<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LXXV">CHAPTER LXXV<br/> <span class="subhead">THE ATHENIAN ARMY IS DESTROYED</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> Athenians made their preparations to retreat as
secretly as possible, but the Syracusans soon discovered their
plans. When they heard that their departure was delayed for
twenty-seven days, they determined to attack the Athenian
fleet once more, and again they were successful.</p>
<p>On land the Athenians repulsed Gylippus, but they
gained little by this success, for the Syracusans had made
up their mind that the whole Athenian army should be
destroyed.</p>
<p>So, as Demosthenes had foreseen, they barricaded the
entrance to the Great Harbour, drawing their ships across
it and lashing them together with chains.</p>
<p>Nicias saw that a battle must be fought, and he ordered
a great number of the land troops to go on board the fleet.
At all costs he must strengthen his navy.</p>
<p>The first thing the Athenians had to do was to break
through the ships that were lashed together at the mouth
of the harbour. But before the chains could be broken the
enemy was upon them, surrounding them on every side.
Despair gave the Athenians courage, and so desperately
did they fight that for a time it seemed that they might yet
escape.</p>
<p>Above the crash of vessels rose the cheers or groans of
those who watched the battle from the shore.</p>
<p>Thucydides gives us a picture of the hopes and fears, the
triumph and despair of those who fought as of those who
watched. He says:</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span></p>
<p>‘The fortune of the battle varied, and it was not possible
that the spectators on the shore should all receive the same
impression of it. Being quite close and having different
points of view, they would some of them see their own ships
victorious; their courage would then revive, and they would
earnestly call upon the gods not to take from them their
hope of deliverance. But others, who saw their ships
worsted, cried and shrieked aloud, and were by the sight
alone more utterly unnerved than the defeated combatants
themselves.</p>
<p>‘Others again who had fixed their gaze on some part of
the struggle which was undecided were in a state of excitement
still more terrible; they kept swaying their bodies
to and fro in an agony of hope and fear, as the stubborn
conflict went on and on; for at every instant they were all
but saved or all but lost. And while the strife hung in the
balance, you might hear in the Athenian army at once
lamentation, shouting, cries of victory or defeat, and all
the various sounds which are wrung from a great host in
extremity of danger.’</p>
<p>At length the Athenians were pushed back and yet
further back, until the fleet was stranded on the shore.
The soldiers who had been left on land now rushed forward
and succeeded in saving sixty of their ships from the enemy.</p>
<p>Demosthenes urged the men to embark and try once
again to cut their way out of the harbour, but they refused,
so crushed were they by their defeat. To retreat by land
was all that the Athenians could now try to do, yet in their
hearts they knew that the retreat must end in slavery or
in death.</p>
<p>The sick and the wounded were left behind. But those
who were stricken with fever, caused by the marsh land on
which they had been encamped, clung to their comrades,
and scarce knowing what they did, begged that they might
not be left behind. But their strength soon failed, and
they sank down by the wayside to die.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">254</span></p>
<p>Nicias, ill as he was, did all in his power to encourage and
cheer his men. He himself led the van, Demosthenes brought
up the rear.</p>
<p>After marching for several days, the Athenians were
parched with thirst. When at length they reached a stream,
it was to find the enemy awaiting them on the farther bank.</p>
<p>But their thirst was intolerable, and paying no heed to
the foe, the soldiers rushed to the water. As they stooped
to drink, the Syracusans fell upon them and put them to
death.</p>
<p>Demosthenes and his men had fallen behind the rest of
the army, and had already been forced to surrender. Nicias
now saw that he, too, must submit to Gylippus.</p>
<p>Seven thousand prisoners were sent by the Spartans to
work in stone quarries. These quarries were like dungeons,
but they were open to the sky, and during the day the
scorching sun beat down piteously on the miserable prisoners,
while at night the cold was so intense that sleep was
impossible.</p>
<p>Here they were kept for seventy days, with only enough
food to keep them alive, and with scarcely any water to
drink. Many of the men died, those who survived were
sold as slaves.</p>
<p>Nicias and Demosthenes were both put to death. It is
said that they were tortured, although Gylippus did all
he could to save them from the angry Syracusans. Thus
in disaster and defeat ended the expedition that sailed forth
so bravely from Athens two years before.</p>
<p>Thucydides says that this expedition was ‘the greatest
adventure that the Greeks entered into during this war,
and, in my opinion,’ he adds, ‘the greatest in which the
Greeks were ever concerned; the one most splendid for the
conquerors and most disastrous for the conquered, for
they suffered no common defeat, but were absolutely
annihilated—land-army, fleet and all—and of many thousands
only a handful ever returned home.’</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span></p>
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