Chapter XIII. The Armed Forces of Athens.
92. The Preliminaries of a Greek Battle.--Later in the day, if
these are happy times of peace, the whole phalanx, so bristling
and formidable, will have resolved itself into its harmless units
of honest citizens all streaming home for dinner.
Our curiosity of course asks how does this army act upon the
campaign; what, in other words, is a typical Greek battle? This
is not hard to describe. Greek battles, until lately, have been
fought according to set formulæ in which there is little room for
original generalship, though much for ordinary circumspection and
personal valor. A battle consists in the charging together of two
phalanxes of hoplites of about equal numbers. If one army greatly
overmatches the other, the weaker side will probably retire without
risking a contest. With a common purpose, therefore, the respective
generals will select a broad stretch of level ground for the
struggle, since stony, hilly, or uneven ground will never do for
the maneuvering of hoplites. The two armies, after having duly
come in sight of one another, and exchanged defiances by derisive
shouts, catcalls, and trumpetings, will probably each pitch its camp
(protected by simple fortifications) and perhaps wait over night,
that the men may be well rested and have a good dinner and breakfast.
The soldiers will be duly heartened up by being told of any lucky
omens of late,--how three black crows were seen on the right, and
a flash of lightning on the left; and the seers and diviners with
the army will, at the general's orders, repeat any hopeful oracles
they can remember or fabricate, e.g. predicting ruin for Thebes,
or victory for Athens. In the morning the soldiers have breakfast,
then the lines are carefully arrayed a little beyond bowshot from
the enemy, who are preparing themselves in similar fashion. Every
man has his arms in order, his spear point and sword just from the
whetstone, and every buckle made fast. The general (probably in
sight of all the men) will cause the seers to kill a chicken, and
examine its entrails. "The omens are good; the color is favorable;
the gods are with us!"[*] he announces; and then, since he is
a Greek among Greeks, he delivers in loud voice an harangue to as
many as can hear him, setting forth the patriotic issues at stake
in the battle, the call of the fatherland to its sons, the glory
of brave valor, the shame of cowardice, probably ending with some
practical directions about "Never edging to the right!" and exhorting
his men to raise as loud a war-cry as possible, both to encourage
themselves and to demoralize the enemy.
[*]It may be suspected that it was very seldom the omens were
ALLOWED to be unfavorable when the general was really resolved on
battle.
Section 93
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