Now what are the terms available to ourselves, gentlemen? How is Sparta disposed to us? Here, if I am about to cause distress to any of you, I ask his forgiveness, as I shall be stating nothing but the facts. To begin with, when we lost our fleet on the Hellespont and were shut within our walls, The siege of Athens , which followed immediately after Aegospotami , lasted from September 405 to April 404. what did our present allies, Notably the Thebans and Corinthians. who were then on the Spartan side, propose to do with us? They proposed, did they not, to sell our citizens as slaves and make Attica a waste. And who was it who prevented this? The Spartans; they dissuaded the allies, and for their own part refused even to contemplate such measures. Later we gave them our oath, were allowed to erect the column, and accepted a truce upon dictated terms, a hardship which was welcome enough at the time. Nevertheless we then proceeded, by means of an alliance, to detach Boeotia and Corinth from Sparta , and to resume friendly relations with Argos , thereby involving Sparta in the battle of Corinth . i.e. Nemea in 394. Who, again, turned the king of Persia against Sparta ? Who enabled Conon to fight the engagement at sea which lost her her maritime supremacy? After Aegospotami Conon, the Athenian admiral, fled to the court of Evagoras of Salamis in Cyprus . Through his influence he ultimately won the confidence of the satrap Pharnabazus. In 397 he was put in charge of the Persian fleet, and in 394 utterly routed the Spartans under Peisander off Cnidus . Yet in spite of all that she has suffered at our hands, she agrees to the same concessions as those made us by our allies, and offers us our walls, our fleet, and our islands. What terms of peace do you expect representatives to bring you back, may I ask? Can they do better than obtain the same advantages from the enemy as our friends are offering us, the very advantages which we went to war to secure for Athens ? Whereas others make peace at a loss to themselves, we gain precisely what we most want. What, then, remains to be considered? Corinth , and the appeal which Argos is making to us. First as to Corinth . I should like to be informed of the value of Corinth to us, if Boeotia leaves our ranks and makes peace with Sparta . Recall the day on which we concluded our alliance with Boeotia , gentlemen: Recall the assumption on which we acted. We imagined, did we not, that once Boeotia joined forces with us we could face the whole world. Yet here we are considering how we can continue fighting Sparta without her help, now that she is making peace.