<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LXVI">CHAPTER LXVI<br/> <span class="subhead">THE SPARTANS SURRENDER</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">When</span> Epitadas found that he was shut up on the island of
Sphacteria, he sent a messenger to Sparta to tell what had
befallen him. The ephors were so disturbed by his tidings
that they at once sent some of their number to the Bay of
Pylos to see what could be done to set free Epitadas and
his men.</p>
<p>They soon saw that it would be too difficult a task to
relieve the island, so they begged Eurymedon to grant a
truce until they sent ambassadors to Athens to sue for peace.</p>
<p>Their request was granted, and the Spartan ambassadors
at once set sail for Athens.</p>
<p>When they entered the assembly, Athens, had she but
known it, might have ended the war with honour. But
Pericles was no longer there to tell her that to do so would
be well. Cleon still ruled the assembly with his rough
eloquence. Nicias, the leader of those who desired peace,
although he bitterly disliked Cleon, was not strong enough
to overthrow him.</p>
<p>The assembly, urged by its leader, offered the Spartan
ambassadors terms which it knew they would not accept.
After rejecting them, as the Athenians expected, the ambassadors
returned indignant to Pylos, and the truce was at an
end. But Sphacteria was not taken so easily as the Athenians
had dreamed. In spite of the strict blockade, food was
taken to the island, so that the Spartans were in no danger
of starving.</p>
<p>Sometimes swimmers carrying with them linseed, poppy<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
seeds and honey, reached the island. Sometimes Helots,
tempted by promise of freedom, would manage, when the
sky was dark and the sea stormy, to sail past the enemy’s
ships, taking cheese, meal and even wine to the Spartans.</p>
<p>In Athens, the people were growing impatient of the
long blockade. When Demosthenes sent messengers to the
city to ask for reinforcements, they began to be sorry that
they had not offered more reasonable terms to the ambassadors.
They looked darkly at Cleon, and began to whisper
that but for his counsel peace would certainly have been made.</p>
<p>A meeting of the assembly was called, and Cleon, losing
his temper when Nicias urged that peace should be arranged
without delay, said, ‘It would be easy enough to take
Sphacteria if our generals were men. If I were general I
would do it at once.’</p>
<p>Nicias was a quiet man, but these scornful words roused
him to anger, and he retorted that if Cleon thought he was
able to take the island it would be well that he should go
and do so. He was himself a general, while Cleon was only
a leather-merchant, but he was willing to resign in his favour.</p>
<p>At first Cleon thought that Nicias was but jesting, and
he pretended that he really wished to go to the help of
Demosthenes. But when he found that his opponent was
in earnest, he declined the honour, saying that while Nicias
was a general, he himself had no training in military affairs.</p>
<p>But the people were not willing to let the leather-merchant
escape the consequences of his rash words. They shouted
that he must go and prove that he could do as he had said.</p>
<p>When Cleon saw that there was no escape he grew reckless,
and boasted that he would not only go to Sphacteria,
but that he would take the island within twenty days, and
either kill all the Spartans on it or bring them prisoners to
Athens.</p>
<p>Some there were who mocked at his words, others
laughed. But all were glad that the merchant should go,
for they were tired of his rough ways and rougher speech.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span>
If he went he might return with his promise unfulfilled and
his power with the people would then be lost. If he came
back in triumph, the Spartans would have been defeated.</p>
<p>Before long, Cleon set out at the head of an army for
Pylos. When he arrived he found Demosthenes already
prepared to attack the island.</p>
<p>A large part of the forest on Sphacteria had just been
burned down by some Athenian soldiers. They had been
sent to the island to reconnoitre, and while making a fire
to cook their dinner the trees were accidentally set alight.</p>
<p>The wood had sheltered the Spartans from the enemy,
and the fire spoiled their chief defence, so that they were
the less prepared to face the army of nearly fourteen thousand
Athenians, which, led by Cleon and Demosthenes, now
landed on the island.</p>
<p>Outnumbered as the Spartans were, for their army consisted
of only about four hundred and twenty soldiers and
the same number of Helots, they fought bravely as was
their custom.</p>
<p>But the arrows of the Athenians soon greatly reduced
their number, while to add to the distress of the wounded,
as well as of those who had escaped, the ground over which
they marched was hot with still smouldering ashes of burnt
wood.</p>
<p>At length Epitadas, the Spartan general, was slain, and
the few soldiers who were still able to fight retreated to a
hill on which was an old ruined fort. Here they took their
stand, determined to keep the enemy at bay. And they
did so until the Athenians found a path up a steep crag,
from the top of which they could command the Spartan fort.</p>
<p>Unseen by the brave defenders, the enemy scaled the
almost precipitous path, and when they reached the top
they at once began to shoot arrows down upon the startled
soldiers.</p>
<p>But soon Cleon bade them stay their arrows while he
sent a herald to the Spartans to bid them surrender.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span></p>
<p>Spartan troops had never yet yielded to a foe. Ever
they had conquered or fought to the death. Cleon believed
that now, as their brave fellows at Thermopylae had done,
they would rather die than yield.</p>
<p>But the Spartans dropped their shields and waved their
hands above their heads to show that they would cease to
fight. They begged to be allowed to ask the advice of their
friends on the mainland. Their request was granted, and
their friends bade them ‘to take counsel for themselves,
but to do nothing disgraceful.’</p>
<p>Two hundred and ninety-two Spartans, who were all
that were still alive on Sphacteria, then surrendered, one
hundred and twenty of these belonging to the noblest
families in Sparta. Never after this surrender were the
Spartans considered invincible.</p>
<p>Cleon was now able to return to Athens, which he reached
within twenty days from the time he left the city, bringing
with him, as he had boasted that he would do, his Spartan
prisoners.</p>
<p>The Athenians rejoiced at the success of their army,
but they laughed as they thought of the strange general
who had led it to victory.</p>
<p>As for the prisoners, they were glad to hold them as
hostages. The Spartans would be less likely to invade
Attica while their comrades were in Athens.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span></p>
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