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Hereupon the Greeks determined to send a body of foot to Thessaly by
sea, which should defend the pass of Olympus. Accordingly a force
was collected, which passed up the Euripus, and disembarking at
Alus, on the coast of Achaea, left the ships there, and marched by
land into Thessaly. Here they occupied the defile of Tempe; which
leads from Lower Macedonia into Thessaly along the course of the
Peneus, having the range of Olympus on the one hand and Ossa upon
the other. In this place the Greek force that had been collected,
amounting to about 10,000 heavy-armed men, pitched their camp;
and here they were joined by the Thessalian cavalry. The commanders
were, on the part of the Lacedaemonians, Evaenetus, the son of
Carenus, who had been chosen out of the Polemarchs, but did not
belong to the blood royal; and on the part of the Athenians
Themistocles, the son of Neocles. They did not however maintain
their station for more than a few days; since envoys came from
Alexander, the son of Amyntas, the Macedonian, and counselled them
to decamp from Tempe, telling them that if they remained in the pass
they would be trodden under foot by the invading army, whose numbers
they recounted, and likewise the multitude of their ships. So when
the envoys thus counselled them, and the counsel seemed to be good,
and the Macedonian who sent it friendly, they did even as he advised.
In my opinion what chiefly wrought on them was the fear that the
Persians might enter by another pass, whereof they now heard, which
led from Upper Macedonia into Thessaly through the territory of the
Perrhaebi, and by the town of Gonnus - the pass by which soon
afterwards the army of Xerxes actually made its entrance. The Greeks
therefore went back to their ships and sailed away to the Isthmus.
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