Page:History of Greece Vol X.djvu/151

 MARCH OF KLEOMBROTUS. 123 Tlieban palisade, and lay waste the plain, he gained no serious victory ; and even showed, more clearly than before, his reluctance to engage except upon perfectly equal terms. 1 It became evident that the Thebans were not only strengthening their position in Boaotia, but also acquiring practice in warfare and confidence against the Spartans ; insomuch that Antalkidas and some other companions remonstrated with Age&ilaus, against carrying on the war so as only to give improving lessons to his enemies in military practice, and called upon him to strike some decisive blow. He quitted Bceotia, however, after the summer's campaign, without any such step. 2 In his way he appeased an intestine conflict which was about to break out in Thespia?. Afterwards, on passing to Megara, he experienced a strain or hurt, which grievously injured his sound leg, (it has been mentioned already that he was lame of one leg,) and induced his surgeon to open a vein in the limb for reducing the inflammation. When this was done, however, the blood could not be stopped until he swooned. Having been conveyed home to Sparta in great suffering, he was confined to his couch for several months ; and he remained during a much longer time unfit for active command. 3 The functions of general now devolved upon the other king Kleombrotus, who in the next spring conducted the army of the confederacy to invade Bceotia anew. But on this occasion, the Athenians and Thebans had occupied the passes of Kithaeron, so that he was unable even to enter the country, and was obliged to dismiss his troops without achieving anything. 4 His inglorious retreat excited such murmurs among the allies when they met at Sparta, that they resolved to fit out a large naval force, sufficient both to intercept the supplies of imported corn to Athens, and to forward an invading army by sea against Thebes, to the Boeotian port of Kreusis in the Krissasan Gulf. The former object was attempted first. Towards midsummer, a fleet of sixty triremes, fitted out under the Spartan admiral Pollis, 1 Xen. Hellen. v, 4, 47, 51. The anecdotes in Polyaenus (ii, 1, 18-20), mentioning faint-heartedness and alarm among the allies of Agesilaus, are likely to apply (certainly in part) to this campaign. 8 Diodor. xv, 33, 34 ; Plutarch, Agesil. c. 26. 3 Xen. Hellen. v, 4, 58 4 Xen. Hellen. r, 4, 59. VOL. X. 6* 9oc.