Page:History of Greece Vol XI.djvu/140

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114 HISTORY OF GREECE. Persuading himself that he could by an illustrious example put tc shame and soften the mutual cruelties so frequent in Grecian par ty-warfare, and regarding the amnesty towards Ilerakleides as a proper sequel to the generous impulse which had led him to march from Leontini to Syracuse, he probably gloried in both, more than in the victory itself. We shall presently have the pain of discovering that his anticipations were totally disappointed. And we may be sure that at the time, the judgment passed on his pro- ceeding towards Herakleides was very different from what it now receives. Among his friends and soldiers, the generosity of the act would be forgotten in its imprudence. Among his enemies, it would excite surprise, perhaps admiration yet few of them would be conciliated or converted into friends. In the bosom of Herakleides himself, the mere fact of owing his life to Dion would be a new and intolerable humiliation, which the Erinnys within would goad him on to avenge. Dion would be warned, by the criticism of his friends, as well as by the instinct of his soldiers, that in yielding to a magnanimous sentiment, he overlooked the reasonable consequences ; and that Herakleides continuing at Syracuse would only be more dangerous both to him and them, than he had been before. "Without taking his life, Dion might have required him to depart from Syracuse ; which sentence, hav- ing regard to the practice of the time, would have been accounted generosity. It was Dion's next business to renew the wall of blockade con- structed against Ortygia, and partially destroyed in the late sally of Nypsius. Every Syracusan citizen was directed to cut a stake, and deposit it near the spot ; after which, during the ensuing night, the soldiers planted a stockade so as to restore the broken parts of the line. Protection being thus ensured to the city against Nypsius and his garrison, Dion proceeded to bury the numerous dead who had been slain in the sally, and to ransom the captives, no less than two thousand in number, who had been carried off into Ortygia. 1 A trophy, with sacrifice to the gods for the victo- ry, was not forgotten. 2 A public assembly was now held to elect new generals in place of those who had fled. Here a motion was made by Herakleides 1 Plutarch, Dion, c. 48. Diodor. xvi.20