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of his allies,I.e., the Sicyonians. and then disbanded his army and himself withdrew by the road to Lacedaemon. From this time on large armies of citizens were no391 B.C. longer employed on either side, for the states merely sent out garrisons, the one party to Corinth, the other to Sicyon, and guarded the walls of these cities. Es in their turn were so afraid of the Lacedaemonians that they did not approach within a javelin's cast of the hoplites; for it had once happened that the younger391 B.C. men among the Lacedaemonians, pursuing even from so great a distance as that, overtook and killed some of them. But while the Lacedaemonians felt contempt for th territory he proceeded straight from there across the mountains by way of Tenea to Corinth and captured the walls that had been rebuilt by the Athenians. And his391 B.C. brother Teleutias also came to his support by sea, with about twelve triremes; so that their mother was deemed happy in that on the same day one of the sons whom
urged this course upon one another. But the Argives, Athenians, Boeotians, and392 B.C. those among the Corinthians who had received a share of the money from the Kinn again, when the signal was given to those who had been told whom they were to392 B.C. kill, they drew their swords and struck men down,—one while standing in a socis and mothers and sisters kept coming to them and trying to dissuade them, and,392 B.C. further, some of the very men who were in power promised under oath that they hould also remain, made plans for his entrance. And when the two men, partly by392 B.C. accident and partly by contrivance, had been made sentinels at the very gate whem to the sea and there killed many of them. But Pasimachus, the Lacedaemonian392 B.C. commander of horse, at the head of a few horsemen, when he saw the Sicyonians rished around the steps, being shoved and struck by the enemy, and still others392 B.C. were trodden under foot by one another and suffocated. And the Lacedaemonians
After this the various contingents of the army were dismissed to their several cities and Agesilaus also sailed back home. And from that time on the393 B.C. Athenians, Boeotians, Argives, and their allies continued the war, making Corinth their base, and the Lacedaemonians and their allies from Sicyon. As the Corinthians, however, saw that their own land was being laid waste and that many of them were being killed because they were continually near the enemy, while the rest of the allies were living in peace themselves and their lands were under cultivation, the most and best of them came to desire peace, and uniting together urged this course upon one another. But the Argives, Athenians, Boeotians, and392 B.C. those among the Corinthians who had received a share of the money from the King, as well as those who had made themselves chiefly responsible for the war, realizing that if they did not put out of the way the people who had turned toward peace, the state would be in danger of go