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Aware of this, the Athenian generals
determined to draw them out in mass as far as possible from the city, and
themselves in the meantime to sail by night along shore, and take up at
their leisure a convenient position.
This they knew they could not so well do, if they had to disembark from
their ships in front of a force prepared for them, or to go by land openly.
The numerous cavalry of the Syracusans (a force which they were
themselves without), would then be able to do the greatest mischief
to their light troops and the crowd that followed them; but this plan would enable them to take up a position in which the horse
could do them no hurt worth speaking of, some Syracusan exiles with the army
having told them of the spot near the Olympieum, which they afterwards
occupied.
In pursuance of their idea, the generals imagined the following stratagem.
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