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| AGESILAUS
              (444-360 BC)
              
           
           Xenophon the Athenian was born 431 BC. He was a
          pupil of Socrates. He marched with the Spartans, and was exiled from Athens.
          Sparta gave him land and property in Scillus, where
          he lived for many years before having to move once more, to settle in Corinth. He
          died in 354 BC.
           The Agesilaus summarises the life of his Spartan friend and king, whom he met after the events of the
          Anabasis.
               
           I
               
           To write the praises of Agesilaus in language equalling his virtue and renown is, I know, no easy task;
          yet must it be essayed; since it were but an ill requital of preeminence, that,
          on the ground of his perfection, a good man should forfeit the tribute even of
          imperfect praise.
               As touching, therefore, the excellency of his
          birth, what weightier, what nobler testimony can be adduced than this one fact?
          To the commemorative list of famous ancestry is added today the name Agesilaus
          as holding this or that numerical descent from Heracles, and these ancestors no
          private persons, but kings sprung from the loins of kings. Nor is it open to
          the gainsayer to contend that they were kings indeed but of some chance city.
          Not so, but even as their family holds highest honour in their fatherland, so too is their city the most glorious in Hellas, whereby
          they hold, not primacy over the second best, but among leaders they have
          leadership.
           And herein it is open to us to praise both his
          fatherland and his family. It is notable that never throughout these ages has
          Lacedaemon, out of envy of the privilege accorded to her kings, tried to dissolve
          their rule; nor ever yet throughout these ages have her kings strained after
          greater powers than those which limited their heritage of kingship from the
          first. Wherefore, while all other forms of government, democracies and
          oligarchies, tyrannies and monarchies, alike have failed to maintain their
          continuity unbroken, here, as the sole exception, endures indissolubly their
          kingship.
               And next in token of an aptitude for kingship
          seen in Agesilaus, before even he entered upon office, I note these signs. On
          the death of Agis, king of Lacedaemon, there were rival claimants to the
          throne. Leotychides claimed the succession as being
          the son of Agis, and Agesilaus as the son of Archidamus.
          But the verdict of Lacedaemon favored Agesilaus as being in point of family and
          virtue unimpeachable, and so they set him on the throne. And yet, in this
          princeliest of cities so to be selected by the noblest citizens as worthy of
          highest privilege, argues, methinks conclusively, an excellence forerunning
          exercise of rule.
           And so I pass on at once to narrate the chief
          achievements of his reign, since by the light of deeds the character of him who
          wrought them will, if I mistake not, best shine forth.
               Agesilaus was still a youth when he obtained the
          kingdom, and he was still but a novice in his office when the news came that
          the king of Persia was collecting a mighty armament by sea and land for the
          invasion of Hellas. The Lacedaemonians and their allies sat debating these
          matters, when Agesilaus undertook to cross over into Asia. He only asked for
          thirty Spartans and two thousand New Citizens, besides a contingent of the
          allies six thousand strong; with these he would cross over into Asia and endeavour to effect a peace; or, if the barbarian preferred
          war, he would leave him little leisure to invade Hellas.
           The proposal was welcomed with enthusiasm on the
          part of many. They could not but admire the eagerness of their king to
          retaliate upon the Persian for his former invasions of Hellas by
          counter-invasion on his own soil. They liked the preference also which he
          showed for attacking rather than awaiting his enemy's attack, and his intention
          to carry on the war at the expense of Persia rather than that of Hellas; but it
          was the perfection of policy, they felt, so to change the arena of battle, with
          Asia as the prize of victory instead of Hellas. If we pass on to the moment
          when he had received his army and set sail, I can conceive no clearer
          exposition of his generalship than the bare narration of his exploits.
               The scene is Asia, and this his first
          achievement. Tissaphernes had sworn an oath to Agesilaus on this wise: if
          Agesilaus would grant him an armistice until the return of certain ambassadors
          whom he would send to the king, he (Tissaphernes) would do his utmost to
          procure the independence of the Hellenic cities in Asia. And Agesilaus took a
          counter oath: without fraud or covin to observe the
          armistice during the three months necessary to that transaction. But the
          compact was scarcely made when Tissaphernes gave the lie to the solemn
          undertaking he had sworn to. So far from effecting peace, he begged the King to
          send him a large armament in addition to that which he already had. As to
          Agesilaus, though he was well aware of these proceedings, he adhered loyally to
          the armistice.
           And for myself, I look upon this as the first
          glorious achievement of the Spartan. By displaying the perjury of Tissaphernes
          he robbed him of his credit with all the world; by the exhibition of himself in
          contrast as a man who ratified his oath and would not gainsay an article of his
          agreement, he gave all men, Hellenes and barbarians alike, encouragement to
          make covenant with him to the full extent of his desire.
               When Tissaphernes, priding himself on the
          strength of that army which had come down to aid him, bade Agesilaus to be gone
          from Asia or to prepare for war, deep was the vexation depicted on the faces of
          the Lacedaemonians there present and their allies, as they realized that the
          scanty force of Agesilaus was all too small to cope with the armaments of
          Persia. But the brow of their general was lit with joy as gaily he bade the
          ambassadors take back this answer to Tissaphernes: "I hold myself indebted
          to your master for the perjury whereby he has obtained to himself the hostility
          of heaven, and made the gods themselves allies of Hellas." And so without
          further pause he published a general order to his soldiers to pack their
          baggage and prepare for active service; and to the several cities which lay on
          the line of march to Caria, the order sped to have their markets in readiness;
          while to the men of Ionia and the Aeolid and the Hellespont he sent despatches bidding them send their contingents to Ephesus
          to join in the campaign.
           Tissaphernes meanwhile was influenced by the fact
          that Agesilaus had no cavalry, and that Caria was a hilly district unsuited for
          that arm. Moreover, as he further bethought him, Agesilaus must needs be wroth with him for his deceit. What could be clearer,
          therefore, than that he was about to make a dash at the satrap's home in Caria?
          Accordingly he transported the whole of his infantry into Caria and marched his
          cavalry round the while into the plain of the Maeander, persuaded that he would
          trample the Hellenes under the hoofs of his horses long before they reached the
          district where no cavalry could operate.
           But Agesilaus, instead of advancing upon Caria,
          turned right about and marched in the direction of Phrygia. Picking up the
          various forces that met him on his progress, he passed onwards, laying city
          after city at his feet, and by the suddenness of his incursion capturing
          enormous wealth.
               Here was an achievement which showed the genius
          of a general, as all agreed. When once war as declared, and the arts of
          circumvention and deceit were thereby justified, he had proved Tissaphernes to
          be a very bade in subtlety; and with what sagacity again did he turn the
          circumstances to account for the enrichment of his friends. Owing to the
          quantity of wealth captured, precious things were selling for a mere song.
          Thereupon he gave his friends warning to make their purchases, adding that he
          should at once march down to the sea-coast at the head of his troops. The
          quartermasters meanwhile received orders to make a note of the purchasers with
          the prices of the articles, and to consign the goods. The result was that,
          without prior disbursement on their part, or detriment to the public treasury,
          his friends reaped an enormous harvest. Moreover, when deserters came with
          offers to disclose hidden treasures, and naturally enough laid their proposal before
          the king himself, he took care to have the capture of these treasures effected
          by his friends, which would enable them to do a stroke of business, and at the
          same time redound to their prestige. For this reason he was not long in
          discovering many an eager aspirant to his friendship.
               But a country pillaged and denuded of inhabitants
          would not long support an army. That he felt. A more perennial source of supply
          was surely to be found in waving cornfields and thickly clustering homesteads.
          So with infinite pains he set himself not merely to crush his foes by force,
          but also to win them to his side by gentleness. In this spirit he often
          enjoined upon his soldiers to guard their captives as fellow-men rather than
          take vengeance upon them as evildoers; or, on a change of quarters, if aware of
          little children left behind by the dealers (since the men often sold them in
          the belief that it would be impossible to carry them away and rear them), he
          would show concern in behalf of these poor waifs and have them conveyed to some
          place of safety; or he would entrust them to the care of fellow-prisoners also
          left behind on account of old age; in no case must they be left to ravening
          dogs and wolves. In this way he won the goodwill not only of those who heard
          tell of these doings but of the prisoners themselves. And whenever he brought
          over a city to his side, he set the citizens free from the harsher service of a
          bondsman to his lord, imposing the gentler obedience of a freeman to his ruler.
          Indeed, there were fortresses impregnable to assault which he brought under his
          power by the subtler force of human kindness.
               But when, in Phrygia even, the freedom of his
          march along the flats was hampered by the cavalry of Pharnabazus, he saw that
          if he wished to avoid a skulking warfare under cover, a force of cavalry was
          indispensable. Accordingly he enlisted the wealthiest members of every city in
          those parts to breed and furnish horses; with this saving clause, however: that
          the individual who furnished a horse and arms with a good rider should be
          exempt from service himself. By this means he engendered an eagerness to
          discharge the obligation, not unlike that of the condemned man, casting about
          to discover some one to die in his place. He further
          ordered some of the states themselves to furnish contingents of mounted
          troopers, and this in the conviction that from such training-centres he would presently get a pick of cavaliers proud of
          their horsemanship. And thus once more he won golden opinions by the skill with
          which he provided himself with a body of cavalry in the plenitude of strength
          and ripe for active service.
           On the approach of early spring he collected his whole
          armament at Ephesus, and set himself to the work of training it. With that
          object he proposed a series of prizes: one set for the cavalry squadron which
          rode best, another for the heavy infantry divisions which presented the best
          physique, another again for various light troops, peltasts, and bowmen, which
          showed themselves most efficient in their respective duties.
               Thereupon it was a sight to see the gymnasiums
          thronged with warriors going through their exercises, the racecourses crowded
          with troopers on prancing steeds, the archers and the javelin men shooting at
          the butts. Nay, the whole city in which he lay was transformed into a spectacle
          itself, so filled to overflowing was the market-place with arms and armour of every sort, and horses, all for sale. Here were
          coppersmiths and carpenters, ironfounders and
          cobblers, painters and decorators--one and all busily engaged in fabricating
          the implements of war; so that an onlooker might have thought the city of
          Ephesus itself a gigantic arsenal. It would have kindled courage in the breast
          of a coward to see the long lines of soldiers, with Agesilaus at their head,
          all garlanded as they marched in proud procession from the gymnasiums and
          dedicated their wreaths to our Lady Artemis. Since, where these three elements
          exist--reverence towards heaven, practice in military affairs, and obedience to
          command--all else must needs be full of happy promise.
           But seeing that contempt for the foe is
          calculated to infuse a certain strength in face of battle, he ordered his
          criers to strip naked the barbarians captured by his foraging parties, and so
          to sell them. The soldiers who saw the white skins of these folk, unused to
          strip for toil, soft and sleek and lazy-looking, as of people who could only
          stir abroad in carriages, concluded that a war with women would scarcely be
          more formidable. Then he published a further order to the soldiers: "I
          shall lead you at once by the shortest route to the stronghold of the enemy's
          territory. Your general asks you to keep yourselves on the alert in mind and
          body, as men about to enter the lists of battle on the instant."
           But Tissaphernes was persuaded that this was all
          talk on his part for the purpose of outwitting him a second time: now certainly
          Agesilaus would make an incursion into Caria. So once again the satrap
          transported his infantry over into that country just has he had done before,
          and as before he posted his cavalry in the plain of the Maeander.
               This time, however, Agesilaus was true to his
          word. In accordance with his published order he advanced straight upon the
          region of Sardis, and, during a three days' march through a country where not
          an enemy was to be seen, provided his army with abundant supplies. On the
          fourth day the enemy's cavalry came up. The Persian general ordered the
          commandant of his baggage train to cross the Pactolus and encamp, whilst his
          troopers, who had caught sight of the camp followers of the Hellenes scattered
          in search of booty, put many of them to the sword. Agesilaus, aware how matters
          were going, ordered his cavalry to the rescue, and the Persians on their side,
          seeing the enemy's supports approaching, collected and formed up in line to
          receive them with the serried squadrons of their cavalry. And now Agesilaus,
          conscious that his enemy's infantry had not as yet arrived, whilst on his side
          no element in his preparation was lacking, felt that the moment was come to
          join battle if he could. Accordingly he sacrificed and advanced against the
          opposing lines of cavalry. A detachment of heavy infantry, the
          ten-years-service men, had orders to close with them at the run, while the
          light infantry division were told to show them the way at a swinging pace. At
          the same time he passed the order along the line of his cavalry to charge in
          reliance of the support of himself and the main body in their rear. Charge they
          did, these troopers, and the pick of Persian cavalry received them bravely, but
          in face of the conjoint horror of the attack they swerved, and some were cut
          down at once in the river-bed, while others sought safety in flight. The
          Hellenes followed close on the heels of the flying foe, and captured his camp.
          Here the peltasts, not unnaturally, fell to pillaging, whereupon Agesilaus
          formed a cordon of troops, round the property of friends and foes alike, and so
          encamped.
               Presently hearing that the enemy were in a state
          of disorder, the result of every one holding his fellow responsible for what
          had happened, he advanced without further stay on Sardis. Having arrived, he
          fell to burning and ravaging the suburbs, while at the same time he did not
          fail to make it known by proclamation that those who asked for freedom should
          join his standard; or if there were any who claimed a right of property in Asia
          he challenged them to come out and meet her liberators in fair fight and let
          the sword decide between them. Finding that no one ventured to come out to meet
          him, his march became for the future a peaceful progress. All around him he
          beheld Hellenes who formerly were forced to bow the knee to brutal governors
          now honoured by their former tyrants, while those who
          had claimed to enjoy divine honours were so humbled
          by him that they scarce dared to look a Hellene in the face. Everywhere he
          saved the territory of his friends from devastation, and reaped the fruits of
          the enemy's soil to such good effect that within two years he was able to
          dedicate as a tithe to the god at Delphi more than one hundred talents.
           It was then that the Persian king, believing that
          Tissaphernes was to blame for the ill success of his affairs, sent down Tithraustes and cut off the satrap's head. After this the
          fortunes of the barbarians grew still more desperate, whilst those of Agesilaus
          assumed a bolder front. On all side embassies from the surrounding nations came
          to make terms of friendship, and numbers even came over to him, stretching out
          eager arms to grasp at freedom. So that Agesilaus was now no longer the chosen
          captain of the Hellenes only, but of many Asiatics.
           And here we may pause and consider what a weight
          of admiration is due to one who, being now ruler over countless cities of the
          continent, and islands also (since the state had further entrusted the navy to
          his hands), just when he had reached this pinnacle of renown and power, and
          might look to turn to account his thronging fortunes; when, too, which overtops
          all else, he was cherishing fond hopes to dissolve that empire which in former
          days had dared to march on Hellas;--at such a moment suffered himself not to be
          overmastered by these promptings, but on receipt of a summons of the home
          authorities to come to the assistance of the fatherland, obeyed the mandate of
          his state as readily as though he stood confronted face to face with the Five
          in the hall of ephors; and thus gave clear proof that he would not accept the
          whole earth in exchange for the land of his fathers, nor newly-acquired in
          place of ancient friends, nor base gains ingloriously purchased rather than the
          perilous pursuit of honour and uprightness.
           And, indeed, glancing back at the whole period
          during which he remained in the exercise of his authority, no act of deeper
          significance in proof of his kingly qualities need be named than this. He found
          the cities which he was sent out to govern each and all a prey to factions, the
          result of constitutional disturbances consequent on the cessation of the
          Athenian empire, and without resort to exile or sanguinary measures he so
          disposed them by his healing presence that civil concord and material
          prosperity were permanently maintained. Therefore it was that the Hellenes in
          Asia deplored his departure, as though they had lost, not simply a ruler, but a
          father or bosom friend, and in the end they showed that their friendship was of
          no fictitious character. At any rate, they voluntarily helped him to succour Lacedaemon, though it involved, as they knew, the
          need of doing battle with combatants of equal prowess with themselves. So the
          tale of his achievements in Asia has an end.
           
           II
               
           He crossed the Hellespont and made his way
          through the very tribes traversed by the Persian with his multitudinous
          equipment in former days, and the march which cost the barbarian a year was
          accomplished by Agesilaus in less than a single month. He did not want to
          arrive a day too late to serve his fatherland. And so passing through Macedonia
          he arrived in Thessaly, and here the men of Larissa, Crannon, Scotussa, and Pharsalus, who were allies of the
          Boeotians, and indeed all the Thessalians, with the exception of those who were
          in exile at the time, combined to dog his steps and do him damage. For a while
          he led his troops in a hollow square, posting one half of his cavalry in the
          van and the other half on his rear, but finding his march hindered by frequent
          attacks of the Thessalians on his hindmost divisions, he sent round the mass of
          his cavalry from the vanguard to support his rear, reserving only his personal
          escort. And now in battle order the rival squadrons faced each other; when the
          Thessalians, not liking a cavalry engagement in face of heavy infantry, wheeled
          and step by step retreated; their opponents with much demureness following.
          Then Agesilaus, detecting the common error under which both parties laboured, sent round his own bodyguard of stalwart troopers
          with orders to their predecessors (an order they would act upon themselves) to
          charge the enemy at full gallop and not give him a chance to rally. The
          Thessalians, in face of this unexpected charge, either could not so much as
          rally, or in the attempt to do so were caught with their horses' flanks exposed
          to the enemy's attack. Polycharmus, the Pharsalian, a commandant of cavalry, did indeed succeed in
          wheeling, but was cut down with those about him sword in hand. This was the
          signal for a flight so extraordinary that dead and dying lined the road, and
          the living were captured wholesale, nor was a halt made until the pursuers
          reached Mount Narthacius. Here, midway between Pras
          and Narthacius, Agesilaus erected a trophy, and here
          for the moment he halted in unfeigned satisfaction at his exploit, since it was
          from an antagonist boasting the finest cavalry in the world that he had wrested
          victory with a body of cavalry organised by himself.
           Next day, crossing the mountain barrier of Achaea Phthiotis, his march lay through friendly territory
          for the rest of the way as far as the frontiers of Boeotia. Here he found the
          confederates drawn up in battle line. They consisted of the Thebans, the
          Athenians, the Argives, the Corinthians, the Aenianians,
          the Euboeans, and both divisions of the Locrians. He
          did not hesitate, but openly before their eyes drew out his lines to give them
          battle. He had with him a division and a half of Lacedaemonians, and from the
          seat of war itself the allied troops of the Phocians and the men of Orchomenus only, besides the armament which he had brought with
          him from Asia.
           I am not going to maintain that he ventured on
          the engagement in spite of having far fewer and inferior forces. Such an
          assertion would only reveal the senselessness of the general and the folly of
          the writer who should select as praiseworthy the reckless imperilling of mighty interests. On the contrary, what I admire is the fact that he had
          taken care to provide himself with an army not inferior to that of his enemy,
          and had so equipped them that his cohorts literally gleamed with purple and
          bronze. He had taken pains to enable his soldiers to undergo the fatigue of
          war, he had filled their breasts with a proud consciousness that they were
          equal to do battle with any combatants in the world, and what was more, he had
          infused a wholesome rivalry in those about him to prove themselves each better
          than the rest. He had filled all hearts with sanguine expectation of great
          blessings to descend on all, if they proved themselves good men. Such incentives,
          he thought, were best calculated to arouse enthusiasm in men's souls to engage
          in battle with the enemy. And in this expectation he was not deceived.
           I proceed to describe the battle, for in certain
          distinctive features it differed from all the battles of our day. The
          contending forces met on the plain of Coronea,
          Agesilaus and his troops approaching from the Cephisus,
          the Thebans and their allies from the slopes of the Helicon. These masses of
          infantry, as any eye might see, were of duly balanced strength, while as near
          as could be the cavalry on either side was numerically the same. Agesilaus held
          the right of his own army, and on his extreme left lay the men of Orchomenus.
          On the opposite side the Thebans themselves formed their own right and the Argives
          held their left. While the two armies approached a deep silence prevailed on
          either side, but when they were now a single furlong's space apart the Thebans
          quickened to a run, and, with a loud hurrah, dashed forward to close quarters.
          And now there was barely a hundred yards between them, when Herippidas,
          with his foreign brigade, rushed forward from the Spartan's battle lines to
          meet them. This brigade consisted partly of troops which had served with
          Agesilaus ever since he left home, with a portion of the Cyreians,
          besides Ionians, Aeolians, and their neighbours on
          the Hellespont. All these took part in the forward rush of the attack just
          mentioned, and coming within spear-thrust they routed that portion of the enemy
          in front of them. The Argives did not even wait for Agesilaus and his division,
          but fled towards Helicon, and at that moment some of his foreign friends were
          on the point of crowning Agesilaus with the wreath of victory, when some one brought him word that the Thebans had cut through
          the division from Orchomenus and were busy with the baggage-train. Accordingly
          he at once deployed his division and advanced by counter-march against them.
          The Thebans on their side, seeing that their allies had scattered on Helicon,
          and eager to make their way back to join their friends, began advancing
          sturdily.
           To assert that Agesilaus at this crisis displayed
          real valour is to assert a thing indisputable, but
          for all that the course he adopted was not the safest. It was open to him to
          let the enemy pass in their effort to rejoin their friends, and that done to
          have hung upon their heels and overmastered their rear ranks, but he did
          nothing of the sort: what he did was, to crash front to front against the
          Thebans. And so with shields interlocked they shoved and fought and fought and
          shoved, dealing death and yielding life. There was no shouting, nor yet was
          there even silence, but a strange and smothered utterance, such as rage and
          battle vent. At last a portion of the Thebans forced their way through towards
          Helicon, but many were slain in that departure.
           Victory remained with Agesilaus. Wounded himself,
          they bore him back to his own lines, when some of his troopers came galloping
          up to tell him that eighty of the enemy had taken refuge with their arms under
          cover of the Temple, and they asked what they ought to do. He, albeit he had
          received wounds all over him, having been the mark of divers weapons, did not
          even so forget his duty to God, and gave orders to let them go whithersoever
          they chose, nor suffered them to be ill-treated, but ordered his bodyguard of
          cavalry to escort them out of reach of danger.
               And now that the battle had ceased, it was a
          sight to see where the encounter took place, the earth bedabbled with gore, the
          dead lying cheek by jowl, friend and foe together, and the great shields hacked
          and broken to pieces, and the spears snapped asunder, the daggers lying bare of
          sheaths, some on the ground, some buried in the bodies, some still clutched in
          the dead men's hands. For the moment then, seeing that it was already late in
          the day, they dragged together the corpses of their slain apart from those of
          the enemy and laid them within the lines, and took their evening meal and
          slept; but early next morning Agesilaus ordered Gylis,
          the polemarch, to marshal the troops in battle order and to set up a trophy,
          while each man donned a wreath in honour of the god,
          and the pipers piped. So they busied themselves, but the Thebans sent a herald
          asking leave to bury their dead under cover of a truce. And so it came to pass
          that a truce was made, and Agesilaus departed homewards, having chosen, in lieu
          of supreme greatness in Asia, to rule, and to be ruled, in obedience to the
          laws at home.
           It was after this that his attention was drawn to
          the men of Argos. They had appropriated Corinth, and were reaping the fruits of
          their fields at home. The war to them was a merry jest. Accordingly he marched
          against them; and having ravaged their territory throughout, he crossed over by
          the pass down upon Corinth and captured the long walls leading to Lechaeum. And so having thrown open the gates of
          Peloponnese he returned home in time for the Hyacinthia,
          where, in the post assigned to him by the master of the chorus, he shared in
          the performance of the paean in honour of the god.
           Later on, it being brought to his notice that the
          Corinthians were keeping all their cattle safely housed in the Peiraeum, sowing the whole of that district, and gathering
          in their crops; and, which was a matter of the greatest moment, that the Boeotians,
          with Creusis as their base of operations, could pour
          their succours into Corinth by this route--he marched
          against Peiraeum. Finding it strongly guarded, he
          made as if the city of Corinth were about to capitulate, and immediately after
          the morning meal shifted his ground and encamped against the capital. Under
          cover of night there was a rush from Peiraeum to
          protect the city, which he was well aware of, and with break of day he turned
          right about and took Peiraeum, defenceless as it lay, capturing all that it contained, with the various fortresses within;
          and having so done retired homewards.
           After these exploits the Achaeans were urgent for
          an alliance, and begged him to join them in an expedition against Acarnania. In
          the course of this the Acarnanians attacked him in a defile. Storming the
          heights above his head with his light troops, he gave them battle, and slew
          many of them, and set up a trophy, nor stayed his hand until he had united the
          Acarnanians, the Aetolians, and the Argives,] in friendship with the Achaeans
          and alliance with himself.
               When the enemy, being desirous of peace, sent an
          embassy, it was Agesilaus who spoke against the peace, until he had forced the
          states of Corinth and of Thebes to welcome back those of them who, for Lacedaemon's
          sake, had suffered banishment.
               And still later, again, he restored the exiles of
          the Phliasians, who had suffered in the same cause,
          and with that object marched in person against Phlius,
          a proceeding which, however liable to censure on other grounds, showed
          unmistakable attachment to his party.
           Thus, when the adverse faction had put to death
          those of the Lacedaemonians then in Thebes, he brought succour to his friends, and marched upon Thebes. Finding the entire country fenced with
          ditch and palisading, he crossed Cynoscephalae and ravaged the district right
          up to the city itself, giving the Thebans an opportunity of engaging him in the
          plain or upon the hills, as they preferred. And once more, in the ensuing year,
          he marched against Thebes, and now surmounting these palisades and
          entrenchments at Scolus, he ravaged the remainder of
          Boeotia.
           Hitherto fortune had smiled in common upon the
          king himself and upon his city. And as for the disasters which presently
          befell, no one can maintain that they were brought about under the leadership
          of Agesilaus. But the day came when, after the disaster which had occurred at
          Leuctra, the rival powers in conjunction with the Mantineans fell to massacring
          his friends and adherents in Tegea (the confederacy
          between all the states of Boeotia, the Arcadians, and the Eleians being already an accomplished fact). Thereupon, with the forces of Lacedaemon
          alone, he took the field, and thus belied the current opinion that it would be
          a long while before the Lacedaemonians ventured to leave their own territory
          again. Having ravaged the country of those who had done his friends to death,
          he was content, and returned home.
           After this Lacedaemon was invaded by the united
          Arcadians, Argives, Eleians, and Boeotians, who were
          assisted by the Phocians, both sections of the Locrians, the Thessalians, Aenianians,
          Acarnanians, and Euboeans; moreover, the slaves had revolted and several of the
          provincial cities; while of the Spartans themselves as many had fallen on the
          field of Leuctra as survived. But in spite of all, he safely guarded the city,
          and that too a city without walls and bulwarks. Forbearing to engage in the
          open field, where the gain would lie wholly with the enemy, he lay stoutly
          embattled on ground where the citizens must reap advantage; since, as he
          doggedly persisted, to march out meant to be surrounded on every side; whereas
          to stand at bay where every defile gave a coign of vantage, would give him
          mastery complete.
           After the invading army had retired, no one will
          gainsay the sound sense of his behaviour. Old age debarred
          him from active service on foot or horse, and what the city chiefly needed now,
          he saw, was money, if she looked to gain allies. To the task therefore of
          providing that he set himself. Everything that could be done by stopping at
          home he deftly turned his hand to; or when the call arose and he could better
          help his country by departure he had no false pride; he set off on foreign
          service, not as general, but as ambassador. Yet on such embassy he achieved
          acts worthy of the greatest general. Autophradates was besieging Ariobarzanes, who was an ally of
          Sparta, in Assos; but before the face of Agesilaus he
          fled in terror and was gone. Cotys, besieging Sestos,
          which still adhered to Ariobarzanes, broke up the
          siege and departed crestfallen. Well might the ambassador have set up a trophy
          in commemoration of the two bloodless victories. Once more, Mausolus was
          besieging both the above-named places with a squadron of one hundred sail. He
          too, like, and yet unlike, the former two, yielded not to terror but to persuasion,
          and withdrew his fleet. These, then, were surely admirable achievements, since
          those who looked upon him as a benefactor and those who fled from before him
          both alike made him the richer by their gifts.
           Tachos, indeed, and Mausolus gave him a magnificent
          escort; and, for the sake of his former friendship with Agesilaus, the latter
          contributed also money for the state of Lacedaemon; and so they sped him home.
               And now the weight of, may be, fourscore years
          was laid upon him, when it came under his observation that the king of Egypt,
          with his hosts of foot and horse and stores of wealth, had set his heart on a
          war with Persia. Joyfully he learned that he himself was summoned by King Tachos, and that the command-in-chief of all the forces was
          promised to him. By this one venture he would achieve three objects, which were
          to requite the Egyptian for the benefits conferred on Lacedaemon; to liberate
          the Hellenes in Asia once again; and to inflict on the Persian a just
          recompense, not only for the old offences, but for this which was of to-day; seeing that, while boasting alliance with
          Sparta, he had dictatorially enjoined the emancipation of Messene. But when the
          man who had summoned him refused to confer the proffered generalship,
          Agesilaus, like one on whom a flagrant deception has been practised,
          began to consider the part he had to play. Meanwhile a separate division of the
          Egyptian armies held aloof from their king. Then, the disaffection spreading,
          all the rest of his troops deserted him; whereat the monarch took flight and
          retired in exile to Sidon in Phoenicia, leaving the Egyptians, split in
          faction, to choose to themselves a pair of kings. Thereupon Agesilaus took his
          decision. If he helped neither, it meant that neither would pay the service-money
          due to his Hellenes, that neither would provide a market, and that, whichever
          of the two conquered in the end, Sparta would be equally detested. But if he
          threw in his lot with one of them, that one would in all likelihood in return
          for the kindness prove a friend. Accordingly he chose between the two that one
          who seemed to be the truer partisan of Hellas, and with him marched against the
          enemy of Hellas and conquered him in a battle, crushing him. His rival he
          helped to establish on the throne, and having made him a friend to Lacedaemon,
          and having acquired vast sums besides, he turned and set sail homewards, even
          in mid-winter, hastening so that Sparta might not lie inactive, but against the
          coming summer be alert to confront the foe.
           
           III
               
           Such, then, is the chronicle of this man's
          achievements, or of such of them as were wrought in the presence of a thousand
          witnesses. Being of this sort they have no need of further testimony; the mere
          recital of them is sufficient, and they at once win credence. But now I will endeavour to reveal the excellence indwelling in his soul,
          the motive power of his acts, in virtue of which he clung to all things honourable and thrust aside all baseness.
           Agesilaus showed such reverence for things divine
          that even his enemies regarded his oaths and solemn treaties as more to be
          relied on than the tie of friendship amongst themselves. These same men, who
          would shrink from too close intercourse with one another, delivered themselves
          into the hands of Agesilaus without fear. And lest the assertion should excite
          discredit, I may name some illustrious examples. Such was Spithridates the
          Persian, who knew that Pharnabazus, whilst negotiating to marry the daughter of
          the great king, was minded to seize his own daughter unwedded. Resenting such
          brutality, Spithridates delivered up himself, his wife, his children, and his
          whole power, into the hands of Agesilaus. Cotys also,
          the ruler of Paphlagonia, had refused to obey a summons from the king, although
          he sent him the warrant of his right hand; then fear came upon him lest he
          should be seized, and either be heavily fined or die the death; yet he too,
          simply trusting to an armistice, came to the camp of Agesilaus and made
          alliance, and of his own accord chose to take the field with Agesilaus,
          bringing a thousand horsemen and two thousand targeteers.
          Lastly, Pharnabazus himself came and held colloquy with Agesilaus, and openly
          agreed that if he were not himself appointed general-in-chief of the royal
          forces he would revolt from the king. "Whereas, if I do become
          general," he added, "I mean to make war upon you, Agesilaus, might
          and main," thus revealing his confidence that, say what he might, nothing
          would befall him contrary to the terms of truce. Of so intrinsic a value to
          all, and not least to a general in the field, is the proud possession of an
          honest and God-fearing character, known and recognised.
          Thus far, as touching the quality of piety.
           
           IV
               
           To speak next of his justice in affairs of money.
          As to this, what testimony can be more conclusive than the following? During
          the whole of his career no charge of fraudulent dealing was ever lodged against
          Agesilaus; against which set the many-voiced acknowledgment of countless
          benefits received from him. A man who found pleasure in giving away his own for
          the benefit of others was not the man to rob another of his goods at the price
          of infamy. Had he suffered from this thirst for riches it would have been
          easier to cling to what belonged to him than to take that to which he had no
          just title. This man, who was so careful to repay debts of gratitude, where the
          law knows no remedy against defaulters, was not likely to commit acts of
          robbery which the law regards as criminal. And as a matter of act Agesilaus
          judged it not only wrong to forgo repayment of a deed of kindness, but, where
          the means were ample, wrong also not to repay such debts with ample interest.
               The charge of embezzlement, could it be alleged,
          would no less outrage all reason in the case of one who made over to his
          country the benefit in full of grateful offerings owed solely to himself.
          Indeed the very fact that, when he wished to help the city or his friends with
          money, he might have done so by the aid of others, goes a long way to prove his
          indifference to the lure of riches; since, had he been in the habit of selling
          his favour, or of playing the part of benefactor for
          pay, there had been no room for a sense of indebtedness. It is only the
          recipient of gratuitous kindness who is ever ready to minister to his
          benefactor, both in return for the kindness itself and for the confidence
          implied in his selection as the fitting guardian of a good deed on deposit.
           Again, who more likely to put a gulf impassable
          between himself and the sordid love of gain than he, who nobly preferred to be
          stinted of his dues rather than snatch at the lion's share unjustly? It is a
          case in point that, being pronounced by the state to be the rightful heir to
          his brother's wealth, he made over one half to his maternal relatives because
          he saw that they were in need; and to the truth of this assertion all
          Lacedaemon is witness. What, too, was his answer to Tithraustes when the satrap offered him countless gifts if he would but quit the country?
          "Tithraustes, with us it is deemed nobler for a
          ruler to enrich his army than himself; it is expected of him to wrest spoils
          from the enemy rather than take gifts."
           
           V
               
           Or again, reviewing the divers pleasures which
          master human beings, I defy any one to name a single
          one to which Agesilaus was enslaved: Agesilaus, who regarded drunkenness as a
          thing to hold aloof from like madness, and immoderate eating like the snare of
          indolence. Even the double portion allotted to him at the banquet was not spent
          on his own appetite; rather would be make distribution of the whole, retaining
          neither portion for himself. In his view of the matter this doubling of the
          king's share was not for the sake of surfeiting, but that the king might have
          the wherewithal to honour whom he wished. And so,
          too, sleep he treated not as a master, but as a slave, subservient to higher
          concerns. The very couch he lay upon must be sorrier than that of any of his
          company or he would have blushed for shame, since in his opinion it was the
          duty of a leader to excel all ordinary mortals in hardihood, not in effeminacy.
          Yet there were things in which he was not ashamed to take the lion's share, as,
          for example, the sun's heat in summer, or winter's cold. Did occasion ever demanded
          of his army moil and toil, he laboured beyond all
          others as a thing of course, believing that such ensamples are a consolation to
          the rank and file. Or, to put the patter compendiously, Agesilaus exulted in
          hard work: indolence he utterly repudiated.
           And, as touching the things of Aphrodite, if for
          nothing else, at any rate for the marvel of it, the self-restraint of the man
          deserves to be put on record. It is easy to say that to abstain from that which
          excites no desire is but human; yet in the case of Megabates,
          the son of Spithridates, he was moved by as genuine a love as any passionate
          soul may feel for what is lovely. Now, it being a national custom among the
          Persians to salute those whom they honour with a
          kiss, Megabates endeavoured so to salute Agesilaus, but the latter with much show of battle,
          resisted--"No kiss might he accept." I ask whether such an incident
          does not reveal on the face of it the self-respect of the man, and that of no
          vulgar order. Megabates, who looked upon himself as
          in some sense dishonoured, for the future endeavoured not to offend in like sort again. Whereupon
          Agesilaus appealed to one who was his comrade to persuade Megabates again to honour him with his regard; and the comrade,
          so appealed to, demanding, "If I persuade him, will you bestow on him a
          kiss?" Agesilaus fell into a silence, but presently exclaimed: "No,
          by the Twins, not if I might this very instant become the swiftest-footed,
          strongest, and handsomest of men. And as to that battle I swear by all the gods
          I would far rather fight it over again than that everything on which I set my
          eyes might turn to gold."
           What construction some will put upon the story I
          am well aware, but for myself I am persuaded that many more people can master
          their enemies than the foes we speak of. Doubtless such incidents when known to
          but few may well be discredited by many, but here we are in the region of
          establishing facts, seeing that the more illustrious a man is the less can his
          every act escape notice. As to Agesilaus no eye-witness has ever reported any
          unworthy behaviour, nor, had he invented it, would
          his tale have found credence, since it was not the habit of the king, when
          abroad, to lodge apart in private houses. He always lay up in some sacred
          place, where behaviour of the sort was out of the
          question, or else in public, with the eyes of all men liable to be called as
          witnesses to his sobriety. For myself, if I make these statements falsely
          against the knowledge of Hellas, this were not in any sense to praise my hero,
          but to dispraise myself.
           
           VI
               
           Nor, in my opinion, were those obscure proofs of
          courage and true manliness which he furnished by his readiness ever to wage war
          against the strongest enemies, whether of Sparta or of Hellas, placing himself
          in the forefront of the contests decided on. If the enemy cared to join issue
          in fair field he would not chance upon a victory won by panic, but in stubborn
          battle, blow for blow, he mastered him; and set up trophies worthy of the name,
          seeing that he left behind him imperishable monuments of prowess, and bore away
          on his own body indelible marks of the fury with which he fought; so that,
          apart from hearsay, by the evidence of men's eyes his valour stood approved.
           And amongst these we must not deem them trophies
          alone which he actually set up, but reckon the many campaigns which he
          undertook, since they were victories truly, even when the enemy refused to
          encounter him, victories devoid of danger, yet fraught with even more solid
          advantage to the state of Sparta and her fellow-combatants; just as in our
          games we crown as victor him who walks over the field no less than him who
          conquers by dint of battle.
               And to speak next of his wisdom, I suppose there
          is not one of all his doings but must illustrate it;--this man whose bearing towards
          his fatherland was such that by dint of implicit obedience [he grew to so greate a height of power], whose zeal in the service of his
          comrades won for him the unhesitating attachment of his friends, who infused
          into the hearts of his soldiers a spirit, not of discipline only, but of
          self-devotion to their chief. And yet surely that is the strongest of all
          battle-lines in which obedience creates tactical efficiency, and alacrity in
          the field springs out of loyal affection for the general.
           Enemies he had to cope with, who had little
          excuse to disparage, however much they might be compelled to hate their
          opponent, seeing that he was for ever contriving to
          give his allies some advantage over them--by sheer deception, if occasion
          offered; now anticipating them if speed were requisite; now skulking in corners
          if concealment served; in all points observing one rule of behaviour to his friends and another towards his foes. By turning night into day and day
          into night he drew so close a veil of mystery over his movements that
          frequently there was no saying where he was, or whither he would go, or what he
          might do next. The fastnesses of the enemy he transformed into so many
          weaknesses, passing this one by, and scaling that, and stealing like a thief
          into a third.
           When he was on the march, and was well aware that
          an enemy might, if he chose, deliver battle, his habit was to lead his troops
          in compact battle order ready to confront emergencies, with soft, slow step,
          advancing, as it were, with maidenly demureness, for in such procedure, as he
          believed, lay the secret of true calm, engendering a dauntless self-assurance,
          imperturbable, unerring, impervious to treacherous assault. Therefore by such behaviour he was a terror to the enemy, whilst he infused
          courage and strength in the hearts of his friends, so that throughout his life
          he continued to be a man whom his foes dared not despise, whom his
          fellow-citizens cared not to arraign, within the circle of his friends held
          blameless, the idol and admiration of the outer world.
           
           VII
               
           To describe his patriotism point by point in
          detail were a tedious story, since, as I suppose, there is not one of his
          several achievements but must finally resolve itself into that. For, to put it
          briefly, we all know well that where Agesilaus expected in any way to benefit
          his country there was no toil he shrank from, no danger he avoided, no money he
          stinted, no excuse whether of age or body he admitted, but deemed it ever the
          true function of a good king to shower blessings to the utmost on the subjects
          of his rule.
               And for my part I hold it as chief among the
          magnificent benefits so conferred by him upon his country that, being the most
          powerful member of the state, he made no secret of his absolute submission to
          the laws, since what lesser man, seeing the king's obedience, would take on
          himself to disobey? Who, in discontentment at his own poor lot, would venture
          on revolution, knowing that the king himself could condescend to constitutional
          control? And that, too, a king who bore himself towards political opponents
          with a paternal mildness. If he rebuked them sharply for their misdemeanours, he none the less honoured their high endeavours, and proved himself a present
          help to them in time of trouble. No citizen could be his personal foe; of that
          he was assured. His desire was to commend them one and all alike, counting the
          common salvation of all a gain, and reckoning it as a loss if even a mean man
          perished. For thus he reasoned, nor made a secret of the conclusion he had come
          to: so long as her citizens continued tranquilly adherent to the laws the
          happiness of Sparta was secure. And for the rest Sparta would once again be
          strong on that day when the states of Hellas should learn wisdom.
           And if, by admission, it is noble for every Hellene
          to be a lover of his fellow-Hellenes, yet we must fare far afield to find
          another instance of a general who, expecting to sack some city, would have
          refused to seize the prize; or who regarded victory in a war waged against
          fellow-Hellenes as a species of calamity. Yet this man when a message was
          brought him concerning the battle at Corinth, in which but eight Lacedaemonians
          had fallen, but of their opponents ten thousand nearly, showed no sign of
          exultation, but sighed, saying, "Alas for Hellas! since those who now lie
          in their graves, were able, had they lived, to conquer the hosts of Asia."
          Again, when some Corinthian exiles informed him that their city was ripe for
          surrender, and showed him the engines by which they were confident they would take
          the walls, he refused to make the assault, saying that Hellene cities ought not
          to be reduced to slavery, but brought back to a better mind, and added,
          "For if we lop off our offending members, haply we may deprive ourselves
          of the means to master the barbarians."
           Again, if it is a sacred duty to hate the
          Persian, who of old set out on a campaign to enslave Hellas; the Persian, who
          to-day makes alliance with these (no matter to him which the party, provided it
          will help him to work the greater mischief); or gives presents to those (who
          will take them and do the greatest harm to his foes the Hellenes); or else
          concocts a peace that shall presently involve us in internecine war, as he
          anticipates:--but why dwell on facts so patent? --I ask, did ever Hellene before
          Agesilaus so enter heart and soul upon his duty; whether it were to help some
          tribe to throw off the Persian yoke, or to save from destruction a revolted
          district, or if nothing else, at any rate to saddle the Persian with such
          troubles of his own that he should cease to trouble Hellas? An ardent hater of
          Persia surely was he, who, when his own country was at war with Hellenes, did
          not neglect the common good of Hellas, but set sail to wreak what harm he might
          upon the barbarians.
               
           VIII
               
           To turn to another side, that grace of manner
          which was his, claims more than passing recognition. Here was a man to whom honour was vouchsafed and power present, and who, to crown
          all else, held in his hands the sceptre of
          sovereignty--a kingship not plotted against, but respected and beloved. Yet
          there was no trace of arrogance to be seen in him, but of tender affection and
          courteous service to his friends proof in abundance without seeking. Witness
          the zest with which he shared in the round of lovers' talk; the zeal with which
          he threw himself into the serious concerns of friends. By dint of a hopeful and
          cheery disposition and unflagging gaiety of heart he attracted to his side a
          throng of visitors, who came, not simply for the transaction of some private
          interest, but rather to pass away the day in pleasant sort. Though little apt
          himself to use high-swelling words, it did not annoy him to hear others
          sounding their own praises, which he regarded as a harmless weakness, the
          pledge at least of high endeavour in the future.
           But that he was capable of lofty sentiment and at
          the right season must not be overlooked. Thus when a letter reached him from
          the king (I speak of that which was brought by the Persian agent in company
          with Calleas of Lacedaemon, proposing terms of
          hospitality and friendship with the Persian monarch), he disdained to accept
          it, telling the bearer to take back to the king this answer: "He need not
          be at pains to send him letters in private, but if he could prove himself a
          friend to Lacedaemon and the well-wisher of Hellas he should have no cause to
          blame the ardour of his friendship," but added,
          "if your king be detected plotting, let him not think to find a friend in
          me. No, not if he sends me a thousand letters." For my part, then, I hold
          it praiseworthy that, by comparison with pleasing his fellow- Hellenes,
          Agesilaus scorned such friendship. And this, too, among his tenets I find
          admirable: the truer title to self-congratulation belonged not to the
          millionaire, the master of many legions, but to him rather, who, being himself
          a better man, commanded the allegiance of better followers.
           And this, in proof of mental forecast, I must
          needs praise in him. Holding to the belief that the more satraps there were who
          revolted from the king the surer the gain to Hellas, he did not suffer himself
          to be seduced, either by gifts or by the mightiness in his power, to be drawn
          into bonds of friendship with the king, but took precaution rather not to abuse
          their confidence who were willing to revolt.
               And lastly, as beyond all controversy admirable,
          note this contrast: First, the Persian, who, believing that in the multitude of
          his riches he had power to lay all things under his feet, would fain have swept
          into his coffers all the gold and all the silver of mankind: for him, and him
          alone, the costliest and most precious things of earth. And then this other,
          who contrariwise so furnished his establishment as to be totally independent of
          every adventitious aid. And if any one doubts the statement, let him look and
          see with what manner of dwelling-place he was contented; let him view the
          palace doors: these are the selfsame doors, he might well imagine, which Aristodemus, the great-great-grandson of Heracles, took and
          set up in the days of the return. Let him endeavour to view the furniture inside; there he will perceive how the king feasted on
          high holy days; and he will hear how the king's own daughter was wont to drive
          to Amyclae in a public basket-carriage. Thus it was
          that by the adjustment of expenditure to income he was never driven to the
          commission of any unjust deed for money's sake. And yet if it be a fine thing
          to hold a fortress impregnable to attack, I count it a greater glory that a man
          should hold the fortress of his soul inviolable against the assaults of riches,
          pleasures, fears.
           
           IX
               
           I will here state to what extent the style of
          living which he presented stands out in striking contrast to the ostentatious
          manner of the Persian. In the first place, if the latter made a solemn
          affectation of being but seldom seen, Agesilaus delighted to live in the eye of
          day, believing that seclusion might accord well enough as a screen for
          shameless conduct, but to a life of nobleness and beauty heaven's light added
          new ornament. And next, if the one prided himself on being unapproachable, the
          other rejoiced in being accessible to all the world; the one, with his airs and
          graces, was pleased to transact business slowly, the other was never so happy
          as when he could satisfy the demands of a petitioner without waste of time.
               Again, it is worthy of observation how much
          easier and simpler to satisfy was the standard of comfort which the Spartan
          aimed at. For the Persian, men must compass sea and land to discover some
          beverage which he will care to drink; he needs ten thousand pastrycooks to
          supply the kick-shaws he will deign to eat; and to
          procure him the blessing of sleep no tongue can describe what a world of
          trouble must be taken. But Agesilaus was a lover of toil, and therefore not so
          dainty; the meanest beverage was sweet to his lips, and pleasant enough to his
          taste was the chance fare of the moment; and for the purpose of refreshing
          slumber every place alike conducive. It was not merely that to fare thus gave
          him pure pleasure, but in the sense of contrast lay a double satisfaction. Here
          was he roaming earth freely in the midst of a world of delight, and there lay
          the Persian, under his eyes, who to escape a life of pain must drag together
          from the uttermost parts of earth the separate ingredients for his pleasure. It
          was another source of joy that to himself it was given to confront the
          appointed order of the universe without pain; while through weakness of soul
          his rival, it was plain to see, was driven to flee away from heat and cold, and
          to shape his life, not by the pattern of brave men, but of some mean and defenceless animal.
           And what a fine trait this was in him, and
          betokening how lofty a sentiment, that, being content to adorn his own house
          with works and possessions suited to a man, and being devoted to the breeding
          of dogs and horses in large numbers for the chase and warfare, he persuaded his
          sister Cynisca to rear chariot horses, and thus by
          her victory showed that to keep a stud of that sort, however much it might be a
          mark of wealth, was hardly a proof of manly virtue. And surely in the following
          opinion we may discern plainly the generosity of him who entertained it. To win
          victories over private persons in a chariot race does not add one tittle to a
          man's renown. He, rather, who holds his city dear beyond all things else, who
          has himself sunk deep into the heart of her affections, who has obtained to
          himself all over the world a host of friends and those the noblest, who can
          outdo his country and comrades alike in the race of kindliness, and his antagonists
          in vengeance--such a man may, in a true sense, be said to bear away the palm of
          victory in conquests noble and magnificent; living and in death to him belongs
          transcendent fame.
           
           X
               
           It is as possession qualities such as these that
          I praise Agesilaus. And in these matters he was not like a man who chances upon
          a treasure and thereby becomes wealthier, albeit none the more skilful in economy; nor yet like him who, when a plague has
          fallen upon an enemy, wrests a victory, whereby he may add to his reputation
          for success, but not for strategy. Rather was his example that of one who in
          each emergency will take the lead; at a crisis where toil is needful, by
          endurance; or in the battle-lists of bravery by prowess; or when the function
          of the counsellor is uppermost, by the soundness of his judgment. Of such a man
          I say, he has obtained by warrant indefeasible the title peerless.
           And if, as a means towards good workmanship, we
          count among the noble inventions of mankind the rule and the plummet, no less
          happily shall we, who desire to attain a manly excellence, find in the virtue
          of Agesilaus a pattern and example. He was God-fearing, he was just in all his
          dealings, sound of soul and self-controlled. How then shall we who imitate him
          become his opposite, unholy, unjust, tyrannical, licentious? And, truth to say,
          this man prided himself, not so much on being a king over others as on ruling
          himself, not so much on leading his citizens to attack the enemy as on guiding
          them to embrace all virtue.
               Yet let it not be supposed, because he whom we
          praise has finished life, that our discourse must therefore be regarded as a
          funeral hymn. Far rather let it be named a hymn of praise, since in the first
          place it is only the repetition, now that he is dead, of a tale familiar to his
          ears when living. And in the next place, what is more remote from dirge and
          lamentation than a life of glory crowned by seasonable death? What more
          deserving of song and eulogy than resplendent victories and deeds of highest
          note? Surely if one man rather than another may be accounted truly blest, it is
          he who, from his boyhood upwards, thirsted for glory, and beyond all
          contemporary names won what he desired; who, being gifted with a nature most
          emulous of honour, remained from the moment he was
          king unconquered; who attained the fullest term of mortal life and died without
          offence committed, whether as concerning those at whose head he marched, or as
          towards those others against whom he fought in war.
           
           XI
               
           It only remains for me, under the form of
          headings, to review the topic of this great man's virtue, in hopes that thus
          his eulogy may cling to the memory more lastingly.
               Agesilaus reverenced the shrines and sacred
          places even of the enemy. We ought, he said, to make the gods our allies on
          hostile no less than on friendly soil.
               He would do no violence to a suppliant, no, not
          even if he were his own foe; since how irrational must it be to stigmatise robbers of temples as sacrilegious and yet to
          regard him who tears the suppliant from the altar as a pious person.
           One tenet he never wearied of repeating: the
          gods, he said, are not less pleased with holy deeds than with pure victims.
               In the day of his prosperity his thoughts were
          not raised higher than befits a man; he gave thanks to the gods; and offered
          more victims when he had nothing to fear than he registered vows in time of
          apprehension.
               He was accustomed in the midst of anxiety to wear
          an aspect of gaiety, but, when the victory was won, of gentleness.
               Amongst friends his warmest greeting was
          reserved, not for the most powerful, but for the most ardent; and if he hated,
          it was not him who, being evil entreated, retaliated, but one who, having had
          kindness done to him, seemed incapable of gratitude.
               He rejoiced when sordid greed was rewarded with
          poverty; and still more if he might himself enrich a righteous man, since his
          wish was to render uprightness more profitable than iniquity.
               He made it a practice to associate with all kinds
          of people, but to be intimate only with the best.
               As he listened to the praise of this man, or the
          censure of another, he felt that he learnt quite as much about the character of
          the speakers themselves as of those whom they discussed.
               To be cheated by a friend was scarcely
          censurable, but he could find no condemnation strong enough for him who was
          outwitted by a foe. Or again, to dupe the incredulous might argue wit, but to
          take in the unsuspecting was veritably a crime.
               The praise of a critic who had courage to point
          out his defects pleased him; and plainness of speech excited in him no hostility.
          It was against the cunning rather of the secretive person that he guarded
          himself, as against a hidden snare.
               The calumniator he detested more than the robber
          or the thief, in proportion as the loss of friends is greater than the loss of
          money.
               The errors of private persons he bore with
          gently, but those of rulers he looked upon as grave; since the mischief wrought
          in the one case was so small, and so large in the other. The proper attribute
          of royalty was, he maintained, not an avoidance of responsibility, but a
          constant striving after nobleness.
               Whilst he would not suffer any image of his
          bodily form to be set up (though many wished to present him with a statue), he
          never ceased elaborating what should prove the monument of his spirit, holding
          that the former is the business of a statuary, the latter of one's self. Wealth
          might procure the one, he said, but only a good man could produce the other.
               As for riches, he employed them not with justice
          merely, but with liberality, holding that for a just man it is sufficient if he
          let alone the things of others, but of a liberal man it is required that he
          should take of his own and give to supply another's needs.
               He was ever subject to religious fear, believing
          that no man during his lifetime, however well he lives, can be counted happy;
          it is only he who has ended his days with glory of whom it can be said that he
          has attained at last to blessedness.
               In his judgment it was a greater misfortune to
          neglect things good and virtuous, knowing them to be so, than in ignorance. Nor
          was he enamoured of any reputation, the essentials of
          which he had not laboriously achieved.
           He was one of the small band, as it seemed to me,
          who regard virtue, not as a thing to be patiently endured, but as a supreme
          enjoyment. At any rate, to win the praise of mankind gave him a deeper pleasure
          than the acquisition of wealth; and he preferred to display courage far rather
          in conjunction with prudence than with unnecessary risks, and to cultivate
          wisdom in action more than by verbal discussion.
               Very gentle to his friends, to his enemies he was
          most terrible. Whilst he could hold out against toil and trouble with the best,
          nothing pleased him better than yielding to his comrades. But passion was
          kindled in him by beauty of deed rather than of person.
               Skilled in the exercise of self-command in the
          midst of external welfare, he could be stout of heart enough in stress of
          danger.
               Urbanity he practised,
          not with jest and witticism, but by the courtesy of his demeanour.
           In spite of a certain haughtiness, he was never
          overbearing, but rich in saving common sense. At any rate, while pouring
          contempt upon arrogance, he bore himself more humbly than the most ordinary
          man. In fact, what he truly took a pride in was the simplicity of his own
          attire, in contrast with the splendid adornment of his troops; or, again, in
          the paucity of his own wants, combined with a bountiful liberality towards his
          friends.
               Besides all this, as an antagonist he could hit
          hard enough, but no one ever bore a lighter hand when the victory was won.
               The same man, whom an enemy would have found it hard
          to deceive, was pliability itself in the concerns of his friends. Whilst for ever occupied in laying these on a secure foundation,
          he made it a ceaseless task to baffle the projects of the national foe.
           The epithets applied to him are significant. His
          relatives found in him a kinsman who was more than kind. To his intimates he appeared
          as a friend in need who is a friend indeed. To the man who had done him some
          service, of tenacious memory. To the victim of injustice, a knight-errant. And
          to those who had incurred danger by his side, a saviour second only to the gods.
           It was given to this man, as it appears to me, to
          prove exceptionally that though strength of body may wax old the vigour of a man's soul is exempt from eld. Of him, at any
          rate, it is true that he never shrank from the pursuit of great and noble
          objects, so long as his body was able to support the vigour of his soul. Therefore his old age appeared mightier than the youth of other
          people. It would be hard to discover, I imagine, any one who in the prime of manhood was as formidable to his foes as Agesilaus when he
          had reached the limit of mortal life. Never, I suppose, was there a foeman
          whose removal came with a greater sense of relief to the enemy than that of
          Agesilaus, though a veteran when he died. Never was there a leader who inspired
          stouter courage in the hearts of fellow-combatants than this man with one foot
          planted in the grave. Never was a young man snatched from a circle of loving
          friends with tenderer regret than this old graybeard.
           The benefactor of his fatherland, absolutely to
          the very end; with bounteous hand, even in the arms of death, dealing out
          largesse to the city which he loved. And so they bore him home to his eternal
          resting-place; this hero, who, having raised to himself many a monument of his valour over the broad earth, came back to find in the land
          of his fathers a sepulture worthy of a king.
           
           
 
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