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Meanwhile, the Grecian fleet, which had left Artemisium, proceeded
to Salamis, at the request of the Athenians, and there cast anchor.
The Athenians had begged them to take up this position, in order that
they might convey their women and children out of Attica, and further
might deliberate upon the course which it now behoved them to follow.
Disappointed in the hopes which they had previously entertained, they
were about to hold a council concerning the present posture of their
affairs. For they had looked to see the Peloponnesians drawn up in
full force to resist the enemy in Boeotia, but found nothing of what
they had expected; nay, they learnt that the Greeks of those parts,
only concerning themselves about their own safety, were building a wall
across the Isthmus, and intended to guard the Peloponnese, and let
the rest of Greece take its chance. These tidings caused them to make
the request whereof I spoke, that the combined fleet should anchor at Salamis.
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