Page:Thucydides, translated into English Vol 2.djvu/279

 13-15] LETTER OF NICIAS 27I selves are busy trading; and thus the precision of the service is lost. ' You to whom I am writing know that the crew of a 14 vessel does not long remain at its, ,, ,„ ° / cannot prevent these prime, " and that the sailors who really abuses; for your A then- start the ship and keep the rowing to- »"« tentpers tvill not gether are but a fraction of the whole f ?""' "". "^''"P^'"'-, _,, 111.,. '^^ ^'^ '" danger of numbers The most hopeless thmg of ^^y,^ starved out. It all is that, although I am general, I am is better that you should not able to put a stop to these disorders, ^'""" " '"'"'> "'"• r I'l ever painful. lor tempers like yours are not easily controlled, and that we cannot even fill up the crews, whereas the enemy can obtain recruits from many sources. Our daily waste in men and stores can only be replaced out of the supplies which we brought with us ; and these we have no means of increasing, for the cities which are now our confederates, Naxos and Catana, are unable to maintain us. There is only one advantage more which the Syracusans can gain over us: if the towns of Italy from which our provisions are derived, seeing in what a plight we are and that you do not come to our help, go over to the enemy, we shall be starved out, and they will have made an end of the war without striking a blow. I could have written you tidings more cheering than these, but none more profitable ; for you should be well-informed of our circumstances if you are to take the right steps. Moreover I know your dispositions ; you like to hear pleasant things, but afterwards lay the fault on those who tell you them if they are falsified by the event ; therefore I think it safer to speak the truth. ' And now, do not imagine that your soldiers and their 15 generals have failed in the fulfilment of the duty which you originally imposed upon them. But when all Sicily is uniting against us, and the Syracusans are expecting " Or. ' and that there are few sailors who can start a ship and keep the rowing together.'