TIMOLEON. 137
parts, Timoleon was desirous now to rescue other cities from the like bondage, and wholly and once for all to ex- tirpate arbitrary government out of Sicily. And for this purpose, marching into the territories of those that used it, he compelled Hicetes first to renounce the Carthagin- ian interest, and, demolishing the fortresses which were held by him, to live henceforth among the Leontin- ians as a private person. Leptines, also, the tyrant of Apollonia and divers other little towns, after some resist- ance made, seeing the danger he was in of being taken by force, surrendered himself; upon which Timoleon spared his life, and sent him away to Corinth, counting it a glorious thing that the mother city should expose to the view of other Greeks these Sicilian tyrants, living now in an exiled and a low condition. After this he returned to Syracuse, that he might have leisure to at- tend to the establishment of the new constitution, and assist Cephalus and Dionysius, who were sent from Cor- inth to make laws, in determining the most important points of it. In the meanwhile, desirous that his hired soldiers should not want action, but might rather enrich themselves by some plunder from the enemy, he de- spatched Dinarchus and Demaretus with a portion of them into the part of the island belonging to the Carthaginians, where they obliged several cities to revolt from the bar- barians, and not only lived in great abundance themselves, but raised money from their spoil to carry on the war. Meantime, the Carthaginians landed at the promon- tory of LilybsBum, bringing with them an army of seventy thousand men on board two hundred galleys, besides a thousand other vessels laden with engines of battery, char- iots, corn, and other military stores, as if they did not intend to manage the war by piecemeal and in parts as heretofore, but to drive the Greeks altogether and at once out of all Sicily. And indeed it was a force suf-