Page:Thucydides, translated into English Vol 2.djvu/366

 358 HIS NARROW ESCAPE [vill Erythrae, where he crossed the channel, arrived in Chios. On his arrival he found at his disposal the sailors whom Chalcidcus had taken from his five ships" and left in Chios fully armed, to the number of five hundred. Some of the Lesbians renewing their proposal to revolt, Asty- ochus suggested to Pedaritus and the Chians that they should go with the fleet to Lesbos and raise the country ; they would thus increase the number of their allies, and, even if the attempt did not wholly succeed, they would injure the Athenians. But they would not listen, and Pedaritus refused to let him have the Chian ships. 33 So Astyochus took five Corinthian ships ^ and a sixth -, , , ., from Megara, one from Hermione, and Astyochus sets sail . /of Miletus to assume the Lacedaemonian ships which he had t/ie comntatid of the brought with him <=, and set sail for ^"' ^/ Tir'^^ Miletus in order to assume his com- escapes the Athenian squadron sailing to mand. He threatened the Chians, Chios. Ti-ick of the again and again, that he would certainly Erythraean prisoners. ^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^ ^^^^^ ^j^^j^ ^^^^ ^^ ^^^^ came. Touching at Corycus in Erythraea he passed the night there. The Athenian ships from Samos were now on their way to Chios ; they had put in at a place where they were only divided from the Peloponnesians by a hill, and neither fleet knew that the other was so near. But that night there came a despatch from Pedaritus informing Astyochus that certain Erythraean prisoners had been released by the Athenians from Samos on condition of betraying Erythrae, and had gone thither with that inten- tion. Whereupon Astyochus sailed back to Erythrae. So narrowly did he escape falling into the hands of the Athenians. Pedaritus sailed over to meet him. They then enquired about the supposed traitors, and found that the whole matter was a trick which the men had devised in order to get away from Samos ; so they acquitted them of the charge, and Pedaritus returned to Chios, while Astyochus resumed his voyage to Miletus. • Cp. viii. 17 init. " Cp. viii. 23 fin. <= Cp. viii. 23 init.