KALLIKRAHDAS. 163 every possible effort to bring about an accommodation between Athens and Sparta. 1 In the. mean time, he put forth all his energy to obtain money in some other way, and thus get the fleet to sea ; knowing well, that the way to overcome the reluctance of Cyrus was, to show that he could do without him. Sailing first from Ephesus to Miietus, he despatched from thence a small squadron to Sparta, disclosing his unexpected poverty, and asking for speedy pecu- niary aid. In the mean time he convoked an assembly of the Milesians, communicated to them the mission just sent to Sparta, and asked from them a temporary supply until this money should arrive. He reminded them that the necessity of this demand sprang altogether from the manoeuvre of Lysander, in paying back the funds in his hands ; that he had already in vain applied to Cyrus for farther money, meeting only with such insulting neglect as could no longer be endured : that they, the Milesians, dwelling amidst the Persians, and having already experienced the maximum of ill-usage at their hands, ought now to be fore- most in the war, and to set an example of zeal to the other allies, 2 in order to get clear the sooner from dependence upon such im- perious taskmasters. He promised that, when the remittance from Sparta and the hour of success should arrive, he would richly requite their forwardness. " Let us, with the aid of the gods, show these foreigners (he concluded) that we can punish our enemies without worshipping them." The spectacle of this generous patriot, struggling against a degrading dependence on the foreigner, which was now becom- ing unhappily familiar to the leading Greeks of both sides, ex- cites our warm sympathy and admiration. We may add, that his language to the Milesians, reminding them of the misery which they had endured from the Persians as a motive to exer- tion in the war, is full of instruction as to the new situation opened for the Asiatic Greeks since the breaking-up of the Athenian power. No such evils had they suffered while Athens was com- 1 Xcnoph. Hellen. i, 6, 7 ; Plutarch, Lysaml. c. 6. 3 Xenoph. Hellen. i, 6, 9. t'/iuf <5e ) u!-iu Trpodvponnovr dvai If rd v, 6i& 7ft olKOvvTOf iv fiapflupoif trfatoru nanil fjirj vrr' avruv