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<h2> CHAPTER XI </h2>
<p><i>Year of the War—Campaigns of Demosthenes in Western Greece—Ruin
of Ambracia</i></p>
<p>Summer was now over. The winter following, the plague a second time
attacked the Athenians; for although it had never entirely left them,
still there had been a notable abatement in its ravages. The second visit
lasted no less than a year, the first having lasted two; and nothing
distressed the Athenians and reduced their power more than this. No less
than four thousand four hundred heavy infantry in the ranks died of it and
three hundred cavalry, besides a number of the multitude that was never
ascertained. At the same time took place the numerous earthquakes in
Athens, Euboea, and Boeotia, particularly at Orchomenus in the last-named
country.</p>
<p>The same winter the Athenians in Sicily and the Rhegians, with thirty
ships, made an expedition against the islands of Aeolus; it being
impossible to invade them in summer, owing to the want of water. These
islands are occupied by the Liparaeans, a Cnidian colony, who live in one
of them of no great size called Lipara; and from this as their
headquarters cultivate the rest, Didyme, Strongyle, and Hiera. In Hiera
the people in those parts believe that Hephaestus has his forge, from the
quantity of flame which they see it send out by night, and of smoke by
day. These islands lie off the coast of the Sicels and Messinese, and were
allies of the Syracusans. The Athenians laid waste their land, and as the
inhabitants did not submit, sailed back to Rhegium. Thus the winter ended,
and with it ended the fifth year of this war, of which Thucydides was the
historian.</p>
<p>The next summer the Peloponnesians and their allies set out to invade
Attica under the command of Agis, son of Archidamus, and went as far as
the Isthmus, but numerous earthquakes occurring, turned back again without
the invasion taking place. About the same time that these earthquakes were
so common, the sea at Orobiae, in Euboea, retiring from the then line of
coast, returned in a huge wave and invaded a great part of the town, and
retreated leaving some of it still under water; so that what was once land
is now sea; such of the inhabitants perishing as could not run up to the
higher ground in time. A similar inundation also occurred at Atalanta, the
island off the Opuntian Locrian coast, carrying away part of the Athenian
fort and wrecking one of two ships which were drawn up on the beach. At
Peparethus also the sea retreated a little, without however any inundation
following; and an earthquake threw down part of the wall, the town hall,
and a few other buildings. The cause, in my opinion, of this phenomenon
must be sought in the earthquake. At the point where its shock has been
the most violent, the sea is driven back and, suddenly recoiling with
redoubled force, causes the inundation. Without an earthquake I do not see
how such an accident could happen.</p>
<p>During the same summer different operations were carried on by the
different belligerents in Sicily; by the Siceliots themselves against each
other, and by the Athenians and their allies: I shall however confine
myself to the actions in which the Athenians took part, choosing the most
important. The death of the Athenian general Charoeades, killed by the
Syracusans in battle, left Laches in the sole command of the fleet, which
he now directed in concert with the allies against Mylae, a place
belonging to the Messinese. Two Messinese battalions in garrison at Mylae
laid an ambush for the party landing from the ships, but were routed with
great slaughter by the Athenians and their allies, who thereupon assaulted
the fortification and compelled them to surrender the Acropolis and to
march with them upon Messina. This town afterwards also submitted upon the
approach of the Athenians and their allies, and gave hostages and all
other securities required.</p>
<p>The same summer the Athenians sent thirty ships round Peloponnese under
Demosthenes, son of Alcisthenes, and Procles, son of Theodorus, and sixty
others, with two thousand heavy infantry, against Melos, under Nicias, son
of Niceratus; wishing to reduce the Melians, who, although islanders,
refused to be subjects of Athens or even to join her confederacy. The
devastation of their land not procuring their submission, the fleet,
weighing from Melos, sailed to Oropus in the territory of Graea, and
landing at nightfall, the heavy infantry started at once from the ships by
land for Tanagra in Boeotia, where they were met by the whole levy from
Athens, agreeably to a concerted signal, under the command of Hipponicus,
son of Callias, and Eurymedon, son of Thucles. They encamped, and passing
that day in ravaging the Tanagraean territory, remained there for the
night; and next day, after defeating those of the Tanagraeans who sailed
out against them and some Thebans who had come up to help the Tanagraeans,
took some arms, set up a trophy, and retired, the troops to the city and
the others to the ships. Nicias with his sixty ships coasted alongshore
and ravaged the Locrian seaboard, and so returned home.</p>
<p>About this time the Lacedaemonians founded their colony of Heraclea in
Trachis, their object being the following: the Malians form in all three
tribes, the Paralians, the Hiereans, and the Trachinians. The last of
these having suffered severely in a war with their neighbours the
Oetaeans, at first intended to give themselves up to Athens; but
afterwards fearing not to find in her the security that they sought, sent
to Lacedaemon, having chosen Tisamenus for their ambassador. In this
embassy joined also the Dorians from the mother country of the
Lacedaemonians, with the same request, as they themselves also suffered
from the same enemy. After hearing them, the Lacedaemonians determined to
send out the colony, wishing to assist the Trachinians and Dorians, and
also because they thought that the proposed town would lie conveniently
for the purposes of the war against the Athenians. A fleet might be got
ready there against Euboea, with the advantage of a short passage to the
island; and the town would also be useful as a station on the road to
Thrace. In short, everything made the Lacedaemonians eager to found the
place. After first consulting the god at Delphi and receiving a favourable
answer, they sent off the colonists, Spartans, and Perioeci, inviting also
any of the rest of the Hellenes who might wish to accompany them, except
Ionians, Achaeans, and certain other nationalities; three Lacedaemonians
leading as founders of the colony, Leon, Alcidas, and Damagon. The
settlement effected, they fortified anew the city, now called Heraclea,
distant about four miles and a half from Thermopylae and two miles and a
quarter from the sea, and commenced building docks, closing the side
towards Thermopylae just by the pass itself, in order that they might be
easily defended.</p>
<p>The foundation of this town, evidently meant to annoy Euboea (the passage
across to Cenaeum in that island being a short one), at first caused some
alarm at Athens, which the event however did nothing to justify, the town
never giving them any trouble. The reason of this was as follows. The
Thessalians, who were sovereign in those parts, and whose territory was
menaced by its foundation, were afraid that it might prove a very powerful
neighbour, and accordingly continually harassed and made war upon the new
settlers, until they at last wore them out in spite of their originally
considerable numbers, people flocking from all quarters to a place founded
by the Lacedaemonians, and thus thought secure of prosperity. On the other
hand the Lacedaemonians themselves, in the persons of their governors, did
their full share towards ruining its prosperity and reducing its
population, as they frightened away the greater part of the inhabitants by
governing harshly and in some cases not fairly, and thus made it easier
for their neighbours to prevail against them.</p>
<p>The same summer, about the same time that the Athenians were detained at
Melos, their fellow citizens in the thirty ships cruising round
Peloponnese, after cutting off some guards in an ambush at Ellomenus in
Leucadia, subsequently went against Leucas itself with a large armament,
having been reinforced by the whole levy of the Acarnanians except
Oeniadae, and by the Zacynthians and Cephallenians and fifteen ships from
Corcyra. While the Leucadians witnessed the devastation of their land,
without and within the isthmus upon which the town of Leucas and the
temple of Apollo stand, without making any movement on account of the
overwhelming numbers of the enemy, the Acarnanians urged Demosthenes, the
Athenian general, to build a wall so as to cut off the town from the
continent, a measure which they were convinced would secure its capture
and rid them once and for all of a most troublesome enemy.</p>
<p>Demosthenes however had in the meanwhile been persuaded by the Messenians
that it was a fine opportunity for him, having so large an army assembled,
to attack the Aetolians, who were not only the enemies of Naupactus, but
whose reduction would further make it easy to gain the rest of that part
of the continent for the Athenians. The Aetolian nation, although numerous
and warlike, yet dwelt in unwalled villages scattered far apart, and had
nothing but light armour, and might, according to the Messenians, be
subdued without much difficulty before succours could arrive. The plan
which they recommended was to attack first the Apodotians, next the
Ophionians, and after these the Eurytanians, who are the largest tribe in
Aetolia, and speak, as is said, a language exceedingly difficult to
understand, and eat their flesh raw. These once subdued, the rest would
easily come in.</p>
<p>To this plan Demosthenes consented, not only to please the Messenians, but
also in the belief that by adding the Aetolians to his other continental
allies he would be able, without aid from home, to march against the
Boeotians by way of Ozolian Locris to Kytinium in Doris, keeping Parnassus
on his right until he descended to the Phocians, whom he could force to
join him if their ancient friendship for Athens did not, as he
anticipated, at once decide them to do so. Arrived in Phocis he was
already upon the frontier of Boeotia. He accordingly weighed from Leucas,
against the wish of the Acarnanians, and with his whole armament sailed
along the coast to Sollium, where he communicated to them his intention;
and upon their refusing to agree to it on account of the non-investment of
Leucas, himself with the rest of the forces, the Cephallenians, the
Messenians, and Zacynthians, and three hundred Athenian marines from his
own ships (the fifteen Corcyraean vessels having departed), started on his
expedition against the Aetolians. His base he established at Oeneon in
Locris, as the Ozolian Locrians were allies of Athens and were to meet him
with all their forces in the interior. Being neighbours of the Aetolians
and armed in the same way, it was thought that they would be of great
service upon the expedition, from their acquaintance with the localities
and the warfare of the inhabitants.</p>
<p>After bivouacking with the army in the precinct of Nemean Zeus, in which
the poet Hesiod is said to have been killed by the people of the country,
according to an oracle which had foretold that he should die in Nemea,
Demosthenes set out at daybreak to invade Aetolia. The first day he took
Potidania, the next Krokyle, and the third Tichium, where he halted and
sent back the booty to Eupalium in Locris, having determined to pursue his
conquests as far as the Ophionians, and, in the event of their refusing to
submit, to return to Naupactus and make them the objects of a second
expedition. Meanwhile the Aetolians had been aware of his design from the
moment of its formation, and as soon as the army invaded their country
came up in great force with all their tribes; even the most remote
Ophionians, the Bomiensians, and Calliensians, who extend towards the
Malian Gulf, being among the number.</p>
<p>The Messenians, however, adhered to their original advice. Assuring
Demosthenes that the Aetolians were an easy conquest, they urged him to
push on as rapidly as possible, and to try to take the villages as fast as
he came up to them, without waiting until the whole nation should be in
arms against him. Led on by his advisers and trusting in his fortune, as
he had met with no opposition, without waiting for his Locrian
reinforcements, who were to have supplied him with the light-armed darters
in which he was most deficient, he advanced and stormed Aegitium, the
inhabitants flying before him and posting themselves upon the hills above
the town, which stood on high ground about nine miles from the sea.
Meanwhile the Aetolians had gathered to the rescue, and now attacked the
Athenians and their allies, running down from the hills on every side and
darting their javelins, falling back when the Athenian army advanced, and
coming on as it retired; and for a long while the battle was of this
character, alternate advance and retreat, in both which operations the
Athenians had the worst.</p>
<p>Still as long as their archers had arrows left and were able to use them,
they held out, the light-armed Aetolians retiring before the arrows; but
after the captain of the archers had been killed and his men scattered,
the soldiers, wearied out with the constant repetition of the same
exertions and hard pressed by the Aetolians with their javelins, at last
turned and fled, and falling into pathless gullies and places that they
were unacquainted with, thus perished, the Messenian Chromon, their guide,
having also unfortunately been killed. A great many were overtaken in the
pursuit by the swift-footed and light-armed Aetolians, and fell beneath
their javelins; the greater number however missed their road and rushed
into the wood, which had no ways out, and which was soon fired and burnt
round them by the enemy. Indeed the Athenian army fell victims to death in
every form, and suffered all the vicissitudes of flight; the survivors
escaped with difficulty to the sea and Oeneon in Locris, whence they had
set out. Many of the allies were killed, and about one hundred and twenty
Athenian heavy infantry, not a man less, and all in the prime of life.
These were by far the best men in the city of Athens that fell during this
war. Among the slain was also Procles, the colleague of Demosthenes.
Meanwhile the Athenians took up their dead under truce from the Aetolians,
and retired to Naupactus, and from thence went in their ships to Athens;
Demosthenes staying behind in Naupactus and in the neighbourhood, being
afraid to face the Athenians after the disaster.</p>
<p>About the same time the Athenians on the coast of Sicily sailed to Locris,
and in a descent which they made from the ships defeated the Locrians who
came against them, and took a fort upon the river Halex.</p>
<p>The same summer the Aetolians, who before the Athenian expedition had sent
an embassy to Corinth and Lacedaemon, composed of Tolophus, an Ophionian,
Boriades, an Eurytanian, and Tisander, an Apodotian, obtained that an army
should be sent them against Naupactus, which had invited the Athenian
invasion. The Lacedaemonians accordingly sent off towards autumn three
thousand heavy infantry of the allies, five hundred of whom were from
Heraclea, the newly founded city in Trachis, under the command of
Eurylochus, a Spartan, accompanied by Macarius and Menedaius, also
Spartans.</p>
<p>The army having assembled at Delphi, Eurylochus sent a herald to the
Ozolian Locrians; the road to Naupactus lying through their territory, and
he having besides conceived the idea of detaching them from Athens. His
chief abettors in Locris were the Amphissians, who were alarmed at the
hostility of the Phocians. These first gave hostages themselves, and
induced the rest to do the same for fear of the invading army; first,
their neighbours the Myonians, who held the most difficult of the passes,
and after them the Ipnians, Messapians, Tritaeans, Chalaeans,
Tolophonians, Hessians, and Oeanthians, all of whom joined in the
expedition; the Olpaeans contenting themselves with giving hostages,
without accompanying the invasion; and the Hyaeans refusing to do either,
until the capture of Polis, one of their villages.</p>
<p>His preparations completed, Eurylochus lodged the hostages in Kytinium, in
Doris, and advanced upon Naupactus through the country of the Locrians,
taking upon his way Oeneon and Eupalium, two of their towns that refused
to join him. Arrived in the Naupactian territory, and having been now
joined by the Aetolians, the army laid waste the land and took the suburb
of the town, which was unfortified; and after this Molycrium also, a
Corinthian colony subject to Athens. Meanwhile the Athenian Demosthenes,
who since the affair in Aetolia had remained near Naupactus, having had
notice of the army and fearing for the town, went and persuaded the
Acarnanians, although not without difficulty because of his departure from
Leucas, to go to the relief of Naupactus. They accordingly sent with him
on board his ships a thousand heavy infantry, who threw themselves into
the place and saved it; the extent of its wall and the small number of its
defenders otherwise placing it in the greatest danger. Meanwhile
Eurylochus and his companions, finding that this force had entered and
that it was impossible to storm the town, withdrew, not to Peloponnese,
but to the country once called Aeolis, and now Calydon and Pleuron, and to
the places in that neighbourhood, and Proschium in Aetolia; the Ambraciots
having come and urged them to combine with them in attacking Amphilochian
Argos and the rest of Amphilochia and Acarnania; affirming that the
conquest of these countries would bring all the continent into alliance
with Lacedaemon. To this Eurylochus consented, and dismissing the
Aetolians, now remained quiet with his army in those parts, until the time
should come for the Ambraciots to take the field, and for him to join them
before Argos.</p>
<p>Summer was now over. The winter ensuing, the Athenians in Sicily with
their Hellenic allies, and such of the Sicel subjects or allies of
Syracuse as had revolted from her and joined their army, marched against
the Sicel town Inessa, the acropolis of which was held by the Syracusans,
and after attacking it without being able to take it, retired. In the
retreat, the allies retreating after the Athenians were attacked by the
Syracusans from the fort, and a large part of their army routed with great
slaughter. After this, Laches and the Athenians from the ships made some
descents in Locris, and defeating the Locrians, who came against them with
Proxenus, son of Capaton, upon the river Caicinus, took some arms and
departed.</p>
<p>The same winter the Athenians purified Delos, in compliance, it appears,
with a certain oracle. It had been purified before by Pisistratus the
tyrant; not indeed the whole island, but as much of it as could be seen
from the temple. All of it was, however, now purified in the following
way. All the sepulchres of those that had died in Delos were taken up, and
for the future it was commanded that no one should be allowed either to
die or to give birth to a child in the island; but that they should be
carried over to Rhenea, which is so near to Delos that Polycrates, tyrant
of Samos, having added Rhenea to his other island conquests during his
period of naval ascendancy, dedicated it to the Delian Apollo by binding
it to Delos with a chain.</p>
<p>The Athenians, after the purification, celebrated, for the first time, the
quinquennial festival of the Delian games. Once upon a time, indeed, there
was a great assemblage of the Ionians and the neighbouring islanders at
Delos, who used to come to the festival, as the Ionians now do to that of
Ephesus, and athletic and poetical contests took place there, and the
cities brought choirs of dancers. Nothing can be clearer on this point
than the following verses of Homer, taken from a hymn to Apollo:</p>
<p>Phoebus, wherever thou strayest, far or near,<br/>
Delos was still of all thy haunts most dear.<br/>
Thither the robed Ionians take their way<br/>
With wife and child to keep thy holiday,<br/>
Invoke thy favour on each manly game,<br/>
And dance and sing in honour of thy name.<br/></p>
<p>That there was also a poetical contest in which the Ionians went to
contend, again is shown by the following, taken from the same hymn. After
celebrating the Delian dance of the women, he ends his song of praise with
these verses, in which he also alludes to himself:</p>
<p>Well, may Apollo keep you all! and so,<br/>
Sweethearts, good-bye—yet tell me not I go<br/>
Out from your hearts; and if in after hours<br/>
Some other wanderer in this world of ours<br/>
Touch at your shores, and ask your maidens here<br/>
Who sings the songs the sweetest to your ear,<br/>
Think of me then, and answer with a smile,<br/>
'A blind old man of Scio's rocky isle.'<br/></p>
<p>Homer thus attests that there was anciently a great assembly and festival
at Delos. In later times, although the islanders and the Athenians
continued to send the choirs of dancers with sacrifices, the contests and
most of the ceremonies were abolished, probably through adversity, until
the Athenians celebrated the games upon this occasion with the novelty of
horse-races.</p>
<p>The same winter the Ambraciots, as they had promised Eurylochus when they
retained his army, marched out against Amphilochian Argos with three
thousand heavy infantry, and invading the Argive territory occupied Olpae,
a stronghold on a hill near the sea, which had been formerly fortified by
the Acarnanians and used as the place of assizes for their nation, and
which is about two miles and three-quarters from the city of Argos upon
the sea-coast. Meanwhile the Acarnanians went with a part of their forces
to the relief of Argos, and with the rest encamped in Amphilochia at the
place called Crenae, or the Wells, to watch for Eurylochus and his
Peloponnesians, and to prevent their passing through and effecting their
junction with the Ambraciots; while they also sent for Demosthenes, the
commander of the Aetolian expedition, to be their leader, and for the
twenty Athenian ships that were cruising off Peloponnese under the command
of Aristotle, son of Timocrates, and Hierophon, son of Antimnestus. On
their part, the Ambraciots at Olpae sent a messenger to their own city, to
beg them to come with their whole levy to their assistance, fearing that
the army of Eurylochus might not be able to pass through the Acarnanians,
and that they might themselves be obliged to fight single-handed, or be
unable to retreat, if they wished it, without danger.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Eurylochus and his Peloponnesians, learning that the Ambraciots
at Olpae had arrived, set out from Proschium with all haste to join them,
and crossing the Achelous advanced through Acarnania, which they found
deserted by its population, who had gone to the relief of Argos; keeping
on their right the city of the Stratians and its garrison, and on their
left the rest of Acarnania. Traversing the territory of the Stratians,
they advanced through Phytia, next, skirting Medeon, through Limnaea;
after which they left Acarnania behind them and entered a friendly
country, that of the Agraeans. From thence they reached and crossed Mount
Thymaus, which belongs to the Agraeans, and descended into the Argive
territory after nightfall, and passing between the city of Argos and the
Acarnanian posts at Crenae, joined the Ambraciots at Olpae.</p>
<p>Uniting here at daybreak, they sat down at the place called Metropolis,
and encamped. Not long afterwards the Athenians in the twenty ships came
into the Ambracian Gulf to support the Argives, with Demosthenes and two
hundred Messenian heavy infantry, and sixty Athenian archers. While the
fleet off Olpae blockaded the hill from the sea, the Acarnanians and a few
of the Amphilochians, most of whom were kept back by force by the
Ambraciots, had already arrived at Argos, and were preparing to give
battle to the enemy, having chosen Demosthenes to command the whole of the
allied army in concert with their own generals. Demosthenes led them near
to Olpae and encamped, a great ravine separating the two armies. During
five days they remained inactive; on the sixth both sides formed in order
of battle. The army of the Peloponnesians was the largest and outflanked
their opponents; and Demosthenes fearing that his right might be
surrounded, placed in ambush in a hollow way overgrown with bushes some
four hundred heavy infantry and light troops, who were to rise up at the
moment of the onset behind the projecting left wing of the enemy, and to
take them in the rear. When both sides were ready they joined battle;
Demosthenes being on the right wing with the Messenians and a few
Athenians, while the rest of the line was made up of the different
divisions of the Acarnanians, and of the Amphilochian carters. The
Peloponnesians and Ambraciots were drawn up pell-mell together, with the
exception of the Mantineans, who were massed on the left, without however
reaching to the extremity of the wing, where Eurylochus and his men
confronted the Messenians and Demosthenes.</p>
<p>The Peloponnesians were now well engaged and with their outflanking wing
were upon the point of turning their enemy's right; when the Acarnanians
from the ambuscade set upon them from behind, and broke them at the first
attack, without their staying to resist; while the panic into which they
fell caused the flight of most of their army, terrified beyond measure at
seeing the division of Eurylochus and their best troops cut to pieces.
Most of the work was done by Demosthenes and his Messenians, who were
posted in this part of the field. Meanwhile the Ambraciots (who are the
best soldiers in those countries) and the troops upon the right wing,
defeated the division opposed to them and pursued it to Argos. Returning
from the pursuit, they found their main body defeated; and hard pressed by
the Acarnanians, with difficulty made good their passage to Olpae,
suffering heavy loss on the way, as they dashed on without discipline or
order, the Mantineans excepted, who kept their ranks best of any in the
army during the retreat.</p>
<p>The battle did not end until the evening. The next day Menedaius, who on
the death of Eurylochus and Macarius had succeeded to the sole command,
being at a loss after so signal a defeat how to stay and sustain a siege,
cut off as he was by land and by the Athenian fleet by sea, and equally so
how to retreat in safety, opened a parley with Demosthenes and the
Acarnanian generals for a truce and permission to retreat, and at the same
time for the recovery of the dead. The dead they gave back to him, and
setting up a trophy took up their own also to the number of about three
hundred. The retreat demanded they refused publicly to the army; but
permission to depart without delay was secretly granted to the Mantineans
and to Menedaius and the other commanders and principal men of the
Peloponnesians by Demosthenes and his Acarnanian colleagues; who desired
to strip the Ambraciots and the mercenary host of foreigners of their
supporters; and, above all, to discredit the Lacedaemonians and
Peloponnesians with the Hellenes in those parts, as traitors and
self-seekers.</p>
<p>While the enemy was taking up his dead and hastily burying them as he
could, and those who obtained permission were secretly planning their
retreat, word was brought to Demosthenes and the Acarnanians that the
Ambraciots from the city, in compliance with the first message from Olpae,
were on the march with their whole levy through Amphilochia to join their
countrymen at Olpae, knowing nothing of what had occurred. Demosthenes
prepared to march with his army against them, and meanwhile sent on at
once a strong division to beset the roads and occupy the strong positions.
In the meantime the Mantineans and others included in the agreement went
out under the pretence of gathering herbs and firewood, and stole off by
twos and threes, picking on the way the things which they professed to
have come out for, until they had gone some distance from Olpae, when they
quickened their pace. The Ambraciots and such of the rest as had
accompanied them in larger parties, seeing them going on, pushed on in
their turn, and began running in order to catch them up. The Acarnanians
at first thought that all alike were departing without permission, and
began to pursue the Peloponnesians; and believing that they were being
betrayed, even threw a dart or two at some of their generals who tried to
stop them and told them that leave had been given. Eventually, however,
they let pass the Mantineans and Peloponnesians, and slew only the
Ambraciots, there being much dispute and difficulty in distinguishing
whether a man was an Ambraciot or a Peloponnesian. The number thus slain
was about two hundred; the rest escaped into the bordering territory of
Agraea, and found refuge with Salynthius, the friendly king of the
Agraeans.</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Ambraciots from the city arrived at Idomene. Idomene
consists of two lofty hills, the higher of which the troops sent on by
Demosthenes succeeded in occupying after nightfall, unobserved by the
Ambraciots, who had meanwhile ascended the smaller and bivouacked under
it. After supper Demosthenes set out with the rest of the army, as soon as
it was evening; himself with half his force making for the pass, and the
remainder going by the Amphilochian hills. At dawn he fell upon the
Ambraciots while they were still abed, ignorant of what had passed, and
fully thinking that it was their own countrymen—Demosthenes having
purposely put the Messenians in front with orders to address them in the
Doric dialect, and thus to inspire confidence in the sentinels, who would
not be able to see them as it was still night. In this way he routed their
army as soon as he attacked it, slaying most of them where they were, the
rest breaking away in flight over the hills. The roads, however, were
already occupied, and while the Amphilochians knew their own country, the
Ambraciots were ignorant of it and could not tell which way to turn, and
had also heavy armour as against a light-armed enemy, and so fell into
ravines and into the ambushes which had been set for them, and perished
there. In their manifold efforts to escape some even turned to the sea,
which was not far off, and seeing the Athenian ships coasting alongshore
just while the action was going on, swam off to them, thinking it better
in the panic they were in, to perish, if perish they must, by the hands of
the Athenians, than by those of the barbarous and detested Amphilochians.
Of the large Ambraciot force destroyed in this manner, a few only reached
the city in safety; while the Acarnanians, after stripping the dead and
setting up a trophy, returned to Argos.</p>
<p>The next day arrived a herald from the Ambraciots who had fled from Olpae
to the Agraeans, to ask leave to take up the dead that had fallen after
the first engagement, when they left the camp with the Mantineans and
their companions, without, like them, having had permission to do so. At
the sight of the arms of the Ambraciots from the city, the herald was
astonished at their number, knowing nothing of the disaster and fancying
that they were those of their own party. Some one asked him what he was so
astonished at, and how many of them had been killed, fancying in his turn
that this was the herald from the troops at Idomene. He replied: "About
two hundred"; upon which his interrogator took him up, saying: "Why, the
arms you see here are of more than a thousand." The herald replied: "Then
they are not the arms of those who fought with us?" The other answered:
"Yes, they are, if at least you fought at Idomene yesterday." "But we
fought with no one yesterday; but the day before in the retreat." "However
that may be, we fought yesterday with those who came to reinforce you from
the city of the Ambraciots." When the herald heard this and knew that the
reinforcement from the city had been destroyed, he broke into wailing and,
stunned at the magnitude of the present evils, went away at once without
having performed his errand, or again asking for the dead bodies. Indeed,
this was by far the greatest disaster that befell any one Hellenic city in
an equal number of days during this war; and I have not set down the
number of the dead, because the amount stated seems so out of proportion
to the size of the city as to be incredible. In any case I know that if
the Acarnanians and Amphilochians had wished to take Ambracia as the
Athenians and Demosthenes advised, they would have done so without a blow;
as it was, they feared that if the Athenians had it they would be worse
neighbours to them than the present.</p>
<p>After this the Acarnanians allotted a third of the spoils to the
Athenians, and divided the rest among their own different towns. The share
of the Athenians was captured on the voyage home; the arms now deposited
in the Attic temples are three hundred panoplies, which the Acarnanians
set apart for Demosthenes, and which he brought to Athens in person, his
return to his country after the Aetolian disaster being rendered less
hazardous by this exploit. The Athenians in the twenty ships also went off
to Naupactus. The Acarnanians and Amphilochians, after the departure of
Demosthenes and the Athenians, granted the Ambraciots and Peloponnesians
who had taken refuge with Salynthius and the Agraeans a free retreat from
Oeniadae, to which place they had removed from the country of Salynthius,
and for the future concluded with the Ambraciots a treaty and alliance for
one hundred years, upon the terms following. It was to be a defensive, not
an offensive alliance; the Ambraciots could not be required to march with
the Acarnanians against the Peloponnesians, nor the Acarnanians with the
Ambraciots against the Athenians; for the rest the Ambraciots were to give
up the places and hostages that they held of the Amphilochians, and not to
give help to Anactorium, which was at enmity with the Acarnanians. With
this arrangement they put an end to the war. After this the Corinthians
sent a garrison of their own citizens to Ambracia, composed of three
hundred heavy infantry, under the command of Xenocleides, son of
Euthycles, who reached their destination after a difficult journey across
the continent. Such was the history of the affair of Ambracia.</p>
<p>The same winter the Athenians in Sicily made a descent from their ships
upon the territory of Himera, in concert with the Sicels, who had invaded
its borders from the interior, and also sailed to the islands of Aeolus.
Upon their return to Rhegium they found the Athenian general, Pythodorus,
son of Isolochus, come to supersede Laches in the command of the fleet.
The allies in Sicily had sailed to Athens and induced the Athenians to
send out more vessels to their assistance, pointing out that the
Syracusans who already commanded their land were making efforts to get
together a navy, to avoid being any longer excluded from the sea by a few
vessels. The Athenians proceeded to man forty ships to send to them,
thinking that the war in Sicily would thus be the sooner ended, and also
wishing to exercise their navy. One of the generals, Pythodorus, was
accordingly sent out with a few ships; Sophocles, son of Sostratides, and
Eurymedon, son of Thucles, being destined to follow with the main body.
Meanwhile Pythodorus had taken the command of Laches' ships, and towards
the end of winter sailed against the Locrian fort, which Laches had
formerly taken, and returned after being defeated in battle by the
Locrians.</p>
<p>In the first days of this spring, the stream of fire issued from Etna, as
on former occasions, and destroyed some land of the Catanians, who live
upon Mount Etna, which is the largest mountain in Sicily. Fifty years, it
is said, had elapsed since the last eruption, there having been three in
all since the Hellenes have inhabited Sicily. Such were the events of this
winter; and with it ended the sixth year of this war, of which Thucydides
was the historian.</p>
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