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      READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECE
 CHAPTER XCVII
                
          SICILIAN AND ITALIAN GREEKS—AGATHOCLES
                
          
             It has been convenient, throughout all this work, to
            keep the history of the Italian and Sicilian Greeks distinct from that of the
            Central and Asiatic. We parted last from the Sicilian Greeks, at the death of
            their champion the Corinthian Timoleon (337 B.C.), by whose energetic exploits,
            and generous political policy, they had been almost regenerated—rescued from
            foreign enemies, protected against intestine discord, and invigorated by a
            large reinforcement of new colonists. For the twenty years next succeeding the
            death of Timoleon, the history of Syracuse and Sicily is an absolute blank;
            which is deeply to be regretted, since the position of these cities included
            so much novelty—so many subjects for debate, for peremptory settlement, or for
            amicable compromise—that the annals of their proceedings must have been
            peculiarly interesting. Twenty years after the death of Timoleon, we find the government
            of Syracuse described as an oligarchy; implying that the constitution
            established by Timoleon must have been changed either by violence or by
            consent. The oligarchy is stated as consisting of 600 chief men, among whom
            Sosistratus and Herakleides appear as leaders. We hear generally that the
            Syracusans had been engaged in wars, and that Sosistratus either first originated,
            or first firmly established, his oligarchy, after an expedition undertaken to
            the coast of Italy, to assist the citizens of Croton against their interior
            neighbours and assailants the Bruttians.
             Not merely Croton, but other Grecian cities also on
            the coast of Italy, appear to have been exposed to causes of danger and
            decline, similar to those which were operating upon so many other portions of
            the Hellenic world. Their non-Hellenic neighbours in the interior were growing
            too powerful and too aggressive to leave them in peace or security. The Messapians, the Lucanians, the Bruttians,
            and other native Italian tribes, were acquiring that increased strength which
            became ultimately all concentrated under the mighty republic of Rome. I have in
            my preceding chapters recounted the acts of the two Syracusan despots, the
            elder and younger Dionysius, on this Italian coast. Though the elder gained
            some advantage over the Lucanians, yet the interference of both contributed
            only to enfeeble and humiliate the Italiot Greeks.
            Not long before the battle of Chaeronea (340-338), the Tarentines found
            themselves so hard pressed by the Messapians, that
            they sent to Sparta, their mother-city, to entreat assistance. The Spartan king
            Archidamus son of Agesilaus, perhaps ashamed of the nullity of his country
            since the close of the Sacred War, complied with their prayer, and sailed at
            the head of a mercenary force to Italy. How long his operations there lasted,
            we do not know; but they ended by his being defeated and killed, near the time
            of the battle of Chaeroneia (338 B.C.).
             About six years after this event, the Tarentines,
            being still pressed by the same formidable neighbours, invoked the aid of the
            Epirotic Alexander, king of the Molossians, and brother of Olympias. These Epirots now, during the general decline of Grecian force,
            rise into an importance which they had never before enjoyed. Philip of Macedon,
            having married Olympias, not only secured his brother-in-law on the Molossian
            throne, but strengthened his authority over subjects not habitually obedient.
            It was through Macedonian interference that the Molossian Alexander first
            obtained (though subject to Macedonian ascendency) the important city of Ambracia;
            which thus passed out of a free Hellenic community into the capital and seaport
            of the Epirotic kings. Alexander further cemented his union with Macedonia by
            marrying his own niece Kleopatra, daughter of Philip and Olympias. In fact,
            during the lives of Philip and Alexander the Great, the Epirotic kingdom
            appears a sort of adjunct to the Macedonian; governed by Olympias either
            jointly with her brother the Molossian Alexander—or as regent after his death.
             It was about the year after the battle of Issus that
            the Molossian Alexander undertook his expedition from Italy; doubtless
            instigated in part by emulation of the Asiatic glories of his nephew and
            namesake. Though he found enemies more formidable than the Persians at Issus,
            yet his success was at first considerable. He gained victories over the Messapians, the Lucanians, and the Samnites; he conquered
            the Lucanian town of Consentia, and the Bruttian town of Tereina; he
            established an alliance with the Poediculi, and
            exchanged friendly messages with the Romans. As far as we can make out from
            scanty data, he seems to have calculated on establishing a comprehensive
            dominion in the south of Italy, over all its population—over Greek cities,
            Lucanians, and Bruttians. He demanded and obtained
            three hundred of the chief Lucanian and Messapian families, whom he sent over
            as hostages to Epirus. Several exiles of these nations joined him as partisans.
            He further endeavoured to transfer the congress of the Greco-Italian cities,
            which had been usually held at the Tarentine colony of Herakleia, to Thurii;
            intending probably to procure for himself a compliant synod like that serving
            the purpose of his Macedonian nephew at Corinth. But the tide of his fortune at
            length turned. The Tarentines became disgusted and alarmed; his Lucanian
            partisans proved faithless; the stormy weather in the Calabrian Apennines broke
            up the communication between his different detachments, and exposed them to be
            cut off in detail. He himself perished, by the hands of a Lucanian exile, in
            crossing the river Acheron, and near the town of Pandosia.
            This was held to be a memorable attestation of the prophetic veracity of the
            oracle; since he had received advice from Dodona to beware of Pandosia and Acheron; two names which he well knew, and
            therefore avoided, in Epirus—but which he had not before known to exist in
            Italy.
             The Greco-Italian cities had thus dwindled down into a
            prize to be contended for between the Epirotic kings and the native Italian
            powers—as they again became, still more conspicuously, fifty years afterwards,
            during the war between Pyrrhus and the Romans. They were now left to seek
            foreign aid, where they could obtain it, and to become the prey of adventurers.
            It is in this capacity that we hear of them as receiving assistance from
            Syracuse, and that the formidable name of Agathocles first comes before us—seemingly
            about 320 B.C. The Syracusan force, sent to Italy to assist the Krotoniates against their enemies the Bruttians,
            was commanded by a general named Antander, whose brother Agathocles served with
            him in a subordinate command.
             To pass over the birth and childhood of Agathocles—respecting
            which romantic anecdotes are told, as about most eminent men—it appears that
            his father, a Rhegine exile named Karkinus,
            came from Therma (in the Carthaginian portion of Sicily) to settle at Syracuse,
            at the time when Timoleon invited and received new Grecian settlers to the
            citizenship of the latter city. Karkinus was in
            comparative poverty, following the trade of a potter ; which his son Agathocles
            learnt also, being about eighteen years of age when domiciliated with his
            father at Syracuse. Though starting from this humble beginning, and even
            notorious for the profligacy and rapacity of his youthful habits, Agathocles
            soon attained a conspicuous position, partly from his own superior personal
            qualities, partly from the favour of a wealthy Syracusan named Damas. The young
            potter was handsome, tall, and of gigantic strength; he performed with
            distinction the military service required from him as a citizen, wearing a
            panoply so heavy, that no other soldier could fight with it; he was moreover
            ready, audacious, and emphatic in public harangue. Damas became much attached
            to him, and not only supplied him profusely with money, but also, when placed
            in command of a Syracusan army against the Agrigentines, nominated him one of
            the subordinate officers. In this capacity Agathocles acquired great reputation
            for courage in battle, ability in command, and fluency of speech. Presently
            Damas died of sickness, leaving a widow without children. Agathocles married
            the widow, and thus raised himself to a high fortune and position in Syracuse.
             Of the oligarchy which now prevailed at Syracuse, we
            have no particulars, nor do we know how it had come to be substituted for the
            more popular forms established by Timoleon. We hear only generally that the
            oligarchical leaders, Sosistratus and Herakleides, were unprincipled and
            sanguinary men. By this government an expedition was despatched from Syracuse
            to the Italian coast, to assist the inhabitants of Croton against their
            aggressive neighbours the Bruttians. Antander,
            brother of Agathocles, was one of the generals commanding this armament, and Agathocles
            himself served in it as a subordinate officer. We neither know the date, the
            duration, nor the issue, of this expedition. But it afforded a fresh
            opportunity to Agathocles to display his adventurous bravery and military
            genius, which procured for him high encomium. He was supposed by some, on his
            return to Syracuse, to be entitled to the first prize for valour; but
            Sosistratus and the other oligarchical leaders withheld it from him and
            preferred another. So deeply was Agathocles incensed by this refusal, that he
            publicly inveighed against them among the people, as men aspiring to despotism.
            His opposition being unsuccessful, and drawing upon him the enmity of the
            government, he retired to the coast of Italy.
             Here he levied a military band of Grecian exiles and
            Campanian mercenaries, which he maintained by various enterprises for or
            against the Grecian cities. He attacked Croton, but was repulsed with loss; he
            took service with the Tarentines, fought for some time against their enemies,
            but at length became suspected and dismissed. Next, he joined himself with the
            inhabitants of Rhegium, assisting in the defence of the town against a
            Syracusan aggression. He even made two attempts to obtain admission by force into
            Syracuse, and to seize the government. Though repulsed in both of them, he
            nevertheless contrived to maintain a footing in Sicily, was appointed general
            at the town of Morgantium, and captured Leontini,
            within a short distance north of Syracuse. Some time afterwards, a revolution
            took place at Syracuse, whereby Sosistratus and the oligarchy were dispossessed
            and exiled with many of their partisans.
             Under the new government, Agathocles obtained his
            recall, and soon gained increased ascendency. The dispossessed exiles contrived
            to raise forces, and to carry on a formidable war against Syracuse from
            without; they even obtained assistance from the Carthaginians, so as to
            establish themselves at Gela, on the southern confines of the Syracusan
            territory. In the military operations thus rendered necessary, Agathocles took
            a forward part, distinguishing himself among the ablest and most enterprising
            officers. He tried, with 1000 soldiers, to surprise Gela by night; but finding
            the enemy on their guard, he was repulsed with loss and severely wounded; yet
            by an able manoeuvre he brought off all his remaining detachment. Though thus
            energetic against the public enemy, however, he at the same time inspired both
            hatred and alarm for his dangerous designs, to the Syracusans within. The Corinthian Akestorides, who had been named general of the
            city,—probably from recollection of the distinguished services formerly
            rendered by the Corinthian Timoleon—becoming persuaded that the presence of Agathocles
            was full of peril to the city, ordered him to depart, and provided men to
            assassinate him on the road during the night. But Agathocles, suspecting their
            design, disguised himself in the garb of a beggar, appointing another man to
            travel in the manner which would be naturally expected from himself. This
            substitute was slain in the dark by the assassins, while Agathocles escaped by
            favour of his disguise. He and his partisans appear to have found shelter with
            the Carthaginians in Sicily.
             Not long afterwards, another change took place in the
            government of Syracuse, whereby the oligarchical exiles were recalled, and
            peace made with the Carthaginians. It appears that a senate of 600 was again
            installed as the chief political body; probably not the same men as before, and
            with some democratical modifications. At the same time, negotiations were
            opened, through the mediation of the Carthaginian commander Hamilkar, between
            the Syracusans and Agathocles. The mischiefs of intestine conflict, amidst the
            numerous discordant parties in the city, pressed hard upon every one, and hopes
            were entertained that all might be brought to agree in terminating them. Agathocles
            affected to enter cordially into these projects of amnesty and reconciliation.
            The Carthaginian general Hamilkar, who had so recently aided Sosistratus and
            the Syracusan oligarchy, now did his best to promote the recall of Agathocles,
            and even made himself responsible for the good and pacific behaviour of that
            exile. Agathocles, and the other exiles along with him, were accordingly
            restored. A public assembly was convened in the temple of Demeter, in the
            presence of Hamilkar; where Agathocles swore by the most awful oaths, with his
            hands touching the altar and statue of the goddess, that he would behave as a
            good citizen of Syracuse, uphold faithfully the existing government, and carry
            out the engagements of the Carthaginian mediators—abstaining from encroachments
            on the rights and possessions of Carthage in Sicily. His oaths and promises
            were delivered with so much apparent sincerity, accompanied by emphatic
            harangues, that the people were persuaded to name him general and guardian of
            the peace, for the purpose of realising the prevailing aspirations towards
            harmony. Such appointment was recommended (it seems) by Hamilkar.
                 All this train of artifice had been concerted by Agathocles
            with Hamilkar, for the purpose of enabling the former to seize the supreme
            power. As general of the city, Agathocles had the direction of the military
            force. Under pretence of marching against some refractory exiles at Erbita in the interior, he got together 3000 soldiers
            strenuously devoted to him—mercenaries and citizens of desperate character—to
            which Hamilkar added a reinforcement of Africans. As if about to march forth,
            he mustered his troops at daybreak in the Timoleontion (chapel or precinct consecrated to Timoleon), while Peisarchus and Dekles, two chiefs of the senate already
            assembled, were invited with forty others to transact with him some closing
            business. Having these men in his power, Agathocles suddenly turned upon them,
            and denounced them to the soldiers as guilty of conspiring his death. Then,
            receiving from the soldiers a response full of ardour, he ordered them
            immediately to proceed to a general massacre of the senate and their leading
            partisans, with full permission of licentious plunder in the houses of these
            victims, the richest men in Syracuse. The soldiers rushed into the streets with
            ferocious joy to execute this order. They slew not only the senators, but many
            others also, unarmed and unprepared; each man selecting victims personally
            obnoxious to him. They broke open the doors of the rich, or climbed over the
            roofs, massacred the proprietors within, and ravished the females. They chased
            the unsuspecting fugitives through the streets, not sparing even those who took
            refuge in the temples. Many of these unfortunate sufferers rushed for safety to
            the gates, but found them closed and guarded by special order of Agathocles; so
            that they were obliged to let themselves down from the walls, in which many
            perished miserably. For two days Syracuse was thus a prey to the sanguinary,
            rapacious, and lustful impulses of the soldiery; four thousand citizens had
            been already slain, and many more were seized as prisoners. The political
            purposes of Agathocles, as well as the passions of the soldiers, being then
            sated, he arrested the massacre. He concluded this bloody feat by killing such
            of his prisoners as were most obnoxious to him, and banishing the rest. The
            total number of expelled or fugitive Syracusans is stated at 6000; who found a
            hospitable shelter and home at Agrigentum. One act of lenity is mentioned, and
            ought not to be omitted amidst this scene of horror. Deinokrates, one among the
            prisoners, was liberated by Agathocles from motives of former friendship : he
            too, probably, went into voluntary exile.
             After a massacre thus perpetrated in the midst of
            profound peace, and in the full confidence of a solemn act of mutual
            reconciliation immediately preceding—surpassing the worst deeds of the elder
            Dionysius, and indeed (we might almost say) of all other Grecian despots—Agathocles
            convened what he called an assembly of the people. Such of the citizens as were
            either oligarchical, or wealthy, or in any way unfriendly to him, had been
            already either slain or expelled; so that the assembly probably included few besides
            his own soldiers. Agathocles—addressing them in terms of congratulation on the
            recent glorious exploit, whereby they had purged the city of its oligarchical
            tyrants—proclaimed that the Syracusan people had now reconquered their full
            liberty. He affected to be weary of the toils of command, and anxious only for
            a life of quiet equality as one among the many; in token of which he threw off
            his general’s cloak and put on a common civil garment. But those whom he
            addressed, fresh from the recent massacre and plunder, felt that their whole
            security depended upon the maintenance of his supremacy, and loudly protested
            that they would not accept his resignation. Agathocles, with pretended
            reluctance, told them, that if they insisted, he would comply, but upon the
            peremptory condition of enjoying a single-handed authority, without any
            colleagues or counsellors for whose misdeeds he was to be responsible. The
            assembly replied by conferring upon him, with unanimous acclamations, the post
            of general with unlimited power, or despot.
                 Thus was constituted a new despot of Syracuse about
            fifty years after the decease of the elder Dionysius, and twenty-two years
            after Timoleon had rooted out the Dionysian dynasty, establishing on its ruins
            a free polity. On accepting the post, Agathocles took pains to proclaim that he
            would tolerate no further massacre or plunder, and that his government would
            for the future be mild and beneficent. He particularly studied to conciliate
            the poorer citizens, to whom he promised abolition of debts and a new distribution
            of lands. How far he carried out this project systematically, we do not know;
            but he conferred positive donations on many of the poor—which he had abundant
            means of doing, out of the properties of the numerous exiles recently expelled.
            He was full of promises to every one, displaying courteous and popular manners,
            and abstaining from all ostentation of guards, or ceremonial attendants, or a
            diadem. He at the same time applied himself vigorously to strengthen his
            military and naval force, his magazines of arms and stores, and his revenues.
            He speedily extended his authority over all the territorial domain of Syracuse,
            with her subject towns, and carried his arms successfully over many other parts
            of Sicily.
                 The Carthaginian general Hamilkar, whose complicity or
            connivance had helped Agathocles to this blood-stained elevation, appears to
            have permitted him without opposition to extend his dominion over a large
            portion of Sicily, and even to plunder the towns in alliance with Carthage
            itself. Complaints having been made to Carthage, this officer was superseded,
            and another general (also named Hamilkar) was sent in his place. We are unable
            to trace in detail the proceedings of Agathocles during the first years of his
            despotism; but he went on enlarging his sway over the neighbouring cities,
            while the Syracusan exiles, whom he had expelled, found a home partly at
            Agrigentum (under Deinokrates), partly at Messene. About the year 314, we hear
            that he made an attempt on Messene, which he was on the point of seizing, had
            he not been stopped by the interference of the Carthaginians (perhaps the
            newly-appointed Hamilkar), who now at length protested against his violation of
            the convention; meaning (as we must presume, for we know of no other
            convention) the oath which had been sworn by Agathocles at Syracuse under the
            guarantee of the Carthaginians. Though thus disappointed at Messene, Agathocles
            seized Abakaenum—where he slew the leading citizens opposed to him,—and carried
            on his aggressions elsewhere so effectively, that the leaders at Agrigentum,
            instigated by the Syracusan exiles there harboured, became convinced of the
            danger of leaving such encroachments unresisted. The people of Agrigentum came
            to the resolution of taking up arms on behalf of the liberties of Sicily, and
            allied themselves with Gela and Messene for the purpose.
                 But the fearful example of Agathocles himself rendered
            them so apprehensive of the dangers from any military leader, at once native
            and energetic, that they resolved to invite a foreigner. Some Syracusan exiles
            were sent to Sparta, to choose and invoke some Spartan of eminence and ability,
            as Archidamus had recently been called to Tarentum—and even more, as Timoleon
            had been brought from Corinth, with results so signally beneficent. The old
            Spartan king Kleomenes (of the Eurysthenid race) had
            a son Akrotatus, then unpopular at home, and well disposed towards foreign
            warfare. This prince, without even consulting the Ephors, listened at once to
            the envoys, and left Peloponnesus with a small squadron, intending to cross by Corcyra
            and the coast of Italy to Agrigentum. Unfavourable winds drove him as far north
            as Apollonia, and delayed his arrival at Tarentum; in which city, originally a
            Spartan colony, he met with a cordial reception, and obtained a vote of twenty
            vessels to assist his enterprise of liberating Syracuse from Agathocles. He
            reached Agrigentum with favourable hopes, was received with all the honours due
            to a Spartan prince, and undertook the command. Bitterly did he disappoint his
            party. He was incompetent as a general; he dissipated in presents or luxuries
            the money intended for the campaign, emulating Asiatic despots; his conduct was
            arrogant, tyrannical, and even sanguinary. The disgust which he inspired was
            brought to a height, when he caused Sosistratus, the leader of the Syracusan
            exiles, to be assassinated at a banquet. Immediately the exiles rose in a body
            to avenge this murder; while Akrotatus, deposed by the Agrigentines, only found
            safety in flight.
             To this young Spartan prince, had he possessed a noble
            heart and energetic qualities, there was here presented a career of equal
            grandeur with that of Timoleon—against an enemy able indeed and formidable, yet
            not so superior in force as to render success impossible. It is melancholy to
            see Akrotatus, from simple worthlessness of character, throwing away such an
            opportunity; at a time when Sicily was the only soil on which a glorious
            Hellenic career was still open—when no similar exploits were practicable by any
            Hellenic leader in Central Greece, from the overwhelming superiority of force
            possessed by the surrounding kings.
                 The misconduct of Akrotatus broke up all hopes of
            active operations against Agathocles. Peace was presently concluded with the
            latter by the Agrigentines and their allies, under the mediation of the
            Carthaginian general Hamilkar. By the terms of this convention, all the Greek
            cities in Sicily were declared autonomous, yet under the hegemony of Agathocles;
            excepting only Himera, Selinus, and Herakleia, which were actually, and were
            declared still to continue, under Carthage. Messene was the only Grecian city
            standing aloof from this convention; as such, therefore, still remaining open
            to the Syracusan exiles. The terms were so favourable to Agathocles, that they
            were much disapproved at Carthage. Agathocles, recognised as chief and having
            no enemy in the field, employed himself actively in strengthening his hold on
            the other cities, and in enlarging his military means at home. He sent a force
            against Messene, to require the expulsion of the Syracusan exiles from that
            city, and to procure at the same time the recall of the Messenian exiles,
            partisans of his own, and companions of his army. His generals extorted these
            two points from the Messenians. Agathocles, having thus broken the force of
            Messene, secured to himself the town still more completely, by sending for
            those Messenian citizens who had chiefly opposed him, and putting them all to
            death, as well as his leading opponents at Tauromenium. The number thus
            massacred was not less than six hundred.
                 It only remained for Agathocles to seize Agrigentum.
            Thither he accordingly marched. But Deinokrates and the Syracusan exiles,
            expelled from Messene, had made themselves heard at Carthage, insisting on the
            perils to that city from the encroachments of Agathocles. The Carthaginians
            alarmed sent a fleet of sixty sail, whereby alone Agrigentum, already under
            siege by Agathocles, was preserved. The recent convention was now broken on all
            sides, and Agathocles kept no further measures with the Carthaginians. He ravaged
            all their Sicilian territory, and destroyed some of their forts; while the
            Carthaginians on their side made a sudden descent with their fleet on the
            harbour of Syracuse. They could achieve nothing more, however, than the capture
            of one Athenian merchantvessel, out of two there
            riding. They disgraced their acquisition by the cruel act (not uncommon in
            Carthaginian warfare) of cutting off the hands of the captive crew; for which,
            in a few days, retaliation was exercised upon the crews of some of their own
            ships, taken by the cruisers of Agathocles.
             The defence of Agrigentum now rested principally on
            the Carthaginians in Sicily, who took up a position on the hill called Eknomus—in the territory of Gela, a little to the west of
            the Agrigentine border. Here Agathocles approached to
            offer them battle—having been emboldened by two important successes obtained
            over Deinokrates and the Syracusan exiles, near Kentoripa and Gallaria. So superior was his force, however,
            that the Carthaginians thought it prudent to remain in their camp; and Agathocles
            returned in triumph to Syracuse, where he adorned the temples with his recently
            acquired spoils. The balance of force was soon altered by the despatch of a
            large armament from Carthage under Hamilkar, consisting of 130 ships of war,
            with numerous other transport ships, carrying many soldiers—2000 native
            Carthaginians, partly men of rank—10,000 Africans—1000 Campanian heavy-armed
            and 1000 Balearic slingers. The fleet underwent in its passage so terrific a
            storm, that many of the vessels sunk with all on board, and it arrived with
            very diminished numbers in Sicily. The loss fell upon the native Carthaginian
            soldiers with peculiar severity; insomuch that when the news reached Carthage,
            a public mourning was proclaimed, and the city walls were hung with black
            serge.
             Those who reached Sicily, however, were quite
            sufficient to place Hamilkar in an imposing superiority of number as compared
            with Agathocles. He encamped on or near Eknomus,
            summoned all the reinforcements that his Sicilian allies could furnish, and
            collected additional mercenaries; so that he was soon at the head of 40,000
            infantry and 5000 cavalry. At the same time, a Carthaginian armed squadron,
            detached to the strait of Messene, fell in with twenty armed ships belonging to
            Agathocles, and captured them all with their crews. The Sicilian cities were
            held to Agathocles principally by terror, and were likely to turn against him,
            if the Carthaginians exhibited sufficient strength to protect them. This the
            despot knew and dreaded; especially respecting Gela, which was not far from the
            Carthaginian camp. Had he announced himself openly as intending to place a
            garrison in Gela, he feared that the citizens might forestall him by calling in
            Hamilkar. Accordingly he detached thither, on various pretences, several small
            parties of soldiers, who presently found themselves united in a number
            sufficient to seize the town. Agathocles then marched into Gela with his main
            force. Distrusting the adherence of the citizens, he let loose his soldiers
            upon them, massacred four thousand persons, and compelled the remainder, as a
            condition of sparing their lives, to bring in to him all their money and
            valuables. Having by this atrocity both struck universal terror and enriched
            himself, he advanced onward towards the Carthaginian camp, and occupied a hill
            called Phalarion opposite to it. The two camps were
            separated by a level plain or valley nearly five miles broad, through which ran
            the river Himera.
             For some days of the hottest season (the dog-days),
            both armies remained stationary, neither of them choosing to make the attack.
            At length Agathocles gained what he thought a favourable opportunity. A
            detachment from the Carthaginian camp sallied forth in pursuit of some Grecian
            plunderers; Agathocles posted some men in ambush, who fell upon this detachment
            unawares, threw it into disorder, and pursued it back to the camp. Following up
            this partial success, Agathocles brought forward his whole force, crossed the
            river Himera, and began a general attack. This advance not being expected, the
            Grecian assailants seemed at first on the point of succeeding. They filled up a
            portion of the ditch, tore up the stockade, and were forcing their way into the
            camp. They were however repulsed by redoubled efforts, and new troops coming
            up, on the part of the defenders; mainly, too, by the very effective action of
            the 1000 Balearic slingers in Hamilkar’s army, who hurled stones weighing a
            pound each, against which the Grecian armour was an inadequate defence. Still Agathocles, noway discouraged, caused the attack to be renewed on
            several points at once, and with apparent success, when a reinforcement landed
            from Carthage—the expectation of which may perhaps have induced Hamilkar to
            refrain from any general attack. These new troops joined in the battle, coming
            upon the rear of the Greeks; who were intimidated and disordered by such
            unforeseen assailants, while the Carthaginians in their front, animated to more
            energetic effort, first repulsed them from the camp, and then pressed them
            vigorously back. After holding their ground for some time against their double
            enemy, the Greeks at length fled in disorder back to their own camp, recrossing
            the river Himera. The interval was between four and five miles of nearly level
            ground, over which they were actively pursued and severely handled by the
            Carthaginian cavalry, 5000 in number. Moreover, in crossing the river, many of
            them drank eagerly, from thirst, fatigue, and the heat of the weather; the
            saltness of the water proved so destructive to them, that numerous dead bodies
            are said to have been found unwounded on the banks. At length they obtained
            shelter in their own camp, after a loss of 7000 men; while the loss of the
            victors is estimated at 500.
             Agathocles, after this great disaster, did not attempt
            to maintain his camp, but set it on fire, and returned to Gela; which was well
            fortified and provisioned, capable of a long defence. Here he intended to
            maintain himself against Hamilkar, at least until the Syracusan harvest
            (probably already begun) should be completed. But Hamilkar, having ascertained
            the strength of Gela, thought it prudent to refrain front a siege, and employed
            himself in operations for the purpose of strengthening his party in Sicily. His
            great victory at the Himera had produced the strongest effect upon many of the  Sicilian cities, who were held to Agathocles
            by no other bonds except those of fear. Hamilkar issued conciliatory
            proclamations, inviting them all to become his allies, and marching his troops
            towards the most convenient points. Presently Kamarina,
            Leontini, Katana, Tauromenium, Messene, Abakaenum, with several other smaller
            towns and forts, sent to tender themselves as allies; and the conduct of
            Hamilkar towards all was so mild and equitable, as to give universal
            satisfaction. Agathocles appears to have been thus dispossessed of most part of
            the island, retaining little besides Gela and Syracuse. Even the harbour of
            Syracuse was watched by a Carthaginian fleet, placed to intercept foreign
            supplies. Returning to Syracuse after Hamilkar had renounced all attempts on
            Gela, Agathocles collected the corn from the neighbourhood, and put the
            fortifications in the best state of defence. He had every reason to feel
            assured that the Carthaginians, encouraged by their recent success, and
            reinforced by allies from the whole island, would soon press the siege of
            Syracuse with all their energy; while for himself, hated by all, there was no
            hope of extraneous support, and little hope of a successful defence.
             In this apparently desperate situation, he conceived
            the idea of a novelty alike daring, ingenious, and effective; surrounded indeed
            with difficulties in the execution, but promising, if successfully executed,
            to change altogether the prospects of the war. He resolved to carry a force
            across from Syracuse to Africa, and attack the Carthaginians on their own soil.
            No Greek, so far as we know, had ever conceived the like scheme before; no one
            certainly had ever executed it. In the memory of man, the African territory of
            Carthage had never been visited by hostile foot. It was known that the
            Carthaginians would be not only unprepared to meet an attack at home, but
            unable even to imagine it as practicable. It was known that their territory was
            rich, and their African subjects harshly treated, discontented, and likely to
            seize the first opportunity for revolting. The landing of any hostile force
            near Carthage would strike such a blow, as at least to cause the recall of the
            Carthaginian armament in Sicily, and thus relieve Syracuse; perhaps the
            consequences of it might be yet greater.
                 How to execute the scheme was the grand difficulty—for
            the Carthaginians were superior not merely on land, but also at sea. Agathocles
            had no chance except by keeping his purpose secret, and even unsuspected. He
            fitted out an armament, announced as about to sail forth from Syracuse on a
            secret expedition, against some unknown town on the Sicilian coast. He selected
            for this purpose his best troops, especially his horsemen, few of whom had been
            slain at the battle of the Himera: he could not transport horses, but he put
            the horsemen aboard with their saddles and bridles, entertaining full
            assurance that he could procure horses in Africa. In selecting soldiers for his
            expedition, he was careful to take one member from many different families, to
            serve as hostage for the fidelity of those left behind. He liberated, and
            enrolled among his soldiers, many of the strongest and most resolute slaves. To
            provide the requisite funds, his expedients were manifold; he borrowed from
            merchants, seized the money belonging to orphans, stripped the women of their
            precious ornaments, and even plundered the richest temples. By all these
            proceedings, the hatred as well as fear towards him was aggravated, especially
            among the more opulent families. Agathocles publicly proclaimed, that the siege
            of Syracuse, which the Carthaginians were now commencing, would be long and
            terrible—that he and his soldiers were accustomed to hardships and could endure
            them, but that those who felt themselves unequal to the effort might retire
            with their properties while it was yet time. Many of the wealthier families—to
            a number stated as 1600 persons—profited by this permission; but as they were
            leaving the city, Agathocles set his mercenaries upon them, slew them all, and
            appropriated their possessions to himself. By such tricks and enormities, he
            provided funds enough for an armament of sixty ships, well filled with
            soldiers. Not one of these soldiers knew where they were going; there was a
            general talk about the madness of Agathocles; nevertheless such was their confidence
            in his bravery and military resource, that they obeyed his orders without
            asking questions. To act as viceroy of Syracuse during his own absence, Agathocles
            named Antander his brother, aided by an Aetolian officer named Erymnon.
             The armament was equipped and ready, without any
            suspicion on the part of the Carthaginian fleet blockading the harbour. It
            happened one day that the approach of some corn-ships seduced this fleet into a
            pursuit; the mouth of the harbour being thus left unguarded, Agathocles took
            the opportunity of striking with his armament into the open sea. As soon as the
            Carthaginian fleet saw him sailing forth, they neglected the corn-ships, and
            prepared for battle, which they presumed that he was come to offer. To their
            surprise, he stood out to sea as fast as he could; they then pushed out in
            pursuit of him, but he had already got a considerable advance and strove to
            keep it. Towards nightfall however they neared him so much, that he was only
            saved by the darkness. During the night he made considerable way; but on the
            next day there occurred an eclipse of the sun so nearly total, that it became
            perfectly dark, and the stars were visible. The mariners were so terrified at
            this phenomenon, that all the artifice and ascendency of Agathocles were
            required to inspire them with new courage. At length, after six days and
            nights, they approached the coast of Africa. The Carthaginian ships had pursued
            them at a venture, in the direction towards Africa; and they appeared in sight
            just as Agathocles was nearing the land. Strenuous efforts were employed by the
            mariners on both sides to touch land first; Agathocles secured that advantage,
            and was enabled to put himself into such a posture of defence that he repulsed
            the attack of the Carthaginian ships, and secured the disembarkation of his own
            soldiers, at a point called the Latomiae or
            Stone-quarries.
             After establishing his position ashore, and refreshing
            his soldiers, the first proceeding of Agathocles was to burn his vessels; a
            proceeding which seemed to carry an air of desperate boldness. Yet in truth the
            ships were now useless—for, if he was unsuccessful on land they were not enough
            to enable him to return in the face of the Carthaginian fleet; they were even
            worse than useless, since, if he retained them, it was requisite that he should
            leave a portion of his army to guard them, and thus enfeeble his means of
            action for the really important achievements on land. Convening his soldiers in
            assembly near the ships, he first offered a sacrifice to Demeter and
            Persephone—the patron goddesses of Sicily, and of Syracuse in particular. He
            then apprised his soldiers, that during the recent crossing and danger from the
            Carthaginian pursuers, he had addressed a vow to these goddesses—engaging to
            make a burnt-offering of his ships in their honour, if they would preserve him
            safe across to Africa. The goddesses had granted this boon; they had further,
            by favourably responding to the sacrifice just offered, promised full success
            to his African projects; it became therefore incumbent on him to fulfil his vow
            with exactness. Torches being now brought, Agathocles took one in his hand, and
            mounted on the stern of the admiral’s ship, directing each of the trierarchs to do the like on his own ship. All were set on
            fire simultaneously, amidst the sound of trumpets, and the mingled prayers and
            shouts of the soldiers.
             Though Agathocles had succeeded in animating his
            soldiers with a factitious excitement, for the accomplishment of this purpose,
            yet so soon as they saw the conflagration decided and irrevocable—thus cutting
            off all their communication with home—their spirits fell, and they began to
            despair of their prospects. Without allowing them time to dwell upon the
            novelty of the situation, Agathocles conducted them at once against the nearest
            Carthaginian town, called Megale-Polis. His march lay for the most part through
            a rich territory in the highest cultivation. The passing glance which we thus
            obtain into the condition of the territory near Carthage is of peculiar
            interest; more especially when contrasted with the desolation of the same
            coast, now and for centuries past. The corn-land, the plantations both of vines
            and olives, the extensive and well- stocked gardens, the size and equipment of
            the farm-buildings, the large outlay for artificial irrigation, the agreeable countryhouses belonging to wealthy Carthaginians, &c.,
            all excited the astonishment, and stimulated the cupidity, of Agathocles and
            his soldiers. Moreover, the towns were not only very numerous, but all open and
            unfortified, except Carthage itself and a few others on the coast. The
            Carthaginians, besides having little fear of invasion by sea, were disposed to
            mistrust their subject cities, which they ruled habitually with harshness and
            oppression. The Liby-Phenicians appear to have been unused to arms—a race of
            timid cultivators and traffickers, accustomed to subjection and practised in
            the deceit necessary for lightening it. Agathocles, having marched through this
            land of abundance, assaulted Megale-Polis without delay. The inhabitants,
            unprepared for attack, distracted with surprise and terror, made little
            resistance. Agathocles easily took the town, abandoning both the persons of the
            inhabitants and all the rich property within, to his soldiers; who enriched
            themselves with a prodigious booty both from town and country—furniture,
            cattle, and slaves. From hence he advanced farther southward to the town called
            Tunes (the modern Tunis, at the distance of only fourteen miles south-west of
            Carthage itself), which he took by storm in like manner. He fortified Tunes as
            a permanent position; but he kept his main force united in camp, knowing well
            that he should presently have an imposing army against him in the field, and
            severe battles to fight.
             The Carthaginian fleet had pursued Agathocles during
            his crossing from Syracuse, in perfect ignorance of his plans, When he landed
            in Africa, on their own territory, and even burnt his fleet, they at first
            flattered themselves with the belief that they held him prisoner. But as soon
            as they saw him commence his march in military array against Megale-Polis, they
            divined his real purposes, and were filled with apprehension. Carrying off the
            brazen prow ornaments of his burnt and abandoned ships, they made sail for
            Carthage, sending forward a swift vessel to communicate first what had
            occurred. Before this vessel arrived, however, the landing of Agathocles had
            been already made known at Carthage, where it excited the utmost surprise and
            consternation; since no one supposed that he could have accomplished such an
            adventure without having previously destroyed the Carthaginian army and fleet
            in Sicily. From this extreme dismay they were presently relieved by the arrival
            of the messengers from their fleet; whereby they learnt the real state of
            affairs in Sicily. They now made the best preparations in their power to resist
            Agathocles. Hanno and Bomilkar, two men of leading families, were named
            generals conjointly.
                 They were bitter political rivals,—but this very
            rivalry was by some construed as an advantage, since each would serve as a
            check upon the other, and as a guarantee to the state; or, what is more
            probable, each had a party sufficiently strong to prevent the separate election
            of the other. These two generals, unable to wait for distant succours, led out
            the native forces of the city, stated at 40,000 infantry, 1000 cavalry, derived
            altogether from citizens and residents—with 2000 war-chariots. They took post
            on an eminence (somewhere between Tunes and Carthage) not far from Agathocles;
            Bomilkar commanding on the left, where the ground was so difficult that he was
            unable to extend his front, and was obliged to admit an unusual depth of files;
            while Hanno was on the right, having in his front rank the Sacred Band of
            Carthage, a corps of 2500 distinguished citizens, better armed and braver than
            the rest. So much did the Carthaginians outnumber the invaders—and so confident
            were they of victory—that they carried with them 20,000 pairs of handcuffs for
            their anticipated prisoners.
                 Agathocles placed himself on the left, with 1000
            chosen hoplites round him to combat the Sacred Band; the command of his right
            he gave to his son Archagathus. His troops—Syracusans, miscellaneous mercenary
            Greeks, Campanians or Samnites, Tuscans, and Gauls—scarcely equalled in numbers
            one-half of the enemy. Some of the ships’ crews were even without arms—a
            deficiency which Agathocles could supply only in appearance, by giving to them
            the leather cases or wrappers of shields, stretched out upon sticks. The
            outstretched wrappers thus exhibited looked from a distance like shields; so
            that these men, stationed in the rear, had the appearance of a reserve of
            hoplites. As the soldiers however were still discouraged, Agathocles tried to
            hearten them up by another device yet more singular, for which indeed he must
            have made deliberate provision beforehand. In various parts of the camp, he let
            fly a number of owls, which perched upon the shields and helmets of the
            soldiers. These birds, the favourite of Athene, were supposed and generally
            asserted to promise victory; the minds of the soldiers are reported to have
            been much reassured by the sight.
                 The Carthaginian war-chariots and cavalry, which
            charged first, made little or no impression; but the infantry of their right
            pressed the Greeks seriously. Especially Hanno, with the Sacred Band around
            him, behaved with the utmost bravery and forwardness, and seemed to be gaining
            advantage, when he was unfortunately slain. His death not only discouraged his
            own troops, but became fatal to the army, by giving opportunity for treason to
            his colleague Bomilkar. This man had long secretly meditated the project of
            rendering himself despot of Carthage. As a means of attaining that end, he
            deliberately sought to bring reverses upon her; and no sooner had he heard of
            Hanno’s death, than he gave orders for his own wing to retreat. The Sacred
            Band, though fighting with unshaken valour, were left unsupported, attacked in
            rear as well as front, and compelled to give way along with the rest. The whole  Carthaginian army was defeated and
            driven back to Carthage. Their camp fell into the hands of Agathocles, who
            found among their baggage the very handcuffs which they had brought for
            fettering their expected captives.
             This victory made Agathocles for the time master of
            the open country. He transmitted the news to Sicily, by a boat of thirty oars,
            constructed expressly for the purpose—since he had no ships of his own
            remaining. Having fortified Tunes, and established it as his central position,
            he commenced operations along the eastern coast (Zeugitana and Byzakium, as the northern and southern portions
            of it were afterwards denominated by the Romans) against the towns dependent on
            Carthage.
             In that city, meanwhile, all was terror and
            despondency in consequence of the recent defeat. It was well known that the
            African subjects generally entertained nothing but fear and hatred towards the
            reigning city. Neither the native Libyans or Africans,—nor the mixed race
            called Liby-Phenicians, who inhabited the towns—could be depended on if their
            services were really needed. The distress of the Carthaginians took the form of
            religious fears and repentance. They looked back with remorse on the impiety of
            their past lives, and on their omissions of duty towards the gods. To the
            Tyrian Herakles, they had been slack in transmitting the dues and presents
            required by their religion; a backwardness which they now endeavoured to make
            up by sending envoys to Tyre, with prayers and supplications, with rich
            presents, and especially with models in gold and silver of their sacred temples
            and shrines. Towards Kronus, or Moloch, they also
            felt that they had conducted themselves sinfully. The worship acceptable to
            that god required the sacrifice of young children, born of free and opulent
            parents, and even the choice child of the family. But it was now found out, on
            investigation, that many parents had recently put a fraud upon the god, by
            surreptitiously buying poor children, feeding them well, and then sacrificing
            them as their own. This discovery seemed at once to explain why Kronus had become offended, and what had brought upon them
            the recent defeat. They made an emphatic atonement, by selecting 200 children
            from the most illustrious families in Carthage, and offering them up to Kronus at a great public sacrifice; besides which, 300
            parents, finding themselves denounced for similar omissions in the past,
            displayed their repentance by voluntarily immolating their own children for the
            public safety. The statue of Kronus,—placed with
            outstretched hands to receive the victim tendered to him, with fire
            immediately underneath,—was fed at that solemnity certainly with 200, and
            probably with 500, living children. By this monstrous holocaust the full
            religious duty being discharged, and forgiveness obtained from the god, the
            mental distress of the Carthaginians was healed.
             Having thus relieved their consciences on the score of
            religious obligation, the Carthaginians despatched envoys to Hamilkar in
            Sicily, acquainting him with the recent calamity, desiring him to send a
            reinforcement, and transmitting to him the brazen prow ornaments taken from the
            ships of Agathocles. They at the same time equipped a fresh army, with which
            they marched forth to attack Tunes. Agathocles had fortified that town, and
            established a strong camp before it; but he had withdrawn his main force to prosecute
            operations against the maritime towns on the eastern coast of the territory of
            Carthage. Among these towns, he first attacked Neapolis with success, granting
            to the inhabitants favourable terms. He then advanced farther southwards
            towards Adrumetum, of which he commenced the siege, with the assistance of a
            neighbouring Libyan prince named Elymas, who now joined him. While Agathocles
            was engaged in the siege of Adrumetum, the Carthaginians attacked his position
            at Tunes, drove his soldiers out of the fortified camp into the town, and began
            to batter the defences of the town itself. Apprised of this danger while
            besieging Adrumetum, but nevertheless reluctant to raise the siege,—Agathocles
            left his main army before it, stole away with only a few soldiers and some
            camp-followers, and conducting them to an elevated spot—half-way between
            Adrumetum and Tunes, yet visible from both—he caused them to kindle at night
            upon this eminence a prodigious number of fires. The effect of these fires,
            seen from Adrumetum on one side and from the army before Tunes on the other,
            was, to produce the utmost terror at both places. The Carthaginians besieging
            Tunes fancied that Agathocles with his whole army was coming to attack them,
            and forthwith abandoned the siege in disorder, leaving their engines behind.
            The defenders of Adrumetum, interpreting these fires as evidence of a large
            reinforcement on its way to join the besieging army, were so discouraged that
            they surrendered the town on capitulation.
                 By this same stratagem—if the narrative can be
            trusted—Agathocles both relieved Tunes and acquired possession of Adrumetum.
            Pushing his conquest yet farther south, he besieged and took Thapsus, with
            several other towns on the coast to a considerable distance southward. He also
            occupied and fortified the important position called Aspis, on the southeast
            of the headland Cape Bon, and not far distant from it; a point convenient for
            maritime communication with Sicily.
                 By a series of such acquisitions, comprising in all
            not less than 200 dependencies of Carthage, Agathocles became master along the
            eastern coast8 He next endeavoured to subdue the towns in the interior, into
            which he advanced as far as several days’ march. But he was recalled by
            intelligence from his soldiers at Tunes, that the Carthaginians had marched out
            again to attack them, and had already retaken some of his conquests. Returning
            suddenly by forced marches, he came upon them by surprise, and drove in their
            advanced parties with considerable loss; while he also gained an important victory
            over the Libyan prince Elymas, who had rejoined the Carthaginians, but was now
            defeated and slain. The Carthaginians, however, though thus again humbled and
            discouraged, still maintained the field, strongly entrenched, between Carthage
            and Tunes.
                 Meanwhile the affairs of Agathocles at Syracuse had
            taken a turn unexpectedly favourable. He had left that city blocked up
            partially by sea and with a victorious enemy encamped near it; so that supplies
            found admission with difficulty. In this condition, Hamilkar, commander of the
            Carthaginian army, received from Carthage the messengers announcing their
            recent defeat in Africa; yet also bringing the brazen prow ornaments taken from
            the ships of Agathocles. He ordered the envoys to conceal the real truth, and
            to spread abroad news that Agathocles had been destroyed with his armament; in
            proof of which he produced the prow ornaments,—an undoubted evidence that the
            ships had really been destroyed. Sending envoys with these evidences into
            Syracuse, to be exhibited to Antander and the other authorities, Hamilkar
            demanded from them the surrender of the city, under promise of safety and
            favourable terms; at the same time marching his army close up to it, with the
            view of making an attack. Antander with others, believing the information and
            despairing of successful resistance, were disposed to comply; but Erymnon the Aetolian insisted on holding out until they had
            fuller certainty. This resolution Antander adopted. At the same time,
            mistrusting those citizens of Syracuse who were relatives or friends of the
            exiles without, he ordered them all to leave the city immediately with their
            wives and families. No less than 8000 persons were expelled under this mandate.
            They were consigned to the mercy of Hamilkar, and his army without; who not
            only suffered them to pass, but treated them with kindness. Syracuse was now a
            scene of aggravated wretchedness and despondency; not less from this late
            calamitous expulsion, than from the grief of those who believed that their
            relatives in Africa had perished with Agathocles. Hamilkar had brought up his
            battering-engines, and was preparing to assault the town, when Nearchus, the
            messenger from Agathocles, arrived from Africa after a voyage of five days,
            having under favour of darkness escaped, though only just escaped, the
            blockading squadron. From him the Syracusan government learnt the real truth,
            and the victorious position of Agathocles. There was no further talk of
            capitulation; Hamilkar—having tried a  partial
            assault, which was vigorously repulsed,—withdrew his army, and detached from
            it; reinforcement of 5000 men to the aid of his countrymen in Africa.
             During some months, he seems to have employed himself
            in partial operations for extending the Carthaginian dominion throughout
            Sicily. But at length he concerted measures with the Syracusan exile
            Deinokrates, who was at the head of a numerous body of his exiled countrymen,
            for a renewed attack upon Syracuse. His fleet already blockaded the harbour,
            and he now with his army, stated as 120,000 men, destroyed the neighbouring
            lands, hoping to starve out the inhabitants. Approaching close to the walls of
            the city, he occupied the Olympieion, or temple of
            Zeus Olympius, near the river Anapus and the interior
            coast of the Great Harbour. From hence—probably under the conduct of
            Deinokrates and the other exiles, well acquainted with the ground—he undertook
            by a night-march to ascend the circuitous and difficult mountain track, for the
            purpose of surprising the fort called Euryalus, at the highest point of Epipolae, and the western apex of the Syracusan lines of
            fortification. This was the same enterprise, at the same hour, and with the
            same main purpose, as that of Demosthenes during the Athenian siege, after he
            had brought the second armament from Athens to the relief of Nicias. Even
            Demosthenes, though conducting his march with greater precaution than Hamilkar,
            and successful in surprising the fort of Euryalus, had been driven down again
            with disastrous loss. Moreover, since his time, this fort Euryalus, instead of
            being left detached, had been embodied by the elder Dionysius as an integral
            portion of the fortifications of the city. It formed the apex or point of
            junction for the two converging walls—one skirting the northern cliff, the
            other the southern cliff, of Epipolae. The surprise
            intended by Hamilkar—difficult in the extreme, if at all practicable—seems to
            have been unskilfully conducted. It was attempted with a confused multitude,
            incapable of that steady order requisite for night-movements. His troops,
            losing their way in the darkness, straggled, and even mistook each other for
            enemies; while the Syracusan guards from Euryalus, alarmed by the noise,
            attacked them vigorously and put them to the rout. Their loss, in trying to
            escape down the steep declivity, was prodigious; and Hamilkar himself, making
            brave efforts to rally them, became prisoner to the Syracusans. What lent
            peculiar interest to this incident, in the eyes of a pious Greek, was that it
            served to illustrate and confirm the truth of prophecy. Hamilkar had been
            assured by a prophet that he would sup that night in Syracuse; and this
            assurance had in part emboldened him to the attack, since he naturally
            calculated on entering the city as a conqueror. He did indeed take his evening
            meal in Syracuse, literally fulfilling the augury. Immediately after it, he was
            handed over to the relatives of the slain, who first paraded him through the
            city in chains, then inflicted on him the worst tortures, and lastly killed
            him. His head was cut off and sent to Africa.
             The loss and humiliation sustained in this
            repulse—together with the death of Hamilkar, and the discord ensuing between
            the exiles under Deinokrates and the Carthaginian soldiers —completely broke up
            the besieging army. At the same time, the Agrigentines, profiting by the
            depression both of Carthaginians and exiles, stood forward publicly,
            proclaiming themselves as champions of the cause of autonomous city government
            throughout Sicily, under their own presidency, against both the Carthaginians
            on one side, and the despot Agathocles on the other. They chose for their
            general a citizen named Xenodokus, who set himself
            with vigour to the task of expelling everywhere the mercenary garrisons which
            held the cities in subjection. He began first with Gela, the city immediately
            adjoining Agrigentum, found a party of the citizens disposed to aid him, and,
            in conjunction with them, overthrew the Agathoclean garrison. The Geloans, thus liberated, seconded cordially his efforts to
            extend the like benefits to others. The popular banner proclaimed by Agrigentum
            proved so welcome, that many cities eagerly invited her aid to shake off the
            yoke of the soldiery in their respective citadels, and regain their free
            governments. Enna, Erbessus, Echetla,
            Leontini, and Kamarina, were all thus relieved from
            the dominion of Agathocles; while other cities were in like manner emancipated
            from the sway of the Carthaginians; and joined the Agrigentine confederacy. The Agathoclean government at Syracuse was not strong enough to
            resist such spirited manifestations. Syracuse still continued to be blocked up
            by the Carthaginian fleet; though the blockade was less efficacious, and
            supplies were now introduced more abundantly than before.
             The ascendency of Agathocles was thus rather on the
            wane in Sicily; but in Africa, he had become more powerful than ever—not
            without perilous hazards which brought him occasionally to the brink of ruin.
            On receiving from Syracuse the head of the captive Hamilkar, he rode forth close
            to the camp of the Carthaginians, and held it up to their view in triumph; they
            made respectful prostration before it, but the sight was astounding and
            mournful to them. While they were thus in despondency, however, a strange vicissitude
            was on the point of putting their enemy into their hands. A violent mutiny
            broke out in the camp of Agathocles at Tunes, arising out of a drunken
            altercation between his son Archagathus and an Aetolian officer named Lykiskus; which ended in the murder of the latter by the
            former. The comrades of Lykiskus rose in arms with
            fury to avenge him, calling for the head of Archagathus. They found sympathy
            with the whole army; who seized the opportunity of demanding their arrears of
            outstanding pay, chose new generals, and took regular possession of Tunes with
            its defensive works. The Carthaginians, informed of this outbreak, immediately
            sent envoys to treat with the mutineers, offering to them large presents and
            double pay in the service of Carthage. Their offer was at first so favourably
            entertained, that the envoys returned with confident hopes of success ; when Agathocles,
            as a last resource, clothed himself in mean garb, and threw himself on the
            mercy of the soldiers. He addressed them in a pathetic appeal, imploring them
            not to desert him, and even drew his sword to kill himself before their faces.
            With such art did he manage this scene, that the feelings of the soldiers
            underwent a sudden and complete revolution. They not only became reconciled to
            him, but even greeted him with enthusiasm, calling on him to resume the dress
            and functions of general, and promising unabated obedience for the future. Agathocles
            gladly obeyed the call, and took advantage of their renewed ardour to attack
            forthwith the Carthaginians; who, expecting nothing less, were defeated with
            considerable loss.
             In spite of this check, the Carthaginians presently
            sent a considerable force into the interior, for the purpose of reconquering
            or regaining the disaffected Numidian tribes. They met with good success in
            this enterprise; but the Numidians were in the main faithless and indifferent
            to both the belligerents, seeking only to turn the war to their own profit. Agathocles,
            leaving his son in command at Tunes, followed the Carthaginians into the
            interior with a large portion of his army. The Carthaginian generals were
            cautious, and kept themselves in strong position. Nevertheless Agathocles felt
            confident enough to assail them in their camp; and after great effort, with
            severe loss on his own side, he gained an indecisive victory. This advantage
            however was countervailed by the fact, that during the action the Numidians
            assailed his camp, slew all the defenders, and carried off nearly all the
            slaves and baggage. The loss on the Carthaginian side fell most severely upon
            the Greek soldiers in their pay ; most of them exiles under Klinon,
            and some Syracusan exiles. These men behaved with signal gallantry, and were
            nearly all slain, either during the battle or after the battle, by Agathokles.
             It had now become manifest, however, to this daring
            invader, that the force of resistance possessed by Carthage was more than he
            could overcome—that though humbling and impoverishing her for the moment, he
            could not bring the war to a triumphant close; since the city itself, occupying
            the isthmus of a peninsula from sea to sea, and surrounded with the strongest
            fortifications, could not be besieged except by means far superior to his. We
            have already seen, that though he had gained victories and seized rich plunder,
            he had not been able to provide even regular pay for his soldiers, whose
            fidelity was consequently precarious. Nor could he expect reinforcements from
            Sicily; where his power was on the whole declining, though Syracuse itself was
            in less danger than before. He therefore resolved to invoke aid from Ophelias
            at Kyrene, and despatched Orthon as envoy for that
            purpose.
             To Cyrene and what was afterwards called its
            Pentapolis (i.e. the five neighbouring Grecian towns, Cyrene, its port
            Apollonia, Barka, Teucheira, and Hesperides), an
            earlier chapter of this History has already been devoted. Unfortunately
            information respecting them, for a century and more anterior to Alexander the
            Great, is almost wholly wanting. Established among a Libyan population, many of
            whom were domiciliated with the Greeks as fellow-residents, these Cyreneans had
            imbibed many Libyan habits in war, in peace, and in religion; of which their
            fine breed of horses, employed both for the festival chariotmatches and in battle, was one example. The Libyan tribes, useful as neighbours,
            servants, and customers, were frequently also troublesome as enemies. In 413 B.C.
            we hear accidentally that Hesperides was besieged by Libyan tribes, and rescued
            by some Peloponnesian hoplites on their way to Syracuse during the Athenian
            siege. About 401 (shortly after the close of the Peloponnesian war), the same
            city was again so hard pressed by the same enemies, that she threw open her
            citizenship to any Greek new-comer who would aid in repelling them. This
            invitation was accepted by several of the Messenians, just then expelled from
            Peloponnesus, and proscribed by the Spartans; they went to Africa, but,
            becoming involved in intestine warfare among the citizens of Kyrene, a large
            proportion of them perished.6 Except these scanty notices, we hear nothing
            about the Greco-Libyan Pentapolis in relation to Grecian affairs, before the
            time of Alexander. It would appear that the trade with the native African
            tribes, between the Gulfs called the Greater and Lesser Syrtis was divided
            between Cyrene (meaning the Cyrenaic Pentapolis) and Carthage—at a boundary
            point called the Altars of the Philaeni, ennobled by
            a commemorative legend; immediately east of these Altars was Automolae, the westernmost factory of Cyrene. We cannot
            doubt that the relations, commercial and otherwise, between Cyrene and
            Carthage, the two great emporia on the coast of Africa, were constant and often
            lucrative—though not always friendly.
             In the year 331, when the victorious Alexander overran
            Egypt, the inhabitants of Cyrene sent to tender presents and submission to him,
            and became enrolled among his subjects. We hear nothing more about them until
            the last year of Alexander’s life (324 to 323). About that time, the exiles
            from Cyrene and Barka, probably enough emboldened by the rescript of Alexander
            (proclaimed at the Olympic festival of 324 B.C., and directing that all Grecian
            exiles, except those guilty of sacrilege, should be recalled forthwith),
            determined to accomplish their return by force. To this end they invited from Crete
            an officer named Thimbron; who, having slain Harpalus after his flight from
            Athens (recounted in a previous chapter), had quartered himself in Crete, with
            the treasure, the ships, and the 6000 mercenaries, brought over from Asia by
            that satrap. Thimbron willingly carried over his army to their assistance,
            intending to conquer for himself a principality in Libya. He landed near Cyrene,
            defeated the Cyrenean forces with great slaughter,
            and made himself master of Apollonia, the fortified port of that city, distant
            from it nearly ten miles. The towns of Barka and Hesperides sided with him; so
            that he was strong enough to force the Cyreneans to a disadvantageous treaty.
            They covenanted to pay 500 talents,—to surrender to him half of their
            war-chariots for his ulterior projects—and to leave him in possession of
            Apollonia. While he plundered the merchants in the harbour, he proclaimed his
            intention of subjugating the independent Libyan tribes, and probably of
            stretching his conquests to Carthage. His schemes were however frustrated by
            one of his own officers, a Cretan named Mnasikles;
            who deserted to the Cyreneans, and encouraged them to set aside the recent
            convention. Thimbron, after seizing such citizens of Cyrene as happened to be
            at Apollonia, attacked Cyrene itself, but was repulsed; and the Pyreneans were
            then bold enough to invade the territory of Barka and Hesperides. Tr aid these
            two cities, Thimbron moved his quarters from Apollonia; but during his absence, Mnasikles contrived to surprise that valuable port;
            thus mastering at once his base of operations, the station for his fleet, and
            all the baggage of his soldiers. Thimbron’s fleet
            could not be long maintained without a harbour. The seamen, landing here and
            there for victuals and water, were cut off by the native Libyans, while the
            vessels were dispersed by storms.
             The Cyreneans, now full of hope, encountered Thimbron
            in the field, and defeated him. Yet though reduced to distress, he contrived to
            obtain possession of Teucheira; to which port he
            invoked as auxiliaries 2500 fresh soldiers, out of the loose mercenary bands
            dispersed near Cape Taenarus in Peloponnesus. This
            reinforcement again put him in a condition for battle. The Cyreneans on their
            side also thought it necessary to obtain succour, partly from the neighbouring
            Libyans, partly from Carthage. They got together a force stated as 30,000 men,
            with which they met him in the field. But on this occasion they were totally
            routed, with the loss of all their generals and much of their army. Thimbron
            was now in the full tide of success; he pressed both Kyrene and the harbour so
            vigorously, that famine began to prevail, and sedition broke out among the
            citizens. The oligarchical men, expelled by the more popular party, sought
            shelter, some in the camp of Thimbron, some at the court of Ptolemy in Egypt.
             I have already mentioned, that in the partition after
            the decease of Alexander, Egypt had been assigned to Ptolemy. Seizing with
            eagerness the opportunity of annexing to it so valuable a possession as the Cyrenaic
            Pentapolis, this chief sent an adequate force under Ophelias to put down
            Thimbron and restore the exiles. His success was complete. All the cities in
            the Pentapolis were reduced; Thimbron, worsted and pursued as a fugitive, was
            seized in his flight by some Libyans, and brought prisoner to Teucheira; the citizens of which place (by permission of
            the Olynthian Epikydes,
            governor for Ptolemy), first tortured him, and then conveyed him to Apollonia
            to be hanged. A final visit from Ptolemy himself regulated the affairs of the
            Pentapolis, which were incorporated with his dominions and placed under the
            government of Ophelias.
             It was thus that the rich and flourishing Cyrene, an
            interesting portion of the once autonomous Hellenic world, passed like the rest
            under one of the Macedonian Diadochi. As the proof and guarantee of this new
            sovereignty, we find erected within the walls of the city, a strong and
            completely detached citadel, occupied by a Macedonian or Egyptian garrison
            (like Munychia at Athens), and forming the stronghold of the viceroy. Ten years
            afterwards (B.C.312) the Cyreneans made an attempt to emancipate themselves,
            and besieged this citadel; but being again put down by an army and fleet which
            Ptolemy despatched under Agis from Egypt, Cyrene passed once more under the
            viceroyalty of Ophelias.
                 To this viceroy Agathocles now sent envoys, invoking
            his aid against Carthage. Ophelias was an officer of consideration and
            experience. He had served under Alexander, and had married an Athenian wife, Euthydike,—a lineal descendant from Miltiades the victor of
            Marathon, and belonging to a family still distinguished at Athens. In inviting
            Ophelias to undertake jointly the conquest of Carthage, the envoys proposed
            that he should himself hold it when conquered. Agathocles (they said) wished
            only to overthrow the Carthaginian dominion in Sicily, being well aware that he
            could not hold that island in conjunction with an African dominion.
             To Ophelias, such an invitation proved extremely
            seducing. He was already on the look-out for aggrandisement towards the west,
            and had sent an exploring nautical expedition along the northern coast of
            Africa, even to some distance round and beyond the Strait of Gibraltar.
            Moreover, to all military adventurers, both on sea and on land, the season was
            one of boundless speculative promise. They had before them not only the
            prodigious career of Alexander himself, but the successful encroachments of the
            great officers his successors. In the second distribution, made at Triparadeisus, of the Alexandrine empire, Antipater had
            assigned to Ptolemy not merely Egypt and Libya, but also an undefined amount of
            territory west of Libya, to be afterwards acquired; the conquest of which was
            known to have been among the projects of Alexander, had he lived longer. To
            this conquest Ophelias was now specially called, either as the viceroy or the
            independent equal of Ptolemy, by the invitation of Agathocles. Having learnt in
            the service of Alexander not to fear long marches, he embraced the proposition
            with eagerness. He undertook an expedition from Kyrene on the largest scale.
            Through his wife’s relatives, he was enabled to make known his projects at
            Athens, where, as well as in other parts of Greece, they found much favour. At
            this season, the Kassandrian oligarchies were
            paramount not only at Athens, but generally throughout Greece. Under the
            prevalent degradation and suffering, there was ample ground for discontent, and
            no liberty of expressing it; many persons therefore were found disposed either
            to accept army-service with Ophelias, or to enroll themselves in a foreign colony under his auspices. To set out under the
            military protection of this powerful chief—to colonise the mighty Carthage,
            supposed to be already enfeebled by the victories of Agathocles—to appropriate
            the wealth, the fertile landed possessions, and the maritime position, of her
            citizens—was a prize well calculated to seduce men dissatisfied with their
            homes, and not well informed of the intervening difficulties.
             Under such hopes, many Grecian colonists joined
            Ophelias at Cyrene, some even with wives and children. The total number is
            stated at 10,000. Ophelias conducted them forth at the head of a well-appointed
            army of 10,000 infantry, 600 cavalry, and 100 war-chariots; each chariot
            carrying the driver and two fighting men. Marching with this miscellaneous body
            of soldiers and colonists, he reached in eighteen days the post of Automolae,—the westernmost factory of Cyrene. From thence
            he proceeded westward along the shore between the two Syrtes,
            in many parts a sandy, trackless desert, without wood and almost without water
            (with the exception of particular points of fertility), and infested by
            serpents many and venomous. At one time, all his provisions were exhausted. He
            passed through the territory of the natives called Lotophagi,
            near the lesser Syrtis; where the army had nothing to eat except the fruit of
            the lotus, which there abounded. Ophelias met with no enemies ; but the
            sufferings of every kind endured by his soldiers—still more of course by the
            less hardy colonists and their families—were most distressing. After miseries
            endured for more than two months, he joined Agathocles in the Carthaginian
            territory; with what abatement of number, we do not know, but his loss must
            have been considerable.
             Ophelias little knew the man whose invitation and
            alliance he had accepted. Agathocles at first received him with the warmest
            protestations of attachment, welcoming the new-comers with profuse hospitality,
            and supplying to them full means of refreshment and renovation after their past
            sufferings. Having thus gained the confidence and favourable sympathies of all,
            he proceeded to turn them to his own purposes. Convening suddenly the most
            devoted among his own soldiers, he denounced Ophelias as guilty of plotting
            against his life. They listened to him with the same feelings of credulous rage
            as the Macedonian soldiers exhibited when Alexander denounced Philotas before
            them. Agathocles then at once called them to arms, set upon Ophelias unawares,
            and slew him with his more immediate defenders. Among the soldiers of Ophelias,
            this act excited horror and indignation, no less than surprise; but Agathocles
            at length succeeded in bringing them to terms, partly by deceitful pretexts,
            partly by intimidation : for this unfortunate army, left without any commander
            or fixed purpose, had no resource except to enter into his service. He thus
            found himself (like Antipater after the death of Leonnatus) master of a double
            army, and relieved from a troublesome rival. The colonists of Ophelias—more
            unfortunate still, since they could be of no service to Agathocles—were put by
            him on board some merchant vessels, which he was sending to Syracuse with
            spoil. The weather becoming stormy, many of these vessels foundered at
            sea,—some were driven off and wrecked on the coast of Italy—and a few only
            reached Syracuse. Thus miserably perished the Cyrenean expedition of Ophelias; one of the most commanding and powerful schemes, for
            joint conquest and colonisation, that ever set out from any Grecian city.
             It would have fared ill with Agathocles, had the
            Carthaginians been at hand, and ready to attack him in the confusion
            immediately succeeding the death of Ophelias. It would also have fared yet
            worse with Carthage, had Agathocles been in a position to attack her during the
            terrible sedition excited, nearly at the same time, within her walls by the
            general Bomilkar. This traitor (as has been already stated) had long cherished
            the design to render himself despot, and had been watching for a favourable
            opportunity. Having purposely caused the loss of the first battle—fought in
            conjunction with his brave colleague Hanno, against Agathocles—he had since
            carried on the war with a view to his own project (which explains in part the
            continued reverses of the Carthaginians); he now thought that the time was come
            for openly raising his standard. Availing himself of a military muster in the
            quarter of the city called Neapolis, he first dismissed the general body of the
            soldiers, retaining near him only a trusty band of 500 citizens, and 4000
            mercenaries. At the head of these, he then fell upon the unsuspecting city;
            dividing them into five detachments, and slaughtering indiscriminately the
            unarmed citizens in the streets, as well as in the great market-place. At first
            the Carthaginians were astounded and paralysed. Gradually however they took
            courage, stood upon their defence against the assailants, combated them in the
            streets, and poured upon them missiles from the house-tops. After a prolonged
            conflict, the partisans of Bomilkar found themselves worsted, and were glad to
            avail themselves of the mediation of some elder citizens. They laid down their
            arms on promise of pardon. The promise was faithfully kept by the victors,
            except in regard to Bomilkar himself; who was hanged in the market-place,
            having first undergone severe tortures.
                 Though the Carthaginians had thus escaped from an
            extreme peril, yet the effects of so formidable a conspiracy weakened them for
            some time against their enemy without; while Agathocles, on the other hand,
            reinforced by the army from Kyrene, was stronger than ever. So elate did he
            feel, that he assumed the title of King; following herein the example of the
            great Macedonian officers, Antigonus, Ptolemy, Seleucus, Lysimachus, and
            Kassander; the memory of Alexander being now discarded, as his heirs had been
            already put to death. Agathocles, already master of nearly all the dependent
            towns east and south-east of Carthage, proceeded to carry his arms to the
            north-west of the city. He attacked Utica,—the second city next to Carthage in
            importance, and older indeed than Carthage itself—situated on the western or
            opposite shore of the Carthaginian Gulf, and visible from Carthage, though
            distant from it twenty-seven miles around the Gulf on land. The Uticans had hitherto remained faithful to Carthage, in
            spite of her reverses, and of defection elsewhere. Agathocles marched into
            their territory with such unexpected rapidity (he had hitherto been on the south-east
            of Carthage, and he now suddenly moved to the north-west of that city), that he
            seized the persons of three hundred leading citizens, who had not yet taken the
            precaution of retiring within the city. Having vainly tried to prevail on the Uticans to surrender, he assailed their walls, attaching in
            front of his battering engines the three hundred Utican prisoners; so that the
            citizens, in hurling missiles of defence, were constrained to inflict death on
            their own comrades and relatives. They nevertheless resisted the assault with
            unshaken resolution; but Agathocles found means to force an entrance through a
            weak part of the walls, and thus became master of the city. He made it a scene
            of indiscriminate slaughter, massacring the inhabitants, armed and unarmed, and
            hanging up the prisoners. He further captured the town of Hippu-Akra, about
            thirty miles north-west of Utica, which had also remained faithful to
            Carthage—and which now, after a brave defence, experienced the like pitiless
            treatment. The Carthaginians, seemingly not yet recovered from their recent
            shock, did not interfere, even to rescue these two important places; so that Agathocles,
            firmly established in Tunes as a centre of operations, extended his African
            dominion more widely than ever all round Carthage, both on the coast and in the
            interior; while he interrupted the supplies of Carthage itself, and reduced the
            inhabitants to great privations. He even occupied and fortified strongly a
            place called Hippagreta, between Utica and Carthage;
            thus pushing his post within a short distance both east and west of her gates.
             In this prosperous condition of his African affairs,
            he thought the opportunity favourable for retrieving his diminished ascendency
            in Sicily; to which island he accordingly crossed over, with 2000 men, leaving
            the command in Africa to his son Archagathus. That young man was at first
            successful, and seemed even in course of enlarging his father’s conquests. His
            general Eumachus overran a wide range of interior
            Numidia, capturing Tokae, Phelline, Meschelae, Akris, and
            another town bearing the same name of Hippu-Akra—and enriching his soldiers
            with a considerable plunder. But in a second expedition, endeavouring to carry
            his arms yet farther into the interior, he was worsted in an attack upon a town
            called Miltine, and compelled to retreat. We read
            that he marched through one mountainous region abounding in wild cats—and
            another, in which there were a great number of apes, who lived in the most tame
            and familiar manner in the houses with men—being greatly caressed, and even
            worshipped as gods.
             The Carthaginians however had now regained internal
            harmony and power of action. Their senate and their generals were emulous, both
            in vigour and in provident combinations, against the common enemy. They sent
            forth 30,000 men, a larger force than they had yet had in the field; forming
            three distinct camps, under Hanno, Imilkon, and
            Adherbal, partly in the interior, partly on the coast. Archagathus, leaving a
            sufficient guard at Tunes, marched to meet them, distributing his army in three
            divisions also; two, under himself and Aeschrion,
            besides the corps under Eumachus in the mountainous
            region. He was however unsuccessful at all points. Hanno contriving to surprise
            the division of Aeschrion, gained a complete victory,
            wherein Aeschrion himself with more than 4000 men
            were slain. Imilkon was yet more fortunate in his
            operations against Eumachus, whom he entrapped by
            simulated flight into an ambuscade, and attacked at such advantage, that the
            Grecian army was routed and cut off from all retreat. A remnant of them
            defended themselves for some time on a neighbouring hill, but being without
            water, nearly all soon perished, from thirst, fatigue, and the sword of the
            conqueror.
             By such reverses, destroying two-thirds of the Agathoclean
            army, Archagathus was placed in serious peril. He was obliged to concentrate
            his force in Tunes, calling in nearly all his outlying detachments. At the same
            time, those Liby-Phenician cities, and rural Libyan tribes, who had before
            joined Agathocles, now detached themselves from him when his power was
            evidently declining, and made their peace with Carthage. The victorious
            Carthaginian generals established fortified camps round Tunes, so as to
            restrain the excursions of Archagathus; while with their fleet they blocked up
            his harbour. Presently provisions became short, and much despondency prevailed
            among the Grecian army. Archagathus transmitted this discouraging news to his
            father in Sicily, with urgent entreaties that he would come to the rescue.
                 The career of Agathocles in Sicily, since his
            departure from Africa, had been chequered, and on the whole unproductive. Just
            before his arrival in the island, his generals Leptines and Demophilus had
            gained an important victory over the Agrigentine forces commanded by Xenodokus, who were disabled from
            keeping the field. This disaster was a fatal discouragement both to the
            Agrigentines, and to the cause which they had espoused as champions—free and
            autonomous citygovernment with equal confederacy for
            self-defence, under the presidency of Agrigentum. The outlying cities
            confederate with Agrigentum were left without military protection, and exposed
            to the attacks of Leptines, animated and fortified by the recent arrival of his
            master Agathocles. That despot landed at Selinus—subdued Herakleia, Therma, and Kephaloidion, on or near the northern coast of
            Sicily—then crossed the interior of the island to Syracuse. In his march he
            assaulted Kentoripa, having some partisans within,
            but was repulsed with loss. At Apollonia, he was also unsuccessful in his first
            attempt; but being stung with mortification, he resumed the assault next day,
            and at length, by great efforts, carried the town. To avenge his loss, which
            had been severe, he massacred most of the citizens, and abandoned the town to
            plunder.
             From hence he proceeded to Syracuse, which he now
            revisited after an absence of (apparently) more than two years in Africa.
            During all this interval, the Syracusan harbour had been watched by a
            Carthaginian fleet, obstructing the entry of provisions, and causing partial
            scarcity. But there was no blockading army on land; nor had the dominion of Agathocles,
            upheld as it was by his brother Antander and his mercenary force, been at all
            shaken. His arrival inspired his partisans and soldiers with new courage, while
            it spread terror throughout most parts of Sicily. To contend with the
            Carthaginian blockading squadron, he made efforts to procure maritime aid from
            the Tyrrhenian ports in Italy; while on land, his forces were now
            preponderant—owing to the recent defeat, and broken spirit, of the
            Agrigentines. But his prospects were suddenly checked by the enterprising move
            of his old enemy—the Syracusan exile Deinokrates; who made profession of taking
            up that generous policy which the Agrigentines had tacitly let fall—announcing
            himself as the champion of autonomous city-government, and equal confederacy,
            throughout Sicily. Deinokrates received ready adhesion from most of the cities belonging
            to the Agrigentine confederacy—all of them who were
            alarmed by finding that the weakness or fears of their presiding city had left
            them unprotected against Agathocles. He was soon at the head of a powerful
            army—20,000 foot, and 1500 horse. Moreover a large proportion of his army were
            not citizen militia, but practised soldiers; for the most part exiles, driven
            from their homes by the distractions and violences of the Agathoclean era. For
            military purposes, both he and his soldiers were far more strenuous and
            effective than the Agrigentines under Xenodokus had
            been. He not only kept the field against Agathocles, but several times offered
            him battle, which the despot did not feel confidence enough to accept. Agathocles
            could do no more than maintain himself in Syracuse, while the Sicilian cities
            generally were put in security against his aggressions.
             Amidst this unprosperous course of affairs in Sicily, Agathocles
            received messengers from his son, reporting the defeats in Africa. Preparing
            immediately to revisit that country, he was fortunate enough to obtain a
            reinforcement of Tyrrhenian ships of war, which enabled him to overcome the
            Carthaginian blockading squadron at the mouth of the Syracusan harbour. A clear
            passage to Africa was thus secured for himself, together with ample supplies of
            imported provisions for the Syracusans. Though still unable to combat
            Deinokrates in the field, Agathocles was emboldened by his recent naval victory
            to send forth Leptines with a force to invade the Agrigentines—the jealous
            rivals, rather than the allies, of Deinokrates. The Agrigentine army—under the general Xenodokus, whom Leptines had
            before defeated—consisted of citizen militia mustered on the occasion; while
            the Agathoclean mercenaries, conducted by Leptines, had made arms a profession,
            and were used to fighting as well as to hardships. Here, as elsewhere in Greece,
            we find the civic and patriotic energy trampled down by professional
            soldiership, and reduced to operate only as an obsequious instrument for
            administrative details.
             Xenodokus, conscious of the inferiority of his Agrigentine force, was reluctant to hazard a battle. Driven to this imprudence by the
            taunts of his soldiers, he was defeated a second time by Leptines, and became
            so apprehensive of the wrath of the Agrigentines, that he thought it expedient
            to retire to Gela. After a period of rejoicing, for his recent victories by
            land as well as by sea, Agathocles passed over to Africa, where he found his
            son, with the army at Tunes in great despondency and privation, and almost
            mutiny for want of pay. They still amounted to 6000 Grecian mercenaries, 6000
            Gauls, Samnites, and Tyrrhenians—1500 cavalry—and no less than 6000 (if the
            number be correct) Libyan war-chariots. There were also a numerous body of
            Libyan allies; faithless time-servers, watching for the turn of fortune. The
            Carthaginians, occupying strong camps in the vicinity of Tunes, and abundantly
            supplied, awaited patiently the destroying effects of privation and suffering
            on their enemies. So desperate was the position of Agathocles, that he was
            compelled to go forth and fight. Having tried in vain to draw the Carthaginians
            down into the plain, he at length attacked them in the full strength of their
            entrenchments. But, in spite of the most strenuous efforts, his troops were
            repulsed with great slaughter, and driven back to their camp.
                 The night succeeding this battle was a scene of
            disorder and panic in both camps; even in that of the victorious Carthaginians.
            The latter, according to the ordinances of their religion, eager to return
            their heartfelt thanks to the gods for this great victory, sacrificed to them
            as a choice offering the handsomest prisoners captured. During this process,
            the tent or tabernacle consecrated to the gods, close to the altar as well as
            to the general’s tent, accidentally took fire. The tents being formed by mere
            wooden posts, connected by a thatch of hay or straw both on roof and sides,—the
            fire spread rapidly, and the entire camp was burnt, together with many Soldiers
            who tried to arrest the conflagration. So distracting was the terror occasioned
            by this catastrophe, that the whole Carthaginian army for the time dispersed;
            and Agathocles, had he been prepared, might have destroyed them. But it
            happened that at the same hour, his own camp was thrown into utter confusion by
            a different accident, rendering his soldiers incapable of being brought into
            action.
                 His position at Tunes had now become desperate. His
            Libyan allies had all declared against him, after the recent defeat. He could
            neither continue to bold Tunes, nor carry away his troops to Sicily; for he had
            but few vessels, and the Carthaginians were masters at sea. Seeing no resource,
            he resolved to embark secretly with his younger son Herakleides; abandoning
            Archagathus and the army to their fate. But Archagathus and the other officers,
            suspecting his purpose, were thoroughly resolved that the man who had brought
            them into destruction should not thus slip away and betray them. As Agathocles
            was on the point of going aboard at night, he found himself watched, arrested,
            and held prisoner, by the indignant soldiery. The whole town now became a scene
            of disorder and tumult, aggravated by the rumour that the enemy were marching
            up to attack them. Amidst the general alarm, the guards who had been set over Agathocles,
            thinking his services indispensable for defence, brought him out with his
            fetters still on. When the soldiers saw him in this condition, their sentiment
            towards him again reverted to pity and admiration, notwithstanding his
            projected desertion; moreover they hoped for his guidance to resist the
            impending attack. With one voice they called upon the guards to strike off his
            chains and set him free. Agathocles was again at liberty. But, insensible to
            everything except his own personal safety, he presently stole away, leaped
            unperceived into a skiff, with a few attendants, but without either of his sons,—and
            was lucky enough to arrive, in spite of stormy November weather, on the coast
            of Sicily.2
                 So terrible was the fury of the soldiers, on
            discovering that Agathocles had accomplished his desertion, that they slew both
            his sons, Archagathus and Herakleides. No resource was left but to elect new
            generals, and make the best terms they could with Carthage. They were still a
            formidable body, retaining in their hands various other towns besides Tunes; so
            that the Carthaginians, relieved from all fear of Agathocles, thought it
            prudent to grant an easy capitulation. It was agreed that all the towns should be
            restored to the Carthaginians, on payment of 300 talents; that such soldiers as
            chose to enter into the African service of Carthage, should be received on full
            pay; but that such as preferred returning to Sicily should be transported
            thither, with permission to reside in the Carthaginian town of Solus (or Soluntum). On these terms the convention was concluded, and
            the army finally broken up. Some indeed among the Grecian garrisons, quartered
            in the outlying posts, being rash enough to dissent and hold out, were besieged
            and taken by the Carthaginian force. Their commanders were crucified, and the
            soldiers condemned to rural work as fettered slaves.
             Thus miserably terminated the expedition of Agathocles
            to Africa, after an interval of four years from the time of his landing. By the vana mirantes,
            who looked out for curious coincidences (probably Timaeus), it was remarked
            that his ultimate flight, with the slaughter of his two sons, occurred exactly
            on the same day of the year following his assassination of Ophelias. Ancient
            writers extol, with good reason, the bold and striking conception of
            transferring the war to Africa, at the very moment when he was himself besieged
            in Syracuse by a superior Carthaginian force. But while admitting the military
            resource, skill, and energy of Agathocles, we must not forget that his success
            in Africa was materially furthered by the treasonable conduct of the
            Carthaginian general Bomilkar—an accidental coincidence in point of time. Nor
            is it to be overlooked, that Agathocles missed the opportunity of turning his
            first success to account, at a moment when the Carthaginians would probably
            have purchased his evacuation of Africa by making large concessions to him in
            Sicily. He imprudently persisted in the war, though the complete conquest of
            Carthage was beyond his strength—and though it was still more beyond his
            strength to prosecute effective war, simultaneously and for a long time, in
            Sicily and in Africa. The African subjects of Carthage were not attached to
            her; but neither were they attached to him;—nor, on the long run, did they do
            him any serious good. Agathocles is a man of force and fraud—consummate in the
            use of both. His whole life is a series of successful adventures, and strokes
            of bold ingenuity to extricate himself from difficulties; but there is wanting
            in him all predetermined general plan, or measured range of ambition, to which
            these single exploits might be made subservient.
             After his passage from Africa, Agathocles landed on
            the western corner of Sicily near the town of Egesta,
            which was then in alliance with him. He sent to Syracuse for a reinforcement.
            But he was hard pressed for money; he suspected, or pretended to suspect, the
            Egestaeans of disaffection; accordingly, on receiving his new force, he
            employed it to commit revolting massacre and plunder in Egesta.
            The town is reported to have contained 10,000 citizens. Of these Agathocles
            caused the poorer men to be for the most part murdered; the richer were cruelly
            tortured, and even their wives tortured and mutilated, to compel revelations of
            concealed wealth; the children of both sexes were transported to Italy, and
            there sold as slaves to the Bruttians. The original
            population being thus nearly extirpated, Agathocles changed the name of the
            town to Dikaeopolis, assigning it as a residence to
            such deserters as might join him. This atrocity, more suitable to Africa than
            Greece (where the mutilation of women is almost unheard of), was probably the
            way in which his savage pride obtained some kind of retaliatory satisfaction
            for the recent calamity and humiliation in Africa. Under the like sentiment, he
            perpetrated another deed of blood at Syracuse. Having learnt that the soldiers,
            whom he had deserted at Tunes, had after his departure put to death his two
            sons, he gave orders to Antander his brother (viceroy of Syracuse), to massacre
            all the relatives of those Syracusans who had served him in the African
            expedition. This order was fulfilled by Antander (we are assured) accurately
            and to the letter. Neither age nor sex—grandsire or infant—wife or mother—were
            spared by the Agathoclean executioners. We may be sure that their properties
            were plundered at the same time; we hear of no mutilations.1
             Still Agathocles tried to maintain his hold on the
            Sicilian towns which remained to him; but his cruelties as well as his reverses
            had produced a strong sentiment against him, and even his general Pasiphilus revolted to join Deinokrates. That exile was now
            at the head of an army stated at 20,000 men, the most formidable military force
            in Sicily; so that Agathocles, feeling the inadequacy of his own means, sent to
            solicit peace, and to offer tempting conditions. He announced his readiness to
            evacuate Syracuse altogether, and to be content, if two maritime towns on the
            northern coast of the island—Therma and Kephaloidion—were
            assigned to his mercenaries and himself. Under this proposition, Deinokrates,
            and the other Syracusan exiles, had the opportunity of entering Syracuse, and
            reconstituting the free city-government. Had Deinokrates been another Timoleon,
            the city might now have acquired and enjoyed another temporary sunshine of
            autonomy and prosperity; but his ambition was thoroughly selfish. As commander
            of this large army, he enjoyed a station of power and licence such as he was
            not likely to obtain under the reconstituted city-government of Syracuse. He
            therefore evaded the proposition of Agathocles, requiring still larger
            concessions: until at length the Syracusan exiles in his own army (partly
            instigated by emissaries from Agathocles himself) began to suspect his selfish
            projects, and to waver in their fidelity to him. Meanwhile Agathocles, being
            repudiated by Deinokrates, addressed himself to the Carthaginians, and
            concluded a treaty with them, restoring or guaranteeing to them all the
            possessions that they had ever enjoyed in Sicily. In return for this
            concession, he received from them a sum of money, and a large supply of corn.
             Relieved from Carthaginian hostility, Agathocles
            presently ventured to march against the army of Deinokrates. The latter was
            indeed greatly superior in strength, but many of his soldiers were now lukewarm
            or disaffected, and Agathocles had established among them correspondences upon
            which he could rely. At a great battle fought near Torgium,
            many of them went over on the field to Agathocles, giving to him a complete
            victory. The army of Deinokrates was completely dispersed. Shortly afterwards a
            considerable body among them (4000 men, or 7000 men, according to different
            statements) surrendered to the victor on terms. As soon as they had delivered
            up their arms, Agathocles, regardless of his covenant, caused them to be
            surrounded by his own army, and massacred.
             It appears as if the recent victory had been the
            result of a secret and treacherous compact between Agathocles and Deinokrates;
            and as if the prisoners massacred by Agathocles were those of whom Deinokrates
            wished to rid himself as malcontents; for immediately after the battle, a
            reconciliation took place between the two. Agathocles admitted the other as a
            sort of partner in his despotism; while Deinokrates not only brought into the
            partnership all the military means and strong posts which he had been two years
            in acquiring, but also betrayed to Agathocles the revolted general Pasiphilus, with the town of Gela, occupied by the latter.
            It is noticed as singular, that Agathocles, generally faithless and
            unscrupulous towards both friends and enemies, kept up the best understanding
            and confidence with Deinokrates to the end of his life.
             The despot had now regained full power at Syracuse,
            together with a great extent of dominion in Sicily. The remainder of his
            restless existence was spent in operations of hostility or plunder against more
            northerly enemies—the Liparaean isles— the Italian
            cities and the Bruttians—the island of Corcyra. We
            are unable to follow his proceedings in detail. He was threatened with a
            formidable attack by the Spartan prince Cleonymus, who was invited by the
            Tarentines to aid them against the Lucanians and Romans. But Cleonymus found
            enough to occupy him elsewhere, without visiting Sicily. He collected a
            considerable force on the coast of Italy, undertook operations with success
            against the Lucanians, and even captured the town of Thurii. But the Romans,
            now pushing their intervention even to the Tarentine Gulf, drove him off and
            retook the town; moreover his own behaviour was so tyrannical and profligate,
            as to draw upon him universal hatred. Returning from Italy to Corcyra, Cleonymus
            made himself master of that important island, intending to employ it as a base
            of operations both against Greece and against Italy.1 He failed however in
            various expeditions both in the Tarentine Gulf and the Adriatic. Demetrius Poliorcetes
            and Kassander alike tried to conclude an alliance with him; but in vain. At a
            subsequent period, Corcyra was besieged by Kassander with a large naval and
            military force; Cleonymus then retired (or perhaps had previously retired) to
            Sparta. Kassander, having reduced the island to great straits, was on the point
            of taking it, when it was relieved by Agathocles with a powerful armament. That
            despot was engaged in operations on the coast of Italy against the Bruttians when his aid to Corcyra was solicited; he
            destroyed most part of the Macedonian fleet, and then seized the island for
            himself. On returning from this victorious expedition to the Italian coast,
            where he had left a detachment of his Ligurian and Tuscan mercenaries, he was
            informed that these mercenaries had been turbulent during his absence, in
            demanding the pay due to them from his grandson Archagathus. He caused them all
            to be slain, to the number of 2000.
             As far as we can trace the events of the last years of
            Agathocles, we find him seizing the towns of Kroton and Hipponia in Italy, establishing an alliance with
            Demetrius Poliorcetes, and giving his daughter Lanassa in marriage to the
            youthful Pyrrhus king of Epirus. At the age of seventy-two, still in the
            plenitude of vigour as well as of power, he was projecting a fresh expedition
            against the Carthaginians in Africa, with two hundred of the largest ships of
            war, when his career was brought to a close by sickness and by domestic
            enemies.
             He proclaimed as future successor to his dominion, his
            son, named Agathocles; but Archagathus his grandson (son of Archagathus who had
            perished in Africa), a young prince of more conspicuous qualities, had already
            been singled out for the most important command, and was now at the head of the
            army near Aetna. The old Agathocles, wishing to strengthen the hands of his
            intended successor, sent his favoured son Agathocles to Aetna, with written
            orders directing that Archagathus should yield up to him the command.
            Archagathus, noway disposed to obey, invited his
            uncle Agathocles to a banquet, and killed him; after which he contrived the
            poisoning of his grandfather the old despot himself. The instrument of his
            purpose was Maenon; a citizen of Egesta,
            enslaved at the time when Agathocles massacred most of the Egestean population. The beauty of his person procured him much favour with Agathocles;
            but he had never forgotten, and had always been anxious to avenge, the bloody
            outrage on his fellow-citizens. To accomplish this purpose, the opportunity was
            now opened to him, together with a promise of protection, through Archagathus.
            He accordingly poisoned Agathocles, as we are told, by means of a medicated
            quill, handed to him for cleaning his teeth after dinner.1 Combining together
            the various accounts, it seems probable that Agathocles was at the time
            sick—that this sickness may have been the reason why he was so anxious to
            strengthen the position of his intended successor—and that his death was as
            much the effect of his malady as of the poison. Archagathus, after murdering
            his uncle, seems by means of his army to have made himself real master of the
            Syracusan power; while the old despot, defenceless on a sick bed, could do no
            more than provide for the safety of his Egyptian wife Theoxena and his two young children, by despatching them on shipboard with all his rich
            moveable treasures to Alexandria. Having secured this object, amidst extreme
            grief on the part of those around, he expired.
             The great lines in the character of Agathocles are
            well marked. He was of the stamp of Gelon and the elder Dionysius—a soldier of
            fortune, who raised himself from the meanest beginnings to the summit of
            political power—and who, in the acquisition as well as maintenance of that
            power, displayed an extent of energy, perseverance, and military resource, not
            surpassed by any one, even of the generals formed in Alexander’s school. He was
            an adept in that art at which all aspiring men of his age aimed —the handling
            of mercenary soldiers for the extinction of political liberty and security at
            home, and for predatory aggrandisement abroad. I have already noticed the
            opinion delivered by Scipio Africanus—that the elder Dionysius and Agathocles
            were the most daring, sagacious, and capable men of action within his
            knowledge. Apart from this enterprising genius, employed in the service of
            unmeasured personal ambition, we know nothing of Agathocles except his
            sanguinary, faithless, and nefarious dispositions; in which attributes also he
            stands pre-eminent, above all his known contemporaries, and above nearly all
            predecessors. Notwithstanding his often-proved perfidy, he seems to have had a
            geniality and apparent simplicity of manner (the same is recounted of Caesar
            Borgia) which amused men and put them off their guard, throwing them
            perpetually into his trap.
                 Agathocles, however, though among the worst of Greeks,
            was yet a Greek. During his government of thirty-two years, the course of
            events in Sicily continued under Hellenic agency, without the preponderant
            intervention of any foreign power. The power of Agathocles indeed rested mainly
            on foreign mercenaries; but so had that of Dionysius and Gelon before him; and
            he, as well as they, kept up vigorously the old conflict against the
            Carthaginian power in the island. Grecian history in Sicily thus continues down
            to the death of Agathocles; but it continues no longer. After his death,
            Hellenic power and interests become incapable of self-support, and sink into a
            secondary and subservient position, over-ridden or contended for by foreigners.
            Syracuse and the other cities passed from one despot to another, and were torn
            with discord arising out of the crowds of foreign mercenaries who had obtained
            footing among them. At the same time, the Carthaginians made increased efforts
            to push their conquests in the island, without finding any sufficient internal
            resistance; so that they would have taken Syracuse, and made Sicily their own,
            had not Pyrrhus king of Epirus (the son-in-law of Agathocles) interposed to
            arrest their progress. From this time forward, the Greeks of Sicily become a
            prize to be contended for—first between the Carthaginians and Pyrrhus—next,
            between the Carthaginians and Romans—until at length they dwindle into subjects
            of Rome; corn-growers for the Roman plebs, clients under the patronage of the
            Roman Marcelli, victims of the rapacity of Verres, and suppliants for the
            tutelary eloquence of Cicero. The historian of self-acting Hellas loses sight
            of them at the death of Agathocles.
                 
             
             
 
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