Pericles

Plutarch

Plutarch. Plutarch's Lives, Vol. III. Perrin, Bernadotte, translator. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press; London: William Heinemann Ltd., 1916.

as these anapaestic verses of Hermippus[*](From his Moirai, or Fates. Kock, Com. Att. Frag. i. pp. 236 f. ) show:—

  1. Thou king of the Satyrs, why pray wilt thou not
  2. Take the spear for thy weapon, and stop the dire talk
  3. With the which, until now, thou conductest the war.
  4. While the soul of a Teles is in thee?
  5. If the tiniest knife is but laid on the stone
  6. To give it an edge, thou gnashest thy teeth,
  7. As if bitten by fiery Cleon.

However, Pericles was moved by no such things, but gently and silently underwent the ignominy and the hatred, and, sending out an armament of a hundred ships against the Peloponnesus, did not himself sail with it, but remained behind, keeping the city under watch and ward and well in hand, until the Peloponnesians withdrew. Then, by way of soothing the multitude, who, in spite of their enemies’ departure, were distressed over the war, he won their favour by distributions of moneys and proposed allotments of conquered lands; the Aeginetans, for instance, he drove out entirely, and parcelled out their island among the Athenians by lot. And some consolation was to be had from what their enemies suffered.

For the expedition around the Peloponnesus ravaged much territory and sacked villages and small cities, while Pericles himself, by land, invaded the Megarid and razed it all. Wherein also it was evident that though their enemies did the Athenians much harm by land, they suffered much too at their hands by sea, and therefore would not have protracted the war to such a length, but would have speedily given up, just as Pericles prophesied in the beginning, had not a terrible visitation from heaven thwarted human calculations.