6.     So true  it is that the minds of men are easily shaken and carried off from  their own sentiments through the casual commendation or reproof of  others, unless the judgments that we make, and the purposes we conceive,  be confirmed by reason and philosophy, and thus obtain strength and  steadiness. An action must not only be just and laudable in its own  nature, but it must proceed likewise from motives and a lasting principle,  that so we may fully and constantly approve the thing, and be perfectly  satisfied in what we do; for otherwise, after having put our resolution  into practice, we shall out of pure weakness come to be troubled at  the performance, when the grace and godliness, which rendered it before  so amiable and pleasing to us, begin to decay and wear out of our  fancy; like greedy people, who, seizing on the more delicious morsels  of any dish with a keen appetite, are presently disgusted when they  grow full, and find themselves oppressed and uneasy now by what they  before so greedily desired. For a succeeding dislike spoils the best  of actions, and repentance makes that which was never so well done  become base and faulty; whereas the choice that is founded upon knowledge  and wise reasoning does not change by disappointment, or suffer us  to repent, though it happen perchance to be less prosperous in the  issue. And thus, Phocion, of Athens, having always vigorously opposed  the measures of Leosthenes, when success appeared to attend them,  and he saw his countrymen rejoicing and offering sacrifice in honour  of their victory, "I should have been as glad," said he to them, "that  I myself had been the author of what Leosthenes has achieved for you,  as I am that I gave you my own counsel against it." A more vehement  reply is record to have been made by Aristides the Locrian, one of  Plato's companions, to Dionysius the elder, who demanded one of his  daughters in marriage: "I had rather," said he to him, "see the virgin  in her grave than in the palace of a tyrant." And when Dionysius,  enraged at the affront, made his sons be put to death a while after,  and then again insultingly asked, whether he were still in the same  mind as to the disposal of his daughters, his answer was, "I cannot  but grieve at the cruelty of your deeds, but am not sorry for the  freedom of my own words." Such expressions as these may belong perhaps  to a more sublime and accomplished virtue.

 

7.     The grief, however, of Timoleon at what had been done, whether it  arose from commiseration of his brother's fate or the reverence he  bore his mother, so shattered and broke his spirits, that for the  space of almost twenty years he had not offered to concern himself  in any honourable or public action. When, therefore, he was pitched  upon for a general, and, joyfully accepted as such by the suffrages  of the people, Teleclides, who was at that time the most powerful  and distinguished man in Corinth, began to exhort him that he would  act now like a man of worth and gallantry: "For," said he, "if you  do bravely in this service we shall believe that you delivered us  from a tyrant; but if otherwise that you killed your brother." While  he was yet preparing to set sail, and enlisting soldiers to embark  with him, there came letters to the Corinthians from Hicetes, plainly  disclosing his revolt and treachery. For his ambassadors had no sooner  gone for Corinth, but he openly joined the Carthaginians, negotiating  that they might assist him to throw out Dionysius, and become master  of Syracuse in his room. And fearing he might be disappointed of his  aim if troops and a commander should come from Corinth before this  were effected, he sent a letter of advice thither, in all haste, to  prevent their setting out, telling them they need not be at any cost  and trouble upon his account, or run the hazard of a Sicilian voyage,  especially since the Carthaginians, alliance with whom against Dionysius  the slowness of their motions had compelled him to embrace, would  dispute their passage, and lay in wait to attack them with a numerous  fleet. This letter being publicly read, if any had been cold and indifferent  before as to the expedition in hand, the indignation they now conceived  against Hicetes so exasperated and inflamed them all that they willingly  contributed to supply Timoleon, and endeavoured with one accord to  hasten his departure.

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13.                        For now the neighbouring cities and potentates sent deputies, one  upon another, to seek his friendship and make offer of their service.  Among the rest Mamercus, the tyrant of Catana, an experienced warrior  and a wealthy prince, made proposals of alliance with him, and what  was of greater importance still, Dionysius himself, being now grown  desperate, and well-nigh forced to surrender, despising Hicetes who  had been thus shamefully baffled, and admiring the valour of Timoleon,  found means to advertise him and his Corinthians that he should be  content to deliver up himself and the citadel into their hands. Timoleon,  gladly embracing this unlooked-for advantage, sends away Euclides  and Telemachus, two Corinthian captains, with four hundred men, for  the seizure and custody of the castle, with directions to enter not  all at once, or in open view, that being impracticable so long as  the enemy kept guard, but by stealth, and in small companies. And  so they took possession of the fortress and the palace of Dionysius,  with all the stores and ammunition he had prepared and laid up to  maintain the war. They found a good number of horses, every variety  of engines, a multitude of darts, and weapons to arm seventy thousand  men (a magazine that had been formed from ancient time), besides two  thousand soldiers that were then with him, whom he gave up with the  rest for Timoleon's service. Dionysius himself, putting his treasure  aboard, and taking a few friends, sailed away unobserved by Hicetes,  and being brought to the camp of Timoleon, there first appeared in  the humble dress of a private person, and was shortly after sent to  Corinth with a single ship and a small sum of money. Born and educated  in the most splendid court and the most absolute monarchy that ever  was, which he held and kept up for the space of ten years succeeding  his father's death, he had, after Dion's expedition, spent twelve  other years in a continual agitation of wars and contests, and great  variety of fortune, during which time all the mischiefs he had committed  in his former reign were more than repaid by the ills he himself then  suffered, since he lived to see the deaths of his sons in the prime  and vigour of their age, and the rape of his daughters in the flower  of their virginity, and the wicked abuse of his sister and his wife,  who, after being first exposed to all the lawless insults of the soldiery,  was then murdered with her children, and cast into the sea; the particulars  of which are more exactly given in the life of Dion.

 

14.                        Upon the news of his landing at Corinth, there was hardly a man in  Greece who had not the curiosity to come and view the late formidable  tyrant, and say some words to him; part, rejoicing at his disasters,  were led thither out of mere spite and hatred, that they might have  the pleasure of trampling, as it were, on the ruins of his broken  fortune; but others, letting their attention and their sympathy turn  rather to the changes and revolutions of his life, could not but see  in them a proof of the strength and potency with which divine and  unseen causes operate amidst the weakness of human and visible things.  For neither art nor nature did in that age produce anything comparable  to this work and wonder of fortune which showed the very same man,  that was not long before supreme monarch of Sicily, loitering about  perhaps in the fish-market, or sitting in a perfumer's shop drinking  the diluted wine of taverns, or squabbling in the street with common  women, or pretending to instruct the singing women of the theatre,  and seriously disputing with them about the measure and harmony of  pieces of music that were performed there. Such behaviour on his part  was variously criticized. He was thought by many to act thus out of  pure compliance with his own natural indolent and vicious inclinations;  while finer judges were of the opinion, that in all this he was playing  a politic part, with a design to be contemned among them, and that  the Corinthians might not feel any apprehension or suspicion of his  being uneasy under his reverse of fortune, or solicitous to retrieve  it; to avoid which danger, he purposely and against his true nature  affected an appearance of folly and want of spirit in his private  life and amusements.

 

15.                        However it be, there are sayings and repartees of his left still upon  record, which seem to show that he not ignobly accommodated himself  to his present circumstances; as may appear in part from the ingenuousness  of the avowal he made on coming to Leucadia, which, as well as Syracuse,  was a Corinthian colony, where he told the inhabitants that he found  himself not unlike boys who had been in fault, who can talk cheerfully  with their brothers, but are ashamed to see their father; so likewise  he, he said, could gladly reside with them in that island, whereas  he felt a certain awe upon his mind which made him averse to the sight  of Corinth, that was a common mother to them both. The thing is further  evident from the reply he once made to a stranger in Corinth, who  deriding him in a rude and scornful manner about the conferences he  used to have with philosophers, whose company had been one of his  pleasures while yet a monarch, and demanding, in fine, what he was  the better now for all those wise and learned discourses of Plato,  "Do you think," said he, "I have made no profit of his philosophy  when you see me bear my change of fortune as I do?" And when Aristoxenus  the musician, and several others, desired to know how Plato offended  him, and what had been the ground of his displeasure with him, he  made answer that, of the many evils attaching to the condition of  sovereignty, the one greatest infelicity was that none of those who  were accounted friends would venture to speak freely, or tell the  plain truth; and that by means of such he had been deprived of Plato's  kindness. At another time, when one of those pleasant companions that  are desirous to pass for wits, in mockery to Dionysius, as if he were  still the tyrant, shook out the folds of his cloak, as he was entering  into a room where he was, to show there were no concealed weapons  about him, Dionysius, by way of retort, observed, that he would prefer  he would do so on leaving the room, as a security that he was carrying  nothing off with him. And when Philip of Macedon, at a drinking party,  began to speak in banter about the verses and tragedies which his  father, Dionysius the elder, had left behind him, and pretended to  wonder how he could get any time from his other business to compose  such elaborate and ingenious pieces, he replied, very much to the  purpose, "It was at those leisurable hours, which such as you and  I, and those we call happy men, bestow upon our cups." Plato had not  the opportunity to see Dionysius at Corinth, being already dead before  he came thither; but Diogenes of Sinope, at their first meeting in  the street there, saluted him with the ambiguous expression, "O Dionysius,  how little you deserve your present life! Upon which Dionysius stopped  and replied, "I thank you, Diogenes, for your condolence." "Condole  with you!" replied Diogenes; "do you not suppose that, on the contrary,  I am indignant that such a slave as you, who, if you had your due,  should have been let alone to grow old and die in the state of tyranny,  as your father did before you, should now enjoy the ease of private  persons, and be here to sport and frolic in our society?" So that  when I compare those sad stories of Philistus, touching the daughters  of Leptines, where he makes pitiful moan on their behalf, as fallen  from all the blessings and advantages of powerful greatness to the  miseries of an humble life, they seem to me like the lamentations  of a woman who has lost her box of ointment, her purple dresses, and  her golden trinkets. Such anecdotes will not, I conceive, be thought  either foreign to my purpose of writing Lives, or unprofitable in  themselves, by such readers as are not in too much haste, or busied  and taken up with other concerns.

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21.                        The day after he went away, Timoleon came up before the city in array  for a battle. But when he and his company heard of this sudden flight;  and saw the docks all empty, they could not forbear laughing at the  cowardice of Mago, and in mockery caused proclamation to be made through  the city that a reward would be given to any one who could bring them  tidings whither the Carthaginian fleet had conveyed itself from them.  However, Hicetes resolving to fight it out alone, and not quitting  his hold of the city, but sticking close to the quarters he was in  possession of, places that were well fortified and not easy to be  attacked, Timoleon divided his forces into three parts, and fell himself  upon the side where the river Anapas ran, which was most strong and  difficult of access; and he commanded those that were led by Isias,  a Corinthian captain, to make their assault from the post of Acradina,  while Dinarchus and Demaretus, that brought him the last supply from  Corinth, were, with a third division, to attempt the quarter called  Epipolae. A considerable impression being made from every side at  once, the soldiers of Hicetes were beaten off and put to flight; and  this- that the city came to be taken by storm, and fall suddenly into  their hands, upon the defeat and rout of the enemy- we must in all  justice ascribe to the valour of the assailants and the wise conduct  of their general; but that not so much as a man of the Corinthians  was either slain or wounded in the action, this the good fortune of  Timoleon seems to challenge for her own work, as though, in a sort  of rivalry with his own personal exertions, she made it her aim to  exceed and obscure his actions by her favours, that those who heard  him commended for his noble deeds might rather admire the happiness  than the merit of them. For the fame of what was done not only passed  through all Sicily, and filled Italy with wonder, but even Greece  itself, after a few days, came to ring with the greatness of his exploit;  insomuch that those of Corinth, who had as yet no certainty that their  auxiliaries were landed on the island, had tidings brought them at  the same time that they were safe and were conquerors. In so prosperous  a course did affairs run, and such was the speed and celerity of execution  with which fortune, as with a new ornament, set off the native lustres  of the performance.

 

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27.                        It was  now about the beginning of summer, and conclusion of the month called  Thargelion, not far from the solstice; and the river sending up a  thick mist, all the adjacent plain was at first darkened with the  fog, so that for a while they could discern nothing from the enemy's  camp; only a confused buzz and undistinguished mixture of voices came  up to the hill from the distant motions and clamours of so vast a  multitude. When the Corinthians had mounted, and stood on the top,  and had laid down their bucklers to take breath and repose themselves,  the sun coming round and drawing up the vapours from below, the gross  foggy air that was now gathered and condensed above formed in a cloud  upon the mountains; and, all the under places being clear and open,  the river Crimesus appeared to them again, and they could descry the  enemies passing over it, first with their formidable four-horse chariots  of war, and then ten thousand footmen bearing white shields, whom  they guessed to be all Carthaginians, from the splendour of their  arms, and the slowness and order of their march. And when now the  troops of various other nations, flowing in behind them, began to  throng for passage in a tumultuous and unruly manner, Timoleon, perceiving  that the river gave them opportunity to single off whatever number  of their enemies they had a mind to engage at and bidding his soldiers  observe how their forces were divided into two separate bodies by  the intervention of the stream, some being already over, and others  still to ford it, gave Demaretus command to fall in upon the Carthaginians  with his horse, and disturb their ranks before they should be drawn  up into form of battle; and coming down into the plain himself forming  his right and left wing of other Sicilians, intermingling only a few  strangers in each, he placed the natives of Syracuse in the middle,  with the stoutest mercenaries he had about his own person; and waiting  a little to observe the action of his horse, when they saw they were  not only hindered from grappling with the Carthaginians by the armed  chariots that ran to and fro before the army, but forced continually  to wheel about to escape having their ranks broken, and so to repeat  their charges anew, he took his buckler in his hand, and crying out  to the foot that they should follow him with courage and confidence,  he seemed to speak with a more than human accent, and a voice stronger  than ordinary; whether it were that he naturally raised it so high  in the vehemence and ardour with his mind to assault the enemy, or  else, as many then thought, some god or other spoke with him. When  his soldiers quickly gave an echo to it, and besought him to lead  them on without any further delay, he made a sign to the horse, that  they should draw off from the front where the chariots were, and pass  sidewards to attack their enemies in the flank; then, making his vanguard  firm by joining man to man and buckler to buckler, he caused the trumpet  to sound, and so bore in upon the Carthaginians.