Page:Plutarch's Lives (Clough, v.4, 1865).djvu/481

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CLEOMENES.
473

Cleomenes, being very much elated by this success, and persuaded that if matters were wholly at his disposal, he should soon be too hard for the Achaeans, persuaded Me- gistonus, his mother's husband, that it was expedient for the state to shake off the power of the ephors, and to put all their wealth into one common stock for the whole body; thus Sparta, being restored to its old equality, might aspire again to the command of all Greece. Me- gistonus liked the design, and engaged two or three more of his friends. About that time, one of the ephors, sleep- ing in Pasiphae's temple, dreamed a very surprising dream ; for he thought he saw the four chairs removed out of the place where the ephors used to sit and do the business of their office, and one only set there ; and whilst he won- dered, he heard a voice out of the temple, saying, " This is best for Sparta." The person telling Cleomenes this dream, he was a little troubled at first, fearing that he used this as a trick to sift him, upon some suspicion of his design, but when he was satisfied that the relater spoke truth, he took heart again. And carrying with him those whom he thought would be most against his project, he took Heraea and Alsasa,[1] two towns in league with the Achaeans, furnished Orchomenus with provisions, encamped before Mantinea, and with long marches up and down so harassed the Lacedaemonians, that many of them at their own request were left behind in Arcadia, while he with the mercenaries went on toward Sparta, and by the way communicated his design to those whom he thought fittest for his purpose, and marched slowly, that he might catch the ephors at supper.

When he was come near the city, he sent Euryclidas to the public table, where the ephors supped, under pretence of carrying some message from him from the army ; The-

  1. Alea or Asea more probably.