< Page:Herodotus (Swayne).djvu
This page needs to be proofread.

PL ATM A AND MYCALE. 171

wished the Athenians to change places with him, as, from their experience at Marathon, they knew the Persian manner of fighting hetter. And this man- oeuvre, dangerous as it was to attempt in the face of the enemy, would have been executed, had not Mar- donius discovered it, and made a corresponding dispo- sition of his own army. He then sent a herald to reproach the Spartans, and challenge them to fight man for man, with or without the rest of the combatants, as they pleased. As no answer was given, his cavalry were launched en masse against the Greek army. The mounted archers caused them great annoyance, and de- stroyed the Gargaphian well, from which their water supply was drawn. The supplies from the rear having been cut off, the Greeks determined on a westward movement towards the city of Platsea, where they would be within reach of water. Half the army were to carry out this movement in the night, while the other half were to fall back on Cithseron, to protect their line of communication with their base behind the isthmus. The first division had suffered so much dur- ing the day, that in their joy at the respite they retired too far, and never halted till they reached the pre- cincts of a temple of Juno, close to Platsea itself. Pausanias himself was following, but he was kept back by the insubordination of a sturdy colonel named Amompharetus, who objected to any strategic movements which looked like running away. At length he was left to follow or not, as he pleased, while the rest of the Spartans defiled along the safe and hilly ground, the Athenians striking across the exposed plain. Mardonius had now some reason to despise his enemy, and he ordered all his cavalry to

This article is issued from Wikisource. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.