NICIAS. 315
approach, so that, neglected altogether and despised, Gylippus went in a longboat ashore* without the know- ledge of Nicias, and, having landed in the remotest parts from Syracuse, mustered up a considerable force, the Syracusans not so much as knowing of his arrival nor expecting him ; so that an assembly was summoned to consider the terms to be arranged with Nicias, and some were actually on the way, thinking it essential to have all despatched before the town should be quite walled round, for now there remained very little to be done, and the materials for the building lay all ready along the line. In this very nick of time and danger arrived Gongy- lus in one galley from Corinth, and every one, as may be imagined, flocking about him, he told them that Gy- lippus would be with them speedily, and that other ships were coming to relieve them. And, ere yet they could perfectly believe Gongylus, an express was brought from Gylippue, to bid them go forth to meet him. So now taking good heart, they armed themselves ; and Gylippus at once led on his men from their march in battle array against the Athenians, as Nicias also embattled these. And Gylippus, piling his arms in view of the Athenians, sent a herald to tell them he would give them leave to depart from Sicily without molestation. To this Nicias would not vouchsafe any answer, but some of his soldiers laughing asked if with the sight of one coarse coat and Laconian staff the Syracusan prospects had become so brilliant that they could despise the Athenians, who had released to the Lacedaemonians three hundred, whom they held in chains, bigger men than Gylippus, and longer- haired ? Timseus, also, writes that even the Syracusans
- This is an uncertain reading ; through the straits " between Italy
very likely the genuine text (dia and Sicily, which is the account tou porthmou, instead of dia given in Thucydides, who, indeed, porthmeiou,) should mean " passed uses these very words.