Cimon
(died 449 B.C.E.)
By
Plutarch
Translated
by John Dryden
Peripoltas the prophet, having brought the King Opheltas,
and those under his command, from Thessaly into Boeotia, left there a family,
which flourished a long time after; the greater part of them inhabiting
Chaeronea, the first city out of which they expelled the barbarians. The
descendants of this race, being men of bold attempts and warlike habits,
exposed themselves to so many danger's in the
invasions of the Mede, and in battles against the Gauls, that at last they were
almost wholly consumed.
There was left one orphan of this house, called Damon,
surnamed Peripoltas, in beauty and greatness of spirit surpassing all of his
age, but rude and undisciplined in temper. A Roman captain of a company that
wintered in Chaeronea
became passionately fond of this youth, who was now pretty nearly grown a man.
And finding all his approaches, his gifts, his entreaties, alike repulsed, he
showed violent inclinations to assault Damon. Our native Chaeronea was then in a distressed condition,
too small and too poor to meet with anything but neglect. Damon, being sensible
of this, and looking upon himself as injured already, resolved to inflict
punishment. Accordingly, he and sixteen of his companions conspired against the
captain; but that the design might be managed without any danger of being
discovered, they all daubed their faces at night with soot. Thus disguised and
inflamed with wine, they set upon him by break of day, as he was sacrificing in
the market-place; and having killed him, and several others that were with him,
they fled out of the city, which was extremely alarmed and troubled at the
murder. The council assembled immediately, and pronounced sentence of death
against Damon and his accomplices. This they did to justify the city to the
Romans. But that evening, as the magistrates were at supper together, according
to the custom, Damon and his confederates, breaking into the hall, killed them,
and then fled again out of the town. About this time, Lucius Lucullus chanced
to be passing that way with a body of troops, upon some expedition, and this
disaster having but recently happened, he stayed to
examine the matter. Upon inquiry, he found the city was in no wise faulty, but
rather that they themselves had suffered; therefore he drew out the soldiers,
and carried them away with him. Yet Damon continuing to ravage the country all
about, the citizens, by messages and decrees, in appearance favourable, enticed
him into the city, and upon his return, made him Gymnasiarch; but afterwards as
he was anointing himself in the vapour baths, they set upon him and killed him.
For a long while after apparitions continuing to be seen, and groans to be
heard in that place, so our fathers have told us, they ordered the gates of the
baths to be built up; and even to this day those who live in the neighbourhood
believe that they sometimes see spectres and hear alarming sounds. The
posterity of Damon, of whom some still remain, mostly in Phocis, near the town
of Stiris, are called Asbolomeni, that is, in the Aeolian idiom, men daubed
with soot: because Damon was thus besmeared when he committed this murder.
But there being a quarrel between the people of Chaeronea
and the Orchomenians, their neighbours, these latter hired an informer, a
Roman, to accuse the community of Chaeronea as if it had been a single person
of the murder of the Romans, of which only Damon and his companions were
guilty; accordingly, the process was commenced, and the cause pleaded before
the Praetor of Macedon, since the Romans as yet had not sent governors into
Greece.
The advocates who defended the inhabitants appealed to the
testimony of Lucullus, who, in answer to a letter the praetor wrote to him,
returned a true account of the matter-of-fact. By this means the town obtained
its acquittal, and escaped a most serious danger. The citizens, thus preserved,
erected a statue to Lucullus in the market-place, near that of the god Bacchus.
We also have the same impressions of gratitude; and though
removed from the events by the distance of several generations, we yet feel the
obligation to extend to ourselves: and as we think an image of the character
and habits to be a greater honour than one merely representing the face and the
person, we will put Lucullus's life amongst our parallels of illustrious men,
and without swerving from the truth, will record his actions. The commemoration
will be itself a sufficient proof of our grateful feeling, and he himself would
not thank us, if in recompense for a service which consisted in speaking the
truth, we should abuse his memory with a false and counterfeit narration. For
as we would wish that a painter who is to draw a beautiful face, in which there
is yet some imperfection, should neither wholly leave out, nor yet too
pointedly express what is defective, because this would deform it, and that
spoil the resemblance; so since it is hard, or indeed perhaps impossible, to
show the life of a man wholly free from blemish, in all that is excellent we
must follow truth exactly, and give it fully; any lapses or faults that occur,
through human passions or political necessities, we may regard rather as the
shortcomings of some particular virtue, than as the natural effects of vice;
and may be content without introducing them, curiously and officiously, into
our narrative, if it be but out of tenderness to the weakness of nature, which
has never succeeded in producing any human character so perfect in virtue as to
be pure from all admixture and open to no criticism. On considering with myself
to whom I should compare Lucullus I find none so exactly his parallel as Cimon.
They were both valiant in war, and successful against the
barbarians; both gentle in political life, and more than any others gave their
countrymen a respite from civil troubles at home, while abroad each of them
raised trophies and gained famous victories. No Greek before Cimon, nor Roman
before Lucullus, ever carried the scene of war so far from their own country;
putting out of the question the acts of Bacchus and Hercules, and any exploit
of Perseus against the Ethiopians, Medes, and Armenians, or again of Jason, of
which any record that deserves credit can be said to have come down to our
days. Moreover in this they were alike, that they did not finish the
enterprises they undertook. They brought their enemies near their ruin, but
never entirely conquered them. There was yet a great conformity in the free
good-will and lavish abundance of their entertainments and general
hospitalities, and in the youthful laxity of their habits. Other points of
resemblance, which we have failed to notice, may be easily collected from our
narrative itself.
Cimon was the son of Miltiades and Hegesipyle, who was by
birth a Thracian, and daughter to the King Olorus, as appears from the poems of
Melanthius and Archelaus, written in praise of Cimon. By this means the
historian Thucydides was his kinsman by the mother's side; for his father's
name also, in remembrance of this common ancestor, was Olorus, and he was the
owner of the gold mines in Thrace, and met his death, it is said, by violence,
in Scapte Hyle, a district of Thrace; and his remains having afterwards been
brought into Attica, a monument is shown as his among those of the family of
Cimon, near the tomb of Elpinice, Cimon's sister. But Thucydides was of the township of Halimus, and Miltiades and his family
were Laciadae. Miltiades, being condemned in a fine of fifty talents of the
state, and unable to pay it, was cast into prison, and there died. Thus Cimon
was left an orphan very young, with his sister Elpinice, who was also young and
unmarried. And at first he had but an indifferent reputation, being looked upon
as disorderly in his habits, fond of drinking, and resembling his grandfather,
also called Cimon, in character, whose simplicity got him the surname of
Coalemus. Stesimbrotus of Thasos, who lived near about the same time with
Cimon, reports of him that he had little acquaintance either with music, or any
of the other liberal studies and accomplishments, then common among the Greeks;
that he had nothing whatever of the quickness and the ready speech of his
countrymen in Attica; that he had great nobleness and candour in his
disposition, and in his character in general resembled rather a native of
Peloponnesus than of Athens; as Euripides describes Hercules-
"----Rude And unrefined, for
great things well endued:"
for this may fairly be added to the
character which Stesimbrotus has given of him.
They accused him, in his younger years, of cohabiting with his
own sister Elpinice, who, indeed, otherwise had no very clear reputation, but
was reported to have been over-intimate with Polygnotus the painter; and hence,
when he painted the Trojan women in the porch, then called the Plesianactium,
and now the Poecile, he made Laodice a portrait of her. Polygnotus was not an
ordinary mechanic, nor was he paid for his work, but out of a desire to please
the Athenians painted the portico for nothing. So it is stated by the historians, and in the following verses by the poet
Melanthius:-
"Wrought by his hand the deeds of heroes grace
At his own charge our temples and our place."
Some affirm that Elpinice lived with her brother, not
secretly, but as his married wife, her poverty excluding her from any suitable
match. But afterwards, when Callias, one of the richest men of Athens, fell in love with her, and proffered
to pay the fine the father was condemned in, if he could obtain the daughter in
marriage, with Elpinice's own consent, Cimon betrothed her to Callias. There is
no doubt but that Cimon was, in general, of an amorous temper. For Melanthius,
in his elegies, rallies him on his attachment for Asteria of Salamis, and again
for a certain Mnestra. And there can be no doubt of his unusually passionate
affection for his lawful wife Isodice, the daughter of Euryptolemus, the son of
Megacles; nor of his regret, even to impatience, at her death, if any
conclusion may be drawn from those elegies of condolence, addressed to him upon
his loss of her. The philosopher Panaetius is of opinion that Archelaus, the
writer on physics, was the author of them, and indeed the time seems to favour
that conjecture. All the other points of Cimon's character were noble and good.
He was as daring as Miltiades, and not inferior to Themistocles in judgment,
and was incomparably more just and honest than either of them. Fully their
equal in all military virtues, in the ordinary duties of a citizen at home he
was immeasurably their superior. And this, too, when he was very young, his
years not yet strengthened by any experience. For when Themistocles, upon the
Median invasion, advised the Athenians to forsake their city and their country,
and to carry all their arms on shipboard and fight the enemy by sea, in the
straits of Salamis; when all the people stood amazed at the confidence and
rashness of this advice, Cimon was seen, the first of all men, passing with a
cheerful countenance through the Ceramicus, on his way with his companions to
the citadel, carrying a bridle in his hand to offer to the goddess, intimating
that there was no more need of horsemen now, but of mariners. There, after he
had paid his devotions to the goddess, and offered up the bridle, he took down
one of the bucklers that hung upon the walls of the temple, and went down to the
port; by this example giving confidence to many of the citizens. He was also of
a fairly handsome person, according to the poet Ion, tall and large, and let
his thick and curly hair grow long. After he had acquitted himself gallantly in
this battle of Salamis,
he obtained great repute among the Athenians, and was regarded with affection,
as well as admiration. He had many who followed after him, and bade him aspire
to actions not less famous than his father's battle of Marathon.
And when he came forward in political life, the people welcomed him gladly,
being now weary of Themistocles; in opposition to whom, and because of the
frankness and easiness of his temper, which was agreeable to every one, they
advanced Cimon to the highest employments in the government. The man that
contributed most to his promotion was Aristides, who early discerned in his
character his natural capacity, and purposely raised him, that he might be a
counterpoise to the craft and boldness of Themistocles.
After the Medes had been driven out of Greece, Cimon was
sent out as an admiral, when the Athenians had not yet attained their dominion
by sea, but still followed Pausanias and the Lacedaemonians; and his
fellow-citizens under his command were highly distinguished, both for the excellence
of their discipline, and for their extraordinary zeal and readiness. And
further, perceiving that Pausanias was carrying on secret communications with
the barbarians, and writing letters to the King of Persia to betray Greece, and
puffed up with authority and success, was treating the allies haughtily, and
committing many wanton injustices, Cimon, taking this advantage, by acts of
kindness to those who were suffering wrong, and by his general humane bearing,
robbed him of the command of the Greeks, before he was aware, not by arms, but
by his mere language and character. The greatest part of the allies, no longer
able to endure the harshness and pride of Pausanias, revolted from him to Cimon
and Aristides, who accepted the duty, and wrote to the Ephors of Sparta,
desiring them to recall a man who was causing dishonour to Sparta
and trouble to Greece.
They tell of Pausanias, that when he was in Byzantium, he solicited a young lady of a
noble family in the city, whose name was Cleonice, to debauch her. Her parents,
dreading his cruelty, were forced to consent, and so abandoned their daughter
to his wishes. The daughter asked the servants outside the chamber to put out
all the lights; so that approaching silently and in the dark towards his bed, she stumbled upon the lamp, which she overturned.
Pausanias, who was fallen asleep, awakened and, startled with the noise,
thought an assassin had taken that dead time of night to murder him, so that
hastily snatching up his poniard that lay by him, he
struck the girl, who fell with the blow, and died. After this, he never had
rest, but was continually haunted by her, and saw an apparition visiting him in
his sleep, and addressing him with these angry words:-
"Go on thy way, unto the evil end, That
doth on lust and violence attend." This was one of the chief occasions of
indignation against him among the confederates, who now, joining their
resentments and forces with Cimon's, besieged him in Byzantium. He escaped out of their hands,
and, continuing, as it is said, to be disturbed by the apparition, fled to the
oracle of the dead at Heraclea, raised the ghost of Cleonice, and entreated her
to be reconciled. Accordingly she appeared to him, and answered that, as soon
as he came to Sparta,
he should speedily be freed from all evils; obscurely foretelling, it would
seem, his imminent death. This story is related by many authors.
Cimon, strengthened with the accession of the allies, went
as general into Thrace.
For he was told that some great men among the Persians, of the
king's kindred, being in possession of Eion, a city situated upon the river
Strymon, infested the neighbouring Greeks. First he defeated these
Persians in battle, and shut them up within the walls of their town. Then he
fell upon the Thracians of the country beyond the Strymon, because they
supplied Eion with victuals, and driving them entirely out of the country, took
possession of it as conqueror, by which means he reduced the besieged to such
straits, that Butes, who commanded there for the king, in desperation set fire
to the town, and burned himself, his goods, and all his relations, in one
common flame. By this means, Cimon got the town, but no great booty; as the
barbarians had not only consumed themselves in the fire, but the richest of
their effects. However, he put the country about into the hands of the
Athenians, a most advantageous and desirable situation for a settlement. For
this action, the people permitted him to erect the stone Mercuries, upon the
first of which was this inscription:-
"Of bold and patient spirit, too, were those,
Who, where the Strymon under Eion flows,
With famine and the sword, to utmost need,
Reduced at last the children of the
Mede."
Upon the second stood this:-
"The Athenians to their leaders this reward
For great and useful service did accord;
Others hereafter shall, from their applause,
Learn to be valiant in their country's cause."
And upon the third the following:-
"With Atreus' sons, this city sent of yore
Divine Menestheus to the Trojan shore;
Of all the Greeks, so Homer's verses say,
The ablest man an army to array:
So old the title of her sons the name
Of chiefs and champions in the field to
claim."
Though the name of Cimon is not mentioned in these
inscriptions, yet his contemporaries considered them to be the very highest
honours to him; as neither Miltiades nor Themistocles ever received the like.
When Miltiades claimed a garland, Sochares of Decelea stood up in the midst of
the assembly and opposed it, using words which, though ungracious, were
received with applause by the people: "When you have gained a victory by
yourself, Miltiades, then you may ask to triumph so too." What then
induced them so particularly to honour Cimon? Was it that under other
commanders they stood upon the defensive? but by his
conduct, they not only attacked their enemies, but invaded them in their own
country, and acquired new territory, becoming masters of Eion and Amphipolis,
where they planted colonies, as also they did in the isle of Scyros,
which Cimon had taken on the following occasion. The Dolopians were the
inhabitants of this isle, a people who neglected all husbandry,
and had, for many generations, been devoted to piracy; this they practised to
that degree, that at last they began to plunder foreigners that brought
merchandise into their ports. Some merchants of Thessaly,
who had come to shore near to Ctesium, were not only spoiled of their goods,
but themselves put into confinement. These men afterwards escaping from their
prison, went and obtained sentence against the Scyrians in a court of
Amphictyons, and when the Scyrian people declined to make public restitution,
and called upon the individuals who had got the plunder to give it up, these
persons, in alarm, wrote to Cimon to succour them, with his fleet, and declared
themselves ready to deliver the town into his hands. Cimon, by these means, got
the town, expelled the Dolopian pirates, and so opened the traffic of the Aegean sea. And, understanding
that the ancient Theseus, the son of Aegeus, when he fled from Athens and took refuge in this isle, was here
treacherously slain by King Lycomedes, who feared him, Cimon endeavoured to
find out where he was buried. For an oracle had commanded the Athenians to
bring home his ashes, and pay him all due honours as a hero; but hitherto they
had not been able to learn where he was interred, as the people of Scyros dissembled the knowledge of it, and were not
willing to allow a search. But now, great inquiry being made, with some
difficulty he found out the tomb and carried the relics into his own galley,
and with great pomp and show brought them to Athens, four hundred years, or thereabouts,
after his expulsion. This act got Cimon great favour with the people, one mark
of which was the judgment, afterwards so famous, upon the tragic poets.
Sophocles, still a young man, had just brought forward his first plays;
opinions were much divided, and the spectators had taken sides with some heat.
So, to determine the case, Apsephion, who was at that time archon, would not cast
lots who should be judges; but when Cimon and his brother commanders with him
came into the theatre, after they had performed the usual rites to the god of
the festival, he would not allow them to retire, but came forward and made them
swear (being ten in all, one from each tribe) the usual oath; and so being
sworn judges, he made them sit down to give sentence. The eagerness for victory
grew all the warmer from the ambition to get the suffrages of such honourable
judges. And the victory was at last adjudged to Sophocles, which Aeschylus is
said to have taken so ill, that he left Athens
shortly after, and went in anger to Sicily,
where he died, and was buried near the city of Gela.
Ion relates that when he was a young man, and recently come
from Chios to Athens,
he chanced to sup with Cimon at Laomedon's house. After supper, when they had,
according to custom, poured out wine to the honour of the gods, Cimon was
desired by the company to give them a song, which he did with sufficient
success, and received the commendations of the company, who remarked on his
superiority to Themistocles, who, on a like occasion, had declared he had never
learnt to sing, nor to play, and only knew how to make a city rich and
powerful. After talking of things incident to such entertainments, they entered
upon the particulars of the several actions for which Cimon had been famous.
And when they were mentioning the most signal, he told them they had omitted
one, upon which he valued himself most for address and good contrivance. He
gave this account of it. When the allies had taken a great number of the barbarians prisoners in Sestos and Byzantium, they gave him the preference to
divide the booty; he accordingly put the prisoners in one lot, and the spoils
of their rich attire and jewels in the other. This the allies complained of as
an unequal division; but he gave them their choice to take which lot they
would, for that the Athenians should be content with that which they refused.
Herophytus of Samos advised them to take the ornaments for their share, and
leave the slaves to the Athenians; and Cimon went away, and was much laughed at
for his ridiculous division. For the allies carried away the golden bracelets,
and armlets, and collars, and purple robes, and the Athenians had only the
naked bodies of the captives, which they could make no advantage of, being
unused to labour. But a little while after, the friends and kinsmen of the
prisoners coming from Lydia and Phrygia, redeemed everyone his relations at a
high ransom; so that by this means Cimon got so much treasure that he
maintained his whole fleet of galleys with the money for four months; and yet
there was some left to lay up in the treasury at Athens.
Cimon now grew rich, and what he gained from the barbarians
with honour, he spent yet more honourably upon the citizens. For
he pulled down all the enclosures of his gardens and grounds, that strangers,
and the needy of his fellow-citizens, might gather of his fruits freely.
At home he kept a table, plain, but sufficient for a considerable number; to
which any poor townsman had free access, and so might support himself without
labour, with his whole time left free for public duties. Aristotle states,
however, that this reception did not extend to all the Athenians, but only to
his own fellow-townsmen, the Laciadae. Besides this, he always went attended by
two or three young companions, very well clad; and if he met with an elderly
citizen in a poor habit, one of these would change clothes with the decayed
citizen, which was looked upon as very nobly done. He enjoined them, likewise,
to carry a considerable quantity of coin about them, which they were to convey
silently into the hands of the better class of poor men, as they stood by them
in the market-place. This, Cratinus the poet speaks of in one of his comedies,
the Archilochi-
"For I, Metrobius too, the scrivener poor,
Of ease and comfort in my age secure
By Greece's
noblest son in life's decline,
Cimon, the generous-hearted, the divine,
Well-fed and feasted hoped till death to be,
Death which, alas! has taken him
ere me."
Gorgias the Leontine gives him this character, that he got
riches that he might use them, and used them that he might get honour by them.
And Critias, one of the thirty tyrants, makes it, in his elegies, his wish to
have-
"The Scopads' wealth, and Cimon's nobleness,
And King Agesilaus's success."
Lichas, we know, became famous in Greece, only because on the days of
the sports, when the young boys run naked, he used to entertain the strangers
that came to see these diversions. But Cimon's generosity outdid all the old
Athenian hospitality and good-nature. For though it is the city's just boast
that their forefathers taught the rest of Greece to sow corn, and how to use
springs of water, and to kindle fire, yet Cimon, by keeping open house for his
fellow-citizens, and giving travellers liberty to eat the fruits which the
several seasons produced in his land, seemed to restore to the world that
community of goods, which mythology says existed in the reign of Saturn. Those
who object to him, that he did this to be popular and gain the applause of the
vulgar, are confuted by the constant tenor of the rest of his actions, which
all tended to uphold the interests of the nobility and the Spartan policy, of which
he gave instances, when together with Aristides he opposed Themistocles, who
was advancing the authority of the people beyond its just limits, and resisted
Ephialtes, who, to please the multitude, was for abolishing the jurisdiction of
the court of Areopagus. And when all of this time, except Aristides and
Ephialtes, enriched themselves out of the public money, he still kept his hands
clean and untainted, and to his last day never acted or spoke for his own
private gain or emolument. They tell us that Rhoesaces, a Persian, who had
traitorously revolted from the king his master, fled to Athens, and there,
being harassed by sycophants, who were still accusing him to the people, he
applied himself to Cimon for redress, and, to gain his favour, laid down in his
doorway two cups, the one full of gold and the other of silver Darics. Cimon
smiled and asked him whether he wished to have Cimon's hired service or his
friendship. He replied, his friendship. "If so," said he, "take
away these pieces, for, being your friend, when I shall have occasion for them,
I will send and ask for them."
The allies of the Athenians began now to be weary of war and
military service, willing to have repose, and to look after their husbandry and
traffic. For they saw their enemies driven out of the country, and did not fear
any new vexations from them. They still paid the tax they were assessed at, but
did not send men and galleys, as they had done before. This
the other Athenian generals wished to constrain them to, and by judicial
proceedings against defaulters, and penalties which they inflicted on them,
made the government uneasy, and even odious. But Cimon practised a contrary
method; he forced no man to go that was not willing, but of those that desired
to be excused from service he took money and vessels unmanned, and let them
yield to the temptation of staying at home, to attend to their private
business. Thus they lost their military habits and luxury, and their own folly
quickly changed them into unwarlike husbandmen and traders; while Cimon,
continually embarking large numbers of Athenians on board his galleys,
thoroughly disciplined them in his expeditions, and ere long made them the
lords of their own paymasters. The allies, whose indolence maintained them,
while they thus went sailing about everywhere, and incessantly bearing arms and
acquiring skill, began to fear and flatter them, and found themselves after a
while allies no longer, but unwittingly become tributaries and slaves.
Nor did any man ever do more than Cimon did to humble the
pride of the Persian king. He was not content with getting rid of him out of
Greece; but following close at his heels, before the barbarians could take
breath and recover themselves, he was already at work, and what with his
devastations, and his forcible reduction of some places, and the revolts and
voluntary accession of others, in the end, from Ionia to Pamphylia, all Asia
was clear of Persian soldiers. Word being brought him that the royal commanders
were lying in wait upon the coast of Pamphylia with a numerous land army and a
large fleet, he determined to make the whole sea on his side the Chelidonian
islands so formidable to them that they should never dare to show themselves in
it; and setting off from Cnidos and the Triopian headland with two hundred
galleys, which had been originally built with particular care by Themistocles,
for speed and rapid evolutions, and to which he now gave greater width and
roomier decks along the sides to move to and fro upon, so as to allow a great
number of full-armed soldiers to take part in the engagements and fight from
them, he shaped his course first of all against the town of Phaselis, which
though inhabited by Greeks, yet would not quit the interests of Persia, but
denied his galleys entrance into their port. Upon this he wasted the country,
and drew up his army to their very walls; but the soldiers of Chios, who were
then serving under him, being ancient friends to the Phaselites, endeavouring
to propitiate the general in their behalf, at the same time shot arrows into
the town, to which were fastened letters conveying intelligence. At length he
concluded peace with them, upon the conditions that they should pay down ten
talents, and follow him against the barbarians. Ephorus says the admiral of the
Persian fleet was Tithraustes, and the general of the
land army Pherendates; but Callisthenes is positive that Ariomandes, the son of
Gobryas, had the supreme command of all the forces. He lay
waiting with the whole fleet at the mouth of the river Eurymedon, with no
design to fight, but expecting a reinforcement of eighty Phoenician ships on
their way from Cyprus.
Cimon, aware of this, put out to sea, resolved, if they would not fight a
battle willingly, to force them to it. The barbarians, seeing this, retired
within the mouth of the river to avoid being attacked; but when they saw the
Athenians come upon them, notwithstanding their retreat, they met them with six
hundred ships, as Phanodemus relates, but, according to Ephorus, only with
three hundred and fifty. However, they did nothing worthy such mighty forces,
but immediately turned the prows of their galleys toward the shore, where those
that came first threw themselves upon the land, and fled to their army drawn up
thereabout, while the rest perished with their vessel or were taken. By this,
one may guess at their number, for though a great many escaped out of the
fight, and a great many others were sunk, yet two hundred galleys were taken by
the Athenians.
When their land army drew toward the seaside, Cimon was in
suspense whether he should venture to try and force his way on shore; as he
should thus expose his Greeks, wearied with slaughter in the first engagement,
to the swords of the barbarians, who were all fresh men, and many times their
number. But seeing his men resolute, and flushed with victory, he bade them
land, though they were not yet cool from their first battle. As soon as they
touched ground, they set up a shout and ran upon the enemy, who stood firm and
sustained the first shock with great courage, so that the fight was a hard one,
and some principal men of the Athenians in rank and courage were slain. At
length, though with much ado, they routed the barbarians, and killing some,
took others prisoners, and plundered all their tents and pavilions, which were
full of rich spoil. Cimon, like a skilled athlete at the games, having in one
day carried off two victories wherein he surpassed that of Salamis
by sea and that of Plataea
by land, was encouraged to try for yet another success. News being brought that
the Phoenician succours, in number eighty sail, had come in sight at Hydrum, he
set off with all speed to find them, while they as yet had not received any
certain account of the larger fleet, and were in doubt what to think; so that,
thus surprised, they lost all their vessels and most of their men with them. This success of Cimon so daunted the King of Persia that he
presently made that celebrated peace, by which he engaged that his armies
should come no nearer the Grecian sea than the length of a horse's course, and
that none of his galleys or vessels of war should appear between the Cyanean
and Chelidonian isles. Callisthenes, however, says that he did not agree
to any such articles, but that, upon the fear this victory gave him, he did in
reality thus act, and kept off so far from Greece, that when Pericles with
fifty and Ephialtes with thirty galleys cruised beyond the Chelidonian isles,
they did not discover one Persian vessel. But in the collection which Craterus
made of the public acts of the people, there is a draft of this treaty given.
And it is told, also, that at Athens
they erected the altar of Peace upon this occasion, and decreed particular
honours to Callias, who was employed as ambassador to procure the treaty.
The people of Athens
raised so much money from the spoils of this war, which were publicly sold,
that besides other expenses, and raising the south wall of the citadel, they
laid the foundation of the long walls, not, indeed, finished till at a later
time, which were called the Legs. And the place where they built them being
soft and marshy ground, they were forced to sink great weights of stone and
rubble to secure the foundation, and did all this out of the money Cimon
supplied them with. It was he, likewise, who first embellished the upper city
with those fine and ornamental places of exercise and resort, which they
afterwards so much frequented and delighted in. He set the market-place with
plane-trees; and the Academy, which was before a bare, dry, and dirty spot, he
converted into a well-watered grove, with shady alleys to walk in, and open
courses for races.
When the Persians who had made themselves masters of the
Chersonese, so far from quitting it, called in the people of the interior of
Thrace to help them against Cimon, whom they despised for the smallness of his
forces, he set upon them with only four galleys, and took thirteen of theirs;
and having driven out the Persians, and subdued the Thracians, he made the
whole Chersonese the property of Athens. Next he attacked the people of Thasos,
who had revolted from the Athenians; and, having defeated them in a fight at
sea, where he took thirty-three of their vessels, he took their town by siege,
and acquired for the Athenians all the mines of gold on the opposite coast, and
the territory dependent on Thasos. This opened
him a fair passage into Macedon, so that he might, it was thought, have
acquired a good portion of that country; and because he neglected the
opportunity, he was suspected of corruption, and of having been bribed off by
King Alexander. So, by the combination of his adversaries, he was accused of
being false to his country. In his defence he told the judges that he had
always shown himself in his public life the friend, not, like other men, of
rich Ionians and Thessalians, to be courted, and to receive presents, but of
the Lacedaemonians; for as he admired, so he wished to imitate, the plainness
of their habits, their temperance, and simplicity of living, which he preferred
to any sort of riches: but that he always had been, and still was, proud to
enrich his country with the spoils of her enemies. Stesimbrotus, making mention
of this trial, states that Elpinice, in behalf of her brother, addressed
herself to Pericles, the most vehement of his accusers, to whom Pericles
answered, with a smile, "You are old, Elpinice, to meddle with affairs of
this nature." However, he proved the mildest of his prosecutors, and rose
up but once all the while, almost as a matter of form, to plead against him. Cimon
was acquitted.
In his public life after this he continued, whilst at home,
to control and restrain the common people, who would have trampled upon the
nobility. and drawn all the power and sovereignty to
themselves. But when he afterwards was sent out to war, the multitude broke
loose, as it were, and overthrew all the ancient laws and customs they had
hitherto observed, and, chiefly at the instigation of Ephialtes, withdrew the
cognisance of almost all causes from the Areopagus; so that all jurisdiction
now being transferred to them, the government was reduced to a perfect
democracy, and this by the help of Pericles, who was already powerful, and had
pronounced in favour of the common people. Cimon, when he returned, seeing the
authority of this great council so upset, was exceedingly troubled, and
endeavoured to remedy these disorders by bringing the courts of law to their
former state, and restoring the old aristocracy of the time of Clisthenes. This the others declaimed against with all the vehemence
possible, and began to revive those stories concerning him and his sister, and
cried out against him as the partisan of the Lacedaemonians. To these calumnies
the famous verses of Eupolis the poet upon Cimon refer:-
"He was as good as others that one sees,
But he was fond of drinking and of ease;
And would at nights to Sparta
often roam,
Leaving his sister desolate at home."
But if, though slothful and a drunkard, he could capture so
many towns and gain so many victories, certainly if he had been sober and minded
his business, there had been no Grecian commander, either before or after him,
that could have surpassed him for exploits of war.
He was, indeed, a favourer of the Lacedaemonians, even from
his youth, and he gave the names of Lacedaemonius and Eleus to two sons, twins,
whom he had, as Stesimbrotus says, by a woman of Clitorium, whence Pericles
often upbraided them with their mother's blood. But Diodorus the geographer
asserts that both these, and another son of Cimon's, whose name was Thessalus,
were born of Isodice, the daughter of Euryptolemus, the son of Megacles.
However, this is certain, that Cimon was countenanced by the
Lacedaemonians in opposition to Themistocles, whom they disliked; and while he
was yet very young, they endeavoured to raise and increase his credit in Athens. This the
Athenians perceived at first with pleasure, and the favour the Lacedaemonians
showed him was in various ways advantageous to them and their affairs; as at
that time they were just rising to power, and were occupied in winning the
allies to their side. So they seemed not at all offended with the honour and
kindness shown to Cimon, who then had the chief management of all the affairs
of Greece,
and was acceptable to the Lacedaemonians, and courteous to the allies. But afterwards
the Athenians, grown more powerful, when they saw Cimon so entirely devoted to
the Lacedaemonians, began to be angry, for he would always in his speeches
prefer them to the Athenians, and upon every occasion, when he would reprimand
them for a fault, or incite them to emulation, he would exclaim, "The
Lacedaemonians would not do thus." This raised the discontent, and got him
in some degree the hatred of the citizens; but that which ministered chiefly to
the accusation against him fell out upon the following occasion.
In the fourth year of the reign of Archidamus, the son of
Zeuxidamus, King of Sparta, there happened in the country of Lacedaemon the
greatest earthquake that was known in the memory of man; the earth opened into
chasms, and the mountain Taygetus was so shaken, that some of the rocky points
of it fell down, and except five houses, all the town of Sparta was shattered
to pieces. They say that a little before any motion was perceived, as the young
men and the boys just grown up were exercising themselves together in the
middle of the portico, a hare, of a sudden, started out just by them, which the
young men, though all naked and daubed with oil, ran after for sport. No sooner
were they gone from the place, than the gymnasium fell down upon the boys who
had stayed behind, and killed them all. Their tomb is to this day called
Sismatias. Archidamus, by the present danger made apprehensive of what might
follow, and seeing the citizens intent upon removing
the most valuable of their goods out of their houses, commanded an alarm to be
sounded, as if an enemy were coming upon them, in order that they should
collect about him in a body, with arms. It was this alone that saved Sparta at that time, for
the Helots were got together from the country about, with design to surprise
the Spartans, and overpower those whom the earthquake had spared. But finding
them armed and well prepared, they retired into the towns and openly made war
with them, gaining over a number of the Laconians of the country districts;
while at the same time the Messenians, also, made an attack upon the Spartans,
who therefore despatched Periclidas to Athens to solicit succours, of whom
Aristophanes says in mockery that he came and-
"In a red jacket, at the altars seated,
With a white face, for men and arms entreated."
This Ephialtes opposed, protesting that they ought not to
raise up or assist a city that was a rival to Athens; but that being down, it
were best to keep her so, and let the pride and arrogance of Sparta be trodden
under. But Cimon, as Critias says, preferring the safety of Lacedaemon
to the aggrandisement of his own country, so persuaded the people, that he soon
marched out with a large army to their relief. Ion records, also, the most
successful expression which he used to move the Athenians. "They ought not
to suffer Greece
to be lamed, nor their own city to be deprived of her
yoke-fellow."
In his return from aiding the Lacedaemonians, he passed with
his army through the territory
of Corinth; whereupon
Lachartus reproached him for bringing his army into the country without first
asking leave of the people. For he that knocks at another man's door ought not
to enter the house till the master gives him leave. "But you Corinthians,
O Lachartus," said Cimon, "did not knock at the gates of the
Cleonaeans and Megarians, but broke them down, and entered by force, thinking
that all places should be open to the stronger." And having thus rallied
the Corinthian, he passed on with his army. Some time after this, the Lacedaemonians
sent a second time to desire succours of the Athenians against the Messenians
and Helots, who had seized upon Ithome. But when they came, fearing their
boldness and gallantry, of all that came to their assistance, they sent them
only back, alleging they were designing innovations. The Athenians returned
home, enraged at this usage, and vented their anger upon all those who were
favourers of the Lacedaemonians, and seizing some slight occasion, they
banished Cimon for ten years, which is the time prescribed to those that are
banished by the ostracism. In the meantime, the Lacedaemonians, on their return
after freeing Delphi from the Phocians, encamped their army at Tanagra, whither
the Athenians presently marched with design to fight them.
Cimon, also, came thither armed, and ranged himself among
those of his own tribe which was the Oeneis, desirous of fighting with the rest
against the Spartans; but the council of five hundred being informed of this,
and frighted at it, his adversaries crying out he would disorder the army, and
bring the Lacedaemonians to Athens, commanded the officers not to receive him.
Wherefore Cimon left the army, conjuring Euthippus, the Anaphlystian, and the
rest of his companions, who were most suspected as favouring the Lacedaemonians,
to behave themselves bravely against their enemies, and by their actions make
their innocence evident to their countrymen. These, being in all a hundred,
took the arms of Cimon, and followed his advice; and making a body by
themselves, fought so desperately with the enemy, that they were all cut off,
leaving the Athenians deep regret for the loss of such brave men, and
repentance for having so unjustly suspected them. Accordingly, they did not
long retain their severity toward Cimon, partly upon remembrance of his former
services, and partly, perhaps, induced by the juncture of the times. For being
defeated at Tanagra
in a great battle, and fearing the Peloponnesians would come upon them at the
opening of the spring, they recalled Cimon by a decree, of which Pericles
himself was author. So reasonable were men's resentments in those times, and so
moderate their anger, that it always gave way to the public good. Even
ambition, the least governable of all human passions, could then yield to the
necessities of the state.
Cimon, as soon as he returned, put an end to the war, and
reconciled the two cities. Peace thus established, seeing the Athenians
impatient of being idle, and eager after the honour and aggrandisement of war,
lest they should set upon the Greeks themselves, or with so many ships cruising
about the isles and Peloponnesus they should give occasions to intestine wars,
or complaining of their allies against them, he equipped two hundred galleys,
with design to make an attempt upon Egypt and Cyprus; purposing, by this means,
to accustom the Athenians to fight against the barbarians, and enrich
themselves honestly by spoiling those who were the natural enemies of Greece.
But when all things were prepared, and the army ready to embark, Cimon had this
dream. It seemed to him that there was a furious bitch barking at him, and
mixed with the barking a kind of human voice uttered these words:-
"Come on, for thou shalt shortly be,
A pleasure to my whelps and me."
This dream was hard to interpret, yet Astyphilus of
Posidonia, a man skilled in divinations, and intimate with Cimon, told him that
his death was presaged by this vision, which he thus
explained. A dog is enemy to him he barks at; and one is always most a pleasure
to one's enemies when one is dead; the mixture of human voice with barking
signifies the Medes, for the army of the Medes is mixed up of Greeks and
barbarians. After this dream, as he was sacrificing to Bacchus, and the priest
cutting up the victim, a number of ants, taking up the congealed particles of
the blood, laid them about Cimon's great toe. This was not observed for a good
while, but at the very time when Cimon spied it, the priest came and showed him
the liver of the sacrifice imperfect, wanting that part of it called the head.
But he could not then recede from the enterprise, so he set sail. Sixty of his
ships he sent toward Egypt; with the rest he went and fought the King of
Persia's fleet, composed of Phoenician and Cilician galleys, recovered all the
cities thereabout, and threatened Egypt; designing no less than the entire ruin
of the Persian empire. And the rather, for that he was informed Themistocles
was in great repute among the barbarians, having promised the king to lead his
army, whenever he should make war upon Greece. But Themistocles, it is
said, abandoning all hopes of compassing his designs, very much out of the
despair of overcoming the valour and good fortune of Cimon, died a voluntary
death. Cimon, intent on great designs, which he was now to enter upon, keeping
his navy about the isle of Cyprus,
sent messengers to consult the oracle of Jupiter Ammon upon some secret matter.
For it is not known about what they were sent, and the god would give them no
answer, but commanded them to return again, for that Cimon was already with
him. Hearing this, they returned to sea, and as soon as they came to the
Grecian army, which was then about Egypt, they understood that Cimon was dead;
and computing the time of the oracle, they found that his death had been
signified, he being then already with the gods.
He died, some say, of sickness, while besieging Citium, in Cyprus;
according to others, of a wound he received in a skirmish with the barbarians.
When he perceived he should die he commanded those under his charge to return,
and by no means to let the news of his death be known by the way; this they did
with such secrecy that they all came home safe, and neither their enemies nor
the allies knew what had happened. Thus, as Phanodemus relates, the Grecian
army was, as it were, conducted by Cimon thirty days after he was dead. But
after his death there was not one commander among the Greeks that did anything
considerable against the barbarians, and instead of uniting against their
common enemies, the popular leaders and partisans of war animated them against
one another to that degree, that none could interpose their good offices to
reconcile them. And while, by their mutual discord, they ruined the power of Greece, they
gave the Persians time to recover breath, and repair all their losses. It is
true, indeed, Agesilaus carried the arms of Greece
into Asia, but it was a long time after; there were, indeed, some brief
appearances of a war against the king's lieutenants in the maritime provinces,
but they all quickly vanished; before he could perform anything of moment, he
was recalled by fresh civil dissensions and disturbances at home. So that he
was forced to leave the Persian king's officers to impose what tribute they
pleased on the Greek cities in Asia, the
confederates and allies of the Lacedaemonians. Whereas, in the time of Cimon,
not so much as a letter-carrier, or a single horseman, was ever seen to come
within four hundred furlongs of the sea.
The monuments, called Cimonian to this day, in Athens, show
that his remains were conveyed home, yet the inhabitants of the city Citium pay
particular honour to a certain tomb which they call the tomb of Cimon,
according to Nausicrates the rhetorician, who states that in a time of famine,
when the crops of their land all failed, they sent to the oracle, which
commanded them not to forget Cimon, but give him the honours of a superior
being. Such was the Greek commander.
THE END