It rattled and fell
to the ground with a noise that roused the Spartans, who
scrambled up the wall in great haste. But the darkness was
so dense that they could see nothing.</p>
<p>Those of the garrison who had stayed in the city did all
that they could to perplex the enemy, by making a sally
on the side of the town farthest from that by which their
friends had fled. And when the Spartans lit torches and
flashed danger signals to the Thebans whose city was not
far off, the Plataeans lit beacons, so that the signals were
confused.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the fugitives, having reached the ground in
safety, were met by a band of three hundred Spartans.
These were carrying lights, so the Plataeans were able to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
send a shower of arrows among them with sure and deadly
aim. In the confusion that followed, all save one archer
succeeded in crossing a ditch, covered with ice, but too thin
to bear the weight of the fugitives. They struggled through
the icy water, and after many narrow escapes two hundred
and twelve weary men reached Athens in safety.</p>
<p>Plataea held out gallantly until the summer of 427 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>,
when famine at length forced her to surrender.</p>
<p>Five judges were sent from Sparta to decide the fate of
the prisoners. But the trial was a mere form, for the
Thebans had already persuaded the Spartans how to treat
the unfortunate men.</p>
<p>Each prisoner as he was brought before the judges was
asked if he had helped the Spartans in their war against
Athens. As each one answered ‘No,’ he was led out and
put to death. In this way two hundred Plataeans and
twenty-five Athenians lost their lives, while the city they
had so bravely defended was razed to the ground.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_214">214</span></p>
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