Evans Experientialism
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| ANABASIS | ||||
| XENOPHON In Eight Parts - Part Seven |
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VI
After this the enemy confined themselves
to their own concerns, and 1 removed
their
households and property as far away
as possible.
The Hellenes, on their side, were still
awaiting
the arrival of Cleander with the ships
of
war and transports, which ought to
be there
soon. So each day they went out with
the
baggage animals and slaves and fearlessly
brought in wheat and barley, wine and
vegetables,
millet and figs; since the district
produced
all good things, the olive alone excepted.
When the army stayed in camp to rest,
pillaging
parties were allowed to go out, and
those
who went out appropriated the spoils;
but
when the whole army went out, if any
one
went off apart and seized 2 anything,
it
was voted to be public property. Ere
long
there was an ample abundance of supplies
of all sorts, for marketables arrived
from
Hellenic cities on all sides, and marts
were
established. Mariners coasting by,
and hearing
that a city was being founded and that
there
was a harbour, were glad to put in.
Even
the hostile tribes dwelling in the
neighbourhood
presently began to send envoys to Xenophon.
It was he who was forming the place
into
a city, as they understood, and they
would
be glad to learn on what terms they
might
secure his friendship. He made a point
of
introducing these visitors to the soldiers.
Meanwhile Cleander arrived with two ships
of war, but not a single transport.
At the
moment of his arrival, as it happened,
the
army had taken the field, and a separate
party had gone off on a pillaging expedition
into the hills and had captured a number
of small cattle. In thir apprehension
of
being deprived of them, these same
people
spoke to Dexippus (this was the same
man
who had made off from Trapezus with
the fifty-oared
galley), and urged him to save their
sheep
for them. "Take some for yourself,"
said they, "and give the rest
back to
us." So, without more ado, he
drove
off the soldiers standing near, who
kept
repeating that the spoil was public
property.
Then off he went to Cleander. "Here
is an attempt," said he, "at
robbery."
Cleander bade him to bring up the culprit
to him. Dexippus seized on some one,
and
was for haling him to the Spartan governor.
Just then Agasias came across him and
rescued
the man, who was a member of his company;
and the rest of the soldiers present
set
to work to stone Dexippus, calling
him "traitor."
Things looked so ill that a number
of the
crew of the ships of war took fright
and
fled to the sea, and with the rest
Cleander
himself. Xenophon and the other generals
tried to hold the men back, assuring
Cleander
that the affair signified nothing at
all,
and that the origin of it was a decree
pased
by the army. That was to blame, if
anything.
But Cleander, goaded by Dexippus, and
personally
annoyed at the fright which he had
experienced,
threatened to sail away and publish
an interdict
against them, forbidding any city to
receive
them, as being public enemies. 9 For
at this
date the Lacedaemonians held sway over
the
whole Hellenic world.
Thereat the affair began to wear an ugly
look, and the Hellenes begged and implored
Cleander to reconsider his intention.
He
replied that he would be as good as
his word,
and that nothing should stop him, unless
the man who set the example of stoning,
with
the other who rescued the prisoner,
were
given up to him. Now, one of the two
whose
persons were thus demanded--Agasias--had
been a friend to Xenophon throughout;
and
that was just why Dexippus was all
the more
anxious to accuse him. In their perplexity
the generals summoned a full meeting
of the
soldiers, and some speakers were disposed
to make very light of Cleander and
set him
at naught. But Xenophon took a more
serious
view of the matter; he rose and addressed
the meeting thus: "Soldiers, I
cannot
say that I feel disposed to make light
of
this business, if Cleander be allowed
to
go away, as he threatens to do, in
his present
temper towards us. There are Hellenic
cities
close by; but then the Lacedaemonians
are
the lords of Hellas, and they can,
any one
of them, carry out whatever they like
in
the cities. If then the first thing
this
Lacedaemonian does is to close the
gates
of Byzantium, and next to pass an order
to
the other governors, city by city,
not to
receive us because we are a set of
lawless
ruffians disloyal to the Lacedaemonians;
and if, further, this report of us
should
reach the ears of their admiral, Anaxibius,
to stay or to sail away will alike
be difficult.
Remember, the Lacedaemonians at the
present
time are lords alike on land and on
sea.
For the sake then of a single man,
or for
two men's sake, it is not right that
the
rest of us should be debarred from
Hellas;
but whatever they enjoin we must obey.
Do
not the cities which gave us birth
yield
them obedience also? For my own part,
inasmuch
as Dexippus, I believe, keeps telling
Cleander
that Agasias would never have done
this had
not I, Xenophon, bidden him, I absolve
you
of all complicity, and Agasias too,
if Agasias
himself states that I am in any way
a prime
mover in this matter. If I have set
the fashion
of stone-throwing or any other sort
of violence
I condemn myself--I say that I deserve
the
extreme penalty, and I will submit
to undergo
it. I 15 further say that if any one
else
is accused, that man is bound to surrender
himself to Cleander for judgement,
for by
this means you will be absolved entirely
from the accusation. But as the matter
now
stands, it is cruel that just when
we were
aspiring to win praise and honour throughout
Hellas, we are destined to sink below
the
level of the rest of the world, banned
from
the Hellenic cities whose common name
we
boast."
After him Agasias got up, and said, "I
swear to you, sirs, by the gods and
goddesses,
verily and indeed, neither Xenophon
nor any
one else among you bade me rescue the
man.
I saw an honest man--one of my own
company--being
taken up by Dexippus, the man who betrayed
you, as you know full well. That I
could
not endure; I rescued him, I admit
the fact.
Do not you deliver me up. I will surrender
myself, as Xenophon suggests, to Cleander
to pass what verdict on me he thinks
right.
Do not, for the sake of such a matter,
make
foes of the Lacedaemonians; rather
God grant
that[1] each of you may safely reach
the
goal of his desire. Only do you choose
from
among yourselves and send with me to
Cleander
those who, in case of any omission
on my
part, may by their words and acts supply
what is lacking." Thereupon the
army
granted him to choose for himself whom
he
would have go with him and to go; and
he
at once chose the generals. After this
they
all set off to Cleander--Agasias and
the
generals and the man who had been rescued
by Agasias--and the generals spoke
as follows:
"The army has sent us to you,
Cleander,
and this is their bidding: 'If you
have fault
to find with all, they say, you ought
to
pass sentence on all, and do with them
what
seems best; or if the charge is against
one
man or two, or possibly several, what
they
expect of these people is to surrender
themselves
to you for judgement.' Accordingly,
if you
lay anything to the charge of us generals,
here we stand at your bar. Or do you
impute
the fault to some one not here? tell
us whom.
Short of flying in the face of our
authority,
there is no one who will absent himself."
[1] Reading with the best MSS., {sozoisthe}.
Agasias ends his sentence with a prayer.
Al. {sozesthe}, "act so that each,"
etc.
At this point Agasias stepped forward and
said: "It was I, Cleander, 21
who rescued
the man before you yonder from Dexippus,
when the latter was carrying him off,
and
it was I who gave the order to strike
Dexippus.
My plea is that I know the prisoner
to be
an honest man. As to Dexippus, I know
that
he was chosen by the army to command
a fifty-oared
galley, which we had obtained by request
from the men of Trapezus for the express
purpose of collecting vessels to carry
us
safely home. But this same Dexippus
betrayed
his fellow-soldiers, with whom he had
been
delivered from so many perils, and
made off
into hiding like a runaway slave, whereby
we have robbed the Trapezuntines of
their
frigate, and must needs appear as knaves
in their eyes for this man's sake.
As to
ourselves, as far as he could, he has
ruined
us; for, like the rest of us, he had
heard
how all but impossible it was for us
to retreat
by foot across the rivers and to reach
Hellas
in safety. That is the stamp of man
whom
I robbed of his prey. Now, had it been
you
yourself who carried him off, or one
of your
emissaries, or indeed any one short
of a
runaway from ourselves, be sure that
I should
have acted far otherwise. Be assured
that
if you put me to death at this time
you are
sacrificing a good, honest man for
the sake
of a coward and a scamp."
When he had listened to these remarks, Cleander
replied that if such had been the conduct
of Dexippus, he could not congratulate
him.
"But still," he added, turning
to the generals, "were Dexippus
ever
so great a scamp he ought not to suffer
violence;
but in the language of your own demand
he
was entitled to a fair trial, and so
to obtain
his deserts. What I have to say at
present
therefore is: leave your friend here
and
go your way, and when I give the order
be
present at the trial. I have no further
charge
against the army or any one, since
the prisoner
himself admits that he rescued the
man."
Then the man who had been rescued said:
"In
behalf of myself, Cleander, if possibly
you
think that I was being taken up for
some
misdeed, it is not so; I neither struck
nor
shot; I merely said, 'The sheep are
public
property;' for it was a resolution
of the
soldiers that whenever the army went
out
as a body any booty privately obtained
was
to be public property. That was all
I said,
and thereupon yonder fellow seized
me 28
and began dragging me off. He wanted
to stop
our mouths, so that he might have a
share
of the things himself, and keep the
rest
for these buccaneers, contrary to the
ordinance."
In answer to that Cleander said: "Very
well, if that is your disposition you
can
stay behind too, and we will take your
case
into consideration also."
Thereupon Cleander and his party proceeded
to breakfast; but Xenophon collected
the
army in assembly, and advised their
sending
a deputation to Cleander to intercede
in
behalf of the men. Accordingly it was
resolved
to send some generals and officers
with Dracontius
the Spartan, and of the rest those
who seemed
best fitted to go. The deputation was
to
request Cleander by all means to release
the two men. Accordingly Xenophon came
and
addressed him thus: "Cleander,
you have
the men; the army has bowed to you
and assented
to do what you wished with respect
to these
two members of their body and themselves
in general. But now they beg and pray
you
to give up these two men, and not to
put
them to death. Many a good service
have these
two wrought for our army in past days.
Let
them but obtain this from you, and
in return
the army promises that, if you will
put yourself
at their head and the gracious gods
approve,
they will show you how orderly they
are,
how apt to obey their general, and,
with
heaven's help, to face their foes unflinchingly.
They make this further request to you,
that
you will present yourself and take
command
of them and make trial of them. 'Test
us
ourselves,' they say, 'and test Dexippus,
what each of us is like, and afterwards
assign
to each his due.'" When Cleander
heard
these things, he answered: "Nay,
by
the twin gods, I will answer you quickly
enough. Here I make you a present of
the
two men, and I will as you say present
myself,
and then, if the gods vouchsafe, I
will put
myself at your head and lead you into
Hellas.
Very different is your language from
the
tale I used to hear concerning you
from certain
people, that you wanted to withdraw
the army
from allegiance to the Lacedaemonians."
After this the deputation thanked him and
retired, taking with them the two men;
then
Cleander sacrificed as a preliminary
to marching
and consorted friendlily with Xenophon,
and
the two struck up an alliance. 35 When
the
Spartan saw with what good discipline
the
men carried out their orders, he was
still
more anxious to become their leader.
However,
in spite of sacrifices repeated on
three
successive days, the victims steadily
remained
unfavourable. So he summoned the generals
and said to them: "The victims
smile
not on me, they suffer me not to lead
you
home; but be not out of heart at that.
To
you it is given, as it would appear,
to bring
your men safe home. Forwards then,
and for
our part, whenever you come yonder,
we will
bestow on you as warm a welcome as
we may."
Then the soldiers resolved to make him a
present of the public cattle, which
he accepted,
but again gave back to them. So he
sailed
away; but the soldiers made division
of the
corn which they had collected and of
the
other captured property, and commenced
their
homeward march through the territory
of the
Bithynians.
At first they confined themselves to the
main road; but not chancing upon anything
whereby they might reach a friendly
territory
with something in their pockets for
themselves,
they resolved to turn sharp round,
and marched
for one day and night in the opposite
direction.
By this proceeding they captured many
slaves
and much small cattle; and on the sixth
day
reached Chrysopolis in Chalcedonia[2].
Here
they halted seven days while they disposed
of their booty by sale.
[2] The name should be written "Calchedonia."
The false form drove out the more correct,
probably through a mispronunciation,
based
on a wrong derivation, at some date
long
ago. The sites of Chrysopolis and Calchedon
correspond respectively to the modern
Scutari
and Kadikoi.
BOOK VII
[In the earlier portion of the narrative
will be found a detailed history of
the fortunes
of the Hellenes during their march
up country
with Cyrus down to the date of the
battle;
and, subsequently to his death, until
they
reached the Euxine; as also of all
their
doings in their efforts to escape from
the
Euxine, partly by land marches and
partly
under sail by sea, until they found
themselves
outside the mouth of the Black Sea
(south
of the Bosphorus) at Chrysopolis in
Asia.]
I
At this point Pharnabazus, who was afraid
that the army might 1 undertake a campaign
against his satrapy, sent to Anaxibius,
the
Spartan high admiral, who chanced to
be in
Byzantium, and begged him to convey
the army
out of Asia, undertaking to comply
with his
wishes in every respect. Anaxibius
accordingly
sent to summon the generals and officers
to Byzantium, and promised that the
soldiers
should not lack pay for service, if
they
crossed the strait. The officers said
that
they would deliberate and return an
answer.
Xenophon individually informed them
that
he was about to quit the army at once,
and
was only anxious to set sail. Anaxibius
pressed
him not to be in so great a hurry:
"Cross
over with the rest," he said,
"and
then it will be time enough to think
about
quitting the army." This the other
undertook
to do.
Now Seuthes the Thracian sent Medosades and
begged Xenophon to use his influence
to get
the army across. "Tell Xenophon,
if
he will do his best for me in this
matter,
he will not regret it." Xenophon
answered:
"The army is in any case going
to cross;
so that, as far as that is concerned,
Seuthes
is under no obligation to me or to
any one
else; 6 but as soon as it is once across,
I personally shall be quit of it. Let
Seuthes,
therefore, as far as he may deem consistent
with prudence, apply to those who are
going
to remain and will have a voice in
affairs."
After this the whole body of troops crossed
to Byzantium. But Anaxibius, instead
of proceeding
to give pay, made proclamation that,
"The
soldiers were to take up their arms
and baggage
and go forth," as if all he wished
were
to ascertain their numbers and bid
them god-speed
at the same moment. The soldiers were
not
well pleased at that, because they
had no
money to furnish themselves with provisions
for the march; and they sluggishly
set about
getting their baggage together. Xenophon
meanwhile, being on terms of intimacy
with
the governor, Cleander, came to pay
his host
a final visit, and bid him adieu, being
on
the point of setting sail. But the
other
protested; "Do not do so, or else,"
said he, "you will be blamed,
for even
now certain people are disposed to
hold you
to account because the army is so slow
in
getting under weigh." The other
answered,
"Nay, I am not to blame for that.
It
is the men themselves, who are in want
of
provisions; that is why they are out
of heart
at their exodus." "All the
same,"
he replied, "I advise you to go
out,
as if you intended to march with them,
and
when you are well outside, it will
be time
enough to take yourself off."
"Well
then," said Xenophon, "we
will
go and arrange all this with Anaxibius."
They went and stated the case to the
admiral,
who insisted that they must do as he
had
said, and march out, bag and baggage,
by
the quickest road; and as an appendix
to
the former edict, he added, "Any
one
absenting himself from the review and
the
muster will have himself to blame for
the
consequences." This was peremptory.
So out marched, the generals first,
and then
the rest; and now, with the exception
of
here a man and there, they were all
outside;
it was a "clean sweep"; and
Eteonicus
stood posted near the gates, ready
to close
them, as soon as the men were fairly
out,
and to thrust in the bolt pin.
Then Anaxibius summoned the generals and
captains, and addressed them: "Provisions
you had better get from the Thracian
villages;
you will 13 find plenty of barley,
wheat,
and other necessaries in them; and
when you
have got them, off with you to the
Chersonese,
where Cyniscus will take you into his
service."
Some of the soldiers overheard what
was said,
or possibly one of the officers was
the medium
of communication; however it was, the
news
was handed on to the army. As to the
generals,
their immediate concern was to try
and gain
some information as to Seuthes: "Was
he hostile or friendly? also, would
they
have to march through the Sacred mountain[1],
or round about through the middle of
Thrace?"
[1] So the mountain-range is named which
runs parallel to the Propontis (Sea
of Marmora)
from lat. 41 degress N. circa to lat. 40 degrees 30'; from Bisanthe (Rhodosto)
to the neck of the Chersonese (Gallipoli).
While they were discussing these points,
the soldiers snatched up their arms
and made
a rush full speed at the gates, with
the
intention of getting inside the fortification
again. But Eteonicus and his men, seeing
the heavy infantry coming up at a run
promptly
closed the gates and thrust in the
bolt pin.
Then the soldiers fell to battering
the gates,
exclaiming that it was iniquitous to
thrust
them forth in this fashion into the
jaws
of their enemies. "If you do not
of
your own accord open the gates,"
they
cried, "we will split them in
half";
and another set rushed down to the
sea, and
so along the break-water and over the
wall
into the city; while a third set, consisting
of those few who were still inside,
having
never left the city, seeing the affair
at
the gates, severed the bars with axes
and
flung the portals wide open; and the
rest
came pouring in.
Xenophon, seeing what was happening, was
seized with alarm lest the army betake
itself
to pillage, and ills incurable be wrought
to the city, to himself, and to the
soldiers.
Then he set off, and, plunging into
the throng,
was swept through the gates with the
crowd.
The Byzantines no sooner saw the soldiers
forcibly rushing in than they left
the open
square, and fled, some to the shipping,
others
to their homes, while those already
indoors
came racing out, and some fell to dragging
down their ships of war, hoping possibly
to be safe on board these; while there
was
not a soul who doubted but that the
city
was 19 taken, and that they were all
undone.
Eteonicus made a swift retreat to the
citadel.
Anaxibius ran down to the sea, and,
getting
on board a fisherman's smack, sailed
round
to the acropolis, and at once sent
off to
fetch over the garrison troops from
Chalcedon,
since those already in the acropolis
seemed
hardly sufficient to keep the men in
check.
The soldiers, catching sight of Xenophon,
threw themselves upon him, crying:
"Now,
Xenophon, is the time to prove yourself
a
man. You have got a city, you have
got triremes,
you have got money, you have got men;
to-day,
if you only chose, you can do us a
good turn,
and we will make you a great man."
He
replied: "Nay, I like what you
say,
and I will do it all; but if that is
what
you have set your hearts on, fall into
rank
and take up position at once."
This
he said, wishing to quiet them, and
so passed
the order along the lines himself,
while
bidding the rest to do the same: "Take
up position; stand easy." But
the men
themselves, by a species of self-marshalling,
fell into rank, and were soon formed,
the
heavy infantry eight deep, while the
light
infantry had run up to cover either
wing.
The Thracian Square, as it is called,
is
a fine site for manouvering, being
bare of
buildings and level. As soon as the
arms
were stacked and the men's tempers
cooled,
Xenophon called a general meeting of
the
soldiers, and made the following speech:--
"Soldiers, I am not surprised at your
wrath, or that you deem it monstrous
treatment
so to be cheated; but consider what
will
be the consequences if we gratify our
indignation,
and in return for such deception, avenge
ourselves on the Lacedaemonians here
present,
and plunder an innocent city. We shall
be
declared enemies of the Lacedaemonians
and
their allies; and what sort of war
that will
be, we need not go far to conjecture.
I take
it, you have not forgotten some quite
recent
occurrences. We Athenians entered into
war
against the Lacedaemonians and their
allies
with a fleet consisting of not less
than
three hundred line-of-battle ships,
including
those in dock as well as those afloat.
We
had vast treasures stored up in the
city,
and a yearly income which, derived
from home
or foreign sources, amounted to no
less than
a thousand talents. Our empire included
all
the 27 islands, and we were possessed
of
numerous cities both in Asia and in
Europe.
Amongst others, this very Byzantium,
where
we are now, was ours; and yet in the
end
we were vanquished, as you all very
well
know.
"What, must we anticipate, will now
be our fate? The Lacedaemonians have
not
only their old allies, but the Athenians
and those who were at that time allies
of
Athens are added to them. Tissaphernes
and
all the rest of the Asiatics on the
seaboard
are our foes, not to speak of our arch-enemy,
the king himself, up yonder, whom we
came
to deprive of his empire, and to kill,
if
possible. I ask then, with all these
banded
together against us, is there any one
so
insensate as to imagine that we can
survive
the contest? For heaven's sake, let
us not
go mad or loosely throw away our lives
in
war with our own native cities--nay,
our
own friends, our kith and our kin;
for in
one or other of the cities they are
all included.
Every city will march against us, and
not
unjustly, if, after refusing to hold
one
single barbarian city by right of conquest,
we seize the first Hellenic city that
we
come to and make it a ruinous heap.
For my
part, my prayer is that before I see
such
things wrought by you, I, at any rate,
may
lie ten thousand fathoms under ground!
My
counsel to you, as Hellenes, is to
try and
obtain your just rights, through obedience
to those who stand at the head of Hellas;
and if so be that you fail in those
demands,
why, being more sinned against than
sinning,
need we rob ourselves of Hellas too?
At present,
I propose that we should send to Anaxibius
and tell him that we have made an entrance
into the city, not meditating violence,
but
merely to discover if he and his will
show
us any good; for if so, it is well;
but of
otherwise, at least we will let him
see that
he does not shut the door upon us as
dupes
and fools. We know the meaning of discipline;
we turn our backs and go."
This resolution was passed, and they sent
Hieronymus an Eleian, with two others,
Eurylochus
an Arcadian and Philesius an Achaean,
to
deliver the message. So these set off
on
their errand. But while the soldiers
were
still seated in conclave, Coeratadas,
of
Thebes, 33 arrived. He was a Theban
not in
exile, but with a taste for generalship,
who made it his business to see if
any city
or nation were in need of his services.
Thus,
on the present occasion, he presented
himself,
and begged to state that he was ready
to
put himself at their head, and lead
them
into the Delta of Thrace[2], as it
is called,
where they would find themselves in
a land
of plenty; but until they got there,
he would
provide them with meat and drink enough
and
to spare. While they were still listening
to this tale, the return message from
Anaxibius
came. His answer was: "The discipline,
they had spoken of, was not a thing
they
would regret; indeed he would report
their
behaviour to the authorities at home;
and
for himself, he would take advice and
do
the best he could for them."
[2] The exact locality, so called, is not
known; doubtless it lay somewhere between
Byzantium and Salmydessus, possibly
at Declus (mod. Derkos); or possibly the narrow portion
of Thrace between the Euxine, Bosphorus,
and Propontis went by this name. See
note
in Pretor ad. loc., and "Dict.
Geog."
"Thracia."
Thereupon the soldiers accepted Coeratadas
as their general, and retired without
the
walls. Their new general undertook
to present
himself to the troops next day with
sacrificial
beasts and a soothsayer, with eatables
also
and drinkables for the army. Now, as
soon
as they were gone out, Anaxibius closed
the
gates and issued a proclamation to
the effect
that "any of the soldiers caught
inside
should be knocked down to the hammer
and
sold at once." Next day, Coeratadas
arrived with the victims and the soothsayer.
A string of twenty bearers bearing
barleymeal
followed at his heels, succeeded by
other
twenty carrying wine, and three laden
with
a supply of olives, and two others
carrying,
the one about as much garlic as a single
man could lift, and the other a similar
load
of onions. These various supplies he
set
down, apparently for distribution,
and began
to sacrifice.
Now Xenophon sent to Cleander, begging him
to arrange matters so that he might
be allowed
to enter the walls, with a view to
starting
from Byzantium on his homeward voyage.
Cleander
came, and this is what he 39 said:
"I
have come; but I was barely able to
arrange
what you want. Anaxibius insisted:
'It was
not convenient that Xenophon should
be inside
while the soldiers are close to the
walls
without; the Byzantines at sixes and
sevens
moreover; and no love lost between
the one
party of them and the other.' Still,
he ended
by bidding you to come inside, if you
were
really minded to leave the town by
sea with
himself." Accordingly Xenophon
bade
the soldiers good-bye, and returned
with
Cleander within the walls.
To return to Coeratadas. The first day he
failed to get favourable signs at the
sacrifice,
and never a dole of rations did he
make to
the soldiers. On the second day the
victims
were standing ready near the altar,
and so
was Coeratadas, with chaplet crowned,
all
ready to sacrifice, when up comes Timasion
the Dardanian, with Neon the Asinaean,
and
Cleanor of Orchomenus, forbidding Coeratadas
to sacrifice: "He must understand
there
was an end to his generalship, unless
he
gave them provisions." The other
bade
them measure out the supplies, "Pray,
dole them out." But when he found
that
he had a good deal short of a single
day's
provisions for each man, he picked
up his
paraphernalia of sacrifice and withdrew.
As to being general, he would have
nothing
more to say to it.
II
Now these five were left--Neon the Asinaean,
Phryniscus the Achaean, 1 Philesius
the Achaean,
Xanthicles the Achaean, Timasion the
Dardanian--at
the head of the army, and they pushed
on
to some villages of the Thracians facing
Byzantium, and there encamped. Now
the generals
could not agree. Cleanor and Phryniscus
wished
to march to join Seuthes, who had worked
upon their feelings by presenting one
with
a horse and the other with a woman
to wife.
But Neon's object was to come to the
Chersonese:
"When we are under the wing of
the Lacedaemonians,"
he thought, "I shall step to the
front
and command the whole army."
Timasion's one ambition was to cross back
again into Asia, hoping to be reinstated
at home and end his exile. The soldiers
shared
the wishes of the last general. But,
as time
dragged on, many of the men sold their
arms
at different places and set sail as
best
they could; others [actually gave away
their
arms, some here, some there, and[1]]
3 became
absorbed in the cities. One man rejoiced.
This was Anaxibius, to whom the break-up
of the army was a blessing. "That
is
the way," he said to himself,
"I
can best gratify Pharnabazus."
[1] The MSS. give the words so rendered--{oi
de kai [didontes ta opla kata tous
khorous]},
which some critics emend {diadidontes},
others
bracket as suspected, others expunge.
But Anaxibius, while prosecuting his voyage
from Byzantium, was met at Cyzicus
by Aristarchus,
the new governor, who was to succeed
Cleander
at Byzantium; and report said that
a new
admiral, Polus, if he had not actually
arrived,
would presently reach the Hellespont
and
relieve Anaxibius. The latter sent
a parting
injunction to Aristarchus to be sure
and
sell all the Cyreian soldiers he could
lay
hands on still lingering in Byzantium;
for
Cleander had not sold a single man
of them;
on the contrary, he had made it his
business
to tend the sick and wounded, pitying
them,
and insisting on their being received
in
the houses. Aristarchus changed all
that,
and was no sooner arrived in Byzantium
than
he sold no less than four hundred of
them.
Meanwhile Anaxibius, on his coasting
voyage,
reached Parium, and, according to the
terms
of their agreement, he sent to Pharnabazus.
But the latter, learning that Aristarchus
was the new governor at Byzantim, and
that
Anixibius had ceased to be admiral,
turned
upon him a cold shoulder, and set out
concocting
the same measures concerning the Cyreian
army with Aristarchus, as he had lately
been
at work upon with Anaxibius.
Anaxibius thereupon summoned Xenophon and
bade him, by every manner of means,
sail
to the army with the utmost speed,
and keep
it together. "He was to collect
the
scattered fragments and march them
down to
Perinthus, and thence convey them across
to Asia without loss of time."
And herewith
he put a thirty-oared galley at his
srrvice,
and gave him a letter of authority
and an
officer to accompany him, with an order
to
the Perinthians "to escort Xenophon
without delay on horseback to the army."
So it was that Xenophon sailed across
and
eventually reached the army. The soldiers
gave him a joyous welcome, and would
have
been only too glad to cross from Thrace
into
Asia under his leadership.
But Seuthes, hearing that Xenophon had arrived,
sent Medosades again, 10 by sea to
meet him,
and begged him to bring the army to
him;
and whatever he thought would make
his speech
persuasive, he was ready to promise
him.
But the other replied, that none of
these
things were open to him to do; and
with this
answer Medosades departed, and the
Hellenes
proceeded to Perinthus. Here on arrival
Neon
withdrew his troops and encamped apart,
having
about eight hundred men; while the
remainder
of the army lay in one place under
the walls
of Perinthus.
After this, Xenophon set himself to find
vessels, so as to lose no time in crossing.
But in the interval Aristarchus, the
governor
from Byzantium, arrived with a couple
of
war-ships, being moved to do so by
Pharnabazus.
To make doubly sure, he first forbade
the
skippers and shipmasters to carry the
troops
across, and then he visited the camp
and
informed the soldiers that their passage
into Asia was forbidden. Xenophon replied
that he was acting under the orders
of Anaxibius,
who had sent him thither for this express
purpose; to which Aristarchus retorted,
"For
the matter of that, Anaxibius is no
longer
admiral, and I am governor in this
quarter;
if I catch any of you at sea, I will
sink
you." With these remarks he retired
within the walls of Perinthus.
Next day, he sent for the generals and officers
of the army. They had already reached
the
fortification walls, when some one
brought
word to Xenophon that if he set foot
inside,
he would be seized, and either meet
some
ill fate there or more likely be delivered
up to Pharnabazus. On hearing this
Xenophon
sent forward the rest of the party,
but for
himself pleaded that there was a sacrifice
which he wished to offer. In this way
he
contrived to turn back and consult
the victims,
"Would the gods allow him to try
and
bring the army over to Seuthes?"
On
the one hand it was plain that the
idea of
crossing over to Asia in the face of
this
man with his ships of war, who meant
to bar
the passage, was too dangerous. Nor
did he
altogether like the notion of being
blocked
up in the Chersonese with an army in
dire
need of everything; where, besides
being
at the beck and call of the 15 governor
of
the place, they would be debarred from
the
necessities of life.
While Xenophon was thus employed, the generals
and officers came back with a message
from
Aristarchus, who had told them they
might
retire for the present, but in the
afternoon
he would expect them. The former suspicions
of a plot had now ripened to a certainty.
Xenophon meantime had ascertained that
the
victims were favourable to his project.
He
personally, and the army as a whole,
might
with safety proceed to Seuthes, they
seemed
to say. Accordingly, he took with him
Polycrates,
the Athenian captain, and from each
of the
generals, not including Neon, some
one man
whom they could in each case trust,
and in
the night they set off to visit the
army
of Seuthes, sixty furlongs distant.
As they approached, they came upon some deserted
watch-fires, and their first impression
was
that Seuthes had shifted his position;
but
presently perceiving a confused sound
(the
voices of Seuthes' people signalling
to one
another), the explanation dawned on
him:
Seuthes kept his watch-fires kindled
in front
of, instead of behind, his night pickets,
in order that the outposts, being in
the
dark, might escape notice, their numbers
and position thus being a mystery;
whilst
any party approaching from the outside,
so
far from escaping notice, would, through
the glare of the fire, stand out conspicuously.
Perceiving how matters stood, Xenophon
sent
forward his interpreter, who was one
of the
party, and bade him inform Seuthes
that Xenophon
was there and craved conference with
him.
The others asked if he were an Athenian
from
the army yonder, and no sooner had
the interpreter
replied, "Yes, the same,"
than
up they leapt and galloped off; and
in less
time than it takes to tell a couple
of hundred
peltasts had come up who seized and
carried
off Xenophon and those with him and
brought
them to Seuthes. The latter was in
a tower
right well guarded, and there were
horses
round it in a circle, standing all
ready
bitted and bridled; for his alarm was
so
great that he gave his horses their
provender
during the day[2], and during the nights
he kept watch and 21 ward with the
brutes
thus bitted and bridled. It was stated
in
explanation that in old days an ancestor
of his, named Teres, had been in this
very
country with a large army, several
of whom
he had lost at the hands of the native
inhabitants,
besides being robbed of his baggage
train.
The inhabitants of the country are
Thynians,
and they are reputed to be far the
most warlike
set of fighters--especially at night.
[2] I. e. "instead of letting them graze."
When they drew near, Seuthes bade Xenophon
enter, and bring with him any two he
might
choose. As soon as they were inside,
they
first greeted one another warmly, and
then,
according to the Thracian custom, pledged
themselves in bowls of wine. There
was further
present at the elbow of Seuthes, Medosades,
who on all occasions acted as his ambassador-in-chief.
Xenophon took the initiative and spoke
as
follows: "You have sent to me,
Seuthes,
once and again. On the first occasion
you
sent Medosades yonder, to Chalcedon,
and
you begged me to use my influence in
favour
of the army crossing over from Asia.
You
promised me, in return for this conduct
on
my part, various kindnesses; at least
that
is what Medosades stated"; and
before
proceeding further he turned to Medosades
and asked, "Is not that so?"
The
other assented. "Again, on a second
occasion, the same Medosades came when
I
had crossed over from Parium to rejoin
the
army; and he promised me that if I
would
bring you the army, you would in various
respects treat me as a friend and brother.
He said especially with regard to certain
seaboard places of which you are the
owner
and lord, that you were minded to make
me
a present of them." At this point
he
again questioned Medosades, "Whether
the words attributed to him were exact?"
and Medosades once more fully assented.
"Come
now," proceeded Xenophon, "recount
what answer I made you, and first at
Chalcedon."
"You answered that the army was,
in
any case, about to cross over to Byzantium;
and as far as that went, there was
no need
to pay you or any one else anything;
and
for yourself, you added, that once
across
you were minded to leave the army,
which
thing came to pass even as you said."
"Well! what did I say," he
asked,
"at your next visit, when 28 you
came
to me in Selybria?" "You
said that
the proposal was impossible; you were
all
going to Perinthus to cross into Asia."
"Good," said Xenophon, "and
in spite of it all, at the present
moment,
here I am myself, and Phryniscus, one
of
my colleagues, and Polycrates yonder,
a captain;
and outside, to represent the other
generals
(all except Neon the Laconian), the
trustiest
men they could find to send. So that
if you
wish to give these transactions the
seal
of still greater security, you have
nothing
to do but to summon them also; and
do you,
Polycrates, go and say from me, that
I bid
them leave their arms outside, and
you can
leave your own sword outside before
you enter
with them on your return."
When Seuthes had heard so far, he interposed:
"I should never mistrust an Athenian,
for we are relatives already[3], I
know;
and the best of friends, I believe,
we shall
be." After that, as soon as the
right
men entered, Xenophon first questioned
Seuthes
as to what use he intended to make
of the
army, and he replied as follows: "Maesades
was my father; his sway extended over
the
Melanditae, the Thynians, and the Tranipsae.
Then the affairs of the Odrysians took
a
bad turn, and my father was driven
out of
this country, and later on died himself
of
sickness, leaving me to be brought
up as
an orphan at the court of Medocus,
the present
king. But I, when I had grown to man's
estate,
could not endure to live with my eyes
fixed
on another's board. So I seated myself
on
the seat by him as a suppliant, and
begged
him to give me as many men as he could
spare,
that I might wreak what mischief I
could
on those who had driven us forth from
our
land; that thus I might cease to live
in
dependence upon another's board, like
a dog
watching his master's hand. In answer
to
my petition, he gave me 34 the men
and the
horses which you will see at break
of day,
and nowadays I live with these, pillaging
my own ancestral land. But if you would
join
me, I think, with the help of heaven,
we
might easily recover my empire. That
is what
I want of you." "Well then,"
said Xenophon, "supposing we came,
what
should you be able to give us? the
soldiers,
the officers, and the generals? Tell
us that
these witnesses may report your answer."
And he promised to give "to the
common
soldiers a cyzicene[4], to a captain
twice
as much, and to a general four times
as much,
with as much land as ever they liked,
some
yoke of oxen, and a fortified place
upon
the seaboard." "But now supposing,"
said Xenophon, "we fail of success,
in spite of our endeavours; suppose
any intimidation
on the part of the Lacedaemonians should
arise; will you receive into your country
any of us who may seek to find a refuge
with
you?" He answered: "Nay,
not only
so, but I shall look upon you as my
brothers,
entitled to share my seat, and the
joint
possessors of all the wealth which
we may
be able to acquire. And to you yourself,
O Xenophon! I will give my daughter,
and
if you have a daughter, I will buy
her in
Thracian fashion; and I will give you
Bisanthe
as a dwelling-place, which is the fairest
of all my possessions on the seaboard[5]."
[3] Tradition said that the Thracians and
Athenians were connected, through the
marriage
of a former prince Tereus (or Teres)
with
Procne, the daughter of Pandion. This
old
story, discredited by Thucydides, ii.
29,
is referred to in Arist. "Birds,"
368 foll. The Birds are about to charge
the
two Athenian intruders, when Epops,
king
of the Birds, formerly Tereus, king
of Thrace,
but long ago transformed into a hoopoe,
intercedes
in behalf of two men, {tes emes gunaikos
onte suggene kai phuleta}, "who
are
of my lady's tribe and kin." As
a matter
of history, the Athenians had in the
year
B. C. 431 made alliance with Sitalces,
king
of the Odrysians (the son of Teres,
the first
founder of their empire), and made
his son,
Sadocus, an Athenian citizen. Cf. Thuc.
ib.;
Arist. Acharnians, 141 foll.
[4] A cyzicene monthly is to be understood.
[5] Bisanthe, one of the Ionic colonies founded
by Samos, with the Thracian name Rhaedestus
(now Rodosto), strongly placed so as
to command
the entrance into the Sacred mountain.
III
After listening to these proposals, they
gave and accepted pledges of 1 good
faith;
and so the deputation rode off. Before
day
they were back again in camp, and severally
rendered a report to those who sent
them.
At dawn Aristarchus again summoned
the generals
and officers, but the latter resolved
to
have done with the visit to Aristarchus,
and to summon a meeting of the army.
In full
conclave the soldiers met, with the
exception
of Neon's men, who remained about ten
furlongs
off. When they were met together Xenophon
rose, and made the following announcement:
"Men, Aristarchus with his ships
of
war hinders us from sailing where we
fain
would go; it is not even safe to set
foot
on 3 board a vessel. But if he hinders
us
here, he hastens us there. 'Be off
to the
Chersonese,' says he, 'force a passage
through
the Sacred mountain.' If we master
it and
succeed in getting to that place, he
has
something in store for us. He promises
that
he will not sell you any more, as he
did
at Byzantium; you shall not be cheated
again;
you shall have pay; he will no longer,
as
now, suffer you to remain in want of
provisions.
That is his proposal. But Seuthes says
that
if you will go to him he will treat
you well.
What you have now to consider is, whether
you will stay to debate this question,
or
leave its settlement till we have gone
up
into a land of provisions. If you ask
me
my opinion, it is this: Since here
we have
neither money to buy, nor leave to
take without
money what we need, why should we not
go
up into these villages where the right
to
help ourselves is conferred by might?
There,
unhampered by the want of bare necessaries,
you can listen to what this man and
the other
wants of you and choose whichever sounds
best. Let those," he added, "who
agree to this, hold up their hands."
They all held them up. "Retire
then,"
said he, "and get your kit together,
and at the word of command, follow
your leader."
After this, Xenophon put himself at the head
and the rest followed. Neon, indeed,
and
other agents from Aristarchus tried
to turn
them from their purpose, but to their
persuasions
they turned a deaf ear. They had not
advanced
much more than three miles, when Seuthes
met them; and Xenophon, seeing him,
bade
him ride up. He wished to tell him
what they
felt to be conducive to their interests,
and in the presence of as many witnesses
as possible. As soon as he had approached,
Xenophon said: "We are going where
the
troops will have enough to live upon;
when
we are there, we will listen to you
and to
the emissaries of the Laconian, and
choose
between you both whatever seems best.
If
then you will lead us where provisions
are
to be got in plenty, we shall feel
indebted
to you for your hospitality."
And Seuthes
answered: "For the matter of that,
I
know many villages, close-packed and
stocked
with all kinds of provisions, just
far enough
9 off to give you a good appetite for
your
breakfasts." "Lead on then!"
said Xenophon. When they had reached
the
villages in the afternoon, the soldiers
met,
and Seuthes made the following speech:
"My
request to you, sirs, is that you will
take
the field with me, and my promise to
you
is that I will give every man of you
a cyzicene,
and to the officers and generals at
the customary
rate; besides this I will honour those
who
show special merit. Food and drink
you shall
get as now for yourselves from the
country;
but whatever is captured, I shall claim
to
have myself, so that by distribution
of it
I may provide you with pay. Let them
flee,
let them creep into hiding-places,
we shall
be able to pursue after them, we will
track
them out; or if they resist, along
with you
we will endeavour to subdue them to
our hands."
Xenophon inquired: "And how far
from
the sea shall you expect the army to
follow
you?" "Nowhere more than
seven
days' journey," he answered, "and
in many places less."
After this, permission was given for all
who wished to speak, and many spoke,
but
ever to one and the same tune: "What
Seuthes said, was very right. It was
winter,
and for a man to sail home, even if
he had
the will to do so, was impossible.
On the
other hand, to continue long in a friendly
country, where they must depend upon
what
they could purchase, was equally beyond
their
power. If they were to wear away time
and
support life in a hostile country,
it was
safer to do so with Seuthes than by
themselves,
not to speak of all these good things;
but
if they were going to get pay into
the bargain,
that indeed was a godsend." To
complete
the proceedings, Xenophon said: "If
any one opposes the measure, let him
state
his views; if not, let the officer
put the
proposition to the vote." No one
opposed;
they put it to the vote, and the resolution
was carried; and without loss of time,
he
informed Seuthes that they would take
the
field with him.
After this the troops messed in their separate
divisions, but the generals and officers
were invited by Seuthes to dinner at
a neighbouring
village which was in his possession.
When
they were at the doors, and on the
point
of stepping in to dinner, they were
met by
16 a certain Heracleides, of Maronea[1].
He came up to each guest, addressing
himself
particularly to those who, as he conjectured,
ought to be able to make a present
to Seuthes.
He addressed himself first to some
Parians
who were there to arrange a friendship
with
Medocus, the king of the Odrysians,
and were
bearers of presents to the king and
to his
wife. Heracleides reminded them: "Medocus
is up country twelve days' journey
from the
sea; but Seuthes, now that he has got
this
army, will be lord on the sea-coast;
as your
neighbour, then, he is the man to do
you
good or do you ill. If you are wise,
you
will give him whatever he askes of
you. On
the whole, it will be laid out at better
interest than if you have it to Medocus,
who lives so far off." That was
his
mode of persuasion in their case. Next
he
came to Timasion the Dardanian, who,
some
one had told him, was the happy possessor
of certain goblets and oriental carpets.
What he said to him was: "It is
customary
when people are invited to dinner by
Seuthes
for the guests to make him a present;
now
if he should become a great person
in these
parts, he will be able to restore you
to
your native land, or to make you a
rich man
here." Such were the solicitations
which
he applied to each man in turn whom
he accosted.
Presently he came to Xenophon and said:
"You
are at once a citizen of no mean city,
and
with Seuthes also your own name is
very great.
Maybe you expect to obtain a fort or
two
in this country, just as others of
your countrymen
have done[2], and territory. It is
only right
and proper therefore that you should
honour
Seuthes in the most magnificent style.
Be
sure, I give this advice out of pure
friendliness,
for I know that the greater the gift
that
you are ready to bestow on him, the
better
the treatment you will receive at his
hands."
Xenophon, on hearing this, was in a
sad dilemma,
for he had brought with him, when he
crossed
from Parium, nothing but one boy and
just
enough to pay his travelling expenses.
[1] A Greek colony in Thrace. Among Asiatico-Ionian
colonies were Abdera, founded by Teos,
and
Maroneia, celebrated for its wine,
founded
by Chios about 540 B. C.--Kiepert,
"Man.
Anct. Geog." viii. 182.
[2] Notably Alcibiades, who possessed two
or three such fortresses.
As soon as the company, consisting of the
most powerful Thracians 21 there present,
with the generals and captains of the
Hellenes,
and any embassy from a state which
might
be there, had arrived, they were seated
in
a circle, and the dinner was served.
Thereupon
three-legged stools were brought in
and placed
in front of the assembled guests. They
were
laden with pieces of meat, piled up,
and
there were huge leavened-loaves fastened
on to the pieces of meat with long
skewers.
The tables, as a rule, were set beside
the
guests at intervals. That was the custom;
and Seuthes set the fashion of the
performance.
He took up the loaves which lay by
his side
and broke them into little pieces,
and then
threw the fragments here to one and
there
to another as seemed to him good; and
so
with the meat likewise, leaving for
himself
the merest taste. Then the rest fell
to following
the fashion set them, those that is
who had
tables placed beside them.
Now there was an Arcadian, Arystas by name,
a huge eater; he soon got tired of
throwing
the pieces about, and seized a good
three-quarters
loaf in his two hands, placed some
pieces
of meat upon his knees, and proceeded
to
discuss his dinner. Then beakers of
wine
were brought round, and every one partook
in turn; but when the cupbearer came
to Arystas
and handed him the bowl, he looked
up, and
seeing that Xenophon had done eating:
"Give
it him," quoth he, "he is
more
at leisure. I have something better
to do
at present." Seuthes, hearing
a remark,
asked the cupbearer what was said,
and the
cupbearer, who knew how to talk Greek,
explained.
Then followed a peal of laughter.
When the drinking had advanced somewhat,
in came a Thracian with a white horse,
who
snatched the brimming bowl and said:
"Here's
a health to thee, O Seuthes! Let me
present
thee with this horse. Mounted on him,
thou
shalt capture whom thou choosest to
pursue,
or retiring from battle, thou shalt
not dread
the foe." He was followed by one
who
brought in a boy, and presented him
in proper
style with "Here's a health to
thee,
O Seuthes!" A third had "clothes
for his wife." Timasion, the Dardanian,
pledged Seuthes, and presented a silver
bowl[3]
and a carpet worth ten minae. Gnesippus,
an Athenian, got up 28 and said: "It
was a good old custom, and a fine one
too,
that those who had, should give to
the king
for honour's sake, but to those who
had not,
the king should give; whereby, my lord,"
he added, "I too may one day have
the
wherewithal to give thee gifts and
honour."
Xenophon the while was racking his
brains
what he was to do; he was not the happier
because he was seated in the seat next
Seuthes
as a mark of honour; and Heracleides
bade
the cupbearer hand him the bowl. The
wine
had perhaps a little mounted to his
head;
he rose, and manfully seized the cup,
and
spoke: "I also, Seuthes, have
to present
you with myself and these my dear comrades
to be your trusty friends, and not
one of
them against his will. They are more
ready,
one and all, still more than I, to
be your
friends. Here they are; they ask nothing
from you in return, rather they are
forward
to labour in your behalf; it will be
their
pleasure to bear the brunt of battle
in voluntary
service. With them, God willing, you
will
gain vast territory; you will recover
what
was once your forefathers'; you will
win
for yourself new lands; and not lands
only,
but horses many, and of men a multitude,
and many a fair dame besides. You will
not
need to seize upon them in robber fashion;
it is your friends here who, of their
own
accord, shall take and bring them to
you,
they shall lay them at your feet as
gifts."
Up got Seuthes and drained with him
the cup,
and with him sprinkled the last drops
fraternally[4].
[3] Or rather "saucer" ({phiale}).
[4] For the Thracian custom, vide Suidas,
s. v. {kataskedazein}.
At this stage entered musicians blowing upon
horns such as they use for signal calls,
and trumpeting on trumpets, made of
raw oxhide,
tunes and airs, like the music of the
double-octave
harp[5]. Seuthes himself got up and
shouted,
trolling forth a war song; then he
sprang
from his place and leapt about as though
he would guard himself against a missile,
in right nimble style. Then came in
a set
of clowns and jesters.
[5] Or, "magadis." This is said
to have been one of the most perfect
instruments.
It comprised two full octaves, the
left hand
playing the same notes as the right
an octave
lower. Guhl and Koner, p. 203, Engl. transl. See also "Dict. Antiq."
"Musica"; and Arist. "Polit."
xix. 18, {Dia ti e dia pason sumphonia
adetai
mone; magasizousi gar tauten, allen
de oudemian},
i. e. "since no interval except
the
octave ({dia pason}) could be 'magidised'
(the effect of any other is well known
to
be intolerable), therefore no other
interval
was employed at all."
But when the sun began to set, the Hellenes
rose from their seats. It 33 was time,
they
said, to place the night sentinels
and to
pass the watchword; further, they begged
of Seuthes to issue an order that none
of
the Thracians were to enter the Hellenic
camp at night, "since between
your Thracian
foes and our Thracian friends there
might
be some confusion." As they sallied
forth, Seuthes rose to accompany them,
like
the soberest of men. When they were
outside,
he summoned the generals apart and
said:
"Sirs, our enemies are not aware
as
yet of our alliance. If, therefore,
we attack
them before they take precautions not
to
be caught, or are prepared to repel
assault,
we shall make a fine haul of captives
and
other stock." The generals fully
approved
of these views, and bade him lead on.
He
answered: "Prepare and wait; as
soon
as the right time comes I will be with
you.
I shall pick up the peltasts and yourselves,
and with the help of the gods, I will
lead
on." "But consider one point,"
urged Xenophon; "if we are to
march
by night, is not the Hellenic fashion
best?
When marching in the daytime that part
of
the army leads the van which seems
best suited
to the nature of the country to be
traversed--heavy
or light infantry, or cavalry; but
by night
our rule is that the slowest arm should
take
the lead. Thus we avoid the risk of
being
pulled to pieces: and it is not so
easy for
a man to give his neighbour the slip
without
intending, whereas the scattered fragments
of an army are apt to fall foul of
one another,
and to cause damage or incur it in
sheer
ignorance." To this Seuthes replied:
"You reason well, and I will adopt
your
custom. I will furnish you with guides
chosen
from the oldest experts of the country,
and
I will myself follow with the cavalry
in
the rear; it will not take me long,
if need
be, to present myself at the front."
Then, for kinship's sake, they chose
"Athenaia[6]"
as their watchword. With this, they
turned
and sought repose.
[6] "Our Lady of Athens."
It was about midnight when Seuthes presented
himself with his cavalry troopers armed
with
corselets, and his light infantry under
arms.
As 40 soon as he had handed over to
them
the promised guides, the heavy infantry
took
the van, followed by the light troops
in
the centre, while the cavalry brought
up
the rear. At daybreak Seuthes rode
up to
the front. He complimented them on
their
method: so often had he himself, while
marching
by night with a mere handful of men,
been
separated with his cavalry from his
infantry.
"But now," said he, "we
find
ourselves at dawn of day all happily
together,
just as we ought to be. Do you wait
for me
here," he proceeded, "and
recruit
yourselves. I will take a look round
and
rejoin you." So saying he took
a certain
path over hill and rode off. As soon
as he
had reached deep snow, he looked to
see whether
there were footprints of human beings
leading
forward or in the opposite direction;
and
having satisfied himself that the road
was
untrodden, back he came, exclaiming:
"God
willing, sirs, it will be all right;
we shall
fall on the fellows, before they know
where
they are. I will lead on with the cavalry;
so that if we catch sight of any one,
he
shall not escape and give warning to
the
enemy. Do you follow, and if you are
left
behind, keep to the trail of the horses.
Once on the other side of the mountains,
we shall find ourselves in numerous
thriving
villages."
By the middle of the day he had already gained
the top of the pass and looked down
upon
the villages below. Back he came riding
to
the heavy infantry and said: "I
will
at once send off the cavalry into the
plain
below, and the peltasts too, to attack
the
villages. Do you follow with what speed
you
may, so that in case of resistance
you may
lend us your aid." Hearing this,
Xenophon
dismounted, and the other asked: "Why
do you dismount just when speed is
the thing
we want?" The other answered:
"But
you do not want me alone, I am sure.
The
hoplites will run all the quicker and
more
cheerily if I lead them on foot."
Thereupon Seuthes went off, and Timasion
with him, taking the Hellene squadron
of
something like forty troopers. Then
Xenophon
passed the order: the active young
fellows
up to thirty years of age from the
different
companies to the front; and off with
these
he went himself, bowling along[7];
while
Cleanor led the other Hellenes. When
they
had 46 reached the villages, Seuthes,
with
about thirty troopers, rode up, exclaiming:
"Well, Xenophon, this is just
what you
said! the fellows are caught, but now
look
here. My cavalry have gone off unsupported;
they are scattered in pursuit, one
here,
one there, and upon my word, I am more
than
half afraid the enemy will collect
somewhere
and do them a mischief. Some of us
must remain
in the villages, for they are swarming
with
human beings." "Well then,"
said Xenophon, "I will seize the
heights
with the men I have with me, and do
you bid
Cleanor extend his line along the level
beside
the villages." When they had done
so,
there were enclosed--of captives for
the
slave market, one thousand; of cattle,
two
thousand; and of other small cattle,
ten
thousand. For the time being they took
up
quarters there.
[7] {etropkhaze}, a favourite word with our
author. Herodotus uses it; so does
Aristotle.;
so also Polybius; but the Atticists
condemn
it, except of course in poetry.
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