| CHAPTER | PAGE | |
| I. | A New Play | [1] |
| II. | News From the Fleet | [14] |
| III. | Hippocles the Alien | [21] |
| IV. | A Council | [30] |
| V. | Running the Blockade | [41] |
| VI. | Arginusæ | [51] |
| VII. | After the Fight | [58] |
| VIII. | The News at Athens | [65] |
| IX. | Socrates | [79] |
| X. | The Murder of the Generals | [87] |
| XI. | Rescued | [104] |
| XII. | The Voyage of the Skylark | [113] |
| XIII. | Alcibiades | [121] |
| XIV. | Bisanthe | [132] |
| XV. | Ægos Potami | [141] |
| XVI. | To Pharnabazus | [151] |
| XVII. | Athens in the Dust | [159] |
| XVIII. | “Noblesse Oblige” | [172] |
| XIX. | The End of Alcibiades | [184] |
| XX. | Dionysius | [195] |
| XXI. | Cyrus the Younger | [207] |
| XXII. | The Retreat | [212] |
| XXIII. | The Diary | [223] |
| XXIV. | A Thanksgiving | [238] |
| XXV. | Business and Pleasure | [252] |
| XXVI. | Invalided | [263] |
| XXVII. | Back to Athens | [274] |
| XXVIII. | The Story of the Trial | [287] |
| XXIX. | The Last Conversation | [304] |
| XXX. | The Condition of Exile | [321] |
| Author’s Postscript | [328] | |
| Index | [331] | |
CALLIAS
A Tale of the Fall of Athens.
CHAPTER I.
A NEW PLAY.
It is the second year of the ninety-third Olympiad[1] and the Theatre at Athens is full, for the great dramatic season is at its height, and to-day there is to be performed a new play by Aristophanes, the special favorite of the Athenian public. It is a brilliant scene, but a keen observer, who happened to see the same gathering some five and twenty years ago, must now notice a certain falling off in its splendor. For these five and twenty years have been years of war, and latterly, years of disaster. Eleven years ago, the City wild with the pride of power and wealth, embarked on the mad scheme of conquering Sicily, and lost the finest fleet and army that it ever possessed. Since then it has been a struggle for life with it, and year by year it has been growing weaker and weaker. This has told sadly on the glories of its great festivals. The furnishing of the stage, indeed, is as perfect as ever, and the building itself has been pushed on several stages towards completion.[2] However scarce money may be in the public treasury, the theatre must not be starved. But elsewhere there are manifest signs of falling off. The strangers’ gallery is almost empty. All the Greek world from Massilia in Gaul to Cyrene among the sands of Africa used to throng it in happier days. Now more than half that world is hostile, and the rest has little to hope or fear from the dispossessed mistress of the seas. Dionysius of Syracuse, has sent an embassy, and the democracy, which once would have treated with scant courtesy the representatives of a tyrant, is fain to flatter so powerful a prince. There are some Persian Envoys too, for the Persians are still following their old game of playing off one great state against another. A few Greeks from Sinope and from one of the Italian cities, persons of no importance, who would hardly have found a place in the gallery during the palmy times of Athens, make up the company of visitors. Look at the body of the theatre, where the citizens sit, and the spectacle is deplorable indeed. The flower of Athens’ sons has perished, and their successors are puny and degenerate. Examine too the crowd that throngs the benches, and you will see that the slaves, distinguished by their unsleeved tunics, fill up no small portion of space. And boys form an unusually large proportion of the audience. Altogether the theatre is a dispiriting sight to a patriotic Athenian.
To-day, however, all is gaiety, for, as has been said, there is a new play to be brought out, and an Athenian must be in desperate straits indeed, if he cannot forget his sorrows at a new play.
When the curtain rises, or rather, is withdrawn, as the Greek arrangement was, into an opening in the floor of the stage, a murmur of recognition runs through the audience. The scene is the market place of Thebes, and a familiar figure occupies the foreground.
The portly figure, the ruddy face, the vine-leaf crown, and the buskins show him to be Bacchus, the patron-god, it will be remembered, of the Drama. But why this lion’s skin and club? The god gives a lordly kick at the door of the house which was one of the familiar stage-properties, and Hercules appears. He roars with laughter to see his own emblems in such strange company. Bacchus explains. “The tragic poets grow worse and worse. There is not one who can write a decent line. I am going down to the regions of the dead to fetch Euripides,[3] and thought that I had better dress myself up in your fashion, for you, I know, made this same journey very successfully. Perhaps you will tell me something about the way, and what inns you can recommend, where they are free from fleas, you know.”