![]()  | 
    HISTORY OF ANCIENT GREECE | 
    ![]()  | 
  
A HISTORY OF GREECE TO   THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER THE GREAT
          
        
 CHAPTER XIII.
              
        THE REVIVAL OF ATHENS AND HER SECOND LEAGUE
          
        
           Sect.
          1. High-handed Policy of Sparta
                 
           The gates of the Peloponnesus were again open to
          Sparta without dispute; she was supported by Persia, and she had no
          complications in Asia to divide her energy. Accordingly she was able to renew
          the despotic policy which had been inaugurated for her by Lysander. Arcadian
          Mantinea was the first to suffer. The Mantineans were accused of various acts
          of disobedience and disloyalty to Sparta, and commanded to pull down their
          walls. When they refused, king Agesipolis—son of the exiled Pausanias—marched
          out against them. The city of Mantinea stood in a high plain, without any
          natural defences, depending entirely on its walls of
          unburnt brick. The river Ophis flowed through the
          town; and, a blockade proving tedious, Agesipolis dammed the stream at the
          point of issue. The water rose and undermined the walls; and when one of the
          towers threatened to fall, the people surrendered. Their punishment was severe.
          Mantinea ceased to be a city, and was broken up into its five constituent
          villages. Those who originally belonged to the village of Mantinea remained on
          the site of the city; the rest had to pull down their houses and move each to
          the village where his property was. The loss of civic life meant to a Greek
          the loss of all his higher interests.
   Agesilaus, who had once gone forth to destroy the
          Persian power, zealously supported the King’s Peace. When someone suggested
          that it was at least curious to find the Spartans medizing, he rejoined,
          “Rather say that the Persians are laconizing.” Each way of putting it expressed
          a measure of the truth. But some of the Lacedaemonians, including king
          Agesipolis, were opposed to the recent policy of their government, and thought
          it ill-done to abandon the Greeks of Asia. Some years after the Peace, there seems
          to have been floating in the air a vague idea, which might or might not take
          shape, of organising another Asiatic expedition. It
          was to animate this idea that the Athenian orator Isocrates published a festal
          speech when the Greek nation was assembled at the Olympian festival. He
          advocated a grand Panhellenic union against Persia, under the common headship
          of Sparta and Athens—Sparta taking the command by land, Athens by sea. It was
          the third occasion on which a renowned master of style had broached the same
          idea at the same gathering-place. Nearly thirty years ago, it had been
          recommended by the florid eloquence of Gorgias; more recently it had been
          advocated with gracious simplicity by Lysias; and now the rich periods of
          Isocrates urged it once more upon Greece. The project—in the ideal form in
          which Isocrates imagined it—was at this moment chimerical. A hundred years
          before, it had been hard enough to compass a practical co-operation between
          Greek powers of equal strength and pretensions, in a war of defence;
          it was hopeless to think of such co-operation now for a war of aggression.
          Sparta and Athens were quarrelling, as the orator complains, over the tribute
          of the Cyclad islands; and neither was likely to
          yield to the other without a clear award of war. And other troubles were
          brewing in another quarter.
   The contest of east and west had been going on
          meanwhile in Cyprus, an island whose geographical situation has marked it out,
          like Sicily, to be a meeting-place of races. We have already met a man who
          played an eminent part in that struggle, Evagoras the prince of Salamis. He
          belonged to the Teucrid family which had reigned
          there in the days of Darius and Xerxes, but had been supplanted by a Phoenician
          dynasty about the middle of the fifth century. Evagoras, crossing over from the
          Cilician Soli, won back the sceptre of his race by a
          daring surprise. He governed with conspicuous moderation, discretion, and
          success; setting himself to the work of reviving the cause of Hellenism, which
          had lost much ground during the past half-century; and pursuing this task by
          entirely peaceful means. After Aegospotami, the city of Evagoras became the
          refuge for large numbers of Athenians who had settled down in various parts of
          the Athenian empire and could no longer remain securely in their homes. For the
          first sixteen years of his reign Evagoras was a faithful tributary of the Great
          King, and we have seen how his influence at Susa assisted Conon. But soon after
          the battle of Cnidus he became involved in war, both with Persia and with some
          of the Phoenician cities in the island. The Peace expressly recognised the sovereignty of Artaxerxes over Cyprus, and as soon as it was concluded,
          Persia began to concentrate her forces against Evagoras and a recalcitrant king
          of Egypt, with whom Evagoras was leagued. A severe defeat at sea shut Evagoras
          up in Salamis; but he held out so dauntlessly, and the war had already cost
          Persia so much, that Tiribazus agreed to leave him
          his principality, on condition that he should pay tribute “as a slave to his
          lord.” Evagoras refused; he would only pay it as one king to another. The
          negotiations were ruptured for a moment on this point of honour,
          but a dispute between the satrap and his subordinate general resulted in the
          removal of Tiribazus, and his successor permitted
          Evagoras to have his way.
   The Salaminian despot had thus gained a moral triumph.
          He did not survive it many years, and the story of his death is curious. A
          certain man named Nicocreon formed a plot against his
          life, and being detected was forced to fly. He left a daughter behind him in
          Salamis under the care of a faithful eunuch. This servant privily acquainted
          both Evagoras and his son Pytagoras with the
          existence of this young lady and her uncommon beauty, and undertook to conduct
          them to her bedchamber, each without the knowledge of the other. Both kept the
          assignation and were slain by the eunuch, who thus avenged his master’s exile.
          Another son of Evagoras, named Nicocles, succeeded him, and pursued the same
          Hellenizing policy. One of the great objects of these enlightened princes was
          to keep their country in touch with the intellectual and artistic movements of
          Greece. Nicocles was a student of Greek philosophy, and a generous friend of
          the essayist, Isocrates, to whose pen we are indebted for much of what we know
          of the career of Evagoras.
   Towards the close of the almost single-handed struggle
          of Salamis against Persia, the eyes of Greece were directed to a different
          quarter of the world. Events were passing in the north of the Aegean, which
          riveted the attention of Sparta and Athens; their Greek brethren of Cyprus and
          the Asiatic coast seem to be quite forgotten; for a while the oriental question
          almost passes out of the pages of Greek history. Yet it was destined that from
          that very region on the north-west comer of the Aegean should issue the force
          which should not only reclaim for European influence Cyprus and all the Greek
          cities of Asia, but bear Greek light into lands of which Agesilaus had never
          dreamed. That force was being forged in the Macedonian uplands; and some who
          were children when Isocrates published his Panegyric against the Barbarian
          lived to see the Barbarian succumb to a Greek power.
               It was indeed only indirectly that the southern Greeks
          had now to concern themselves with their backward brethren of Macedonia. One of
          the chief obstacles to the development of this country was its constant
          exposure to the attacks of its Illyrian neighbours and an Illyrian invasion,
          supported by domestic disloyalty, compelled king Amyntas—he was the nephew of
          Perdiccas—to flee from his kingdom. Amyntas, soon after his accession, had
          concluded a close defensive and commercial alliance for fifty years with the
          Chalcidian league, which had been formed by Olynthus and comprised the towns of
          the Sithonian promontory. It was, as we observed
          already, an age of small federations. At the moment of his retreat Amyntas
          handed over to the Chalcidians the lower districts of Macedonia and the cities
          lying round the Thermaic gulf. The Macedonian cities
          readily embraced an union which could protect them against the Illyrians, and
          the league spread from the maritime towns up the country and included even
          Pella. Perfect equality and brotherhood between the members was the basis of
          this Chalcidian confederacy. All the cities had common laws, common rights of
          citizenship, intermarriage and commerce; Olynthus did not assume a privileged
          position for herself. The neighbouring Greek cities
          were also asked to join, and some of them, Potidaea for instance, accepted the
          offer. But it was always a sacrifice for a Greek city to give up its hereditary
          laws and surrender any part of its sovereignty, whatever compensating
          advantages might be purchased; and there was consequently more reluctance among
          the Chalcidians than among the less developed Macedonians to join the league.
          The Olynthians, as their work grew, conceived the
          idea of a confederate power which should embrace the whole Chalcidic peninsula
          and its neighbourhood. Once this ambition took form,
          it became necessary to impose by force their propositions upon those who
          declined to accept them freely. The strong cities of Acanthus and Apollonia
          resisted, and sent envoys to Sparta to obtain her help. Moreover Amyntas had
          recovered his throne, and when the Olynthians refused
          to abandon the cities which he had handed over to them, he too looked for aid
          to Sparta. These appeals directed the eyes of Greece upon the Chalcidian
          confederacy. It was the Lacedaemonian policy to oppose all combinations and
          keep Greece disunited—a policy which was popular, in so far as it appealed to
          that innate love of autonomy which made it so difficult to bring about abiding
          federal unions in Greece. The ambassadors had little difficulty in persuading
          the Lacedaemonians and their allies that the movement in Chalcidice was
          dangerous to the interests of Sparta, and should be crushed at the outset; and
          they argued that the very liberality of the principles on which it was founded
          made the league more attractive and therefore more dangerous. A vote of
          assistance to Acanthus and Apollonia was passed, and a small advance force was
          immediately sent under Eudamidas. Though unable to meet the confederate army in
          the field, this force was sufficient to protect the cities which had refused to
          join the league, and it even induced Potidaea to revolt
   The expedition against the Chalcidian Confederacy led
          unexpectedly to an important incident elsewhere. Phoebidas,
          the brother of Eudamidas, was to follow with larger forces, and, as the line of
          march lay through Boeotia, a party in Thebes favourable to Sparta thought to profit by the proximity of Spartan troops for the purpose
          of a revolution. Leontiadas, the most prominent
          member of this party, was then one of the polemarchs.
          He concerted with Phoebidas a plot to seize the
          Cadmea—the citadel of Thebes—on the day of the Thesmophoria; for on that day
          the citadel was given up to the use of the women who celebrated the feast. The
          plot succeeded perfectly; the acropolis was occupied without striking a blow;
          the oligarchical Council was intimidated by Leontiadas;
          and his colleague, the other polemarch, Ismenias was
          arrested. The leading anti-Spartans fled from Thebes, and a government friendly
          to Sparta was established. This was a great triumph for Sparta, a great
          satisfaction to Agesilaus, although, as a violation of peace, it caused a
          moment’s embarrassment. Was the government to recognise the action of Phoebidas and profit by it? Spartan
          hypocrisy compromised the matter; Phoebidas was fined
          100,000 drachmae for his indiscretion, and the Cadmea was retained. Then Ismenias was tried by a body of judges representing Sparta
          and her allies, and was condemned on charges of Medism and executed. That Sparta, after the King’s Peace, should condemn a Theban for Medism, was a travesty of justice.
   With the fortress of Thebes in her hands, Sparta had a
          basis for extending her power in central Greece and might regard her supremacy
          as secured. She restored the city of Plataea, which she had herself destroyed
          well-nigh fifty years agone, and gathered all the Plataeans who could be found
          to their old home. But her immediate attention was fixed on the necessity of
          repressing the dangerous league in the north of Greece, and continuing the
          measures which had been interrupted by the enterprise of Phoebidas in Boeotia. The popular brother of Agesilaus, Teleutias,
          was sent to conduct the war; but, although he was aided by Amyntas, and by
          Derdas, a prince of Upper Macedonia, who supplied good cavalry, it proved no
          easy matter to make head against the league. In front of the walls of Olynthus, Teleutias sustained a signal defeat and was himself
          slain. The war was fatal to a king as well as to a king’s brother. Agesipolis,
          who was next sent out at the head of a very large force, caught a fever in the
          intolerable summer heat. He was carried to the shady grove of the temple of
          Dionysus at Aphytis, but he died there; and his body,
          stowed in honey, was brought home for burial. His successor, Polybiadas, was more successful. He forced the Olynthians to sue for peace and dissolve their league. They
          and all the Greek cities of the peninsula were constrained to join the
          Lacedaemonian alliance, and the maritime cities of Macedonia were restored to
          the sway of Amyntas. Thus Sparta put down an attempt to overcome that system of
          isolation, which placed Greek cities at a great disadvantage, when they had
          barbarian neighbours. If Sparta had not happened to be so strong at this
          moment, the Chalcidian league might have grown into a power, which would have
          considerably modified the development of Macedonia. All that Sparta did,
          although for a moment it made her power paramount in northern Greece, fell out
          ultimately to the advancement and profit of Macedon.
   About the same time, the Lacedaemonians were making
          their heavy hand felt in the Peloponnesus. Soon after the King’s Peace they had
          forced the Phliasians to recall a number of banished
          aristocrats. Disputes arose about the restoration of confiscated property, and
          the exiles appealed to Sparta, where they had a zealous supporter in Agesilaus.
          War was declared; Agesilaus reduced the city of Phlius by blockade, and compelled it to receive a Lacedaemonian garrison for six
          months, until a commission of one hundred, which he nominated, should have
          drawn up a new constitution.
   Thus the Lacedaemonians, in alliance with the tyrant
          Dionysius and the barbarian Artaxerxes, tyrannised over the Greeks for a space. Some demonstrations were made, some voices of
          protest were raised, in the name of the Panhellenic cause. At the Olympian
          festival which was held about two years after the King’s Peace, the Athenian
          orator Lysias warned the assembled Greeks of the dangers which loomed in the
          east and in the west, from Persia and from Sicily, and uttered his amazement at
          the policy of Lacedaemon. A magnificent deputation had been sent by Dionysius
          to this festival, and the inflammatory words, perhaps the direct instigation,
          of the speaker incited some enthusiastic spectators to attack the gorgeous
          pavilion of the Syracusan envoys. The outrage was prevented; but the occurrence
          shows the beginning of that tide of feeling to which Isocrates appealed, four
          years later, when in his festal oration he denounced the Lacedaemonians, as
          sacrificing the freedom of Greece to their own interests and treacherously
          aiding foreigners and tyrants
   Even Xenophon, the friend of Sparta’s king, the
          admirer of Sparta’s institutions, is roused to regretful indignation at
          Sparta’s conduct, and recognises her fall as a just
          retribution. “The Lacedaemonians, who swore to leave the cities independent,
          seized the acropolis of Thebes, and they were punished by the very men,
          single-handed, whom they had wronged, though never before had they been
          vanquished by any single people. It is a proof that the gods observe men who do
          irreligious and unhallowed deeds.” In this way the pious historian introduces
          the event which prepared the fall of Sparta and the rise of Thebes.
   
           Sect.
          2. Alliance of Athens and Thebes
                 
           The government of Leontiadas and his party at Thebes, maintained by 1500 Lacedaemonians in the citadel, was
          despotic and cruel, like that of the Thirty at Athens. Fear made the rulers
          suspicious and oppressive; for they were afraid of the large number of exiles,
          who had found a refuge at Athens and were awaiting an opportunity to recover
          their city. Athens was now showing the same goodwill to the fugitives from
          Thebes which Thebes, when Athens was in a like plight, had shown to Thrasybulus
          and his fellows. One of the exiles, named Pelopidas, of more than common daring
          and devotion, resolved to take his life in his hands and found six others to
          associate in his plans. No open attack was to be thought of; Thebes must be
          recovered by guile, even as by guile it had been won. There were many in Thebes
          who were bitter foes of the ruling party, such as Epaminondas, the beloved
          friend of Pelopidas, but most of them deemed the time unripe for any sudden
          stroke for freedom. Yet a few were found ready to run the risk; above all, Phyllidas, who was the secretary of the polemarchs and therefore the most useful of confederates, and Charon, a citizen of good
          estate, who offered his house as a place of hiding for the conspirators. The
          day on which the two polemarchs, Archias and Philippus, were to go out of office was fixed for the enterprise. On the
          day before, Pelopidas and his six comrades crossed Cithaeron in the guise of
          huntsmen, and, nearing Thebes at nightfall, mixed with the peasants who were
          returning from the fields, got them safely within the gates, and found safe
          hiding in the abode of Charon. The secretary Phyllidas had made ready a great banquet for the following night, to which he had bidden
          the outgoing polemarchs, tempting them by the promise
          of introducing them to some high-born and beautiful women, whose love they
          desired. During the carouse a messenger came with a letter for Archias, and said that it concerned serious affairs.
          “Business tomorrow,” said Archias, placing it under
          his pillow. On the morrow it was found that this letter disclosed the
          conspiracy. The polemarchs then called for the women,
          who were waiting in an adjoining room. Phyllidas said
          that they declined to appear till all the attendants were dismissed. When no
          one remained in the dining hall but the polemarchs and a few friends, all flushed with wine, the women entered and sat down beside
          the lords. They were covered with long veils; and even as they were bidden lift
          them and reveal their charms, they buried daggers in the bodies of the polemarchs. For they were none other than Pelopidas and his
          fellows in the guise of women. Then they went and slew in their houses Leontiadas and Hypatas, the two
          other chief leaders of the party, and set free the political prisoners. When
          all this was done, Epaminondas and the other patriots, who were unwilling to
          initiate such deeds themselves, accepted the revolution with joy. When day
          dawned, an assembly of the people was held in the Agora, and the conspirators
          were crowned with wreaths. Three of them, including Pelopidas, were appointed polemarchs, and a democratic constitution was established.
   The rest of the exiles and a body of Athenian
          volunteers presently arrived, on the news of the success. The Spartan commander
          of the Cadmea had sent hastily, on the first alarm, for reinforcements to Thespiae and Plataea, but those that came were charged and
          repelled, outside the gate. Then in the first flush of success the patriots
          resolved to storm the Cadmea, strong as the place was. But the labour and the danger were spared them. Amazing as it may
          seem Lacedaemonian harmosts decided to capitulate at once. Two of these
          commanders were put to death on their return to Sparta, and the third was
          banished. The chagrin of the ephors and Agesilaus was intense; king Cleombrotus was immediately sent with an army to Boeotia,
          but accomplished nothing.
   Athens was formally at peace with Sparta, and was not
          disposed to break with her, however great may have been the secret joy felt at
          the events of Boeotia. But the march of the Athenian volunteers to Thebes was
          an awkward incident, the more so as there were two strategi among them.
          Lacedaemonian envoys arrived to demand explanation and satisfaction; and their
          statements were reinforced by the neighbourhood of
          the army of king Cleombrotus. There was indeed
          nothing to be said for the conduct of the two strategi. They had abused their
          position and brought their city into danger and embarrassment. We can only
          approve the sentence of the Athenians, which executed one and banished the
          other.
   But if these Athenian generals were indiscreet, it was
          as nothing beside the indiscretion of a Lacedaemonian commander, which now
          precipitated the breach between the two states. A not ignoble sympathy might
          have been pleaded by the two Athenians; but no excuse could be urged for the
          rash enterprise of the Spartan harmost of Thespiae,
          who aspired to be a second Phoebidas. His name was Sphodrias, and he conceived the plan of making a night
          march to Athens and surprising Piraeus on the landside. To seize Piraeus, the
          seat of Athenian merchandise, would be a compensation for the loss of Thebes.
          But the plan was, if not ill-considered, at least ill carried out. Day dawned
          when he had hardly passed Eleusis; and there was nothing to do but to turn
          back. He retreated, laying waste the districts through which he passed.
   Great wrath was kindled in Athens by this unprovoked
          deed of hostility. The envoys had not yet gone; they were immediately thrown
          into prison, but escaped by declaring that the Spartan government was not
          responsible for the raid, and would speedily prove its innocence by the
          condemnation of Sphodrias. The assurance was
          belied  Sphodrias was not condemned. His son and the son of Agesilaus were lovers, and the king’s
          influence saved him. Agesilaus is reported to have said: “Sphodrias is guilty, of course; but it is a hard thing to put to death a man who, as
          child, stripling, and man, lived a life of perfect honour;
          for Sparta needeth such soldiers.” This miscarriage
          of justice was a grave mistake of policy; and the high-handed insolence of the
          Spartan oligarchs was set in a more glaring light by contrast with the
          fair-mindedness which the Athenian people had displayed in promptly punishing
          its own generals for a similar though certainly less heinous act. The Athenian
          generals had at least not invaded Lacedaemonian territory. It was debated at
          the time, and has been debated since, whether Sphodrias acted wholly of his own accord; some thought that the suggestion came from king Cleombrotus, and the theory was started that the
          Thebans were the prime instigators—an unlikely theory, which was evidently
          based on the fact that Thebes was the only gainer by the raid. It seems most
          probable that the private ambition of Sphodrias, who
          thought he had a chance of emulating Phoebidas, was
          alone responsible.
   The raid and acquittal of Sphodrias drove Athens, against her will, into war with Sparta and alliance with Thebes;
          it stirred her for a while to leave her role of neutral spectator and assume
          that of an active belligerent. For the next six years, Athens and Sparta are at
          war, though such a war was contrary to the interests of both states, but
          especially to the interests of Sparta.
               
           Sect.
          3. The Second Athenian League and the Theban Reforms
                 
           The raid of Sphodrias was
          the direct occasion of the Second Athenian Confederacy. For many years back,
          ever since the battle of Cnidus, Athens had been gradually forming bonds of
          alliance with various states in Thrace, the Aegean, and the coasts of Asia
          Minor. The breach with Sparta induced her now to gather together these separate connexions into a common league, with the express
          object of protecting the independence of the Greek states against the
          oppression of Sparta. When men thought of the old Confederacy of Delos, they
          might fear that the second Athenian league would be soon converted into a
          second Athenian empire. But Athens anticipated such alarms by establishing the
          confederacy on a different system, which provided safeguards against the
          dangers of Athenian preponderance and Athenian encroachment. In the archonship
          of Nausinicus, Aristoteles of the deme of Marathon proposed in the Assembly a
          decree which embodied the principles of the league. The sway of Persia over the
          Greeks of Asia was explicitly recognised, so that the
          field of operations was to be European Greece and the Islands. The league,
          which was purely defensive, was constituted in two parts, Athens on one side,
          her allies on the other. The allies had their own synedrion or congress which
          met in Athens, but in which Athens had no part. Both the synedrion of the
          Confederates and the Athenian Assembly had the right of initiating measures,
          but no measure passed by either body was valid until it had been approved by
          the other body also. While this system gave Athens a weight and dignity equal
          to that of all her allies together, it secured for the allies an independence
          which they had not possessed under the old league, and they had the right of
          absolute veto on any Athenian proposal which they disliked. It was necessary
          for the members of the league to form a federal fund; their payments were
          called syntaxeis (“contributions”), and the word phoros (“tribut”), which had
          odious memories connected with the confederacy of Delos, was avoided. It was especially
          enacted that the practice of Athenian outsettling in
          the lands of the allies, which had formerly helped and supported the Athenian
          empire, was not to be permitted. No Athenian was to acquire home or farm, “by
          purchase or mortgage, or any other means whatever,” in the territory of any of
          the confederates. But the administration of the federal fund and the leadership
          of the federal army were in the hands of Athens.
   Good fortune has preserved to us the original stone,
          shattered in about twenty pieces, with the decree which founded the
          confederacy, and we find the purpose of the league definitely declared: “To
          force the Lacedaemonians to allow the Greeks to enjoy peace in freedom and
          independence, with their lands unviolated.” It was no doubt Callistratus, the
          ablest statesman and orator of the day, who did most to make the new scheme a
          success; but, though he may be called the Aristides of the Second Confederacy,
          Callistratus certainly did not mean the combination against Sparta as seriously
          as Aristides meant the combination against Persia. The policy which
          Callistratus generally pursued was based on harmony with Sparta and antagonism
          to Thebes. It is sometimes said that at this period there were two parties
          contending for the guidance of the foreign policy of Athens, one friendly and
          the other obstinately hostile to Boeotia. But, though Thebes had some friends
          at Athens, we have no good grounds for speaking of a Theban or Boeotian party.
          It might be truer to say that there was an anti-Spartan faction, which might
          often seek a Theban alliance as a means to an end. At this juncture
          Callistratus was astute enough to see not only that it would be useless to
          oppose the feeling against Sparta, but also that an opportunity which might
          never recur was offered for increasing the power of Athens. He therefore
          abandoned for the time his permanent policy, and threw himself heartily into a
          scheme of which the most remarkable feature was union with Thebes.
               The chief cities which first joined the new league
          were Chios, Byzantium, Mytilene, Methymna, and Rhodes; then most of the towns
          of Euboea joined, and, what was most important and wonderful, Thebes enrolled
          her name in the list of the confederates. The Thracian cities, and several
          other states, including Coreyra, Jason the despot of
          Pherae in Thessaly, and Alcetas a prince of Epirus,
          presently brought up the whole tale of members to about seventy. But though the
          league, drawn on such liberal lines, evoked some enthusiasm at first, and the
          adhesion of Thebes gave its inauguration a certain éclat, it had no vital elements of growth or permanence, and never
          attained high political importance. The fact is, that the true interest of
          Athens, as Callistratus knew, was peace with Sparta, and was consequently
          repugnant to the avowed object of the confederacy. Hence the confederacy was
          doomed either to fall asunder, or to become the tool of other designs of Athens
          as soon as Sparta had been taught a lesson and the more abiding interest of
          Athene could safely assert itself again over the temporary expedient of an
          unnatural alliance with Thebes.
   It was a moment at which the chief Greek states were
          setting their houses in order. Thebes was making herself ready and dight for a
          new career; Sparta was remodelling her league, and
          Athens her finances. A property tax, such as had first been introduced in the
          third year of the Peloponnesian war, was revived, and a new assessment of
          property was made. One-fifth of the actual capital of each citizen was
          inscribed in the register, and the tax (probably about one per cent) was
          imposed on this fraction, not on the whole capital. The revenue from this
          impost seems to have amounted annually to about sixty talents. For the purpose
          of levying the tax the whole body of burghers was divided into 100 symmories, and the richest citizens in each symmory were responsible to the treasury for the total sum
          due on the properties of all the citizens who belonged to it. By this means the
          State relieved itself from the friction which is generally caused by the
          collection of direct imposts, and the revenue accruing from the tax was realised more promptly and easily than if the government
          had to deal immediately with the individual burghers. Thus Athens tried the
          novel experiment of a system of joint responsibility, such as in later days was
          to be introduced and established in an empire of which Athens was only an
          insignificant town.
   At Thebes the attention of the government was chiefly
          bestowed on military affairs. A ditch was dug and a rampart raised round part
          of the Theban territory as a defence against the
          inevitable Lacedaemonian invasions. But this precaution was of small moment in
          comparison with the creation of a new troop of 300 hoplites, all chosen young
          men of the noblest families, who had proved their eminent strength and
          endurance in a long training in the wrestling school. Each man had his best
          friend beside him; so that the Sacred Band, as it was called, consisted of 150
          pairs of lovers, prepared to fight and fall together. In battle, it was to
          stand in front of the other hoplites. At the same time, we may be sure, much
          was done to improve the army in other points. Opportunely for Thebes there had
          arisen, to guide her to success when her chance came, a man of rare ability, in
          whom nature seemed to have united the best features of Greek character and
          discarded the defects. This was Epaminondas, the friend of Pelopidas. He was a
          modest, unambitious man, who in other circumstances would probably have
          remained in obscurity, unobtrusively fulfilling the duties of a citizen and
          soldier. But the revolution stimulated his patriotism and lured him into the
          field of public affairs, where his eminent capacity, gradually revealing
          itself, made him, before eight years had passed, the most influential man in
          his city. He had devoted as much time to musical as to gymnastic training;
          unlike most of his countrymen, he could play the lyre as well as the Theban
          flute; and he had a genuine interest in philosophical speculation. A Tarentine
          friend, who had been much in his company, assevered that he never met a man who knew more and talked less than Epaminondas. But the
          Theban statesman could speak when he chose, or when the need demanded; and his
          eloquence was extremely impressive. Exceptional in his indifference to the
          prizes of ambition, he was also exceptional in his indifference to money, and
          he died poor. Not less remarkable was his lack of that party spirit, which led
          to so many crimes in Greece. He could not share in strong political hatred or
          lust for revenge; and we have already seen that his repugnance to domestic
          bloodshed kept him from taking a part in the fortunate conspiracy of Pelopidas.
   
           Sect.
          4. The Battle of Naxos and the Peace of Callias
                 
           The following eight years are marked by a successful
          defensive war of Thebes against Spartan invasions; by a decrease of Spartan
          prestige; by the extension of the Theban supremacy over the rest of Boeotia. At
          the same time, Athens prosecutes a naval war against the Lacedaemonian
          Confederacy, and gains considerable successes; but the strain on her resources
          which this war entails, and a growing jealousy of Thebes, combine to induce her
          to come to terms with Sparta.
               Two invasions of Boeotia conducted by Agesilaus
          himself in successive summers achieved nothing; and the Thebans had the
          satisfaction of slaying Phoebidas, who had won his
          fame by the capture of their acropolis. The other king, Cleombrotus,
          did even less than Agesilaus, for he found the passes of Cithaeron held by the
          foes, and could not enter Boeotia. After this, the Thebans had time to attack
          the Boeotian cities and drive out the Spartan garrison; so that by the end of
          four years the Boeotian confederacy once more extended over all Boeotia, the
          local governments being overthrown and the foreign harmosts expelled. Only in
          the extreme west, in Orchomenus and Chaeronea, were the Lacedaemonians able to
          hold their ground. In the course of this resuscitation of the Boeotian league
          one notable exploit was wrought by Pelopidas and the Sacred Band. At Tegyra, on the road from Orchomenus to Locris, in a narrow
          pass, the Thebans routed twice as many Lacedaemonian troops, and slew both the
          Spartan generals. As in the case of all Spartan defeats, the moral effect was
          of far greater import than the actual loss in the field. Perhaps it was about
          this time that Athens won back Oropus, which had been lost to her in the year
          of the Four Hundred.
   In the meantime there had been war too on the seas.
          When the invasions of Boeotia fell out so badly, Sparta had had bethought
          herself of equipping a naval armament to cut off the corn ships which bore rain
          to Attica from the Euxine. The ships reached Geraestus,
          the south point of Euboea; but a fleet of sixty galleys under the Spartan
          Pollis hindered them from rounding the Cape of Sunium,
          and Athens was menaced with famine. Eighty triremes were speedily fitted out
          and sent forth from the Piraeus, under the command of Chabrias,
          to recover the mastery of the sea. Chabrias sailed to
          Naxos, which had seized this moment to desert the Athenian Confederacy, and
          beleaguered the city. Pollis hurried to the rescue, and a battle was fought in
          the sound between Paros and Naxos. The Athenians gained a complete victory, and
          only eleven of the Lacedaemonian vessels escaped. Even these would have been
          disabled, had not Chabrias desisted from the action,
          for the purpose of saving some of his own men who were overboard or in disabled
          ships. The lesson which the Athenian people taught their generals after the
          battle of Arginusae had not been forgotten. Though the battle of Naxos had not
          the important consequences of the battle of Cnidus, it was more gratifying to
          Athens. The Cnidian victory had been won indeed under
          the command of an Athenian, but by Persian men and ships; the victory gained by Chabrias was entirely Athenian. It led immediately to
          an enlargement of the Confederacy. The triumphant fleet sailed round the
          Aegean, enrolled seventeen new cities, and collected a large sum of money.
          Athens had also to reassert her authority at Delos. For the inhabitants of the
          island who chafed at the administration of their temple by the Athenian amphictiones, as
          the sacred overseers were entitled, had attempted, doubtless with Lacedaemonian
          help, to recover control of the sanctuary. An interesting entry in the Delian
          accounts of these years, preserved on a stone, tells how seven ringleaders of
          the movement were punished by fines and perpetual banishment “for having led
          the amphictiones forth from the temple and beaten
          them.”
   Next year, the fleet was sent to sail round the
          Peloponnesus under the command of Timotheus, son of Conon, This
          circumnavigation of the Peloponnesus was an assertion by Athens that her naval
          power was once more dominant; it was intended to frighten Sparta, to extend
          Athenian influence in western Greece, and to act in the Corinthian Gulf, in
          case the Spartans tried to throw an army into Boeotia by the port of Creusis.
          The islands of Corcyra and Cephallenia, the king of
          the Molossi, some of the Acarnanians, were won over to the Athenian alliance by
          the discreet policy of Timotheus, who also gained a trifling victory over some
          hostile ships. But there was a darker side to this triumphant expedition. The
          cost of the war was proving to be greater than Athens could well bear, and
          Timotheus failed to obtain from home the money requisite to pay his seamen. In
          this strait, he was obliged to ask each trierarch to advance seven minae for the payment of his crew; and Athens herself sent
          a request to Thebes for some contribution towards the expense of the naval
          operations, on the ground that the enterprise of Timotheus had been undertaken
          partly at Theban instigation. The refusal of this demand, along with a growing
          jealousy of Theban success, and the somewhat grave financial difficulties of
          the moment, combined to dispose Athens towards peace with Sparta; and this was
          in fact her wisest policy. Negotiations were opened and carried to a successful
          issue; but the peace was no sooner made than it was broken. For Timotheus, who
          was ordered to return home from Coreyra and
          reluctantly obeyed, halted at Zacynthus on his way,
          landed some Zacynthian exiles who were with him, and
          fortified a post for them on the island. The Zacynthians straightway complained to Sparta; Sparta demanded satisfaction from Athens; and
          when this was refused, the incident was treated as a breach of contract and the
          war was resumed.
   The first object of Sparta was to regain her power in
          the west, and undo the work of Timotheus. The best of the winnings of that
          general had been Corcyra, and Corcyra once more became the scene of a
          “Peloponnesian” war. With the help of their confederates, including Corinth,
          the Lacedaemonians launched an armament of sixty ships, conveying 1500
          mercenary hoplites, to gain possession of the island; and at the same time a
          message was dispatched to Dionysius of Syracuse requesting his aid, on the
          ground that Sicily had her interests in Corcyraean politics. The armament was
          commanded by the Spartan Mnasippus. He drove the
          Corcyraean fleet into the harbour, which he blocked
          with his own ships, and he invested the city by land, so that the supplies of
          the inhabitants were cut off. The island was a rich prize for the soldiers to
          whose depredations it was now given over. The tillage was goodly, the crofts and
          farmhouses exceeding fair; and so plentiful was the wine that the troopers
          would drink none that was not of the finest sort. Urgent messages were sent to
          Athens by the Corcyraeans, who soon began to feel the pinch of famine. So great
          was the misery that slaves were cast out of the gates; even some citizens
          deserted, but were whipped back to the walls by the Lacedaemonian commander.
          But he deeming that he had the city in his hands grew careless in his
          confidence; and from the watch-towers on their walls the besieged could observe
          that the watch was sometimes relaxed. An opportune moment was seized for a
          sally, which resulted in a completer success than they looked for. The
          professional soldiers, who had not been paid and detested their general, showed
          no zeal in withstanding the hot onslaught of the desperate men who poured forth
          from the gates. Mnasippus was slain, and the
          besiegers fell back to their camp. The beleaguerment was thus broken up, and
          the Corcyraeans were safe until the coming of the expected help from Athens.
          But they were delivered from all constraint even before that tardy help came;
          for the Lacedaemonians evacuated the island almost immediately after the
          defeat. Then at last the Athenian fleet sailed into the roads of Corcyra.
   It was from no want of goodwill on the part of the
          Athenian people that the help had not come in time to save Corcyra much of the
          misery which she had suffered. A tale hangs by the delay of the fleet. On the
          first appeal, it was resolved to send sixty ships at once, and 600 peltasts
          were sent in advance and successfully introduced into the city. It was
          befitting that Timotheus should return to the scene of his former achievements,
          and the command of the fleet was entrusted to him. He found himself in an awkward
          position, owing to one of the gravest defects in the machinery of Athenian
          administration. The people had voted a certain measure, appointing him to carry
          it out; but had omitted to vote or consider the necessary ways and means. It
          consequently devolved upon Timotheus to find the men and the money. For this
          purpose he cruised with some of his ships in the Northern Aegean, visiting
          Thessaly, Macedonia, and Thrace, while the main part of the fleet awaited his
          return at the island of Calauria. But meanwhile the
          need of Corcyra was sore, and more pressing messengers were arriving in Athens.
          The long tarrying of the general excited public indignation; his appointment
          was annulled; and Iphicrates, in conjunction with Chabriasand Callistratus, was charged to sail at once to Corcyra.
   Callistratus was the most eloquent orator of the day. Chabrias, a tried soldier who had served under Cypriote and
          Egyptian kings, we have already met as the victor of Naxos. Iphicrates, who had
          come to the front by his boldness and success in the Corinthian war, had for
          the last fifteen years served as a captain of peltasts under the princes of
          Thrace, and had married a daughter of king Cotys. A comic poet gives a
          picturesque description of his barbaric wedding. In the market-place a
          plentiful feast is set out for a throng of wildhaired Thracians. There are immense brazen cauldrons of broth, and the king, girding
          himself up, serves it with his own hands in a golden basin. Then the wine and
          water are tempered in the mixing-bowls, and the king goes around tasting each
          bowl, until he is the first drunk. But an adventurous life among the
          “butter-eating” barbarians does not seem to have wholly satisfied Iphicrates.
          He served the King of Persia in Egypt and then returned to Athens, and this
          expedition to Corcyra seems to have been his first service after his return. It
          was well and capably performed. The people in their excitement gave him a freer
          hand than they had given to Timotheus. He was able to put hard pressure on the trierarchs; he was allowed to impress seamen, and to make
          use of the galleys which guarded the Attic coast, and even the two sacred
          vessels, the Salaminia and Paralus. By these unusual efforts
          a fleet of seventy triremes was put together, but before it was quite ready to
          sail Timotheus returned. His cruise had been successful in raising money and
          men, and adding new members to the Confederacy; but it was thought that neither
          necessity nor success could excuse the singular inopportuneness of the delay.
          Ill-luck seemed to wait upon Timotheus. The funds which he brought back proved
          unable to meet the obligations which they ought to have defrayed, and a fraud
          was suspected. Iphicrates and Callistratus, his political rivals, lodged an
          indictment against him, but as they had to sail immediately to the west, the
          trial was postponed till the autumn.
   On his way out Iphicrates learned the news of the
          deliverance of Corcyra, so that he was able to send back those ships whose true
          duty was the defence of Attica. But there was still
          work to be done. The appeal which the Lacedaemonians sent to the tyrant
          Dionysius had not been in vain, and ten Syracusan triremes were even then
          approaching Corcyra. They stopped at a point in the north of the island, that
          the crews might rest after the long voyage; and there Iphicrates whose scouts
          had watched for their approach captured them, all but one vessel. This prize
          raised the welcome sum of sixty talents, but it was not long before Iphicrates,
          even as Timotheus, found himself embarrassed for want of money. Callistratus
          went back to Athens, promising to persuade the people either to keep the fleet
          regularly paid or to make peace. Meanwhile the crews of Iphicrates obtained
          subsistence by labour on the Corcyraean farms.
   If Corcyra had fallen, there can be little question
          that Timotheus would have been sacrificed to the displeasure of the Athenian
          people. But the good tidings from the west restored the public good-humour, and this was fortunate for the discredited general.
          His trial came on towards the end of the year. His military treasurer was tried
          at the same time, found guilty of malversation, and condemned to death. But
          Timotheus himself was acquitted. He had indeed unusually powerful support. Two
          foreign monarchs had condescended to come to Athens to bear testimony in his favour, the Epirot king Alcetas,
          and Jason the despot of Thessalian Pherae. It was through Timotheus that these
          potentates had joined the Athenian league; and it was through them that he had
          been able to transport across Thessaly and Epirus the 600 peltasts who had been
          sent in advance to Corcyra. The interest of Jason—of whom more will have to be
          said presently—was particularly effective. Timotheus entertained these
          distinguished guests in his house in Piraeus, but he was obliged to borrow
          bedding, two silver bowls, and other things from his rich neighbour, the banker
          Pasion, in order to lodge them suitably. Though acquitted, Timotheus was
          discredited in public opinion, and he soon left Athens to take service in Egypt
          under the Great King.
   Sparta had lost heart at the decisive check which she
          had received in Corcyra, and the discouragement was increased by a series of
          terrible earthquakes, in which Poseidon seemed to declare his wrath. She was
          therefore disposed to peace, and she thought to bring peace about, as before,
          through the mediation of Persia. Antalcidas was once more sent up to the
          Persian court. But this intervention from without was not really needed.
          Athens, uneasy under the burdens of the war and feeling rather jealousy of Thebes
          than bitterness against Sparta, was also well inclined to peace, and the
          influential orator Callistratus made it the object of his policy. The recent
          aggressions of Thebes against the Phocians, who were old allies of Athens,
          tended to estrange the two cities; and to this was added the treatment of that
          unfortunate little mountain burg, Plataea, by her Theban enemies. Restored
          Plataea had perforce been enrolled in the Boeotian confederacy, but she was
          secretly scheming for annexation to Attica. Suspecting these plots, Thebes
          determined to forestall them, and a small Theban force, surprising the town one
          day when the men were in the fields, took possession of it and drove all the
          Plataeans forth from Plataean soil. Many of the
          people, thus bereft of land and city, found a refuge at Athens; where the
          publicist Isocrates took up their cause and wrote his Plataeic Discourse, a denunciation of Thebes. This incident definitely,
          though not formally, loosened the bonds between the two northern powers.
   The overtures came from Athens and her Confederacy.
          When the Lacedaemonian allies met at Sparta in spring, three Athenian envoys
          appeared at the congress. Of these the chief spokesman was Callistratus, and
          one of his associates was Callias, Torchbearer of the Eleusinian Mysteries, who
          had also worked to bring about the abortive peace three years before. Thebes
          likewise sent ambassadors, one of whom was Epaminondas. The basis of the peace
          which was now concluded was the principle which had been affirmed by the King’s
          Peace, the principle of the autonomy of every Hellenic city. The Athenian and
          Lacedaemonian Confederacies were thus both rendered invalid. No compulsion
          could be exercised on any city to fulfil engagements as member of a league.
          Cities might co-operate with each other freely so far as they chose, but no
          obligation could be contracted or enforced. Yet while Athens and Sparta
          resigned empire, they mutually agreed to recognise each other’s predominance, that of Athens by sea, that of Sparta on land—a
          predominance which must never be asserted by aggression and must always be
          consistent with the universal autonomy.
   The question immediately arose whether the Boeotian
          League was condemned by this doctrine of universal autonomy. Sparta and Athens,
          of course, intended to condemn it. But it might be pleaded that the Confederacy
          of Boeotian cities under the presidency of Thebes was not on the same footing
          as the Confederacies which had been formed, for temporary political purposes,
          without any historical or geographical basis of union, under the presidencies
          of Athens and Sparta. It might be contended that Boeotia was a geographical
          unity, like Attica and Laconia, and had a title to political unity too,
          especially as the League was an ancient institution. The question came to the
          issue when it was the turn of Thebes to take the oath. Her representative
          Epaminondas claimed to take it on behalf of the Boeotian cities; and Thebes,
          represented by him, was not so easily cowed as when she made the same claim at
          the conclusion of the King’s Peace. He seems to have developed the view that
          Boeotia was to be compared to Laconia, not to the Lacedaemonian Confederacy;
          and when Agesilaus asked him, curtly and angrily: “Will you leave each of the
          Boeotian towns independent?” he retorted: “Will you leave each of the Laconian
          towns independent?” The name of Thebes was thereupon struck out of the treaty.
               There was an argument as well as a sting in this
          retort of Epaminondas. The argument was: Sparta has no more right to interfere
          in the internal affairs of Boeotia than we have to interfere in the domestic
          administration of Laconia; Laconia, Boeotia, Attica, each represents a distinct
          kind of constitution, and each constitution is justified; the union of Boeotia
          in a federation is as natural as the union of Attica in a single city, as
          legitimate as the union of Laconia in its subjection to the Spartan oligarchy.
          The union of Boeotia, like the union of Laconia, could not have been realised and could not be maintained without the
          perpetration of outrages upon the freewill of some communities. Yet it is
          hardly legitimate for one state to say to another: “We have committed certain
          acts of violence, but you must not interfere  for at a remote period of history which none of us remember, your
          ancestors used even more high-handed methods for similar purposes, and you now
          maintain what they established.” But the tyrannical method by which Laconia was
          governed was certainly a weak point in the Spartan armour;
          and the reply of Epaminondas may have well set Greece thinking over a question
          of political science. Setting aside the arguments of diplomacy, the point of
          the situation was this: Thebes could never become a strong power, the rival of
          Sparta or of Athens, except at the head of an united Boeotia, and it was the
          interest of Athens and Sparta to hinder her from becoming such a power.
   So far as the two chief contracting parties were
          concerned, this bargain—which is often called the “Peace of Callias”—put an end
          to a war which was contrary to the best interests of both. They were both
          partly to blame, but Sparta was far more to blame than her old rival. Her
          witless policy in overlooking the raid of Sphodrias had caused the war; for it left to Athens no alternative but hostility. At the
          end of four years, they seemed to have come to their senses; they made peace,
          but they were stupid enough to allow the incident of Zacynthus to annul the bargain. Three more years of fighting were required to restore
          their wits. But, although Athens was financially exhausted by her military
          efforts, the war had brought its compensations to her. The victory of Naxos,
          the circumnavigation of the Peloponnesus and revival of her influence in
          Western Greece, were achievements which indisputably proved that Athens was
          once more a first-rate Hellenic power, the peer of Sparta; and this fact was
          fully acknowledged in the Peace of Callias. But the true policy of Athens—from
          which the raid of Sphodrias had forced her—was that
          of a watchful spectator; and this policy she now resumes, though only for a
          brief space, leaving Sparta and Thebes in the arena. As for Sparta, she had
          lost as much as Athens had gained; the defeat of Naxos, the defeat of Tegyra, the failure at Corcyra, had dimmed her prestige.
          After the King’s Peace, she had begun her second attempt to dominate Greece ;
          her failure is confessed by the Peace of Callias. If a third attempt was to be
          successful, it was obvious that it must begin by the subjugation of Thebes.
   
           Sect. 5. Athens
          under the Restored Democracy
                 
           When Pericles declared that Athens was the school of
          Greece, this was rather his ideal of what she should be than a statement of a
          reality. It would have surprised him to learn that, when imperial Athens fell
          from her throne, his ideal would be fulfilled. This was what actually happened.
          It was not until Athens lost her empire that she began to exert a great
          decisive influence on Greek thought and civilisation.
          This influence was partly exerted by the establishment of schools in the
          strict sense—the literary school of Isocrates and the philosophical school of
          Plato—which attracted to Athens men from all quarters of the Hellenic world.
          But the increase in the intellectual influence of Athens was largely owing to
          the fact that she was becoming herself more receptive of influence from
          without. She was becoming Hellenic as well as Athenian; she was beginning to
          become even something more than Hellenic. This tendency towards cosmopolitanism
          had been promoted by philosophical speculation, which rises above national
          distinctions; and it is manifested variously in the pan-Hellenism of Isocrates,
          in the attitude of such different men as Plato and Xenophon towards Athens, in
          the increasing number of foreign religious worships established at Athens or
          Piraeus, in a general decline of local patriotism, and in many other ways.
          There was perhaps no institution which had a wider influence in educating Greek
          thought in the fourth century than the theatre; its importance in city life was recognised by practical statesmen. It was therefore a
          matter of the utmost moment that the old Athenian comedy, turning mainly on
          local politics, ceased to be written, and a new school of comic poets arose who
          dealt with subjects of general human interest. Here Athens had a most effectual
          instrument for spreading ideas. And the tragedies of the fourth century, though
          as literature they were of less note and consequence than the comedies, were
          not less significant of the spirit of the time. They were all dominated by the
          influence of Euripides, the great teacher of rationalism, the daring critic of
          all established institutions and beliefs. And the comic poets were also under
          his spell.
   It can easily be seen that the cultivation of these
          wider sympathies was connected with the growth of what is commonly called
          “individualism.” By this it is meant that the individual citizen no longer
          looks at the outside world through the medium of his city, but regards it
          directly, as it were, with his own eyes and in its bearings on him
          individually. He is no longer content to express his religious feelings, simply
          as one member of the state, in the common usages of the state religion, but
          seeks to enter into an immediate personal relation with the supernatural world.
          And since his own life has thus become for him something independent of the
          city, his attitude to the city itself is transformed. The citizen of Athens has
          become a citizen of the world. His duty to his country may conflict with his
          duty to himself as a man; and thus patriotism ceases to be unconditionally the
          highest virtue. Again, men begin to put to themselves, more or less explicitly,
          the question, whether the state is not made for the individual and not the
          individual for the state,— a complete reversal of the old unquestioning
          submission to the authority of the social organism. It followed that greater
          demands were made upon the state by the citizen for his own private welfare;
          and that the citizen, feeling himself tied by no indissoluble bond to his
          country, was readier than formerly to seek his fortune elsewhere. Thus we find,
          in the single field of military service, Athenian officers acting independently
          of their country, in the pay of foreign powers, whenever it suited them—Conon,
          Xenophon, Iphicrates, Chabrias, and others.
   A vivid exaggerated description of this spirit has
          been drawn by Plato in one of his famous contributions to political science,
          the Republic. “The horses and asses,”
          he says,  have a way of marching along
          with all the rights and dignities of freemen; and they will run at anybody whom
          they meet in the street if he does not leave the road clear for them: and all
          things are just ready to burst with liberty.” When he describes the excessive
          freedom of democracy, he is dealing with the growth of individualism, as a
          result of freedom in its constitutional sense; but his argument that
          individualism is the fatal fruit of a democratic constitution rests largely on
          the double sense of the word “freedom.” The notable thing is that no man did
          more to promote the tendencies which are here deplored by Plato than Plato
          himself and his fellow philosophers. If any single man could be held
          responsible for the inevitable growth of individualism, it would be perhaps
          Euripides; but assuredly, next to Euripides, it would be Plato’s revered
          master, Socrates, the son of Sophroniscus.
   When the history of Greece was being directed by
          Pericles and, Cleon, Nicias and Lysander, men little dreamed either at Athens
          or elsewhere that the interests of the world were far more deeply concerned in
          the doings of one eccentric Athenian who held aloof from public affairs. The
          work of Pericles and Lysander affected a few generations in a small portion of
          the globe; but the spirit of that eccentric Athenian was to lay an impress,
          indelible for ever, upon the thought of mankind. The ideas which we owe to
          Socrates are now so organically a part of the mind of civilised men, so familiar and commonplace, that it is hard to appreciate the
          intellectual power which was required to originate them. Socrates was the first
          champion of the supremacy of the intellect as a court from which there is no
          appeal; he was the first to insist, without modification or compromise, that a
          man must order his life by the guidance of his own intellect, without any
          regard for mandates of external authority or for the impulses of emotion,
          unless his intellect approves. Socrates was thus a rebel against authority as
          such; and he shrank from no consequences. He did not hesitate to show his
          companions that an old man has no title to respect because he is old, unless he
          is also wise; or that an ignorant parent has no claim to obedience on the mere
          account of the parental relation. Knowledge and veracity, the absolute
          sovereignty of the understanding, regardless of consequences, regardless of all
          prejudices connected with family or city—this was the ideal of Socrates,
          consistently and uncompromisingly followed.
   But men using their intellects often come to different
          conclusions. The command issued by an authority which Socrates may reject has
          been, directly or ultimately, the result of some mental process. It is manifest
          that we require a standard of truth and an explanation of the causes of error.
          The solution of Socrates is, briefly, this. When we make a judgment, we compare
          two ideas ; and in order to do so correctly it is obvious that these ideas must
          be clear and distinct; error arises from comparing ideas that are undefined and
          vague. Definition was thus the essential point—and it was an essential
          novelty—in the Socratic method for arriving at truth. Its necessity is a
          commonplace now; and we have rather to guard against its dangers. The
          application of this method to ethics was the chief occupation of Socrates, for
          the interests of human life and its perplexities entirely absorbed him. In the
          history of ethics his position is supreme; he was the founder of
          utilitarianism. He arrived at the doctrine by analysing the notion of “good”; the result of his analysis was that “the good is the
          useful.” Closely connected was the principle that virtue is happiness, and this
          was the basis of the famous Socratic paradox that no man willingly does wrong,
          but only through ignorance, for there is no man who would not will his own
          happiness. It is easy to point out the errors of this startling statement; it
          is perhaps easier to forget how much wrong-doing is due to the confused
          thinking of clouded brains and the ignorance of untrained minds.
   The man who had no respect for authority was not
          likely to except the gods from the range of his criticism; and the popular
          religion could not sustain examination. Socrates was as little orthodox as
          Anaxagoras and other “impious” philosophers; but he made no new departure in
          the field of theology. He doubtless believed in the existence of a God; but as
          to the nature of the divine principle he was probably what we call an
          “agnostic,” as he certainly was in regard to the immortality of the soul.
               Socrates then was the originator of a new logical
          method, the founder of utilitarianism, and, above all, the unsparing critic of
          all things in heaven and earth—or rather on earth only, for he disdained things
          in heaven as uninteresting and irrelevant,—a fearless critic, undeterred by any
          feeling of piety or prejudice. He never wrote anything, he only conversed. But
          he conversed with the ablest young men of the day who were destined afterwards
          to become immortal themselves as thinkers; he communicated to them—to Plato, to
          Aristippus, to Euclides—his own spirit of scepticism and criticism; he imbued them with intellectual courage and intellectual
          freedom. He never preached, he only discussed; that was the Socratic
          method—dialectic or the conversational method. He did not teach, for he
          professed to have no knowledge; he would only confess that he was exceptional
          in knowing that he knew nothing: this was the Socratic irony. He went about
          showing that most popular notions, as soon as they are tested, prove to be inconsistent
          and untenabl ; he wished to convince every man he met
          that his convictions would not stand examination. We can easily conceive how
          stimulating this was to the young men, and how extremely irritating to the old.
          Haunting the market-places and the gymnasia Socrates was always ready to entrap
          men of all ages and ranks into argument, and many a grudge was owed him by
          reverend and conceited seniors, whose foggy minds he exposed to ridicule by
          means of his prudent interrogations. Though no man ever taught more effectually
          than Socrates, he was not a teacher, he had no course of lectures to give, and
          therefore he took no fee. Herein lay his distinction from the sophists, to whom
          by his speculation, his scepticism, his mastery of
          argument, his influence over young men, he naturally belongs, and with whom he
          was generally classed. He soon became a notorious figure in the streets of
          Athens; nature had marked him out among other men by his grotesque satyr-like
          face.
   Though he was the child of democracy, born to a
          heritage of freedom in a city where the right of free discussion was
          unrestrained, the sacred name of democracy was not more sheltered than anything
          else from the criticism of Socrates. He railed, for instance, at the system of
          choosing magistrates by lot, one of the protections of democracy at Athens. He
          was unpopular with the mass, for he was an enemy of shams and ignorance and
          superstition. Honest democrats of the type of Thrasybulus and Anytus, who did
          their duty but had no desire to probe its foundations, regarded him as a
          dangerous freethinker who spent his life in diffusing ideas subversive of the
          social order. They might point to the ablest of the young men who had kept
          company with him, and say: “Behold the fruits of his conversation! Look at
          Alcibiades, his favourite companion, who has done
          more than any other man to ruin his country. Look at Critias,
          who, next to Alcibiades, has wrought the deepest harm to Athens; who, brought
          up in the Socratic circle, first wrote a book against democracy, then visited
          Thessaly and stirred up the serfs against their masters, and finally, returning
          here, inaugurated the reign of terror. Look, on the other hand, at Plato, an
          able young man, whom the taste for idle speculation, infused by Socrates, has
          seduced from the service of his country. Or look at Xenophon, who, instead of
          serving Athens, has gone to serve her enemies. Truly Socrates and his
          propaganda have done little good to the Athenian state.” However unjust any
          particular instance might seem, it is easy to understand how considerations of
          this kind would lead many practical unspeculative men to look upon Socrates and
          his ways with little favour. And from their point of
          view, they were perfectly right. His spirit, and the ideas that he made
          current, were an insidious menace to the cohesion of the social fabric, in
          which there was not a stone or a joint that he did not question. In other
          words, he was the active apostle of individualism, which led in its further development
          to the subversion of that local patriotism which had inspired the cities of
          Greece in her days of greatness.
   And this thinker, whose talk was shaking the Greek
          world in its foundations, though none guessed it, was singled out by the
          Delphic Priesthood for a distinguished mark of approbation. In the truest
          oracle that was ever uttered from the Pythian tripod, it was declared that no
          one in the world was wiser than Socrates. We know not at what period of the
          philosopher’s career this answer was given, but, if it was seriously meant, it
          showed a strange insight which we should hardly have looked for at the shrine
          of Delphi. The Delphic priesthood were skilful enough
          in adjusting their policy to the changing course of events; but they cannot be
          suspected of brooding over the mysteries of things to come, or feeling the
          deeper pulsations of the thoughts of men. The motive of the oracle concerning
          the wisdom of Socrates is an unsolved problem. If it were an attempt to enlist
          his support, in days when religion was threatened by such men as Anaxagoras, it
          shows an unexpected perception of his importance, united with a by no means
          surprising blindness to the significance of his work.
   Socrates died five years after the fall of the
          Athenian empire, and the manner of his death set a seal upon his life. Anytus,
          the honest democratic politician who had been prominent in the restoration of
          the democracy, came forward, with some others, as a champion of the state
          religion, and accused Socrates of impiety. The accusation ran: “Socrates is
          guilty of crime, because he does not believe in the gods recognised by the city, but introduces strange supernatural beings; he is also guilty,
          because he corrupts the youth.” The penalty proposed was death; but the
          accusers had no desire to inflict it; they expected that, when the charge was
          lodged in the archon’s office, Socrates would leave Attica, and no one would
          have hindered him from doing so. But Socrates was full of days—he had reached
          the age of seventy—and life spent otherwise than in conversing in the streets
          of Athens would have been worthless to him. He surprised the city by remaining
          to answer the charge. The trial was heard in a court of 501 judges, the
          king-archon presiding, and the old philosopher was found guilty by a majority
          of sixty. It was a small majority, considering that the general truth of the
          accusation was undeniable. According to the practice of Athenian law, it was
          open to a defendant when he was condemned to propose a lighter punishment than
          that fixed by the accuser, and the judges were required to choose one of the
          two sentences. Socrates might have saved his life if he had proposed an
          adequate penalty, but he offered only a small fine, and was consequently
          condemned, by a much larger majority, to death. He drank the cup of doom a
          month later, discoursing with his disciples as eagerly as ever till his last
          hour.
   The actual reply of Socrates at his trial has not been
          preserved, but we know its tone and spirit and much of its tenor. For it
          supplied  his companion Plato, who was
          present, with the material of a work which stands absolutely alone in
          literature. In the Apology of Socrates,
          Plato has succeeded in catching the personality of the master and conveying its
          stimulus to his readers. There can be no question that this work reproduces the
          general outline of the actual defence, which is here
          wrought into an artistic form. And we see how utterly impossible it was for
          Socrates to answer the accusation. He enters into an explanation of his life
          and motives, and has no difficulty in showing that many things popularly
          alleged against him are false. But with the actual charge of holding and
          diffusing Socrates heterodox views he deals briefly and unsatisfactorily. He
          was not condemned unjustly—according to the law. And that is the intensity of
          the tragedy. There have been no better men than Socrates; and yet his accusers
          were perfectly right. It is not clear why their manifesto for orthodoxy was
          made at that particular time; but it is probable that twenty years later such
          an action would have been a failure. Perhaps the facts of the trial justify us
          in the rough conclusion that two out of every five Athenian citizens then were
          religiously indifferent. In any case the event had a wider than a merely
          religious significance. The execution of Socrates was the protest of the spirit
          of the old order against the growth of individualism.
   Seldom in the course of history have violent blows of
          this kind failed to recoil upon the striker and serve the cause they were meant
          to harm. Socrates was remembered at Athens with pride and regret. His spirit
          began to exercise an influence which the tragedy of his death enhanced. His
          companions never forgave the democracy for putting their master to death; he
          lived and grew in the study of their imaginations; and they spent their lives
          in carrying on his work.
               They carried forward his work, but they knew not what
          they were doing. They had no suspicion that in pursuing those speculations to
          which they were stimulated by the Socratic method they were sapping the roots
          of Greek city life as it was known to the men who fought at Marathon. Plato was
          a true child of Socrates, and yet he was vehement in condemning that
          individualism which it had been the lifework of Socrates to foster. Few sights
          are stranger than Plato and Xenophon turning their eyes away from their own
          free country to regard with admiration the constitution of Sparta, where their
          beloved master would not have been suffered so much as to open his mouth. It
          was a triumph indeed for the Lacedaemonians when their constitution, which the
          Athenians of the age of Pericles regarded as old-fashioned machinery, was
          selected by the greatest thinker of Athens as the nearest existing approach to
          the ideal. Indeed the Spartan organisation, at the
          very time when Sparta was making herself detested throughout Greece, seems to
          have attracted general admiration from political thinkers. It attracted them
          because the old order survived there,—the citizen absolutely submissive to the
          authority of the state, and not looking beyond it. Elsewhere they were troubled
          by the problem of reconciling the authority of the state with the liberty of
          the individual citizen; at Sparta there was no such trouble, for the state was
          absolute. Accordingly they saw in Sparta the image of what a state should be;
          just because it was relatively free from that individualism which they were
          themselves actively promoting by their speculations in political philosophy.
          How freely such speculations ranged at this time is illustrated by the fact
          that the fundamental institution of ancient society, slavery, was called in
          question. It had indeed been called in question by Euripides, and the heterodox
          “modern” views of Euripides were coming into fashion. One thinker expounded the
          doctrine that slavery was unnatural. Speculation even went so far as to stir the
          question of the political subjection of women. The Parliament of Women, a comedy of Aristophanes, ridicules
          women’s rights; and in Plato’s ideal Republic women are on a political equality with men. Socialistic theories were also
          rife, and were a mark for the mockery of Aristophanes in the same play. Plato
          seized upon the notion of communism and made it one of the principles of his
          ideal state. But his object was not that of the ordinary “collectivist,” to
          promote the material well-being of all; but rather to make his citizens better,
          by defending them against poverty and ambition. Before he died, Plato had come
          to the conviction that communism was impracticable, and in the state which he
          adumbrated in his old age he recognised private
          property—though he vested the ownership not in the individual but in the
          family.
   In this period—during the fifty years after the battle
          of Aegospotami—the art of writing prose was brought to perfection at Athens;
          and this is closely connected with the characteristic tendency which has
          engaged our attention. While Socrates and others had been bringing about a
          revolution in thought, the Sicilian Gorgias and other professors of rhetoric or
          style had been preparing an efficient vehicle for diffusing ideas. Prose is the
          natural instrument of criticism and argument; it is a necessary weapon for
          intellectual persuasion; and therefore the fourth century is an age of prose.
          The circumstance that the great Athenian poets of the fifth century had no
          successors in the fourth does not prove any decline in brains or in
          imagination. If Plato had been born half a century earlier he would have been a
          rival of Aeschylus and Sophocles. If Aeschylus and Sophocles had been born two
          or three generations later they would have expressed their, genius in prose.
          Euripides, who has come under the influence of the critical spirit, seems
          sometimes like a man belated; he uses the old vehicle to convey thoughts for
          which it was hardly suited. It must always be remembered that the great
          dramatic poems of the fifth century bore an inalienable religious character;
          and, as soon as the day came when the men of the highest literary faculty were
          no longer in touch with the received religion, drama of the old kind ceased to
          be written. That is why the fourth century is an age of prose; tragic poetry
          owes its death to Euripides and the Socratic spirit. The eager individualism of
          the age found its natural expression in prose, whose rhythmical periods
          demanded almost as much care and art as poetry; and the plastic nature of the
          Greek language rendered it a most facile instrument for the purposes of free
          thought and criticism.
               Thus Athens became really a school for Greece, as soon
          as that individualism prevailed which Pericles had unwittingly foreshadowed in
          the very same breath: “I say that Athens is the school of Hellas, and that the
          individual Athenian in his own person seems to have the power of adapting
          himself to the most varied forms of action with the utmost versatility and
          grace.”[
               It must never be forgotten that it is to the
          democratic Athenian law-courts that the perfecting of Attic prose was mainly
          due. This institution had, as we saw, called into being a class of professional
          speech-writers. But there were many who were not content with learning off, and
          reciting in court, speeches which a speech-writer like Lysias wrote for them,
          but wished to learn themselves the art of speaking. For those who aspired to
          make their mark in debates in the Assembly, this was a necessity. The most illustrious
          instructor in oratory at this period was Isocrates. But the school of Isocrates
          had a far wider scope and higher aim than to teach the construction of
          sentences or the arrangement of topics in a speech. It was a general school of
          culture, a discipline intended to fit for public life. Questions of political
          science were studied, and Isocrates likes to describe his course of studies as
          “philosophy.” But it was to Plato’s school in the Academy that the youths of
          the day went to study “philosophy” in the stricter sense. The discipline of
          these two rival schools—for there was rivalry between them, though their aims
          were different—was what corresponded at Athens to our university education.
          And the pupils of Isocrates, as well as those of Plato, had to work hard. For
          thoroughness of method was one of the distinctive characteristics of Isocrates.
          His school attained a panHellenic reputation; pupils
          came to him from all quarters of the world. “Our city,” he says, “is regarded
          as the established teacher of all who speak or teach others to speak. And
          naturally so, since men see that our city offers the greatest prizes to those
          who possess this faculty—provides the most numerous and various schools for
          those who having resolved to enter the real contests desire a preparatory
          discipline—and further affords to all men that experience which is the main
          secret of success in speaking.” The tone of the teaching of Isocrates harmonised with the national position which he held. He
          took a large view of all things; there was nothing narrow or local in his
          opinions. And not less important than the width of his horizon was the high
          moral tone in which his thoughts were consistently pitched. Isocrates
          discharged not only the duties which are in modem times discharged by
          university teachers, but also the functions of a journalist of the best kind.
          Naturally nervous and endowed with a poor voice, he did not speak in the
          Assembly, but when any great question moved him he would issue a pamphlet, in
          the form of a speech, for the purpose of influencing public opinion. We may
          suspect that the Athenians appreciated these publications more for their
          inimitable excellence of style than for their political wisdom.
   A highly remarkable passage of Isocrates expresses and
          applauds the wide-minded cosmopolitanism which was beginning to prevail in
          Greece. He says that “Athens has so distanced the rest of the world in power of
          thought and speech that her disciples have become the teachers of all other
          men. She has brought it to pass that the name of Greek should be thought no
          longer a matter of race but a matter of intelligence ; and should be given to
          the participators in our culture rather than to the sharers of our common
          origin.” Thirty or forty years earlier, no one perhaps, except Euripides, would
          have been bold enough to speak like that. But Isocrates did not see that this
          enlightenment which he admires was closely connected with the decay of public
          spirit which he elsewhere deplores. It is curious to find the man who approves
          of citizenship of the world looking back with regret to the days of Solon and
          proposing to revive the old powers of censorship which the court of the
          Areopagus possessed over the lives of Athenian citizens.
               The form and features of an age are wont to be
          mirrored in its art; and one effective means of winning a concrete notion of
          the spirit of the fourth century is to study the works of Praxiteles and
          compare them with the sculptures which issued from the workshop of Phidias.
          Just as the citizen was beginning to assert his own individuality as more than
          a mere item in the state, so the plastic artist was emancipating his art from
          its intimate connexion with the temples of the gods,
          and its subordination to architecture. For in the fifth century, apart from a
          few colossal statues like those which Phidias wrought for Athens and Olympia,
          the finest works of the sculptor's chisel were to decorate frieze or pediment.
          In the fourth century the architect indeed still required the sculptor’s
          service; Scopas, for instance, was called upon in his youth to decorate the
          temple of Athena Aiea at Tegea, in his later years to make a frieze for the
          tomb of a Carian prince; but, in general, the sculptor developed his art more
          independently of architecture, and all the great works of Praxiteles were
          complete in themselves and independent. And, as sculpture was emancipating
          itself from the old subordination to architecture, so it also emancipated
          itself from the religious ideal. In the age of Phidias, the artist who
          fashioned a god sought to express in human shape the majesty and immutability
          of a divine being; and this ideal had been perfectly achieved. In the fourth
          century the deities lose their majesty and changelessness; they are conceived
          as physically perfect men and women, with human feelings though without human
          sorrows; they are invested with human personalities. The contrast may be seen
          by looking at the group of gods in the frieze of the Parthenon, and then at
          some of the works of Praxiteles: the Hermes, which was set up in the temple of
          Hera at Olympia, and is preserved there  the Aphrodite of Cnidus—a woman shrinking from revealing her beauty as
          she enters the bath; or the Satyr, with the shape of a man and the mind of a beast.
          Thus sculpture is marked by “individualism” in a double sense. Each artist is
          freer to work out an individual path of his own; and the tendency of all
          artists is to pourtray the individual man or woman
          rather than the type, and even the individual phase of emotion rather than the
          character.
   The general spirit of the Athenians in their political
          life corresponds to this change. Men came more and more to regard the state as
          a means for administering to the needs of the individual. We might almost say
          that they conceived it as a co-operative society for making profits to be
          divided among the members; this at least was the tendency of public opinion.
          They were consequently more disinclined to enter upon foreign undertakings
          which were not either necessary for the protection and promotion of their commerce
          or likely to fill their purses. The fourth century was therefore for Athens an
          age of less ambition and glory, but of greater happiness and freedom, than the
          fifth.
               The decisive circumstance for Athens was that, while
          she lost her empire, she did not lose her commerce. This was a cruel blow to
          Corinth, since it was to destroy Athenian trade that Corinth had brought about
          the war. The fact shows on how firm foundations Athenian commerce rested. The
          only rival Athens had to fear was Rhodes, which was becoming a centre of traffic in the south-eastern Mediterranean, but
          was not destined to interfere seriously with Athenian trade for a long time
          yet. The population of Attica had declined; plague and war reduced the number
          of adult male citizens from at least 35,000 to 21,000. But that was not
          unfortunate, for there were no longer outsettlements to receive the surplus of the population; and even with the diminished numbers
          there was a surplus which sought employment in foreign mercenary service. The
          mercantile development of Athens is shown by the increase of the Piraeus at the
          expense of the city, in which many plots of ground now became deserted, and by
          the growth of private banks. It had long been a practice to deposit money in
          temples, and the priesthoods used to lend money on interest. This suggested to
          money-changers the idea of doing likewise; and Pasion founded a famous house at
          Athens, which operated with a capital of fifty talents, and had credit at all
          Greek centres of commerce. Thus business could be
          transacted by exchanging letters of credit instead of paying in coin; and the
          introduction of this system, even on such a small scale, shows the growth of
          mercantile activity. Money was now much more plentiful, and prices far higher,
          than before. This was due to the large amount of the precious metals, chiefly
          gold, which had been brought into circulation in the Greek world in the last
          quarter of the fifth century. The continuous war led to the coining of the
          treasures which had been accumulating for many years in temples ; and the
          banking system circulated the money which would otherwise have been hoarded in
          private houses. But, although the precious metals became plentiful, the rate of
          interest did not fall; men could still get 12 per cent for a loan of their
          money. This fact is highly significant; it shows clearly that industries were
          more thriving and trade more active, and consequently capital in greater
          demand. The high rate of interest must always be remembered when we read of a
          Greek described as wealthy with a capital which would nowadays seem small. Thus
          a fortune of 50 talents, little more than 10,000 English pounds, would yield an
          income of nearly £1500; and that sum had an enormously greater purchasing power
          than the equivalent weight of gold today. Such incomes were extremely rare.
   Communistic ideas were a consequence, perhaps
          inevitable, of the growth of individualism and the growth of capital. The
          poorer burghers became more and more acutely alive to the inconsistency between
          the political equality of all citizens and the social and economical advantages
          enjoyed by the rich. Political equality seemed to point to social equality as
          its logical sequel; in fact, full and equal political equality could not be
          secured without social equality also, since the advantages of wealth necessarily
          involve superiorities in political influence. Thus, just as in modern Europe,
          so in ancient Greece, capital and democracy produced socialists, who pleaded
          for a levelling of classes by means of a distribution of property by the state.
          Aristophanes mocked these speculations in his Parliament of Women and his Wealth.
          The idea of communism which Plato develops on lines of his own in the Republic was not an original notion of
          the philosopher’s brain, but was suggested by the current communistic theories
          of the day. It is well worthy of consideration that the Athenians did not take
          the step from political to social democracy; and this discretion may have been
          partly due to the policy of those statesmen who, doubtless conscious of the
          danger, regarded the theoric fund as an indispensable
          institution.
   The changed attitude of the individual to the state is
          shown by the introduction of a fixed remuneration of half a drachma to Athenian
          citizens for attending the meetings of the Assembly; and the rise in prices is
          illustrated by the subsequent increase of this remuneration. For the regular
          sessions, in which the proceedings were unattractive, the pay was raised to a
          drachma and a half; for the other meetings, which were more exciting, it was
          fixed at a drachma. The remuneration for serving in the law-courts was not
          increased; it was found that half a drachma was sufficient to draw applicants
          for the judge’s ticket. Payment for the discharge of political duties was part
          of the necessary machinery of the democracy, but the distribution of
          “spectacle-money” to the poor citizens was a luxury which involved an entirely
          different principle. It is uncertain when the practice of giving the price of
          his theatre ticket to the poor Athenian was first introduced; it has been
          attributed to Pericles, but it is possible that it was not introduced till
          Athens began to recover after the fall of her empire. In any case, the
          principle became established in the fourth century of distributing “theoric ” moneys, which were supposed to be spent on
          religious festivals; the citizens came to look forward to frequent and large
          distributions; the surplus revenue of the state, instead of being saved for
          emergencies, was placed in the theoric fund; and this theoric fund became so important that it ultimately
          required a special minister of finance to manage it. Those statesmen under
          whose guidance the theoric doles were most liberal
          had naturally the greatest influence with the mass of the citizens; and
          consequently finance acquired a new importance, and financial ability was
          developed in a very high degree. The state thus assumed the character of a
          commercial society; dividends were a political necessity, and in order to meet
          it heavier taxation was demanded. We have seen how, when war broke with Sparta,
          in the year in which the Second Athenian Confederacy was formed, a property-tax
          was imposed, and the properties of the citizens were assessed anew for this
          purpose.
   Thus the state provided for the comfort of its poorer
          burghers at the expense of their wealthier fellows. It is, as it were, publicly recognised as a principle of political science that
          the end of the state is the comfort and pleasure of its individual members; and
          everything has to be made subordinate to this principle which is outwardly
          embodied in the theoric fund. This principle affected
          the foreign policy of Athens, as we have already observed. When she took the
          step of sending outsettlers to Samos and elsewhere,
          in defiance of the public opinion of Greece, her chief motive was doubtless
          pecuniary profit.
   Constitutionally, the restored Athenian democracy was
          a remarkable success. The difficulties which the democratic statesmen
          encountered after the overthrow of the Thirty had been treated with a wisdom
          and moderation which are in striking contrast with the violence and
          vengefulness shown in other Greek states at similar crises. Most democratic men
          of means had been robbed of property under the tyranny of the oligarchs, and
          the property had been sold. Were the purchasers to be compelled to restore it
          without compensation? Were all the acts of the Thirty to be declared illegal?
          Such a measure would have created a bitter and discontented party in the state.
          Some of the chief democratic leaders voluntarily resigned all claim to
          compensation for the property they had lost, and this example promoted a
          general inclination on both sides to concession and compromise. The wisdom and
          tact displayed in this matter were not the least of the services which
          Thrasybulus and his fellows conferred on their country. No oligarchical
          conspiracy endangered the domestic peace of Athens again; no citizen, if it
          were not a philosophical speculator, called the democracy in question.
               At this epoch the laws were revised, and the register
          of burghers was revised, but the constitution was left practically unaltered. A
          change, indeed, was made in the presidency of the Assembly, which had hitherto
          belonged to the prytaneis or board of Ten, selected every seven days from the presiding tribe in the
          Council. The close organic relation between the Council and Assembly rendered
          it needful that members of the Council should preside in the Assembly; but
          the presidency of the Assembly was now divorced from the presidency of the
          Council and invested in a body of nine, selected one from each of the nine
          tribes which were not presiding. This change was proobviously designed to form a check on the administration. The presiding tribe in the
          Council could no longer deal directly with the Assembly, but was obliged to
          present its measures to the people through an intermediate body, which belonged
          indeed to the Council but not to its own part of the Council. The year in which
          these reforms were probably made witnessed also the introduction of a new
          alphabet as the official script of the state. The old Attic alphabet, with its
          hard-worked vowels doing duty for more than one sound, was discontinued; and
          henceforward the stones which record the public acts archonship of the Athenian
          people are inscribed in the Ionic alphabet, with separate signs for the long
          and short e and o, and distinct symbols for the double consonants.
   It is plain that Athens needed, at this period, not
          men of genius or enthusiasm, but simply men of ability, for the conduct of her
          affairs. She had no great aims to achieve, no grave dangers to escape, which
          demanded a Pericles or a Themistocles; a man of genius would have found no
          scope in the politics of Athens for two generations after the fall of her
          empire. Men of great ability she had, men who were thoroughly adequate to the
          comparatively unambitious rôle which she had wisely
          imposed upon herself—Agyrrhius, Callistratus, and
          afterwards Eubulus. To us they are all shadowy figures. Agyrrhius inaugurated the profit-system which afterwards resulted in the institution of
          the theoric fund; and it was he who opposed and
          discredited the extreme anti-Spartan policy of the heroes of Phyle. His nephew
          Callistratus enjoyed a longer career and played a greater part in the affairs
          of Greece, conspicuous as the founder of the Second Confederacy, as the
          negotiator of the Peace of Callias, and then as the opponent of Epaminondas.
          His policy throughout was consistent and reasonable. He aimed at rendering
          Athens powerful enough to be independent of Sparta; he desired that Sparta and
          Athens should stand side by side as the two leading states in Greece; and he recognised that the neighbourhood of Attica to Boeotia necessarily laid upon Athens the policy of opposing the aggrandisement of Thebes.
   Agyrrhius and Callistratus might once and again fill the office of strategos ;
          but, like Cleon and Hyperbolus, they exercised their influence as recognised—practically, official—advisers of the Assembly
          The art of war became every year more and more an art, and little could be
          accomplished except by generals who devoted their life to the military
          profession. Such were Timotheus, the hero of Leucas; Chabrias,
          the victor of Naxos; and above all Iphicrates, whom we have met in so many
          places and in so many guises. Timotheus was a rich man  his father Conon had left him a fortune, and
          he could afford to serve his country and his country only. But Chabrias and Iphicrates enriched themselves by taking
          temporary service under foreign masters; Iphicrates even went so far as to
          Support the Thracian king, whose daughter he had wedded, against Athens. All
          these military men preferred to dwell elsewhere than at Athens. Abroad they
          could live in luxury and ostentation; while at Athens men lived simply and
          moderately, and public opinion was unfavourable to
          sumptuous establishments. The attitude of the generals to the city became much
          more independent when the citizens themselves ceased to serve abroad regularly,
          and hired mercenaries instead. The hiring of the troops and their organisation devolved upon the general, and he was often
          expected to provide the means for paying them too. Here we touch on a vice in
          the constitutional machine, which was the cause of frequent failures in the
          foreign enterprises of Athens during this period. No systematic provision was
          made that, when the people voted that a certain thing should be done, the
          adequate moneys at the same time should be voted. Any one might propose a
          decree, without responsibility for its execution; and at the next meeting of
          the Assembly the people might refuse to allow the necessary supplies, or no one
          might be ready to move the grant. In the same way, supplies might be cut off in
          the middle of a campaign. This defect had not made itself seriously felt in the
          fifth century, when the leading generals were always statesmen too, with
          influence in the Assembly; but it became serious when the generals were
          professional soldiers whom the statesmen employed. During the ten years after
          the Peace of Callias, Athens was actively engaged in a multitude of enterprises
          of foreign aggrandisement; but she achieved little,
          and the reason is that her armaments were hardly ever adequate. The
          difficulties of her financiers, who had always to keep a theoric reserve, must be taken into consideration.
           
           CHAPTER XIV.
              
        THE HEGEMONY OF THEBES
              
        
 
  | 
![]()  | 
      ![]()  | 
      ![]()  |