villages. The travellers, who visited Greece several years afterwards, could easily discover the deep
and bloody traces of the march of the Goths; and Thebes was less indebted for her preservation to the
strength of her seven gates, than to the eager haste of Alaric, who advanced to occupy the city of Athens,
and the important harbor of the Piræus. The same impatience urged him to prevent the delay and danger
of a siege, by the offer of a capitulation; and as soon as the Athenians heard the voice of the Gothic
herald, they were easily persuaded to deliver the greatest part of their wealth, as the ransom of the
city of Minerva and its inhabitants. The treaty was ratified by solemn oaths, and observed with mutual
fidelity. The Gothic prince, with a small and select train, was admitted within the walls; he indulged himself
in the refreshment of the bath, accepted a splendid banquet, which was provided by the magistrate, and
affected to show that he was not ignorant of the manners of civilized nations. But the whole territory of
Attica, from the promontory of Sunium to the town of Megara, was blasted by his baleful presence; and,
if we may use the comparison of a contemporary philosopher, Athens itself resembled the bleeding and
empty skin of a slaughtered victim. The distance between Megara and Corinth could not much exceed
thirty miles; but the bad road, an expressive name, which it still bears among the Greeks, was, or might
easily have been made, impassable for the march of an enemy. The thick and gloomy woods of Mount
Cithæron covered the inland country; the Scironian rocks approached the water's edge, and hung over
the narrow and winding path, which was confined above six miles along the sea-shore. The passage of
those rocks, so infamous in every age, was terminated by the Isthmus of Corinth; and a small a body of
firm and intrepid soldiers might have successfully defended a temporary intrenchment of five or six miles
from the Ionian to the Ægean Sea. The confidence of the cities of Peloponnesus in their natural rampart,
had tempted them to neglect the care of their antique walls; and the avarice of the Roman governors
had exhausted and betrayed the unhappy province. Corinth, Argos, Sparta, yielded without resistance
to the arms of the Goths; and the most fortunate of the inhabitants were saved, by death, from beholding
the slavery of their families and the conflagration of their cities. The vases and statues were distributed
among the Barbarians, with more regard to the value of the materials, than to the elegance of the workmanship; the
female captives submitted to the laws of war; the enjoyment of beauty was the reward of valor; and the
Greeks could not reasonably complain of an abuse which was justified by the example of the heroic
times. The descendants of that extraordinary people, who had considered valor and discipline as the
walls of Sparta, no longer remembered the generous reply of their ancestors to an invader more formidable
than Alaric. "If thou art a god, thou wilt not hurt those who have never injured thee; if thou art a man,
advance: -- and thou wilt find men equal to thyself." From Thermopylæ to Sparta, the leader of the Goths
pursued his victorious march without encountering any mortal antagonists: but one of the advocates
of expiring Paganism has confidently asserted, that the walls of Athens were guarded by the goddess
Minerva, with her formidable Ægis, and by the angry phantom of Achilles; and that the conqueror was dismayed
by the presence of the hostile deities of Greece. In an age of miracles, it would perhaps be unjust to
dispute the claim of the historian Zosimus to the common benefit: yet it cannot be dissembled, that the
mind of Alaric was ill prepared to receive, either in sleeping or waking visions, the impressions of Greek
superstition. The songs of Homer, and the fame of Achilles, had probably never reached the ear of the
illiterate Barbarian; and the Christian faith, which he had devoutly embraced, taught him to despise
the imaginary deities of Rome and Athens. The invasion of the Goths, instead of vindicating the honor,
contributed, at least accidentally, to extirpate the last remains of Paganism: and the mysteries of Ceres,
which had subsisted eighteen hundred years, did not survive the destruction of Eleusis, and the calamities
of Greece.
The last hope of a people who could no longer depend on their arms, their gods, or their sovereign, was
placed in the powerful assistance of the general of the West; and Stilicho, who had not been permitted
to repulse, advanced to chastise, the invaders of Greece. A numerous fleet was equipped in the ports of
Italy; and the troops, after a short and prosperous navigation over the Ionian Sea, were safely disembarked
on the isthmus, near the ruins of Corinth. The woody and mountainous country of Arcadia, the fabulous
residence of Pan and the Dryads, became the scene of a long and doubtful conflict between the two
generals not unworthy of each other. The skill and perseverance of the Roman at length prevailed; and
the Goths, after sustaining a considerable loss from disease and desertion, gradually retreated to the
lofty mountain of Pholoe, near the sources of the Peneus, and on the frontiers of Elis; a sacred country,