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| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 02:36:18 -0700 |
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| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-15 02:36:18 -0700 |
| commit | 64e4d8ef6f429e63d00c8447e82224a0d56d222b (patch) | |
| tree | 1546ba27c39743ee0c182df52c2a682a1b09d308 | |
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diff --git a/.gitattributes b/.gitattributes new file mode 100644 index 0000000..6833f05 --- /dev/null +++ b/.gitattributes @@ -0,0 +1,3 @@ +* text=auto +*.txt text +*.md text diff --git a/27802-8.txt b/27802-8.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b5b5211 --- /dev/null +++ b/27802-8.txt @@ -0,0 +1,6001 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of Darius the Great, by Jacob Abbott + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with +almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Darius the Great + Makers of History + +Author: Jacob Abbott + +Release Date: January 13, 2009 [EBook #27802] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DARIUS THE GREAT *** + + + + +Produced by D Alexander and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was +produced from images generously made available by The +Internet Archive) + + + + + + + + + + Makers of History + + Darius the Great + + BY + + JACOB ABBOTT + + WITH ENGRAVINGS + + NEW YORK AND LONDON + + HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS + + 1904 + + + + + Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year one thousand + eight hundred and fifty, by + + HARPER & BROTHERS, + + in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District + of New York. + + Copyright, 1878, by JACOB ABBOTT. + + + + +[Illustration: DARIUS CROSSING THE BOSPORUS.] + + + + +PREFACE. + + +In describing the character and the action of the personages whose +histories form the subjects of this series, the writer makes no +attempt to darken the colors in which he depicts their deeds of +violence and wrong, or to increase, by indignant denunciations, the +obloquy which heroes and conquerors have so often brought upon +themselves, in the estimation of mankind, by their ambition, their +tyranny, or their desperate and reckless crimes. In fact, it seems +desirable to diminish, rather than to increase, the spirit of +censoriousness which often leads men so harshly to condemn the errors +and sins of others, committed in circumstances of temptation to which +they themselves were never exposed. Besides, to denounce or vituperate +guilt, in a narrative of the transactions in which it was displayed, +has little influence in awakening a healthy sensitiveness in the +conscience of the reader. We observe, accordingly, that in the +narratives of the sacred Scriptures, such denunciations are seldom +found. The story of Absalom's undutifulness and rebellion, of David's +adultery and murder, of Herod's tyranny, and all other narratives of +crime, are related in a calm, simple, impartial, and forbearing +spirit, which leads us to condemn the sins, but not to feel a +pharisaical resentment and wrath against the sinner. + +This example, so obviously proper and right, the writer of this series +has made it his endeavor in all respects to follow. + + + + +CONTENTS. + + + Chapter Page + + I. CAMBYSES 13 + + II. THE END OF CAMBYSES 38 + + III. SMERDIS THE MAGIAN 59 + + IV. THE ACCESSION OF DARIUS 82 + + V. THE PROVINCES 99 + + VI. THE RECONNOITERING OF GREECE 123 + + VII. THE REVOLT OF BABYLON 144 + + VIII. THE INVASION OF SCYTHIA 167 + + IX. THE RETREAT FROM SCYTHIA 189 + + X. THE STORY OF HISTIÆUS 210 + + XI. THE INVASION OF GREECE 233 + + XII. THE DEATH OF DARIUS 264 + + + + +ENGRAVINGS. + + + Page + + MAP OF THE PERSIAN EMPIRE. + + DARIUS CROSSING THE BOSPORUS _Frontispiece._ + + THE ARMY OF CAMBYSES OVERWHELMED IN THE DESERT 35 + + PHÆDYMA FEELING FOR SMERDIS'S EARS 69 + + THE INDIAN GOLD HUNTERS 121 + + THE BABYLONIANS DERIDING DARIUS FROM THE WALL 156 + + MAP OF GREECE 232 + + THE INVASION OF GREECE 256 + + + + +[Illustration: MAP OF THE PERSIAN EMPIRE.] + + + + +DARIUS THE GREAT + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +CAMBYSES. + +B.C. 530-524 + +Cyrus the Great.--His extended conquests.--Cambyses and +Smerdis.--Hystaspes and Darius.--Dream of Cyrus.--His anxiety and +fears.--Accession of Cambyses.--War with Egypt.--Origin of the war +with Egypt.--Ophthalmia.--The Egyptian physician.--His plan of +revenge.--Demand of Cyrus.--Stratagem of the King of Egypt.--Resentment +of Cassandane.--Threats of Cambyses.--Future conquests.--Temperament +and character of Cambyses.--Impetuosity of Cambyses.--Preparations for +the Egyptian war.--Desertion of Phanes.--His narrow escape.--Information +given by Phanes.--Treaty with the Arabian king.--Plan for providing +water.--Account of Herodotus.--A great battle.--Defeat of the +Egyptians.--Inhuman conduct of Cambyses.--His treatment of +Psammenitus.--The train of captive maidens.--The young men.--Scenes +of distress and suffering.--Composure of Psammenitus.--Feelings of the +father.--His explanation of them.--Cambyses relents.--His treatment of +the body of Amasis.--Cambyses's desecrations.--The sacred bull +Apis.--Cambyses stabs the sacred bull.--His mad expeditions.--The sand +storm.--Cambyses a wine-bibber.--Brutal act of Cambyses.--He is deemed +insane. + + +About five or six hundred years before Christ, almost the whole of the +interior of Asia was united in one vast empire. The founder of this +empire was Cyrus the Great. He was originally a Persian; and the whole +empire is often called the Persian monarchy, taking its name from its +founder's native land. + +Cyrus was not contented with having annexed to his dominion all the +civilized states of Asia. In the latter part of his life, he conceived +the idea that there might possibly be some additional glory and power +to be acquired in subduing certain half-savage regions in the north, +beyond the Araxes. He accordingly raised an army, and set off on an +expedition for this purpose, against a country which was governed by a +barbarian queen named Tomyris. He met with a variety of adventures on +this expedition, all of which are fully detailed in our history of +Cyrus. There is, however, only one occurrence that it is necessary to +allude to particularly here. That one relates to a remarkable dream +which he had one night, just after he had crossed the river. + +To explain properly the nature of this dream, it is necessary first to +state that Cyrus had two sons. Their names were Cambyses and Smerdis. +He had left them in Persia when he set out on his expedition across +the Araxes. There was also a young man, then about twenty years of +age, in one of his capitals, named Darius. He was the son of one of +the nobles of Cyrus's court. His father's name was Hystaspes. +Hystaspes, besides being a noble of the court, was also, as almost all +nobles were in those days, an officer of the army. He accompanied +Cyrus in his march into the territories of the barbarian queen, and +was with him there, in camp, at the time when this narrative +commences. + +Cyrus, it seems, felt some misgivings in respect to the result of his +enterprise; and, in order to insure the tranquillity of his empire +during his absence, and the secure transmission of his power to his +rightful successor in case he should never return, he established his +son Cambyses as regent of his realms before he crossed the Araxes, +and delivered the government of the empire, with great formality, into +his hands. This took place upon the frontier, just before the army +passed the river. The mind of a father, under such circumstances, +would naturally be occupied, in some degree, with thoughts relating to +the arrangements which his son would make, and to the difficulties he +would be likely to encounter in managing the momentous concerns which +had been committed to his charge. The mind of Cyrus was undoubtedly so +occupied, and this, probably, was the origin of the remarkable dream. + +His dream was, that Darius appeared to him in a vision, with vast +wings growing from his shoulders. Darius stood, in the vision, on the +confines of Europe and Asia, and his wings, expanded either way, +overshadowed the whole known world. When Cyrus awoke and reflected on +this ominous dream, it seemed to him to portend some great danger to +the future security of his empire. It appeared to denote that Darius +was one day to bear sway over all the world. Perhaps he might be even +then forming ambitious and treasonable designs. Cyrus immediately sent +for Hystaspes, the father of Darius; when he came to his tent, he +commanded him to go back to Persia, and keep a strict watch over the +conduct of his son until he himself should return. Hystaspes received +this commission, and departed to execute it; and Cyrus, somewhat +relieved, perhaps, of his anxiety by this measure of precaution, went +on with his army toward his place of destination. + +Cyrus never returned. He was killed in battle; and it would seem that, +though the import of his dream was ultimately fulfilled, Darius was +not, at that time, meditating any schemes of obtaining possession of +the throne, for he made no attempt to interfere with the regular +transmission of the imperial power from Cyrus to Cambyses his son. At +any rate, it was so transmitted. The tidings of Cyrus's death came to +the capital, and Cambyses, his son, reigned in his stead. + +The great event of the reign of Cambyses was a war with Egypt, which +originated in the following very singular manner: + +It has been found, in all ages of the world, that there is some +peculiar quality of the soil, or climate, or atmosphere of Egypt which +tends to produce an inflammation of the eyes. The inhabitants +themselves have at all times been very subject to this disease, and +foreign armies marching into the country are always very seriously +affected by it. Thousands of soldiers in such armies are sometimes +disabled from this cause, and many are made incurably blind. Now a +country which produces a disease in its worst form and degree, will +produce also, generally, the best physicians for that disease. At any +rate, this was supposed to be the case in ancient times; and +accordingly, when any powerful potentate in those days was afflicted +himself with ophthalmia, or had such a case in his family, Egypt was +the country to send to for a physician. + +Now it happened that Cyrus himself, at one time in the course of his +life, was attacked with this disease, and he dispatched an embassador +to Amasis, who was then king of Egypt, asking him to send him a +physician. Amasis, who, like all the other absolute sovereigns of +those days, regarded his subjects as slaves that were in all respects +entirely at his disposal, selected a physician of distinction from +among the attendants about his court, and ordered him to repair to +Persia. The physician was extremely reluctant to go. He had a wife and +family, from whom he was very unwilling to be separated; but the +orders were imperative, and he must obey. He set out on the journey, +therefore, but he secretly resolved to devise some mode of revenging +himself on the king for the cruelty of sending him. + +He was well received by Cyrus, and, either by his skill as a +physician, or from other causes, he acquired great influence at the +Persian court. At last he contrived a mode of revenging himself on the +Egyptian king for having exiled him from his native land. The king had +a daughter, who was a lady of great beauty. Her father was very +strongly attached to her. The physician recommended to Cyrus to send +to Amasis and demand this daughter in marriage. As, however, Cyrus was +already married, the Egyptian princess would, if she came, be his +concubine rather than his wife, or, if considered a wife, it could +only be a secondary and subordinate place that she could occupy. The +physician knew that, under these circumstances, the King of Egypt +would be extremely unwilling to send her to Cyrus, while he would yet +scarcely dare to refuse; and the hope of plunging him into extreme +embarrassment and distress, by means of such a demand from so powerful +a sovereign, was the motive which led the physician to recommend the +measure. + +Cyrus was pleased with the proposal, and sent, accordingly, to make +the demand. The king, as the physician had anticipated, could not +endure to part with his daughter in such a way, nor did he, on the +other hand, dare to incur the displeasure of so powerful a monarch by +a direct and open refusal. He finally resolved upon escaping from the +difficulty by a stratagem. + +There was a young and beautiful captive princess in his court named +Nitetis. Her father, whose name was Apries, had been formerly the King +of Egypt, but he had been dethroned and killed by Amasis. Since the +downfall of her family, Nitetis had been a captive; but, as she was +very beautiful and very accomplished, Amasis conceived the design of +sending her to Cyrus, under the pretense that she was the daughter +whom Cyrus had demanded. He accordingly brought her forth, provided +her with the most costly and splendid dresses, loaded her with +presents, ordered a large retinue to attend her, and sent her forth to +Persia. + +Cyrus was at first very much pleased with his new bride. Nitetis +became, in fact, his principal favorite; though, of course, his other +wife, whose name was Cassandane, and her children, Cambyses and +Smerdis, were jealous of her, and hated her. One day, a Persian lady +was visiting at the court, and as she was standing near Cassandane, +and saw her two sons, who were then tall and handsome young men, she +expressed her admiration of them, and said to Cassandane, "How proud +and happy you must be!" "No," said Cassandane; "on the contrary, I am +very miserable; for, though I am the mother of these children, the +king neglects and despises me. All his kindness is bestowed on this +Egyptian woman." Cambyses, who heard this conversation, sympathized +deeply with Cassandane in her resentment. "Mother," said he, "be +patient, and I will avenge you. As soon as I am king, I will go to +Egypt and turn the whole country upside down." + +In fact, the tendency which there was in the mind of Cambyses to look +upon Egypt as the first field of war and conquest for him, so soon as +he should succeed to the throne, was encouraged by the influence of +his father; for Cyrus, although he was much captivated by the charms +of the lady whom the King of Egypt had sent him, was greatly incensed +against the king for having practiced upon him such a deception. +Besides, all the important countries in Asia were already included +within the Persian dominions. It was plain that if any future progress +were to be made in extending the empire, the regions of Europe and +Africa must be the theatre of it. Egypt seemed the most accessible and +vulnerable point beyond the confines of Asia; and thus, though Cyrus +himself, being advanced somewhat in years, and interested, moreover, +in other projects, was not prepared to undertake an enterprise into +Africa himself, he was very willing that such plans should be +cherished by his son. + +Cambyses was an ardent, impetuous, and self-willed boy, such as the +sons of rich and powerful men are very apt to become. They imbibe, by +a sort of sympathy, the ambitious and aspiring spirit of their +fathers; and as all their childish caprices and passions are generally +indulged, they never learn to submit to control. They become vain, +self-conceited, reckless, and cruel. The conqueror who founds an +empire, although even his character generally deteriorates very +seriously toward the close of his career, still usually knows +something of moderation and generosity. His son, however, who inherits +his father's power, seldom inherits the virtues by which the power +was acquired. These truths, which we see continually exemplified all +around us, on a small scale, in the families of the wealthy and the +powerful, were illustrated most conspicuously, in the view of all +mankind, in the case of Cyrus and Cambyses. The father was prudent, +cautious, wise, and often generous and forbearing. The son grew up +headstrong, impetuous, uncontrolled, and uncontrollable. He had the +most lofty ideas of his own greatness and power, and he felt a supreme +contempt for the rights, and indifference to the happiness of all the +world besides. His history gives us an illustration of the worst which +the principle of hereditary sovereignty can do, as the best is +exemplified in the case of Alfred of England. + +Cambyses, immediately after his father's death, began to make +arrangements for the Egyptian invasion. The first thing to be +determined was the mode of transporting his armies thither. Egypt is a +long and narrow valley, with the rocks and deserts of Arabia on one +side, and those of Sahara on the other. There is no convenient mode of +access to it except by sea, and Cambyses had no naval force sufficient +for a maritime expedition. + +While he was revolving the subject in his mind, there arrived in his +capital of Susa, where he was then residing, a deserter from the army +of Amasis in Egypt. The name of this deserter was Phanes. He was a +Greek, having been the commander of a body of Greek troops who were +employed by Amasis as auxiliaries in his army. He had had a quarrel +with Amasis, and had fled to Persia, intending to join Cambyses in the +expedition which he was contemplating, in order to revenge himself on +the Egyptian king. Phanes said, in telling his story, that he had had +a very narrow escape from Egypt; for, as soon as Amasis had heard that +he had fled, he dispatched one of his swiftest vessels, a galley of +three banks of oars, in hot pursuit of the fugitive. The galley +overtook the vessel in which Phanes had taken passage just as it was +landing in Asia Minor. The Egyptian officers seized it and made Phanes +prisoner. They immediately began to make their preparations for the +return voyage, putting Phanes, in the mean time, under the charge of +guards, who were instructed to keep him very safely. Phanes, however, +cultivated a good understanding with his guards, and presently invited +them to drink wine with him. In the end, he got them intoxicated, and +while they were in that state he made his escape from them, and then, +traveling with great secrecy and caution until he was beyond their +reach, he succeeded in making his way to Cambyses in Susa. + +Phanes gave Cambyses a great deal of information in respect to the +geography of Egypt, the proper points of attack, the character and +resources of the king, and communicated, likewise, a great many other +particulars which it was very important that Cambyses should know. He +recommended that Cambyses should proceed to Egypt by land, through +Arabia; and that, in order to secure a safe passage, he should send +first to the King of the Arabs, by a formal embassy, asking permission +to cross his territories with an army, and engaging the Arabians to +aid him, if possible, in the transit. Cambyses did this. The Arabs +were very willing to join in any projected hostilities against the +Egyptians; they offered Cambyses a free passage, and agreed to aid his +army on their march. To the faithful fulfillment of these stipulations +the Arab chief bound himself by a treaty, executed with the most +solemn forms and ceremonies. + +The great difficulty to be encountered in traversing the deserts which +Cambyses would have to cross on his way to Egypt was the want of +water. To provide for this necessity, the king of the Arabs sent a +vast number of camels into the desert, laden with great sacks or bags +full of water. These camels were sent forward just before the army of +Cambyses came on, and they deposited their supplies along the route at +the points where they would be most needed. Herodotus, the Greek +traveler, who made a journey into Egypt not a great many years after +these transactions, and who wrote subsequently a full description of +what he saw and heard there, gives an account of another method by +which the Arab king was said to have conveyed water into the desert, +and that was by a canal or pipe, made of the skins of oxen, which he +laid along the ground, from a certain river of his dominions, to a +distance of twelve days' journey over the sands! This story Herodotus +says he did not believe, though elsewhere in the course of his history +he gravely relates, as true history, a thousand tales infinitely more +improbable than the idea of a leathern pipe or hose like this to serve +for a conduit of water. + +By some means or other, at all events, the Arab chief provided +supplies of water in the desert for Cambyses's army, and the troops +made the passage safely. They arrived, at length, on the frontiers of +Egypt.[A] Here they found that Amasis, the king, was dead, and +Psammenitus, his son, had succeeded him. Psammenitus came forward to +meet the invaders. A great battle was fought. The Egyptians were +routed. Psammenitus fled up the Nile to the city of Memphis, taking +with him such broken remnants of his army as he could get together +after the battle, and feeling extremely incensed and exasperated +against the invader. In fact, Cambyses had now no excuse or pretext +whatever for waging such a war against Egypt. The monarch who had +deceived his father was dead, and there had never been any cause of +complaint against his son or against the Egyptian people. Psammenitus, +therefore, regarded the invasion of Egypt by Cambyses as a wanton and +wholly unjustifiable aggression, and he determined, in his own mind, +that such invaders deserved no mercy, and that he would show them +none. Soon after this, a galley on the river, belonging to Cambyses, +containing a crew of two hundred men, fell into his hands. The +Egyptians, in their rage, tore these Persians all to pieces. This +exasperated Cambyses in his turn, and the war went on, attended by the +most atrocious cruelties on both sides. + +[Footnote A: For the places mentioned in this chapter, and the track +of Cambyses on his expedition, see the map at the commencement of this +volume.] + +In fact, Cambyses, in this Egyptian campaign, pursued such a career of +inhuman and reckless folly, that people at last considered him insane. +He began with some small semblance of moderation, but he proceeded, in +the end, to the perpetration of the most terrible excesses of violence +and wrong. + +As to his moderation, his treatment of Psammenitus personally is +almost the only instance that we can record. In the course of the war, +Psammenitus and all his family fell into Cambyses's hands as captives. +A few days afterward, Cambyses conducted the unhappy king without the +gates of the city to exhibit a spectacle to him. The spectacle was +that of his beloved daughter, clothed in the garments of a slave, and +attended by a company of other maidens, the daughters of the nobles +and other persons of distinction belonging to his court, all going +down to the river, with heavy jugs, to draw water. The fathers of all +these hapless maidens had been brought out with Psammenitus to +witness the degradation and misery of their children. The maidens +cried and sobbed aloud as they went along, overwhelmed with shame and +terror. Their fathers manifested the utmost agitation and distress. +Cambyses stood smiling by, highly enjoying the spectacle. Psammenitus +alone appeared unmoved. He gazed on the scene silent, motionless, and +with a countenance which indicated no active suffering; he seemed to +be in a state of stupefaction and despair. Cambyses was disappointed, +and his pleasure was marred at finding that his victim did not feel +more acutely the sting of the torment with which he was endeavoring to +goad him. + +When this train had gone by, another came. It was a company of young +men, with halters about their necks, going to execution. Cambyses had +ordered that for every one of the crew of his galley that the +Egyptians had killed, ten Egyptians should be executed. This +proportion would require two thousand victims, as there had been two +hundred in the crew. These victims were to be selected from among the +sons of the leading families; and their parents, after having seen +their delicate and gentle daughters go to their servile toil, were now +next to behold their sons march in a long and terrible array to +execution. The son of Psammenitus was at the head of the column. The +Egyptian parents who stood around Psammenitus wept and lamented aloud, +as one after another saw his own child in the train. Psammenitus +himself, however, remained as silent and motionless, and with a +countenance as vacant as before. Cambyses was again disappointed. The +pleasure which the exhibition afforded him was incomplete without +visible manifestations of suffering in the victim for whose torture it +was principally designed. + +After this train of captives had passed, there came a mixed collection +of wretched and miserable men, such as the siege and sacking of a city +always produces in countless numbers. Among these was a venerable man +whom Psammenitus recognized as one of his friends. He had been a man +of wealth and high station; he had often been at the court of the +king, and had been entertained at his table. He was now, however, +reduced to the last extremity of distress, and was begging of the +people something to keep him from starving. The sight of this man in +such a condition seemed to awaken the king from his blank and +death-like despair. He called his old friend by name in a tone of +astonishment and pity, and burst into tears. + +Cambyses, observing this, sent a messenger to Psammenitus to inquire +what it meant. "He wishes to know," said the messenger, "how it +happens that you could see your own daughter set at work as a slave, +and your son led away to execution unmoved, and yet feel so much +commiseration for the misfortunes of a stranger." We might suppose +that any one possessing the ordinary susceptibilities of the human +soul would have understood without an explanation the meaning of this, +though it is not surprising that such a heartless monster as Cambyses +did not comprehend it. Psammenitus sent him word that he could not +help weeping for his friend, but that his distress and anguish on +account of his children were too great for tears. + +The Persians who were around Cambyses began now to feel a strong +sentiment of compassion for the unhappy king, and to intercede with +Cambyses in his favor. They begged him, too, to spare Psammenitus's +son. It will interest those of our readers who have perused our +history of Cyrus to know that Croesus, the captive king of Lydia, +whom they will recollect to have been committed to Cambyses's charge +by his father, just before the close of his life, when he was setting +forth on his last fatal expedition, and who accompanied Cambyses on +this invasion of Egypt, was present on this occasion, and was one of +the most earnest interceders in Psammenitus's favor. Cambyses allowed +himself to be persuaded. They sent off a messenger to order the +execution of the king's son to be stayed; but he arrived too late. The +unhappy prince had already fallen. Cambyses was so far appeased by the +influence of these facts, that he abstained from doing Psammenitus or +his family any further injury. + +He, however, advanced up the Nile, ravaging and plundering the country +as he went on, and at length, in the course of his conquests, he +gained possession of the tomb in which the embalmed body of Amasis was +deposited. He ordered this body to be taken out of its sarcophagus, +and treated with every mark of ignominy. His soldiers, by his orders, +beat it with rods, as if it could still feel, and goaded it, and cut +it with swords. They pulled the hair out of the head by the roots, and +loaded the lifeless form with every conceivable mark of insult and +ignominy. Finally, Cambyses ordered the mutilated remains that were +left to be burned, which was a procedure as abhorrent to the ideas and +feelings of the Egyptians as could possibly be devised. + +Cambyses took every opportunity to insult the religious, or as, +perhaps, we ought to call them, the superstitious feelings of the +Egyptians. He broke into their temples, desecrated their altars, and +subjected every thing which they held most sacred to insult and +ignominy. Among their objects of religious veneration was the sacred +bull called Apis. This animal was selected from time to time, from the +country at large, by the priests, by means of certain marks which they +pretended to discover upon its body, and which indicated a divine and +sacred character. The sacred bull thus found was kept in a magnificent +temple, and attended and fed in a most sumptuous manner. In serving +him, the attendants used vessels of gold. + +Cambyses arrived at the city where Apis was kept at a time when the +priests were celebrating some sacred occasion with festivities and +rejoicings. He was himself then returning from an unsuccessful +expedition which he had made, and, as he entered the town, stung with +vexation and anger at his defeat, the gladness and joy which the +Egyptians manifested in their ceremonies served only to irritate him, +and to make him more angry than ever. He killed the priests who were +officiating. He then demanded to be taken into the edifice to see the +sacred animal, and there, after insulting the feelings of the +worshipers in every possible way by ridicule and scornful words, he +stabbed the innocent bull with his dagger. The animal died of the +wound, and the whole country was filled with horror and indignation. +The people believed that this deed would most assuredly bring down +upon the impious perpetrator of it the judgments of heaven. + +Cambyses organized, while he was in Egypt, several mad expeditions +into the surrounding countries. In a fit of passion, produced by an +unsatisfactory answer to an embassage, he set off suddenly, and +without any proper preparation, to march into Ethiopia. The provisions +of his army were exhausted before he had performed a fifth part of the +march. Still, in his infatuation, he determined to go on. The soldiers +subsisted for a time on such vegetables as they could find by the way; +when these failed, they slaughtered and ate their beasts of burden; +and finally, in the extremity of their famine, they began to kill and +devour one another; then, at length, Cambyses concluded to return. He +sent off, too, at one time, a large army across the desert toward the +Temple of Jupiter Ammon, without any of the necessary precautions for +such a march. This army never reached their destination, and they +never returned. The people of the Oasis said that they were overtaken +by a sand storm in the desert, and were all overwhelmed. + +[Illustration: THE ARMY OF CAMBYSES OVERWHELMED IN THE DESERT.] + +There was a certain officer in attendance on Cambyses named +Prexaspes. He was a sort of confidential friend and companion of the +king; and his son, who was a fair, and graceful, and accomplished +youth, was the king's cup-bearer, which was an office of great +consideration and honor. One day Cambyses asked Prexaspes what the +Persians generally thought of him. Prexaspes replied that they +thought and spoke well of him in all respects but one. The king +wished to know what the exception was. Prexaspes rejoined, that it +was the general opinion that he was too much addicted to wine. +Cambyses was offended at this reply; and, under the influence of the +feeling, so wholly unreasonable and absurd, which so often leads men +to be angry with the innocent medium through which there comes to +them any communication which they do not like, he determined to +punish Prexaspes for his freedom. He ordered his son, therefore, the +cup-bearer, to take his place against the wall on the other side of +the room. "Now," said he, "I will put what the Persians say to the +test." As he said this, he took up a bow and arrow which were at his +side, and began to fit the arrow to the string. "If," said he, "I do +not shoot him exactly through the heart, it shall prove that the +Persians are right. If I do, then they are wrong, as it will show +that I do not drink so much as to make my hand unsteady." So saying, +he drew the bow, the arrow flew through the air and pierced the poor +boy's breast. He fell, and Cambyses coolly ordered the attendants to +open the body, and let Prexaspes see whether the arrow had not gone +through the heart. + +These, and a constant succession of similar acts of atrocious and +reckless cruelty and folly, led the world to say that Cambyses was +insane. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +THE END OF CAMBYSES. + +B.C. 523-522 + +Cambyses's profligate conduct.--He marries his own +sisters.--Consultation of the Persian judges.--Their +opinion.--Smerdis.--Jealousy of Cambyses.--The two magi.--Cambyses +suspicious.--He plans an invasion of Ethiopia.--Island of +Elephantine.--The Icthyophagi.--Classes of savage nations.--Embassadors +sent to Ethiopia.--The presents.--The Ethiopian king detects the +imposture.--The Ethiopian king's opinion of Cambyses's presents.--The +Ethiopian bow.--Return of the Icthyophagi.--Jealousy of Cambyses.--He +orders Smerdis to be murdered.--Cambyses grows more cruel.--Twelve +noblemen buried alive.--Cambyses's cruelty to his sister.--Her +death.--The venerable Croesus.--His advice to Cambyses.--Cambyses's +rage at Croesus.--He attempts to kill him.--The declaration of the +oracle.--Ecbatane, Susa, and Babylon.--Cambyses returns +northward.--He enters Syria.--A herald proclaims Smerdis.--The herald +seized.--Probable explanation.--Rage of Cambyses.--Cambyses mortally +wounded.--His remorse and despair.--Cambyses calls his nobles about +him.--His dying declaration.--Death of Cambyses.--His dying declaration +discredited. + + +Among the other acts of profligate wickedness which have blackened +indelibly and forever Cambyses's name, he married two of his own +sisters, and brought one of them with him to Egypt as his wife. The +natural instincts of all men, except those whose early life has been +given up to the most shameless and dissolute habits of vice, are +sufficient to preserve them from such crimes as these. Cambyses +himself felt, it seems, some misgivings when contemplating the first +of these marriages; and he sent to a certain council of judges, whose +province it was to interpret the laws, asking them their opinion of +the rightfulness of such a marriage. Kings ask the opinion of their +legal advisers in such cases, not because they really wish to know +whether the act in question is right or wrong, but because, having +themselves determined upon the performance of it, they wish their +counselors to give it a sort of legal sanction, in order to justify +the deed, and diminish the popular odium which it might otherwise +incur. + +The Persian judges whom Cambyses consulted on this occasion understood +very well what was expected of them. After a grave deliberation, they +returned answer to the king that, though they could find no law +allowing a man to marry his sister, they found many which authorized a +king of Persia to do whatever he thought best. Cambyses accordingly +carried his plan into execution. He married first the older sister, +whose name was Atossa. Atossa became subsequently a personage of great +historical distinction. The daughter of Cyrus, the wife of Darius, and +the mother of Xerxes, she was the link that bound together the three +most magnificent potentates of the whole Eastern world. How far these +sisters were willing participators in the guilt of their incestuous +marriages we can not now know. The one who went with Cambyses into +Egypt was of a humane, and gentle, and timid disposition, being in +these respects wholly unlike her brother; and it may be that she +merely yielded, in the transaction of her marriage, to her brother's +arbitrary and imperious will. + +Besides this sister, Cambyses had brought his brother Smerdis with +him into Egypt. Smerdis was younger than Cambyses, but he was superior +to him in strength and personal accomplishments. Cambyses was very +jealous of this superiority. He did not dare to leave his brother in +Persia, to manage the government in his stead during his absence, lest +he should take advantage of the temporary power thus committed to his +hands, and usurp the throne altogether. He decided, therefore, to +bring Smerdis with him into Egypt, and to leave the government of the +state in the hands of a regency composed of two _magi_. These magi +were public officers of distinction, but, having no hereditary claims +to the crown, Cambyses thought there would be little danger of their +attempting to usurp it. It happened, however, that the name of one of +these magi was Smerdis. This coincidence between the magian's name and +that of the prince led, in the end, as will presently be seen, to very +important consequences. + +The uneasiness and jealousy which Cambyses felt in respect to his +brother was not wholly allayed by the arrangement which he thus made +for keeping him in his army, and so under his own personal observation +and command. Smerdis evinced, on various occasions, so much strength +and skill, that Cambyses feared his influence among the officers and +soldiers, and was rendered continually watchful, suspicious, and +afraid. A circumstance at last occurred which excited his jealousy +more than ever, and he determined to send Smerdis home again to +Persia. The circumstance was this: + +After Cambyses had succeeded in obtaining full possession of Egypt, he +formed, among his other wild and desperate schemes, the design of +invading the territories of a nation of Ethiopians who lived in the +interior of Africa, around and beyond the sources of the Nile. The +Ethiopians were celebrated for their savage strength and bravery. +Cambyses wished to obtain information respecting them and their +country before setting out on his expedition against them, and he +determined to send spies into their country to obtain it. But, as +Ethiopia was a territory so remote, and as its institutions and +customs, and the language, the dress, and the manners of its +inhabitants were totally different from those of all the other nations +of the earth, and were almost wholly unknown to the Persian army, it +was impossible to send Persians in disguise, with any hope that they +could enter and explore the country without being discovered. It was +very doubtful, in fact, whether, if such spies were to be sent, they +could succeed in reaching Ethiopia at all. + +Now there was, far up the Nile, near the cataracts, at a place where +the river widens and forms a sort of bay, a large and fertile island +called Elephantine, which was inhabited by a half-savage tribe called +the Icthyophagi. They lived mainly by fishing on the river, and, +consequently, they had many boats, and were accustomed to make long +excursions up and down the stream. Their name was, in fact, derived +from their occupation. It was a Greek word, and might be translated +"Fishermen."[B] The manners and customs of half-civilized or savage +nations depend entirely, of course, upon the modes in which they +procure their subsistence. Some depend on hunting wild beasts, some on +rearing flocks and herds of tame animals, some on cultivating the +ground, and some on fishing in rivers or in the sea. These four +different modes of procuring food result in as many totally diverse +modes of life: it is a curious fact, however, that while a nation of +hunters differs very essentially from a nation of herdsmen or of +fishermen, though they may live, perhaps, in the same neighborhood +with them, still, all nations of hunters, however widely they may be +separated in geographical position, very strongly resemble one another +in character, in customs, in institutions, and in all the usages of +life. It is so, moreover, with all the other types of national +constitution mentioned above. The Greeks observed these +characteristics of the various savage tribes with which they became +acquainted, and whenever they met with a tribe that lived by fishing, +they called them Icthyophagi. + +[Footnote B: Literally, _fish-eaters_.] + +Cambyses sent to the Icthyophagi of the island of Elephantine, +requiring them to furnish him with a number of persons acquainted with +the route to Ethiopia and with the Ethiopian language, that he might +send them as an embassy. He also provided some presents to be sent as +a token of friendship to the Ethiopian king. The presents were, +however, only a pretext, to enable the embassadors, who were, in fact, +spies, to go to the capital and court of the Ethiopian monarch in +safety, and bring back to Cambyses all the information which they +should be able to obtain. + +The presents consisted of such toys and ornaments as they thought +would most please the fancy of a savage king. There were some purple +vestments of a very rich and splendid dye, and a golden chain for the +neck, golden bracelets for the wrists, an alabaster box of very +precious perfumes, and other similar trinkets and toys. There was also +a large vessel filled with wine. + +The Icthyophagi took these presents, and set out on their expedition. +After a long and toilsome voyage and journey, they came to the country +of the Ethiopians, and delivered their presents, together with the +message which Cambyses had intrusted to them. The presents, they said, +had been sent by Cambyses as a token of his desire to become the +friend and ally of the Ethiopian king. + +The king, instead of being deceived by this hypocrisy, detected the +imposture at once. He knew very well, he said, what was the motive of +Cambyses in sending such an embassage to him, and he should advise +Cambyses to be content with his own dominions, instead of planning +aggressions of violence, and schemes and stratagems of deceit against +his neighbors, in order to get possession of theirs. He then began to +look at the presents which the embassadors had brought, which, +however, he appeared very soon to despise. The purple vest first +attracted his attention. He asked whether that was the true, natural +color of the stuff, or a false one. The messengers told him that the +linen was dyed, and began to explain the process to him. The mind of +the savage potentate, however, instead of being impressed, as the +messengers supposed he would have been through their description, with +a high idea of the excellence and superiority of Persian art, only +despised the false show of what he considered an artificial and +fictitious beauty. "The beauty of Cambyses's dresses," said he, "is as +deceitful, it seems, as the fair show of his professions of +friendship." As to the golden bracelets and necklaces, the king looked +upon them with contempt. He thought that they were intended for +fetters and chains, and said that, however well they might answer +among the effeminate Persians, they were wholly insufficient to +confine such sinews as he had to deal with. The wine, however, he +liked. He drank it with great pleasure, and told the Icthyophagi that +it was the only article among all their presents that was worth +receiving. + +In return for the presents which Cambyses had sent him, the King of +the Ethiopians, who was a man of prodigious size and strength, took +down his bow and gave it to the Icthyophagi, telling them to carry it +to Cambyses as a token of his defiance, and to ask him to see if he +could find a man in all his army who could bend it. "Tell Cambyses," +he added, "that when his soldiers are able to bend such bows as that, +it will be time for him to think of invading the territories of the +Ethiopians; and that, in the mean time, he ought to consider himself +very fortunate that the Ethiopians were not grasping and ambitious +enough to attempt the invasion of his." + +When the Icthyophagi returned to Cambyses with this message, the +strongest men in the Persian camp were of course greatly interested in +examining and trying the bow. Smerdis was the only one that could be +found who was strong enough to bend it; and he, by the superiority to +the others which he thus evinced, gained great renown. Cambyses was +filled with jealousy and anger. He determined to send Smerdis back +again to Persia. "It will be better," thought he to himself, "to incur +whatever danger there may be of his exciting revolt at home, than to +have him present in my court, subjecting me to continual mortification +and chagrin by the perpetual parade of his superiority." + +His mind was, however, not at ease after his brother had gone. +Jealousy and suspicion in respect to Smerdis perplexed his waking +thoughts and troubled his dreams. At length, one night, he thought he +saw Smerdis seated on a royal throne in Persia, his form expanded +supernaturally to such a prodigious size that he touched the heavens +with his head. The next day, Cambyses, supposing that the dream +portended danger that Smerdis would be one day in possession of the +throne, determined to put a final and perpetual end to all these +troubles and fears, and he sent for an officer of his court, +Prexaspes--the same whose son he shot through the heart with an arrow, +as described in the last chapter--and commanded him to proceed +immediately to Persia, and there to find Smerdis, and kill him. The +murder of Prexaspes's son, though related in the last chapter as an +illustration of Cambyses's character, did not actually take place till +after Prexaspes returned from this expedition. + +Prexaspes went to Persia, and executed the orders of the king by the +assassination of Smerdis. There are different accounts of the mode +which he adopted for accomplishing his purpose. One is, that he +contrived some way to drown him in the sea; another, that he poisoned +him; and a third, that he killed him in the forests, when he was out +on a hunting excursion. At all events, the deed was done, and +Prexaspes went back to Cambyses, and reported to him that he had +nothing further to fear from his brother's ambition. + +In the mean time, Cambyses went on from bad to worse in his +government, growing every day more despotic and tyrannical, and +abandoning himself to fits of cruelty and passion which became more +and more excessive and insane. At one time, on some slight +provocation, he ordered twelve distinguished noblemen of his court to +be buried alive. It is astonishing that there can be institutions and +arrangements in the social state which will give one man such an +ascendency over others that such commands can be obeyed. On another +occasion, Cambyses's sister and wife, who had mourned the death of her +brother Smerdis, ventured a reproach to Cambyses for having destroyed +him. She was sitting at table, with some plant or flower in her hand, +which she slowly picked to pieces, putting the fragments on the table. +She asked Cambyses whether he thought the flower looked fairest and +best in fragments, or in its original and natural integrity. "It +looked best, certainly," Cambyses said, "when it was whole." "And +yet," said she, "you have begun to take to pieces and destroy our +family, as I have destroyed this flower." Cambyses sprang upon his +unhappy sister, on hearing this reproof, with the ferocity of a tiger. +He threw her down and leaped upon her. The attendants succeeded in +rescuing her and bearing her away; but she had received a fatal +injury. She fell immediately into a premature and unnatural sickness, +and died. + +These fits of sudden and terrible passion to which Cambyses was +subject, were often followed, when they had passed by, as is usual in +such cases, with remorse and misery; and sometimes the officers of +Cambyses, anticipating a change in their master's feelings, did not +execute his cruel orders, but concealed the object of his blind and +insensate vengeance until the paroxysm was over. They did this once in +the case of Croesus. Croesus, who was now a venerable man, +advanced in years, had been for a long time the friend and faithful +counselor of Cambyses's father. He had known Cambyses himself from +his boyhood, and had been charged by his father to watch over him and +counsel him, and aid him, on all occasions which might require it, +with his experience and wisdom. Cambyses, too, had been solemnly +charged by his father Cyrus, at the last interview that he had with +him before his death, to guard and protect Croesus, as his father's +ancient and faithful friend, and to treat him, as long as he lived, +with the highest consideration and honor. + +Under these circumstances, Croesus considered himself justified in +remonstrating one day with Cambyses against his excesses and his +cruelty. He told him that he ought not to give himself up to the +control of such violent and impetuous passions; that, though his +Persian soldiers and subjects had borne with him thus far, he might, +by excessive oppression and cruelty, exhaust their forbearance and +provoke them to revolt against him, and that thus he might suddenly +lose his power, through his intemperate and inconsiderate use of it. +Croesus apologized for offering these counsels, saying that he felt +bound to warn Cambyses of his danger, in obedience to the injunctions +of Cyrus, his father. + +Cambyses fell into a violent passion at hearing these words. He told +Croesus that he was amazed at his presumption in daring to offer him +advice, and then began to load his venerable counselor with the +bitterest invectives and reproaches. He taunted him with his own +misfortunes, in losing, as he had done, years before, his own kingdom +of Lydia, and then accused him of having been the means, through his +foolish counsels, of leading his father, Cyrus, into the worst of the +difficulties which befell him toward the close of his life. At last, +becoming more and more enraged by the reaction upon himself of his own +angry utterance, he told Croesus that he had hated him for a long +time, and for a long time had wished to punish him; "and now," said +he, "you have given me an opportunity." So saying, he seized his bow, +and began to fit an arrow to the string. Croesus fled. Cambyses +ordered his attendants to pursue him, and when they had taken him, to +kill him. The officers knew that Cambyses would regret his rash and +reckless command as soon as his anger should have subsided, and so, +instead of slaying Croesus, they concealed him. A few days after, +when the tyrant began to express his remorse and sorrow at having +destroyed his venerable friend in the heat of passion, and to mourn +his death, they told him that Croesus was still alive. They had +ventured, they said, to save him, till they could ascertain whether it +was the king's real and deliberate determination that he must die. The +king was overjoyed to find Croesus still alive, but he would not +forgive those who had been instrumental in saving him. He ordered +every one of them to be executed. + +Cambyses was the more reckless and desperate in these tyrannical +cruelties because he believed that he possessed a sort of charmed +life. He had consulted an oracle, it seems, in Media, in respect to +his prospects of life, and the oracle had informed him that he would +die at Ecbatane. Now Ecbatane was one of the three great capitals of +his empire, Susa and Babylon being the others. Ecbatane was the most +northerly of these cities, and the most remote from danger. Babylon +and Susa were the points where the great transactions of government +chiefly centered, while Ecbatane was more particularly the private +residence of the kings. It was their refuge in danger, their retreat +in sickness and age. In a word, Susa was their seat of government, +Babylon their great commercial emporium, but Ecbatane was their home. + +And thus as the oracle, when Cambyses inquired in respect to the +circumstances of his death, had said that it was decreed by the fates +that he should die at Ecbatane, it meant, as he supposed, that he +should die in peace, in his bed, at the close of the usual period +allotted to the life of man. Considering thus that the fates had +removed all danger of a sudden and violent death from his path, he +abandoned himself to his career of vice and folly, remembering only +the substance of the oracle, while the particular form of words in +which it was expressed passed from his mind. + +At length Cambyses, after completing his conquests in Egypt, returned +to the northward along the shores of the Mediterranean Sea, until he +came into Syria. The province of Galilee, so often mentioned in the +sacred Scriptures, was a part of Syria. In traversing Galilee at the +head of the detachment of troops that was accompanying him, Cambyses +came, one day, to a small town, and encamped there. The town itself +was of so little importance that Cambyses did not, at the time of his +arriving at it, even know its name. His encampment at the place, +however, was marked by a very memorable event, namely, he met with a +herald here, who was traveling through Syria, saying that he had been +sent from Susa to proclaim to the people of Syria that Smerdis, the +son of Cyrus, had assumed the throne, and to enjoin upon them all to +obey no orders except such as should come from him! + +Cambyses had supposed that Smerdis was dead. Prexaspes, when he had +returned from Susa, had reported that he had killed him. He now, +however, sent for Prexaspes, and demanded of him what this +proclamation could mean. Prexaspes renewed, and insisted upon, his +declaration that Smerdis was dead. He had destroyed him with his own +hands, and had seen him buried. "If the dead can rise from the grave," +added Prexaspes, "then Smerdis may perhaps, raise a revolt and appear +against you; but not otherwise." + +Prexaspes then recommended that the king should send and seize the +herald, and inquire particularly of him in respect to the government +in whose name he was acting. Cambyses did so. The herald was taken and +brought before the king. On being questioned whether it was true that +Smerdis had really assumed the government and commissioned him to make +proclamation of the fact, he replied that it was so. He had not seen +Smerdis himself, he said, for he kept himself shut up very closely in +his palace; but he was informed of his accession by one of the magians +whom Cambyses had left in command. It was by him, he said, that he had +been commissioned to proclaim Smerdis as king. + +Prexaspes then said that he had no doubt that the two magians whom +Cambyses had left in charge of the government had contrived to seize +the throne. He reminded Cambyses that the name of one of them was +Smerdis, and that probably that was the Smerdis who was usurping the +supreme command. Cambyses said that he was convinced that this +supposition was true. His dream, in which he had seen a vision of +Smerdis, with his head reaching to the heavens, referred, he had no +doubt, to the magian Smerdis, and not to his brother. He began +bitterly to reproach himself for having caused his innocent brother to +be put to death; but the remorse which he thus felt for his crime, in +assassinating an imaginary rival, soon gave way to rage and resentment +against the real usurper. He called for his horse, and began to mount +him in hot haste, to give immediate orders, and make immediate +preparations for marching to Susa. + +As he bounded into the saddle, with his mind in this state of +reckless desperation, the sheath, by some accident or by some +carelessness caused by his headlong haste, fell from his sword, and +the naked point of the weapon pierced his thigh. The attendants took +him from his horse, and conveyed him again to his tent. The wound, on +examination, proved to be a very dangerous one, and the strong +passions, the vexation, the disappointment, the impotent rage, which +were agitating the mind of the patient, exerted an influence extremely +unfavorable to recovery. Cambyses, terrified at the prospect of death, +asked what was the name of the town where he was lying. They told him +it was Ecbatane. + +He had never thought before of the possibility that there might be +some other Ecbatane besides his splendid royal retreat in Media; but +now, when he learned that was the name of the place where he was then +encamped, he felt sure that his hour was come, and he was overwhelmed +with remorse and despair. + +He suffered, too, inconceivable pain and anguish from his wound. The +sword had pierced to the bone, and the inflammation which had +supervened was of the worst character. After some days, the acuteness +of the agony which he at first endured passed gradually away, though +the extent of the injury resulting from the wound was growing every +day greater and more hopeless. The sufferer lay, pale, emaciated, and +wretched, on his couch, his mind, in every interval of bodily agony, +filling up the void with the more dreadful sufferings of horror and +despair. + +At length, on the twentieth day after his wound had been received, he +called the leading nobles of his court and officers of his army about +his bedside, and said to them that he was about to die, and that he +was compelled, by the calamity which had befallen him, to declare to +them what he would otherwise have continued to keep concealed. The +person who had usurped the throne under the name of Smerdis, he now +said, was not, and could not be, his brother Smerdis, the son of +Cyrus. He then proceeded to give them an account of the manner in +which his fears in respect to his brother had been excited by his +dream, and of the desperate remedy that he had resorted to in ordering +him to be killed. He believed, he said, that the usurper was Smerdis +the magian, whom he had left as one of the regents when he set out on +his Egyptian campaign. He urged them, therefore, not to submit to his +sway, but to go back to Media, and if they could not conquer him and +put him down by open war, to destroy him by deceit and stratagem, or +in any way whatever by which the end could be accomplished. Cambyses +urged this with so much of the spirit of hatred and revenge beaming in +his hollow and glassy eye as to show that sickness, pain, and the +approach of death, which had made so total a change in the wretched +sufferer's outward condition, had altered nothing within. + +Very soon after making this communication to his nobles, Cambyses +expired. + +It will well illustrate the estimate which those who knew him best, +formed of this great hero's character, to state, that those who heard +this solemn declaration did not believe one word of it from beginning +to end. They supposed that the whole story which the dying tyrant had +told them, although he had scarcely breath enough left to tell it, was +a fabrication, dictated by his fraternal jealousy and hate. They +believed that it was really the true Smerdis who had been proclaimed +king, and that Cambyses had invented, in his dying moments, the story +of his having killed him, in order to prevent the Persians from +submitting peaceably to his reign. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +SMERDIS THE MAGIAN. + +B.C. 520 + +Usurpation of the magians.--Circumstances favoring it.--Murder of +Smerdis not known.--He is supposed to be alive.--Precautions taken +by Smerdis.--Effect of Cambyses's measures.--Opinion in regard to +Smerdis.--Acquiescence of the people.--Dangerous situation of +Smerdis.--Arrangement with Patizithes.--Smerdis lives in +retirement.--Special grounds of apprehension.--Cambyses's +wives.--Smerdis appropriates them.--Phædyma.--Measures of +Otanes.--Otanes's communications with his daughter.--Her +replies.--Phædyma discovers the deception.--Otanes and the six +nobles.--Arrival of Darius.--Secret consultations.--Various +opinions.--Views of Darius.--Apology for a falsehood.--Opinion of +Gobryas.--Uneasiness of the magi.--Situation of Prexaspes.--Measures +of the magi.--An assembly of the people.--Decision of Prexaspes.--His +speech from the tower.--Death of Prexaspes.--The conspirators.--The +omen.--The conspirators enter the palace.--Combat with the +magi.--Flight of Smerdis.--Smerdis is killed.--Exultation of the +conspirators.--General massacre of the magians. + + +Cambyses and his friends had been right in their conjectures that it +was Smerdis the magian who had usurped the Persian throne. This +Smerdis resembled, it was said, the son of Cyrus in his personal +appearance as well as in name. The other magian who had been +associated with him in the regency when Cambyses set out from Persia +on his Egyptian campaign was his brother. His name was Patizithes. +When Cyrus had been some time absent, these magians, having in the +mean time, perhaps, heard unfavorable accounts of his conduct and +character, and knowing the effect which such wanton tyranny must have +in alienating from him the allegiance of his subjects, conceived the +design of taking possession of the empire in their own name. The great +distance of Cambyses and his army from home, and his long-continued +absence, favored this plan. Their own position, too, as they were +already in possession of the capitals and the fortresses of the +country, aided them; and then the name of Smerdis, being the same +with that of the brother of Cambyses, was a circumstance that greatly +promoted the success of the undertaking. In addition to all these +general advantages, the cruelty of Cambyses was the means of +furnishing them with a most opportune occasion for putting their plans +into execution. + +The reader will recollect that, as was related in the last chapter, +Cambyses first sent his brother Smerdis home, and afterward, when +alarmed by his dream, he sent Prexaspes to murder him. Now the return +of Smerdis was publicly and generally known, while his assassination +by Prexaspes was kept a profound secret. Even the Persians connected +with Cambyses's court in Egypt had not heard of the perpetration of +this crime, until Cambyses confessed it on his dying bed, and even +then, as was stated in the last chapter, they did not believe it. It +is not probable that it was known in Media and Persia; so that, after +Prexaspes accomplished his work, and returned to Cambyses with the +report of it, it was probably generally supposed that his brother was +still alive, and was residing somewhere in one or another of the royal +palaces. + +Such royal personages were often accustomed to live thus, in a state +of great seclusion, spending their time in effeminate pleasures within +the walls of their palaces, parks, and gardens. When the royal +Smerdis, therefore, secretly and suddenly disappeared, it would be +very easy for the magian Smerdis, with the collusion of a moderate +number of courtiers and attendants, to take his place, especially if +he continued to live in retirement, and exhibited himself as little as +possible to public view. Thus it was that Cambyses himself, by the +very crimes which he committed to shield himself from all danger of a +revolt, opened the way which specially invited it, and almost insured +its success. Every particular step that he took, too, helped to +promote the end. His sending Smerdis home; his waiting an interval, +and then sending Prexaspes to destroy him; his ordering his +assassination to be secret--these, and all the other attendant +circumstances, were only so many preliminary steps, preparing the way +for the success of the revolution which was to accomplish his ruin. He +was, in a word, his own destroyer. Like other wicked men, he found, in +the end, that the schemes of wickedness which he had malignantly aimed +at the destruction of others, had been all the time slowly and surely +working out his own. + +The people of Persia, therefore, were prepared by Cambyses's own acts +to believe that the usurper Smerdis was really Cyrus's son, and, next +to Cambyses, the heir to the throne. The army of Cambyses, too, in +Egypt, believed the same. It was natural that they should do so for +they placed no confidence whatever in Cambyses's dying declarations; +and since intelligence, which seemed to be official, came from Susa +declaring that Smerdis was still alive, and that he had actually taken +possession of the throne, there was no apparent reason for doubting +the fact. Besides, Prexaspes, as soon as Cambyses was dead, considered +it safer for him to deny than to confess having murdered the prince. +He therefore declared that Cambyses's story was false, and that he had +no doubt that Smerdis, the monarch in whose name the government was +administered at Susa, was the son of Cyrus, the true and rightful heir +to the throne. Thus all parties throughout the empire acquiesced +peaceably in what they supposed to be the legitimate succession. + +In the mean time, the usurper had placed himself in an exceedingly +dizzy and precarious situation, and one which it would require a +great deal of address and skillful management to sustain. The plan +arranged between himself and his brother for a division of the +advantages which they had secured by their joint and common cunning +was, that Smerdis was to enjoy the ease and pleasure, and Patizithes +the substantial power of the royalty which they had so stealthily +seized. This was the safest plan. Smerdis, by living secluded, and +devoting himself to retired and private pleasures, was the more likely +to escape public observation; while Patizithes, acting as his prime +minister of state, could attend councils, issue orders, review troops, +dispatch embassies, and perform all the other outward functions of +supreme command, with safety as well as pleasure. Patizithes seems to +have been, in fact, the soul of the whole plan. He was ambitious and +aspiring in character, and if he could only himself enjoy the actual +exercise of royal power, he was willing that his brother should enjoy +the honor of possessing it. Patizithes, therefore, governed the realm, +acting, however, in all that he did, in Smerdis's name. + +Smerdis, on his part, was content to take possession of the palaces, +the parks, and the gardens of Media and Persia, and to live in them +in retired and quiet luxury and splendor. He appeared seldom in +public, and then only under such circumstances as should not expose +him to any close observation on the part of the spectators. His +figure, air, and manner, and the general cast of his countenance, were +very much like those of the prince whom he was attempting to +personate. There was one mark, however, by which he thought that there +was danger that he might be betrayed, and that was, his ears had been +cut off. This had been done many years before, by command of Cyrus, on +account of some offense of which he had been guilty. The marks of the +mutilation could, indeed, on public occasions, be concealed by the +turban, or helmet, or other head-dress which he wore; but in private +there was great danger either that the loss of the ears, or the +studied effort to conceal it, should be observed. Smerdis was, +therefore, very careful to avoid being seen in private, by keeping +himself closely secluded. He shut himself up in the apartments of his +palace at Susa, within the citadel, and never invited the Persian +nobles to visit him there. + +Among the other means of luxury and pleasure which Smerdis found in +the royal palaces, and which he appropriated to his own enjoyment, +were Cambyses's wives. In those times, Oriental princes and +potentates--as is, in fact, the case at the present day, in many +Oriental countries--possessed a great number of wives, who were bound +to them by different sorts of matrimonial ties, more or less +permanent, and bringing them into relations more or less intimate with +their husband and sovereign. These wives were in many respects in the +condition of slaves: in one particular they were especially so, +namely, that on the death of a sovereign they descended, like any +other property, to the heir, who added as many of them as he pleased +to his own seraglio. Until this was done, the unfortunate women were +shut up in close seclusion on the death of their lord, like mourners +who retire from the world when suffering any great and severe +bereavement. + +The wives of Cambyses were appropriated by Smerdis to himself on his +taking possession of the throne and hearing of Cambyses's death. Among +them was Atossa, who has already been mentioned as the daughter of +Cyrus, and, of course, the sister of Cambyses as well as his wife. In +order to prevent these court ladies from being the means, in any way, +of discovering the imposture which he was practicing, the magian +continued to keep them all closely shut up in their several separate +apartments, only allowing a favored few to visit him, one by one, in +turn, while he prevented their having any communication with one +another. + +The name of one of these ladies was Phædyma. She was the daughter of a +Persian noble of the highest rank and influence, named Otanes. Otanes, +as well as some other nobles of the court, had observed and reflected +upon the extraordinary circumstances connected with the accession of +Smerdis to the throne, and the singular mode of life that he led in +secluding himself, in a manner so extraordinary for a Persian monarch, +from all intercourse with his nobles and his people. The suspicions of +Otanes and his associates were excited, but no one dared to +communicate his thoughts to the others. At length, however, Otanes, +who was a man of great energy as well as sagacity and discretion, +resolved that he would take some measures to ascertain the truth. + +He first sent a messenger to Phædyma, his daughter, asking of her +whether it was really Smerdis, the son of Cyrus, who received her when +she went to visit the king. Phædyma, in return, sent her father word +that she did not know, for she had never seen Smerdis, the son of +Cyrus, before the death of Cambyses. She therefore could not say, of +her own personal knowledge, whether the king was the genuine Smerdis +or not. Otanes then sent to Phædyma a second time, requesting her to +ask the queen Atossa. Atossa was the sister of Smerdis the prince, and +had known him from his childhood. Phædyma sent back word to her father +that she could not speak to Atossa, for she was kept closely shut up +in her own apartments, without the opportunity to communicate with any +one. Otanes then sent a third time to his daughter, telling her that +there was one remaining mode by which she might ascertain the truth, +and that was, the next time that she visited the king, to feel for his +ears when he was asleep. If it was Smerdis the magian, she would find +that he had none. He urged his daughter to do this by saying that, if +the pretended king was really an impostor, the imposture ought to be +made known, and that she, being of noble birth, ought to have the +courage and energy to assist in discovering it. To this Phædyma +replied that she would do as her father desired, though she knew that +she hazarded her life in the attempt. "If he has no ears," said she, +"and if I awaken him in attempting to feel for them, he will kill me; +I am sure that he will kill me on the spot." + +The next time that it came to Phædyma's turn to visit the king, she +did as her father had requested. She passed her hand very cautiously +beneath the king's turban, and found that his ears had been cut off +close to his head. Early in the morning she communicated the knowledge +of the fact to her father. + +[Illustration: PHÆDYMA FEELING FOR SMERDIS'S EARS.] + +Otanes immediately made the case known to two of his friends, Persian +nobles, who had, with him, suspected the imposture, and had consulted +together before in respect to the means of detecting it. The question +was, what was now to be done. After some deliberation, it was agreed +that each of them should communicate the discovery which they had +made to one other person, such as each should select from among the +circle of his friends as the one on whose resolution, prudence, and +fidelity he could most implicitly rely. This was done, and the number +admitted to the secret was thus increased to six. At this juncture it +happened that Darius, the son of Hystaspes, the young man who has +already been mentioned as the subject of Cyrus's dream, came to +Susa. Darius was a man of great prominence and popularity. His +father, Hystaspes, was at that time the governor of the province of +Persia, and Darius had been residing with him in that country. As +soon as the six conspirators heard of his arrival, they admitted him +to their councils, and thus their number was increased to seven. + +They immediately began to hold secret consultations for the purpose of +determining how it was best to proceed, first binding themselves by +the most solemn oaths never to betray one another, however their +undertaking might end. Darius told them that he had himself discovered +the imposture and usurpation of Smerdis, and that he had come from +Persia for the purpose of slaying him; and that now, since it appeared +that the secret was known to so many, he was of opinion that they +ought to act at once with the utmost decision. He thought there would +be great danger in delay. + +Otanes, on the other hand, thought that they were not yet ready for +action. They must first increase their numbers. Seven persons were too +few to attempt to revolutionize an empire. He commended the courage +and resolution which Darius displayed, but he thought that a more +cautious and deliberate policy would be far more likely to conduct +them to a safe result. + +Darius replied that the course which Otanes recommended would +certainly ruin them. "If we make many other persons acquainted with +our plans," said he, "there will be some, notwithstanding all our +precautions, who will betray us, for the sake of the immense rewards +which they well know they would receive in that case from the king. +No," he added, "we must act ourselves, and alone. We must do nothing +to excite suspicion, but must go at once into the palace, penetrate +boldly into Smerdis's presence, and slay him before he has time to +suspect our designs." + +"But we can not get into his presence," replied Otanes. "There are +guards stationed at every gate and door, who will not allow us to +pass. If we attempt to kill them, a tumult will be immediately raised, +and the alarm given, and all our designs will thus be baffled." + +"There will be little difficulty about the guards," said Darius. "They +know us all, and, from deference to our rank and station, they will +let us pass without suspicion, especially if we act boldly and +promptly, and do not give them time to stop and consider what to do. +Besides, I can say that I have just arrived from Persia with +important dispatches for the king, and that I must be admitted +immediately into his presence. If a falsehood must be told, so let it +be. The urgency of the crisis demands and sanctions it." + +It may seem strange to the reader, considering the ideas and habits of +the times, that Darius should have even thought it necessary to +apologize to his confederates for his proposal of employing falsehood +in the accomplishment of their plans; and it is, in fact, altogether +probable that the apology which he is made to utter is his +historian's, and not his own. + +The other conspirators had remained silent during this discussion +between Darius and Otanes; but now a third, whose name was Gobryas, +expressed his opinion in favor of the course which Darius recommended. +He was aware, he said, that, in attempting to force their way into the +king's presence and kill him by a sudden assault, they exposed +themselves to the most imminent danger; but it was better for them to +die in the manly attempt to bring back the imperial power again into +Persian hands, where it properly belonged, than to acquiesce any +further in its continuance in the possession of the ignoble Median +priests who had so treacherously usurped it. + +To this counsel they all finally agreed, and began to make +arrangements for carrying their desperate enterprise into execution. + +In the mean time, very extraordinary events were transpiring in +another part of the city. The two magi, Smerdis the king and +Patizithes his brother, had some cause, it seems, to fear that the +nobles about the court, and the officers of the Persian army, were not +without suspicions that the reigning monarch was not the real son of +Cyrus. Rumors that Smerdis had been killed by Prexaspes, at the +command of Cambyses, were in circulation. These rumors were +contradicted, it is true, in private, by Prexaspes, whenever he was +forced to speak of the subject; but he generally avoided it; and he +spoke, when he spoke at all, in that timid and undecided tone which +men usually assume when they are persisting in a lie. In the mean +time, the gloomy recollections of his past life, the memory of his +murdered son, remorse for his own crime in the assassination of +Smerdis, and anxiety on account of the extremely dangerous position in +which he had placed himself by his false denial of it, all conspired +to harass his mind with perpetual restlessness and misery, and to +make life a burden. + +In order to do something to quiet the suspicions which the magi feared +were prevailing, they did not know how extensively, they conceived the +plan of inducing Prexaspes to declare in a more public and formal +manner what he had been asserting timidly in private, namely, that +Smerdis had not been killed. They accordingly convened an assembly of +the people in a court-yard of the palace, or perhaps took advantage of +some gathering casually convened, and proposed that Prexaspes should +address them from a neighboring tower. Prexaspes was a man of high +rank and of great influence, and the magi thought that his public +espousal of their cause, and his open and decided contradiction of the +rumor that he had killed Cambyses's brother, would fully convince the +Persians that it was really the rightful monarch that had taken +possession of the throne. + +But the strength even of a strong man, when he has a lie to carry, +soon becomes very small. That of Prexaspes was already almost +exhausted and gone. He had been wavering and hesitating before, and +this proposal, that he should commit himself so formally and solemnly, +and in so public a manner, to statements wholly and absolutely +untrue, brought him to a stand. He decided, desperately, in his own +mind, that he would go on in his course of falsehood, remorse, and +wretchedness no longer. He, however, pretended to accede to the +propositions of the magi. He ascended the tower, and began to address +the people. Instead, however, of denying that he had murdered Smerdis, +he fully confessed to the astonished audience that he had really +committed that crime; he openly denounced the reigning Smerdis as an +impostor, and called upon all who heard him to rise at once, destroy +the treacherous usurper, and vindicate the rights of the true Persian +line. As he went on, with vehement voice and gestures, in this speech, +the utterance of which he knew sealed his own destruction, he became +more and more excited and reckless. He denounced his hearers in the +severest language if they failed to obey his injunctions, and +imprecated upon them, in that event, all the curses of Heaven. The +people listened to this strange and sudden phrensy of eloquence in +utter amazement, motionless and silent; and before they or the +officers of the king's household who were present had time even to +consider what to do, Prexaspes, coming abruptly to the conclusion of +his harangue, threw himself headlong from the parapet of the tower, +and came down among them, lifeless and mangled, on the pavement below. + +Of course, all was now tumult and commotion in the court-yard, and it +happened to be just at this juncture that the seven conspirators came +from the place of their consultation to the palace, with a view of +executing their plans. They were soon informed of what had taken +place. Otanes was now again disposed to postpone their attempt upon +the life of the king. The event which had occurred changed, he said, +the aspect of the subject, and they must wait until the tumult and +excitement should have somewhat subsided. But Darius was more eager +than ever in favor of instantaneous action. He said that there was not +a moment to be lost; for the magi, so soon as they should be informed +of the declarations and of the death of Prexaspes, would be alarmed, +and would take at once the most effectual precautions to guard against +any sudden assault or surprise. + +These arguments, at the very time in which Darius was offering them +with so much vehemence and earnestness, were strengthened by a very +singular sort of confirmation; for while the conspirators stood +undetermined, they saw a flock of birds moving across the sky, which, +on their more attentively regarding them, proved to be seven hawks +pursuing two vultures. This they regarded an omen, intended to signify +to them, by a divine intimation, that they ought to proceed. They +hesitated, therefore, no longer. + +They went together to the outer gates of the palace. The action of the +guards who were stationed there was just what Darius had predicted +that it would be. Awed by the imposing spectacle of the approach of +seven nobles of the highest distinction, who were advancing, too, with +an earnest and confident air, as if expecting no obstacle to their +admission, they gave way at once, and allowed them to enter. The +conspirators went on until they came to the inner apartments, where +they found eunuchs in attendance at the doors. The eunuchs resisted, +and demanded angrily why the guards had let the strangers in. "Kill +them," said the conspirators, and immediately began to cut them down. +The magi were within, already in consternation at the disclosures of +Prexaspes, of which they had just been informed. They heard the tumult +and the outcries of the eunuchs at the doors, and seized their arms, +the one a bow and the other a spear. The conspirators rushed in. The +bow was useless in the close combat which ensued, and the magian who +had taken it turned and fled. The other defended himself with his +spear for a moment, and wounded severely two of his assailants. The +wounded conspirators fell. Three others of the number continued the +unequal combat with the armed magian, while Darius and Gobryas rushed +in pursuit of the other. + +The flying magian ran from one apartment to another until he reached a +dark room, into which the blind instinct of fear prompted him to rush, +in the vain hope of concealment. Gobryas was foremost; he seized the +wretched fugitive by the waist, and struggled to hold him, while the +magian struggled to get free. Gobryas called upon Darius, who was +close behind him, to strike. Darius, brandishing his sword, looked +earnestly into the obscure retreat, that he might see where to strike. + +"Strike!" exclaimed Gobryas. "Why do you not strike?" + +"I can not see," said Darius, "and I am afraid of wounding you." + +"No matter," said Gobryas, struggling desperately all the time with +his frantic victim. "Strike quick, if you kill us both." + +Darius struck. Gobryas loosened his hold, and the magian fell upon the +floor, and there, stabbed again through the heart by Darius's sword, +almost immediately ceased to breathe. + +They dragged the body to the light, and cut off the head. They did the +same with the other magian, whom they found that their confederates +had killed when they returned to the apartments where they had left +them contending. The whole body of the conspirators then, except the +two who were wounded, exulting in their success, and wild with the +excitement which such deeds always awaken, went forth into the streets +of the city, bearing the heads upon pikes as the trophies of their +victory. They summoned the Persian soldiers to arms, and announced +every where that they had ascertained that the king was a priest and +an impostor, and not their legitimate sovereign, and that they had +consequently killed him. They called upon the people to kill the +magians wherever they could find them, as if the whole class were +implicated in the guilt of the usurping brothers. + +The populace in all countries are easily excited by such denunciations +and appeals as these. The Persians armed themselves, and ran to and +fro every where in pursuit of the unhappy magians, and before night +vast numbers of them were slain. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +THE ACCESSION OF DARIUS. + +B.C. 520 + +Confusion at Susa.--No heir to the throne.--Five days' +interregnum.--Provisional government.--Consultation of the +confederates.--Otanes in favor of a republic.--Otanes's +republic.--Principles of representation.--Large assemblies.--Nature +of ancient republics.--Nature of a representative +republic.--Megabyzus.--He opposes the plan of Otanes.--Speech of +Megabyzus.--He proposes an oligarchy.--Speech of Darius.--He advocates +a monarchy.--Four of the seven confederates concur with Darius.--Otanes +withdraws.--Agreement made by the rest.--Singular mode of deciding +which should be the king.--The groom Oebases.--His method of making +Darius's horse neigh.--Probable truth or falsehood of this +account.--Ancient statesmen.--Their character and position.--The +conspirators governed, in their decision, by superstitious +feelings.--The conspirators do homage to Darius.--The equestrian +statue. + + +For several days after the assassination of the magi the city was +filled with excitement, tumults, and confusion. There was no heir, of +the family of Cyrus, entitled to succeed to the vacant throne, for +neither Cambyses, nor Smerdis his brother, had left any sons. There +was, indeed, a daughter of Smerdis, named Parmys, and there were also +still living two daughters of Cyrus. One was Atossa, whom we have +already mentioned as having been married to Cambyses, her brother, and +as having been afterward taken by Smerdis the magian as one of his +wives. These princesses, though of royal lineage, seem neither of them +to have been disposed to assert any claims to the throne at such a +crisis. The mass of the community were stupefied with astonishment at +the sudden revolution which had occurred. No movement was made toward +determining the succession. For five days nothing was done. + +During this period, all the subordinate functions of government in +the provinces, cities, and towns, and among the various garrisons and +encampments of the army, went on, of course, as usual, but the general +administration of the government had no head. The seven confederates +had been regarded, for the time being, as a sort of provisional +government, the army and the country in general, so far as appears, +looking to them for the means of extrication from the political +difficulties in which this sudden revolution had involved them, and +submitting, in the mean time, to their direction and control. Such a +state of things, it was obvious, could not long last; and after five +days, when the commotion had somewhat subsided, they began to consider +it necessary to make some arrangements of a more permanent character, +the power to make such arrangements as they thought best resting with +them alone. They accordingly met for consultation. + +Herodotus the historian,[C] on whose narrative of these events we have +mainly to rely for all the information respecting them which is now +to be attained, gives a very minute and dramatic account of the +deliberations of the conspirators on this occasion. The account is, in +fact, too dramatic to be probably true. + +[Footnote C: An account of Herodotus, and of the circumstances under +which he wrote his history, which will aid the reader very much in +forming an opinion in respect to the kind and degree of confidence +which it is proper to place in his statements, will be found in the +first chapter of our history of Cyrus the Great.] + +Otanes, in this discussion, was in favor of establishing a republic. +He did not think it safe or wise to intrust the supreme power again to +any single individual. It was proved, he said, by universal +experience, that when any one person was raised to such an elevation +above his fellow-men, he became suspicious, jealous, insolent, and +cruel. He lost all regard for the welfare and happiness of others, and +became supremely devoted to the preservation of his own greatness and +power by any means, however tyrannical, and to the accomplishment of +the purposes of his own despotic will. The best and most valuable +citizens were as likely to become the victims of his oppression as the +worst. In fact, tyrants generally chose their favorites, he said, from +among the most abandoned men and women in their realms, such +characters being the readiest instruments of their guilty pleasures +and their crimes. Otanes referred very particularly to the case of +Cambyses as an example of the extreme lengths to which the despotic +insolence and cruelty of a tyrant could go. He reminded his colleagues +of the sufferings and terrors which they had endured while under his +sway, and urged them very strongly not to expose themselves to such +terrible evils and dangers again. He proposed, therefore, that they +should establish a republic, under which the officers of government +should be elected, and questions of public policy be determined, in +assemblies of the people. + +It must be understood, however, by the reader, that a republic, as +contemplated and intended by Otanes in this speech, was entirely +different from the mode of government which that word denotes at the +present day. They had little idea, in those times, of the principle of +representation, by which the thousand separate and detached +communities of a great empire can choose _delegates_, who are to +deliberate, speak, and act for them in the assemblies where the great +governmental decisions are ultimately made. By this principle of +representation, the people can really all share in the exercise of +power. Without it they can not, for it is impossible that the people +of a great state can ever be brought together in one assembly; nor, +even if it were practicable to bring them thus together, would it be +possible for such a concourse to deliberate or act. The action of any +assembly which goes beyond a very few hundred in numbers, is always, +in fact, the action exclusively of the small knot of leaders who call +and manage it. Otanes, therefore, as well as all other advocates of +republican government in ancient times, meant that the supreme power +should be exercised, not by the great mass of the people included +within the jurisdiction in question, but by such a portion of certain +privileged classes as could be brought together in the capital. It was +such a sort of republic as would be formed in this country if the +affairs of the country at large, and the municipal and domestic +institutions of all the states, were regulated and controlled by laws +enacted, and by governors appointed, at great municipal meetings held +in the city of New York. + +This was, in fact, the nature of all the republics of ancient times. +They were generally small, and the city in whose free citizens the +supreme power resided, constituted by far the most important portion +of the body politic. The Roman republic, however, became at one period +very large. It overspread almost the whole of Europe; but, widely +extended as it was in territory, and comprising innumerable states +and kingdoms within its jurisdiction, the vast concentration of power +by which the whole was governed, vested entirely and exclusively in +noisy and tumultuous assemblies convened in the Roman forum. + +Even if the idea of a representative system of government, such as is +adopted in modern times, and by means of which the people of a great +and extended empire can exercise, conveniently and efficiently, a +general sovereignty held in common by them all, had been understood in +ancient times, it is very doubtful whether it could, in those times, +have been carried into effect, for want of certain facilities which +are enjoyed in the present age, and which seem essential for the safe +and easy action of so vast and complicated a system as a great +representative government must necessarily be. The regular transaction +of business at public meetings, and the orderly and successful +management of any extended system of elections, requires a great deal +of writing; and the general circulation of newspapers, or something +exercising the great function which it is the object of newspapers to +fulfill, that of keeping the people at large in some degree informed +in respect to the progress of public affairs, seems essential to the +successful working of a system of representative government comprising +any considerable extent of territory. + +However this may be, whether a great representative system would or +would not have been practicable in ancient times if it had been tried, +it is certain that it was never tried. In all ancient republics, the +sovereignty resided, essentially, in a privileged class of the people +of the capital. The territories governed were provinces, held in +subjection as dependencies, and compelled to pay tribute; and this was +the plan which Otanes meant to advocate when recommending a republic, +in the Persian council. + +The name of the second speaker in this celebrated consultation was +Megabyzus. He opposed the plan of Otanes. He concurred fully, he said, +in all that Otanes had advanced in respect to the evils of a monarchy, +and to the oppression and tyranny to which a people were exposed whose +liberties and lives were subject to the despotic control of a single +human will. But in order to avoid one extreme, it was not necessary to +run into the evils of the other. The disadvantages and dangers of +popular control in the management of the affairs of state were +scarcely less than those of a despotism. Popular assemblies were +always, he said, turbulent, passionate, capricious. Their decisions +were controlled by artful and designing demagogues. It was not +possible that masses of the common people could have either the +sagacity to form wise counsels, or the energy and steadiness to +execute them. There could be no deliberation, no calmness, no secrecy +in their consultations. A populace was always governed by excitements, +which spread among them by a common sympathy; and they would give way +impetuously to the most senseless impulses, as they were urged by +their fear, their resentment, their exultation, their hate, or by any +other passing emotion of the hour. + +Megabyzus therefore disapproved of both a monarchy and a republic. He +recommended an oligarchy. "We are now," said he, "already seven. Let +us select from the leading nobles in the court and officers of the +army a small number of men, eminent for talents and virtue, and thus +form a select and competent body of men, which shall be the depository +of the supreme power. Such a plan avoids the evils and inconveniences +of both the other systems. There can be no tyranny or oppression +under such a system; for, if any one of so large a number should be +inclined to abuse his power, he will be restrained by the rest. On the +other hand, the number will not be so large as to preclude prudence +and deliberation in counsel, and the highest efficiency and energy in +carrying counsels into effect." + +When Megabyzus had completed his speech, Darius expressed his opinion. +He said that the arguments of those who had already spoken appeared +plausible, but that the speakers had not dealt quite fairly by the +different systems whose merits they had discussed, since they had +compared a good administration of one form of government with a bad +administration of another. Every thing human was, he admitted, subject +to imperfection and liable to abuse; but on the supposition that each +of the three forms which had been proposed were equally well +administered, the advantage, he thought, would be strongly on the side +of monarchy. Control exercised by a single mind and will was far more +concentrated and efficient than that proceeding from any conceivable +combination. The forming of plans could be, in that case, more secret +and wary, and the execution of them more immediate and prompt. Where +power was lodged in many hands, all energetic exercise of it was +paralyzed by the dissensions, the animosities and the contending +struggles of envious and jealous rivals. These struggles, in fact, +usually resulted in the predominance of some one, more energetic or +more successful than the rest, the aristocracy or the democracy +running thus, of its own accord, to a despotism in the end, showing +that there were natural causes always tending to the subjection of +nations of men to the control of one single will. + +Besides all this, Darius added, in conclusion, that the Persians had +always been accustomed to a monarchy, and it would be a very dangerous +experiment to attempt to introduce a new system, which would require +so great a change in all the habits and usages of the people. + +Thus the consultation went on. At the end of it, it appeared that four +out of the seven agreed with Darius in preferring a monarchy. This was +a majority, and thus the question seemed to be settled. Otanes said +that he would make no opposition to any measures which they might +adopt to carry their decision into effect, but that he would not +himself be subject to the monarchy which they might establish. "I do +not wish," he added, "either to govern others or to have others +govern me. You may establish a kingdom, therefore, if you choose, and +designate the monarch in any mode that you see fit to adopt, but he +must not consider me as one of his subjects. I myself, and all my +family and dependents, must be wholly free from his control." + +This was a very unreasonable proposition, unless, indeed, Otanes was +willing to withdraw altogether from the community to which he thus +refused to be subject; for, by residing within it, he necessarily +enjoyed its protection, and ought, therefore, to bear his portion of +its burdens, and to be amenable to its laws. Notwithstanding this, +however, the conspirators acceded to the proposal, and Otanes +withdrew. + +The remaining six of the confederates then proceeded with their +arrangements for the establishment of a monarchy. They first agreed +that one of their own number should be the king, and that on +whomsoever the choice should fall, the other five, while they +submitted to his dominion, should always enjoy peculiar privileges and +honors at his court. They were at all times to have free access to the +palaces and to the presence of the king, and it was from among their +daughters alone that the king was to choose his wives. These and some +other similar points having been arranged, the manner of deciding +which of the six should be the king remained to be determined. The +plan which they adopted, and the circumstances connected with the +execution of it, constitute, certainly, one of the most extraordinary +of all the strange transactions recorded in ancient times. It is +gravely related by Herodotus as sober truth. How far it is to be +considered as by any possibility credible, the reader must judge, +after knowing what the story is. + +They agreed, then, that on the following morning they would all meet +on horseback at a place agreed upon beyond the walls of the city, and +that the one whose horse should neigh first should be the king! The +time when this ridiculous ceremony was to be performed was sunrise. + +As soon as this arrangement was made the parties separated, and each +went to his own home. Darius called his groom, whose name was +OEbases, and ordered him to have his horse ready at sunrise on the +next morning, explaining to him, at the same time, the plan which had +been formed for electing the king. "If that is the mode which is to be +adopted," said Oebases, "you need have no concern, for I can +arrange it very easily so as to have the lot fall upon you." Darius +expressed a strong desire to have this accomplished, if it were +possible, and Oebases went away. + +The method which Oebases adopted was to lead Darius's horse out to +the ground that evening, in company with another, the favorite +companion, it seems, of the animal. Now the attachment of the horse to +his companion is very strong, and his recollection of localities very +vivid, and Oebases expected that when the horse should approach the +ground on the following morning, he would be reminded of the company +which he enjoyed there the night before, and neigh. The result was as +he anticipated. As the horsemen rode up to the appointed place, the +horse of Darius neighed the first, and Darius was unanimously +acknowledged king. + +In respect to the credibility of this famous story, the first thought +which arises in the mind is, that it is utterly impossible that sane +men, acting in so momentous a crisis, and where interests so vast and +extended were at stake, could have resorted to a plan so childish and +ridiculous as this. Such a mode of designating a leader, seriously +adopted, would have done discredit to a troop of boys making +arrangements for a holiday; and yet here was an empire extending for +thousands of miles through the heart of a vast continent, comprising, +probably, fifty nations and many millions of people, with capitals, +palaces, armies, fleets, and all the other appointments and machinery +of an immense dominion, to be appropriated and disposed of absolutely, +and, so far as they could see, forever. It seems incredible that men +possessing such intelligence, and information, and extent of view as +we should suppose that officers of their rank and station would +necessarily acquire, could have attempted to decide such a momentous +question in so ridiculous and trivial a manner. And yet the account is +seriously recorded by Herodotus as sober history, and the story has +been related again and again, from that day to this, by every +successive generation of historians, without any particular question +of its truth. + +And it may possibly be that it is true. It is a case in which the +apparent improbability is far greater than the real. In the first +place, it would seem that, in all ages of the world, the acts and +decisions of men occupying positions of the most absolute and exalted +power have been controlled, to a much greater degree, by caprice and +by momentary impulse, than mankind have generally supposed. Looking up +as we do to these vast elevations from below, they seem invested with +a certain sublimity and grandeur which we imagine must continually +impress the minds of those who occupy them, and expand and strengthen +their powers, and lead them to act, in all respects, with the +circumspection, the deliberation, and the far-reaching sagacity which +the emergencies continually arising seem to require. And this is, in +fact, in some degree the case with the statesmen and political leaders +raised to power under the constitutional governments of modern times. +Such statesmen are clothed with their high authority, in one way or +another, by the combined and deliberate action of vast masses of men, +and every step which they take is watched, in reference to its +influence on the condition and welfare of these masses, by many +millions; so that such men live and act under a continual sense of +responsibility, and they appreciate, in some degree, the momentous +importance of their doings. But the absolute and independent +sovereigns of the Old World, who held their power by conquest or by +inheritance, though raised sometimes to very vast and giddy +elevations, seem to have been unconscious, in many instances, of the +dignity and grandeur of their standing, and to have considered their +acts only as they affected their own personal and temporary interests. +Thus, though placed on a great elevation, they took only very narrow +and circumscribed views; they saw nothing but the objects immediately +around them; and they often acted, accordingly, in the most frivolous +and capricious manner. + +It was so, undoubtedly, with these six conspirators. In deciding which +of their number should be king, they thought nothing of the interests +of the vast realms, and of the countless millions of people whose +government was to be provided for. The question, as they considered +it, was doubtless merely which of them should have possession of the +royal palaces, and be the center and the object of royal pomp and +parade in the festivities and celebrations of the capital. + +And in the mode of decision which they adopted, it may be that some +degree of superstitious feeling mingled. The action and the voices of +animals were considered, in those days, as supernatural omens, +indicating the will of heaven. These conspirators may have expected, +accordingly, in the neighing of the horse, a sort of divine +intimation in respect to the disposition of the crown. This idea is +confirmed by the statement which the account of this transaction +contains, that immediately after the neighing of Darius's horse, it +thundered, although there were no clouds in the sky from which the +thunder could be supposed naturally to come. The conspirators, at all +events, considered it solemnly decided that Darius was to be king. +They all dismounted from their horses and knelt around him, in +acknowledgment of their allegiance and subjection. + +It seems that Darius, after he became established on his throne, +considered the contrivance by which, through the assistance of his +groom, he had obtained the prize, not as an act of fraud which it was +incumbent on him to conceal, but as one of brilliant sagacity which he +was to avow and glory in. He caused a magnificent equestrian statue to +be sculptured, representing himself mounted on his neighing horse. +This statue he set up in a public place with this inscription: + + DARIUS, SON OF HYSTASPES, OBTAINED THE SOVEREIGNTY OF PERSIA + BY THE SAGACITY OF HIS HORSE AND THE INGENIOUS CONTRIVANCE + OF OEBASES HIS GROOM. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +THE PROVINCES. + +B.C. 520 + +Intaphernes.--He is denied admittance to Darius.--Intaphernes's cruelty +to the two guards.--Darius's apprehensions.--Intaphernes and family +arrested.--They are condemned to die.--Alternative offered to +Intaphernes's wife.--Her strange decision.--Death of Intaphernes.--The +provinces.--The governors.--Their independence.--Power of the +governors.--Oretes, governor of Sardis.--Conversation between Oretes +and Mitrobates.--Polycrates.--Dominion of Polycrates.--Letter of +Amasis.--Suggestion of Amasis.--Adopted by Polycrates.--Polycrates +throws away his ring.--Its singular recovery.--Predictions of +Amasis.--Their fulfillment.--Letter of Oretes.--His hypocrisy.--The +pretended treasure.--Fears of Polycrates's daughter.--Oretes murders +Polycrates.--He commits other murders.--Oretes destroys Darius's +messenger.--Darius is incensed.--Plan of Darius for punishing +Oretes.--His proposal.--Commission of Bagæus.--His plan.--Oretes +beheaded.--Divisions of Darius's empire.--Tribute of the satrapies.--The +white horses.--The gold of India.--Mode of gathering it.--The wonderful +ants.--Their prodigious size. + + +Several of the events and incidents which occurred immediately after +the accession of Darius to the throne, illustrate in a striking manner +the degree in which the princes and potentates of ancient days were +governed by caprice and passionate impulse even in their public acts. +One of the most remarkable of these was the case of Intaphernes. + +Intaphernes was one of the seven conspirators who combined to depose +the magian and place Darius on the throne. By the agreement which they +made with each other before it was decided which should be the king, +each of them was to have free access to the king's presence at all +times. One evening, soon after Darius became established on his +throne, Intaphernes went to the palace, and was proceeding to enter +the apartment of the king without ceremony, when he was stopped by two +officers, who told him that the king had retired. Intaphernes was +incensed at the officers' insolence, as he called it. He drew his +sword, and cut off their noses and their ears. Then he took the bridle +off from his horse at the palace gate, and tied the officers together; +and then, leaving them in this helpless and miserable condition, he +went away. + +The officers immediately repaired to the king, and presented +themselves to him, a frightful spectacle, wounded and bleeding, and +complaining bitterly of Intaphernes as the author of the injuries +which they had received. The king was at first alarmed for his own +safety. He feared that the conspirators had all combined together to +rebel against his authority, and that this daring insult offered to +his personal attendants, in his very palace, was the first outbreak of +it. He accordingly sent for the conspirators one by one, to ask of +them whether they approved of what Intaphernes had done. They promptly +disavowed all connection with Intaphernes in the act, and all approval +of it, and declared their determination to adhere to the decision that +they had made, by which Darius had been placed on the throne. + +Darius then, after taking proper precautions to guard against any +possible attempts at resistance, sent soldiers to seize Intaphernes, +and also his son, and all of his family, relatives, and friends who +were capable of bearing arms; for he suspected that Intaphernes had +meditated a rebellion, and he thought that, if so, these men would +most probably be his accomplices. The prisoners were brought before +him. There was, indeed, no proof that they were engaged in any plan of +rebellion, nor even that any plan of rebellion whatever had been +formed; but this circumstance afforded them no protection. The +liberties and the lives of all subjects were at the supreme and +absolute disposal of these ancient kings. Darius thought it possible +that the prisoners had entertained, or might entertain, some +treasonable designs, and he conceived that he should, accordingly, +feel safer if they were removed out of the way. He decreed, therefore, +that they must all die. + +While the preparations were making for the execution, the wife of +Intaphernes came continually to the palace of Darius, begging for an +audience, that she might intercede for the lives of her friends. +Darius was informed of this, and at last, pretending to be moved with +compassion for her distress, he sent her word that he would pardon one +of the criminals for her sake, and that she might decide which one it +should be. His real motive in making this proposal seems to have been +to enjoy the perplexity and anguish which the heart of a woman must +suffer in being compelled thus to decide, in a question of life and +death, between a husband and a son. + +The wife of Intaphernes did not decide in favor of either of these. +She gave the preference, on the other hand, to a brother. Darius was +very much surprised at this result, and sent a messenger to her to +inquire how it happened that she could pass over and abandon to their +fate her husband and her son, in order to save the life of her +brother, who was certainly to be presumed less near and dear to her. +To which she gave this extraordinary reply, that the loss of her +husband and her son might perhaps be repaired, since it was not +impossible that she might be married again, and that she might have +another son; but that, inasmuch as both her father and mother were +dead, she could never have another brother. The death of her present +brother would, therefore, be an irreparable loss. + +The king was so much pleased with the novelty and unexpectedness of +this turn of thought, that he gave her the life of her son in addition +to that of her brother. All the rest of the family circle of +relatives and friends, together with Intaphernes himself, he ordered +to be slain. + +Darius had occasion to be so much displeased, too, shortly after his +accession to the throne, with the governor of one of his provinces, +that he was induced to order him to be put to death. The circumstances +connected with this governor's crime, and the manner of his execution, +illustrate very forcibly the kind of government which was administered +by these military despots in ancient times. It must be premised that +great empires, like that over which Darius had been called to rule, +were generally divided into provinces. The inhabitants of these +provinces, each community within its own borders, went on, from year +to year, in their various pursuits of peaceful industry, governed +mainly, in their relations to each other, by the natural sense of +justice instinctive in man, and by those thousand local institutions +and usages which are always springing up in all human communities +under the influence of this principle. There were governors stationed +over these provinces, whose main duty it was to collect and remit to +the king the tribute which the province was required to furnish him. +These governors were, of course, also to suppress any domestic +outbreak of violence, and to repel any foreign invasion which might +occur. A sufficient military force was placed at their disposal to +enable them to fulfill these functions. They paid these troops, of +course, from sums which they collected in their provinces under the +same system by which they collected the tribute. This made them, in a +great measure, independent of the king in the maintenance of their +armies. They thus intrenched themselves in their various capitals at +the head of these troops, and reigned over their respective dominions +almost as if they were kings themselves. They had, in fact, very +little connection with the supreme monarch, except to send him the +annual tribute which they had collected from their people, and to +furnish, also, their quota of troops in case of a national war. In the +time of our Savior, Pilate was such a governor, intrusted by the +Romans with the charge of Judea, and Matthew was one of the tax +gatherers employed to collect the tribute. + +Of course, the governors of such provinces, as we have already said, +were, in a great measure, independent of the king. He had, ordinarily, +no officers of justice whose jurisdiction could control, peacefully, +such powerful vassals. The only remedy in most cases, when they were +disobedient and rebellious, was to raise an army and go forth to make +war upon them, as in the case of any foreign state. This was attended +with great expense, and trouble, and hazard. The governors, when +ambitious and aspiring, sometimes managed their resources with so much +energy and military skill as to get the victory over their sovereign +in the contests in which they engaged with them, and then they would +gain vast accessions to the privileges and powers which they exercised +in their own departments; and they would sometimes overthrow their +discomfited sovereign entirely, and take possession of his throne +themselves in his stead. + +Oretes was the name of one of these governors in the time of Darius. +He had been placed by Cyrus, some years before, in charge of one of +the provinces into which the kingdom of Lydia had been divided. The +seat of government was Sardis.[D] He was a capricious and cruel +tyrant, as, in fact, almost all such governors were. We will relate +an account of one of the deeds which he performed some time before +Darius ascended the throne, and which sufficiently illustrates his +character. + +[Footnote D: For the position of Sardis, and of other places mentioned +in this chapter, see the map at the commencement of the volume, and +also that at the commencement of chapter xi.] + +He was one day sitting at the gates of his palace in Sardis, in +conversation with the governor of a neighboring territory who had come +to visit him. The name of this guest was Mitrobates. As the two +friends were boasting to one another, as such warriors are accustomed +to do, of the deeds of valor and prowess which they had respectively +performed, Mitrobates said that Oretes could not make any great +pretensions to enterprise and bravery so long as he allowed the Greek +island of Samos, which was situate at a short distance from the Lydian +coast, to remain independent, when it would be so easy to annex it to +the Persian empire. "You are afraid of Polycrates, I suppose," said +he. Polycrates was the king of Samos. + +Oretes was stung by this taunt, but, instead of revenging himself on +Mitrobates, the author of it, he resolved on destroying Polycrates, +though he had no reason other than this for any feeling of enmity +toward him. + +Polycrates, although the seat of his dominion was a small island in +the Ægean Sea, was a very wealthy, and powerful, and prosperous +prince. All his plans and enterprises had been remarkably successful. +He had built and equipped a powerful fleet, and had conquered many +islands in the neighborhood of his own. He was projecting still wider +schemes of conquests, and hoped, in fact, to make himself the master +of all the seas. + +A very curious incident is related of Polycrates, which illustrates +very strikingly the childish superstition which governed the minds of +men in those ancient days. It seems that in the midst of his +prosperity, his friend and ally, the King of Egypt--for these events, +though narrated here, occurred before the invasion of Egypt by +Cambyses--sent to him a letter, of which the following is the purport. + + "_Amasis, king of Egypt, to Polycrates._ + + "It always gives me great satisfaction and pleasure to hear + of the prosperity of a friend and ally, unless it is too + absolutely continuous and uninterrupted. Something like an + alternation of good and ill fortune is best for man; I have + never known an instance of a very long-continued course of + unmingled and uninterrupted success that did not end, at + last, in overwhelming and terrible calamity. I am anxious, + therefore, for you, and my anxiety will greatly increase if + this extraordinary and unbroken prosperity should continue + much longer. I counsel you, therefore, to break the current + yourself, if fortune will not break it. Bring upon yourself + some calamity, or loss, or suffering, as a means of averting + the heavier evils which will otherwise inevitably befall + you. It is a general and substantial welfare only that can + be permanent and final." + +Polycrates seemed to think there was good sense in this suggestion. He +began to look around him to see in what way he could bring upon +himself some moderate calamity or loss, and at length decided on the +destruction of a very valuable signet ring which he kept among his +treasures. The ring was made with very costly jewels set in gold, and +was much celebrated both for its exquisite workmanship and also for +its intrinsic value. The loss of this ring would be, he thought, a +sufficient calamity to break the evil charm of an excessive and +unvaried current of good fortune. Polycrates, therefore, ordered one +of the largest vessels in his navy, a fifty-oared galley, to be +equipped and manned, and, embarking in it with a large company of +attendants, he put to sea. When he was at some distance from the +island, he took the ring, and in the presence of all his attendants, +he threw it forth into the water, and saw it sink, to rise, as he +supposed, no more. + +But Fortune, it seems, was not to be thus outgeneraled. A few days +after Polycrates had returned, a certain fisherman on the coast took, +in his nets, a fish of very extraordinary size and beauty; so +extraordinary, in fact, that he felt it incumbent on him to make a +present of it to the king. The servants of Polycrates, on opening the +fish for the purpose of preparing it for the table, to their great +astonishment and gratification, found the ring within. The king was +overjoyed at thus recovering his lost treasure; he had, in fact, +repented of his rashness in throwing it away, and had been bitterly +lamenting its loss. His satisfaction and pleasure were, therefore, +very great in regaining it; and he immediately sent to Amasis an +account of the whole transaction, expecting that Amasis would share in +his joy. + +Amasis, however, sent word back to him in reply, that he considered +the return of the ring in that almost miraculous manner as an +extremely unfavorable omen. "I fear," said he, "that it is decreed by +the Fates that you must be overwhelmed, at last, by some dreadful +calamity, and that no measures of precaution which you can adopt will +avail to avert it. It seems to me, too," he added, "that it is +incumbent on me to withdraw from all alliance and connection with you, +lest I should also, at last, be involved in your destined +destruction." + +Whether this extraordinary story was true, or whether it was all +fabricated after the fall of Polycrates, as a dramatic embellishment +of his history, we can not now know. The result, however, corresponded +with these predictions of Amasis, if they were really made; for it was +soon after these events that the conversation took place at Sardis +between Oretes and Mitrobates, at the gates of the palace, which led +Oretes to determine on effecting Polycrates's destruction. + +In executing the plans which he thus formed, Oretes had not the +courage and energy necessary for an open attack on Polycrates, and he +consequently resolved on attempting to accomplish his end by treachery +and stratagem. + +The plan which he devised was this: He sent a messenger to Polycrates +with a letter of the following purport: + + "_Oretes, governor of Sardis, to Polycrates of Samos._ + + "I am aware, sire, of the plans which you have long been + entertaining for extending your power among the islands and + over the waters of the Mediterranean, until you shall have + acquired the supreme and absolute dominion of the seas. I + should like to join you in this enterprise. You have ships + and men, and I have money. Let us enter into an alliance + with each other. I have accumulated in my treasuries a large + supply of gold and silver, which I will furnish for the + expenses of the undertaking. If you have any doubt of my + sincerity in making these offers, and of my ability to + fulfill them, send some messenger in whom you have + confidence, and I will lay the evidence before him." + +Polycrates was much pleased at the prospect of a large accession to +his funds, and he sent the messenger, as Oretes had proposed. Oretes +prepared to receive him by filling a large number of boxes nearly full +with heavy stones, and then placing a shallow layer of gold or silver +coin at the top. These boxes were then suitably covered and secured, +with the fastenings usually adopted in those days, and placed away in +the royal treasuries. When the messenger arrived, the boxes were +brought out and opened, and were seen by the messenger to be full, as +he supposed, of gold and silver treasure. The messenger went back to +Polycrates, and reported that all which Oretes had said was true; and +Polycrates then determined to go to the main land himself to pay +Oretes a visit, that they might mature together their plans for the +intended campaigns. He ordered a fifty-oared galley to be prepared to +convey him. + +His daughter felt a presentiment, it seems, that some calamity was +impending. She earnestly entreated her father not to go. She had had a +dream, she said, about him, which had frightened her excessively, and +which she was convinced portended some terrible danger. Polycrates +paid no attention to his daughter's warnings. She urged them more and +more earnestly, until, at last, she made her father angry, and then +she desisted. Polycrates then embarked on board his splendid galley, +and sailed away. As soon as he landed in the dominions of Oretes, the +monster seized him and put him to death, and then ordered his body to +be nailed to a cross, for exhibition to all passers by, as a public +spectacle. The train of attendants and servants that accompanied +Polycrates on this expedition were all made slaves, except a few +persons of distinction, who were sent home in a shameful and +disgraceful manner. Among the attendants who were detained in +captivity by Oretes was a celebrated family physician, named +Democedes, whose remarkable and romantic adventures will be the +subject of the next chapter. + +Oretes committed several other murders and assassinations in this +treacherous manner, without any just ground for provocation. In these +deeds of violence and cruelty, he seems to have acted purely under the +influence of that wanton and capricious malignity which the possession +of absolute and irresponsible power so often engenders in the minds of +bad men. It is doubtful, however, whether these cruelties and crimes +would have particularly attracted the attention of Darius, so long as +he was not himself directly affected by them. The central government, +in these ancient empires, generally interested itself very little in +the contentions and quarrels of the governors of the provinces, +provided that the tribute was efficiently collected and regularly +paid. + +A case, however, soon occurred, in Oretes's treacherous and bloody +career, which arrested the attention of Darius and aroused his ire. +Darius had sent a messenger to Oretes, with certain orders, which, it +seems, Oretes did not like to obey. After delivering his dispatches +the bearer set out on his return, and was never afterward heard of. +Darius ascertained, to his own satisfaction at least, that Oretes had +caused his messenger to be waylaid and killed, and that the bodies +both of horse and rider had been buried, secretly, in the solitudes of +the mountains, in order to conceal the evidences of the deed. + +Darius determined on punishing this crime. Some consideration was, +however, required, in order to determine in what way his object could +best be effected. The province of Oretes was at a great distance from +Susa, and Oretes was strongly established there, at the head of a +great force. His guards were bound, it is true, to obey the orders of +Darius, but it was questionable whether they would do so. To raise an +army and march against the rebellious governor would be an expensive +and hazardous undertaking, and perhaps, too, it would prove that such +a measure was not necessary. All things considered, Darius determined +to try the experiment of acting, by his own direct orders, upon the +troops and guards in Oretes's capital, with the intention of resorting +subsequently to an armed force of his own, if that should be at last +required. + +He accordingly called together a number of his officers and nobles, +selecting those on whose resolution and fidelity he could most +confidently rely, and made the following address to them: + +"I have an enterprise which I wish to commit to the charge of some one +of your number who is willing to undertake it, which requires no +military force, and no violent measures of any kind, but only wisdom, +sagacity, and courage. I wish to have Oretes, the governor of Sardis, +brought to me, dead or alive. He has perpetrated innumerable crimes, +and now, in addition to all his other deeds of treacherous violence, +he has had the intolerable insolence to put to death one of my +messengers. Which of you will volunteer to bring him, dead or alive, +to me?" + +This proposal awakened a great enthusiasm among the nobles to whom it +was addressed. Nearly thirty of them volunteered their services to +execute the order. Darius concluded to decide between these +competitors by lot. The lot fell upon a certain man named Bagæus, and +he immediately began to form his plans and make his arrangements for +the expedition. + +He caused a number of different orders to be prepared, beginning with +directions of little moment, and proceeding to commands of more and +more weighty importance, all addressed to the officers of Oretes's +army and to his guards. These orders were all drawn up in writing with +great formality, and were signed by the name of Darius, and sealed +with his seal; they, moreover, named Bagæus as the officer selected by +the king to superintend the execution of them. Provided with these +documents, Bagæus proceeded to Sardis, and presented himself at the +court of Oretes. He presented his own personal credentials, and with +them some of his most insignificant orders. Neither Oretes nor his +guards felt any disposition to disobey them. Bagæus, being thus +received and recognized as the envoy of the king, continued to present +new decrees and edicts, from time to time, as occasions occurred in +which he thought the guards would be ready to obey them, until he +found the habit, on their part, of looking to him as the +representative of the supreme power sufficiently established; for +their disposition to obey him was not merely tested, it was +strengthened by every new act of obedience. When he found, at length, +that his hold upon the guards was sufficiently strong, he produced his +two final decrees, one ordering the guards to depose Oretes from his +power, and the other to behead him. Both the commands were obeyed. + +The events and incidents which have been described in this chapter +were of no great importance in themselves, but they illustrate, more +forcibly than any general description would do the nature and the +operation of the government exercised by Darius throughout the vast +empire over which he found himself presiding. + +Such personal and individual contests and transactions were not all +that occupied his attention. He devoted a great deal of thought and of +time to the work of arranging, in a distinct and systematic manner, +the division of his dominions into provinces, and to regulating +precisely the amount of tribute to be required of each, and the modes +of collecting it. He divided his empire into twenty great districts, +each of which was governed by a ruler called a _satrap_. He fixed the +amount of tribute which each of these districts was to pay, making it +greater or less as the soil and the productions of the country varied +in fertility and abundance. In some cases this tribute was to be paid +in gold, in others in silver, and in others in peculiar commodities, +natural to the country of which they were required. For example, one +satrapy, which comprised a country famous for its horses, was obliged +to furnish one white horse for every day in the year. This made three +hundred and sixty annually, that being the number of days in the +Persian year. Such a supply, furnished yearly, enabled the king soon +to have a very large troop of white horses; and as the horses were +beautifully caparisoned, and the riders magnificently armed, the body +of cavalry thus formed was one of the most splendid in the world. + +The satrapies were numbered from the west toward the east. The western +portion of Asia Minor constituted the first, and the East Indian +nations the twelfth and last. The East Indians had to pay their +tribute in ingots of gold. Their country produced gold. + +As it is now forever too late to separate the facts from the fiction +of ancient history, and determine what is to be rejected as false and +what received as true, our only resource is to tell the whole story +just as it comes down to us, leaving it to each reader to decide for +himself what he will believe. In this view of the subject, we will +conclude this chapter by relating the manner in which it was said in +ancient times that these Indian nations obtained their gold. + +The gold country was situated in remote and dreary deserts, inhabited +only by wild beasts and vermin, among which last there was, it seems, +a species of ants, which were of enormous size, and wonderful +fierceness and voracity, and which could run faster than the fleetest +horse or camel. These ants, in making their excavations, would bring +up from beneath the surface of the ground all the particles of gold +which came in their way, and throw them out around their hills. The +Indians then would penetrate into these deserts, mounted on the +fleetest camels that they could procure, and leading other camels, not +so fleet, by their sides. They were provided, also, with bags for +containing the golden sands. When they arrived at the ant hills, they +would dismount, and, gathering up the gold which the ants had +discarded, would fill their bags with the utmost possible dispatch, +and then mount their camels and ride away. The ants, in the mean time, +would take the alarm, and begin to assemble to attack them; but as +their instinct prompted them to wait until considerable numbers were +collected before they commenced their attack, the Indians had time to +fill their bags and begin their flight before their enemies were +ready. Then commenced the chase, the camels running at their full +speed, and the swarms of ants following, and gradually drawing nearer +and nearer. At length, when nearly overtaken, the Indians would +abandon the camels that they were leading, and fly on, more swiftly, +upon those which they rode. While the ants were busy in devouring the +victims thus given up to them, the authors of all the mischief would +make good their escape, and thus carry off their gold to a place of +safety. These famous ants were bigger than foxes! + +[Illustration: THE INDIAN GOLD HUNTER.] + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +THE RECONNOITERING OF GREECE. + +B.C. 519 + +The reconnoitering party.--The physician Democedes.--Story of +Democedes.--His boyhood.--Democedes at Ægina.--At Athens.--At the court +of Polycrates.--Democedes a captive.--He is sent to Darius.--Democedes +is cast into prison.--His wretched condition.--Darius sprains his +ankle.--The Egyptian physicians baffled.--Sufferings of Darius.--He +sends for Democedes.--Democedes's denial.--He treats the sprain +successfully.--Darius's recovery.--The golden fetters.--Democedes +released.--Honors conferred on him.--Atossa cured by Democedes.--His +conditions.--Atossa with Darius.--She suggests the invasion of +Greece.--The exploring party.--Democedes appointed guide.--Designs of +Democedes.--Darius baffled.--The expedition sets out.--City of +Sidon.--The sea voyage.--The Grecian coasts examined.--Arrival at +Tarentum.--Suspicions of the authorities.--The Persians seized.--Escape +of Democedes.--Release of the Persians.--Tumult at Crotona.--Conduct +of Democedes.--The expedition returns.--Misfortunes.--Cillus.--Arrival +at Susa.--Reception by Darius. + + +The great event in the history of Darius--the one, in fact, on account +of which it was, mainly, that his name and his career have been so +widely celebrated among mankind, was an attempt which he made, on a +very magnificent scale, for the invasion and conquest of Greece. +Before commencing active operations in this grand undertaking, he sent +a reconnoitering party to examine and explore the ground. This +reconnoitering party met with a variety of extraordinary adventures in +the course of its progress, and the history of it will accordingly +form the subject of this chapter. + +The guide to this celebrated reconnoitering party was a certain Greek +physician named Democedes. Though Democedes was called a Greek, he +was, really, an Italian by birth. His native town was Crotona, which +may be found exactly at the ball of the foot on the map of Italy. It +was by a very singular series of adventures that he passed from this +remote village in the west, over thousands of miles by land and sea, +to Susa, Darius's capital. He began by running away from his father +while he was still a boy. He said that he was driven to this step by +the intolerable strictness and cruelty of his father's government. +This, however, is always the pretext of turbulent and ungovernable +young men, who abandon their parents and their homes when the favors +and the protection necessary during their long and helpless infancy +have been all received, and the time is beginning to arrive for making +some return. + +Democedes was ingenious and cunning, and fond of roving adventure. In +running away from home, he embarked on board a ship, as such +characters generally do at the present day, and went to sea. After +meeting with various adventures, he established himself in the island +of Ægina, in the Ægean sea, where he began to practice as a physician, +though he had had no regular education in that art. In his practice he +evinced so much medical skill, or, at least, exercised so much +adroitness in leading people to believe that he possessed it, as to +give him very soon a wide and exalted reputation. The people of Ægina +appointed him their physician, and assigned him a large salary for +his services in attending upon the sick throughout the island. This +was the usual practice in those days. A town, or an island, or any +circumscribed district of country, would appoint a physician as a +public officer, who was to devote his attention, at a fixed annual +salary, to any cases of sickness which might arise in the community, +wherever his services were needed, precisely as physicians serve in +hospitals and public institutions in modern times. + +Democedes remained at Ægina two years, during which time his celebrity +increased and extended more and more, until, at length, he received an +appointment from the city of Athens, with the offer of a greatly +increased salary. He accepted the appointment, and remained in Athens +one year, when he received still more advantageous offers from +Polycrates, the king of Samos, whose history was given so fully in the +last chapter. + +Democedes remained for some time in the court of Polycrates, where he +was raised to the highest distinction, and loaded with many honors. He +was a member of the household of the king, enjoyed his confidence in a +high degree, and attended him, personally, on all his expeditions. At +last, when Polycrates went to Sardis, as is related in the last +chapter, to receive the treasures of Oretes, and concert with him the +plans for their proposed campaigns, Democedes accompanied him as +usual; and when Polycrates was slain, and his attendants and followers +were made captive by Oretes, the unfortunate physician was among the +number. By this reverse, he found that he had suddenly fallen from +affluence, ease, and honor, to the condition of a neglected and +wretched captive in the hands of a malignant and merciless tyrant. + +Democedes pined in this confinement for a long time; when, at length, +Oretes himself was killed by the order of Darius, it might have been +expected that the hour of his deliverance had arrived. But it was not +so; his condition was, in fact, made worse, and not better by it; for +Bagæus, the commissioner of Darius, instead of inquiring into the +circumstances relating to the various members of Oretes's family, and +redressing the wrongs which any of them might be suffering, simply +seized the whole company, and brought them all to Darius in Susa, as +trophies of his triumph, and tokens of the faithfulness and efficiency +with which he had executed the work that Darius had committed to his +charge. Thus Democedes was borne away, in hopeless bondage, thousands +of miles farther from his native land than before, and with very +little prospect of being ever able to return. He arrived at Susa, +destitute, squalid, and miserable. His language was foreign, his rank +and his professional skill unknown, and all the marks which might +indicate the refinement and delicacy of the modes of life to which he +had been accustomed were wholly disguised by his present destitution +and wretchedness. He was sent with the other captives to the prisons, +where he was secured, like them, with fetters and chains, and was soon +almost entirely forgotten. + +He might have taken some measures for making his character, and his +past celebrity and fame as a physician known; but he did not dare to +do this, for fear that Darius might learn to value his medical skill, +and so detain him as a slave for the sake of his services. He thought +that the chance was greater that some turn of fortune, or some +accidental change in the arrangements of government might take place, +by which he might be set at liberty, as an insignificant and worthless +captive, whom there was no particular motive for detaining, than if +he were transferred to the king's household as a slave, and his value +as an artisan--for medical practice was, in those days, simply an +art--were once known. He made no effort, therefore, to bring his true +character to light, but pined silently in his dungeon, in rags and +wretchedness, and in a mental despondency which was gradually sinking +into despair. + +About this time, it happened that Darius was one day riding furiously +in a chase, and coming upon some sudden danger, he attempted to leap +from his horse. He fell and sprained his ankle. He was taken up by the +attendants, and carried home. His physicians were immediately called +to attend to the case. They were Egyptians. Egypt was, in fact, +considered the great seat and centre of learning and of the arts in +those days, and no royal household was complete without Egyptian +physicians. + +The learning and skill, however, of the Egyptians in Darius's court +were entirely baffled by the sprain. They thought that the joint was +dislocated, and they turned and twisted the foot with so much +violence, in their attempts to restore the bones to their proper +position, as greatly to increase the pain and the inflammation. +Darius spent a week in extreme and excruciating suffering. He could +not sleep day nor night, but tossed in continual restlessness and +anguish on his couch, made constantly worse instead of better by every +effort of his physicians to relieve him. + +At length somebody informed him that there was a Greek physician among +the captives that came from Sardis, and recommended that Darius should +send for him. The king, in his impatience and pain, was ready for any +experiment which promised the least hope of relief, and he ordered +that Democedes should be immediately summoned. The officers +accordingly went to the prison and brought out the astonished captive, +without any notice or preparation, and conducted him, just as he was, +ragged and wretched, and shackled with iron fetters upon his feet, +into the presence of the king. The fetters which such captives wore +were intended to allow them to walk, slowly and with difficulty, while +they impeded the movements of the feet so as effectually to prevent +any long or rapid flight, or any escape at all from free pursuers. + +Democedes, when questioned by Darius, denied at first that he +possessed any medical knowledge or skill. Darius was, however, not +deceived by these protestations. It was very customary, in those days +of royal tyranny, for those who possessed any thing valuable to +conceal the possession of it: concealment was often their only +protection. Darius, who was well aware of this tendency, did not +believe the assurances of Democedes, and in the irritation and +impatience caused by his pain, he ordered the captive to be taken out +and put to the torture, in order to make him confess that he was +really a physician. + +Democedes yielded without waiting to be actually put to the test. He +acknowledged at once, for fear of the torture, that he had had some +experience in medical practice, and the sprained ankle was immediately +committed to his charge. On examining the case, he thought that the +harsh and violent operations which the Egyptian physicians had +attempted were not required. He treated the inflamed and swollen joint +in the gentlest manner. He made fomenting and emollient applications, +which soothed the pain, subdued the inflammation, and allayed the +restlessness and the fever. The royal sufferer became quiet and calm, +and in a short time fell asleep. + +In a word, the king rapidly recovered; and, overwhelmed with gratitude +toward the benefactor whose skill had saved him from such suffering, +he ordered that, in place of his single pair of iron fetters, he +should have two pairs of fetters of gold! + +It might at first be imagined that such a strange token of regard as +this could be intended only as a jest and an insult; but there is no +doubt that Darius meant it seriously as a compliment and an honor. He +supposed that Democedes, of course, considered his condition of +captivity as a fixed and permanent one; and that his fetters were not, +in themselves, an injustice or disgrace, but the necessary and +unavoidable concomitant of his lot, so that the sending of golden +fetters to a slave was very naturally, in his view, like presenting a +golden crutch to a cripple. Democedes received the equivocal donation +with great good nature. He even ventured upon a joke on the subject to +the convalescent king. "It seems, sire," said he "that in return for +my saving your limb and your life, you double my servitude. You have +given me two chains instead of one." + +The king, who was now in a much better humor to be pleased than when, +writhing in anguish, he had ordered Democedes to be put to the +torture, laughed at this reply, and released the captive from the +bonds entirely. He ordered him to be conducted by the attendants to +the apartments of the palace, where the wives of Darius and the other +ladies of the court resided, that they might see him and express their +gratitude. "This is the physician," said the eunuchs, who introduced +him, "that cured the king." The ladies welcomed him with the utmost +cordiality, and loaded him with presents of gold and silver as he +passed through their apartments. The king made arrangements, too, +immediately, for providing him with a magnificent house in Susa, and +established him there in great luxury and splendor, with costly +furniture and many attendants, and all other marks of distinction and +honor. In a word, Democedes found himself, by means of another +unexpected change of fortune, suddenly elevated to a height as lofty +as his misery and degradation had been low. He was, however, a captive +still. + +The Queen Atossa, the daughter of Cyrus, who has already been +mentioned as the wife of Cambyses and of Smerdis the magian, was one +of the wives of Darius. Her sister Antystone was another. A third was +Phædyma, the daughter of Otanes, the lady who had been so +instrumental, in connection with Atossa, in the discovery of the +magian imposture. It happened that, some time after the curing of +Darius's sprain, Atossa herself was sick. Her malady was of such a +nature, that for some time she kept it concealed, from a feeling of +delicacy.[E] At length, terrified by the danger which threatened her, +she sent for Democedes, and made her case known to him. He said that +he could cure her, but she must first promise to grant him, if he did +so, a certain favor which he should ask. She must promise beforehand +to grant it, whatever it might be. It was nothing, he said, that +should in any way compromise her honor. + +[Footnote E: It was a tumor of the breast, which became, at length, an +open ulcer, and began to spread and enlarge in a very formidable +manner.] + +Atossa agreed to these conditions, and Democedes undertook her case. +Her malady was soon cured; and when she asked him what was the favor +which he wished to demand, he replied, + +"Persuade Darius to form a plan for the invasion of Greece, and to +send me, with a small company of attendants, to explore the country, +and obtain for him all the necessary preliminary information. In this +way I shall see my native land once more." + +Atossa was faithful in her promise. She availed herself of the first +favorable opportunity, when it became her turn to visit the king, to +direct his mind, by a dexterous conversation, toward the subject of +the enlargement of his empire. He had vast forces and resources, she +said, at his command, and might easily enter upon a career of conquest +which would attract the admiration of the world. Darius replied that +he had been entertaining some views of that nature. He had thought, he +said, of attacking the Scythians: these Scythians were a group of +semi-savage nations on the north of his dominions. Atossa represented +to him that subduing the Scythians would be too easy a conquest, and +that it would be a far nobler enterprise, and more worthy of his +talents and his vast resources, to undertake an expedition into +Europe, and attempt the conquest of Greece. "You have all the means at +your command essential for the success of such an undertaking, and you +have in your court a man who can give you, or can obtain for you, all +the necessary information in respect to the country, to enable you to +form the plan of your campaigns." + +The ambition of Darius was fired by these suggestions. He began +immediately to form projects and schemes. In a day or two he organized +a small party of Persian officers of distinction, in whom he had great +confidence, to go on an exploring tour into Greece. They were provided +with a suitable company of attendants, and with every thing necessary +for their journey, and Democedes was directed to prepare to go with +them as their guide. They were to travel simply as a party of Persian +noblemen, on an excursion of curiosity and pleasure, concealing their +true design; and as Democedes their guide, though born in Italy, was +in all important points a Greek, and was well acquainted with the +countries through which they were to pass, they supposed that they +could travel every where without suspicion. Darius charged the +Persians to keep a diligent watch over Democedes, and not to allow +him, on any account to leave them, but to bring him back to Susa +safely with them on their return. + +As for Democedes, he had no intention whatever of returning to Persia, +though he kept his designs of making his escape entirely concealed. +Darius, with seeming generosity, said to him, while he was making his +preparations, "I recommend to you to take with you all your private +wealth and treasures, to distribute, for presents, among your friends +in Greece and Italy. I will bestow more upon you here on your return." +Democedes regarded this counsel with great suspicion. He imagined that +the king, in giving him this permission, wished to ascertain, by +observing whether he would really take with him all his possessions, +the existence of any secret determination in his mind not to come back +to Susa. If this were Darius's plan, it was defeated by the sagacious +vigilance and cunning of the physician. He told the king, in reply, +that he preferred to leave his effects in Persia, that they might be +ready for his use on his return. The king then ordered a variety of +costly articles to be provided and given to Democedes, to be taken +with him and presented to his friends in Greece and Italy. They +consisted of vessels of gold and silver, pieces of Persian armor of +beautiful workmanship, and articles of dress, expensive and splendid. +These were all carefully packed, and the various other necessary +preparations were made for the long journey. + +At length the expedition set out. They traveled by land westward, +across the continent, till they reached the eastern shores of the +Mediterranean Sea. The port at which they arrived was Sidon, the city +so often mentioned in the Scriptures as a great pagan emporium of +commerce. The city of Sidon was in the height of its glory at this +time, being one of the most important ports of the Mediterranean for +all the western part of Asia. Caravans of travelers came to it by +land, bringing on the backs of camels the productions of Arabia, +Persia, and all the East; and fleets of ships by sea, loaded with the +corn, and wine, and oil of the Western nations. + +At Sidon the land journey of the expedition was ended. Here they +bought two large and splendid ships, galleys of three banks of oars, +to convey them to Greece. These galleys were for their own personal +accommodation. There was a third vessel, called a transport, for the +conveyance of their baggage, which consisted mainly of the packages of +rich and costly presents which Darius had prepared. Some of these +presents were for the friends of Democedes, as has been already +explained, and others had been provided as gifts and offerings from +the king himself to such distinguished personages as the travelers +might visit on their route. When the vessels were ready, and the +costly cargo was on board, the company of travelers embarked, and the +little fleet put to sea. + +The Grecian territories are endlessly divided and indented by the +seas, whose irregular and winding shores form promontories, +peninsulas, and islands without number, which are accessible in every +part by water. The Persian explorers cruised about among these coasts +under Democedes's guidance, examining every thing, and noting +carefully all the information which they could obtain, either by +personal observation or by inquiring of others, which might be of +service to Darius in his intended invasion. Democedes allowed them to +take their own time, directing their course, however, steadily, though +slowly, toward his own native town of Crotona. The expedition landed +in various places, and were every where well received. It was not for +the interest of Democedes that they should yet be intercepted. In +fact, the name and power of Darius were very much feared, or, at +least, very highly respected in all the Grecian territory, and the +people were little inclined to molest a peaceful party of Persians +traveling like ordinary tourists, and under the guidance, too, of a +distinguished countryman of their own, whose name was, in some degree, +a guarantee for the honesty and innocence of their intentions. At +length, however, after spending some time in the Grecian seas, the +little squadron moved still farther west, toward the coast of Italy, +and arrived finally at Tarentum. Tarentum was the great port on the +Grecian side of Italy. It was at the head of the spacious bay which +sets up between the heel and the ball of the foot of the boot-shaped +peninsula. Crotona, Democedes's native town, to which he was now +desirous to return, was southwest of Tarentum, about two hundred miles +along the shore.[F] + +[Footnote F: For the situation of these places, see the map at the +commencement of chapter xi.] + +It was a very curious and extraordinary circumstance that, though the +expedition had been thus far allowed to go and come as its leaders +pleased, without any hinderance or suspicion, yet now, the moment that +they touched a point from which Democedes could easily reach his home, +the authorities on shore, in some way or other, obtained some +intimation of the true character of their enterprise. The Prince of +Tarentum seized the ships. He made the Persians themselves prisoners +also, and shut them up; and, in order effectually to confine the +ships, he took away the helms from them, so that they could not be +steered, and were thus entirely disabled. The expedition being thus, +for the time at least, broken up, Democedes said, coolly, that he +would take the opportunity to make a little excursion along the coast, +and visit his friends at Crotona! + +It was another equally suspicious circumstance in respect to the +probability that this seizure was the result of Democedes's +management, that, as soon as he was safely away, the Prince of +Tarentum set his prisoners at liberty, releasing, at the same time, +the ships from the seizure, and sending the helms on board. The +Persians were indignant at the treatment which they had received, and +set sail immediately along the coast toward Crotona in pursuit of +Democedes. They found him in the market-place in Crotona, haranguing +the people, and exciting, by his appearance and his discourse, a great +and general curiosity. They attempted to seize him as a fugitive, and +called upon the people of Crotona to aid them, threatening them with +the vengeance of Darius if they refused. A part of the people were +disposed to comply with this demand, while others rallied to defend +their townsman. A great tumult ensued; but, in the end, the party of +Democedes was victorious. He was not only thus personally rescued, +but, as he informed the people that the transport vessel which +accompanied the expedition contained property that belonged to him, +they seized that too, and gave it up to Democedes, saying to the +Persians that, though they must give up the transport, the galleys +remained at their service to convey them back to their own country +whenever they wished to go. + +The Persians had now no other alternative but to return home. They +had, it is true, pretty nearly accomplished the object of their +undertaking; but, if any thing remained to be done, they could not now +attempt it with any advantage, as they had lost their guide, and a +great portion of the effects which had been provided by Darius to +enable them to propitiate the favor of the princes and potentates into +whose power they might fall. They accordingly began to make +preparations for sailing back again to Sidon, while Democedes +established himself in great magnificence and splendor in Crotona. +When, at length, the Persians were ready to sail, Democedes wished +them a very pleasant voyage, and desired them to give his best +respects to Darius, and inform him that he could not return at present +to Persia, as he was making arrangements to be married! + +The disasters which had befallen these Persian reconnoiterers thus far +were only the beginning of their troubles. Their ships were driven by +contrary winds out of their course, and they were thrown at last upon +the coast of Iapygia, a country occupying the heel of Italy. Here they +were seized by the inhabitants and made slaves. It happened that there +was living in this wild country at that time a man of wealth and of +cultivation, who had been exiled from Tarentum on account of some +political offenses. His name was Cillus. He heard the story of these +unhappy foreigners, and interested himself in their fate. He thought +that, by rescuing them from their captivity and sending them home, he +should make Darius his friend, and secure, perhaps, his aid in +effecting his own restoration to his native land. He accordingly paid +the ransom which was demanded for the captives, and set them free. He +then aided them in making arrangements for their return to Persia, and +the unfortunate messengers found their way back at last to the court +of Darius, without their guide, without any of the splendid +appointments with which they had gone forth, but stripped of every +thing, and glad to escape with their lives. + +They had some cause to fear, too, the anger of Darius, for the +insensate wrath of a tyrant is awakened as often by calamity as by +crime. Darius, however, was in this instance graciously disposed. He +received the unfortunate commissioners in a favorable manner. He took +immediate measures for rewarding Cillus for having ransomed them. He +treasured up, too, the information which they had obtained respecting +Greece, though he was prevented by circumstances, which we will +proceed to describe, from immediately putting into execution his plans +of invasion and conquest there. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +THE REVOLT OF BABYLON. + +B.C. 516-514 + +City of Babylon.--The captive Jews.--Wickedness of the +Babylonians.--Causes of discontent.--Preparations of the Babylonians +for revolt.--Their secrecy.--Time chosen for revolt.--Story of +Syloson.--Syloson's red cloak.--He gives it to Darius.--Syloson goes +to Susa.--Interview with Darius.--Request of Syloson.--Darius grants +it.--Citadel of Samos.--Measures of Mæandrius.--Hypocrisy +of Mæandrius.--His brother Charilaus.--Reproaches of +Charilaus.--Character of Mæandrius.--Attack of Charilaus.--Slaughter +of the Samians.--Revolt of Babylon.--Insults and jeers of the +Babylonians.--Ancient mode of warfare.--Modern warfare.--Taunt of the +Babylonians.--Fabricating prodigies.--The mule of Zopyrus.--Interview +with Darius.--Desperate plan of Zopyrus.--He mutilates +himself.--Darius's astonishment.--Final arrangements.--Zopyrus +leaves the Persian camp.--Success of Zopyrus's stratagem.--His +piteous story.--The three victories.--Zopyrus intrusted with power +in Babylon.--Zopyrus admits the Persians.--Fall of Babylon. + + +The city of Babylon, originally the capital of the Assyrian empire, +was conquered by Cyrus, the founder of the Persian monarchy, when he +annexed the Assyrian empire to his dominions. It was a vast and a very +magnificent and wealthy city; and Cyrus made it, for a time, one of +his capitals. + +When Cyrus made this conquest of Babylon, he found the Jews in +captivity there. They had been made captive by Nebuchadnezzar, a +previous king of Babylon, as is related in the Scriptures. The holy +prophets of Judea had predicted that after seventy years the captives +should return, and that Babylon itself should afterward be destroyed. +The first prediction was fulfilled by the victory of Cyrus. It +devolved on Darius to execute the second of these solemn and +retributive decrees of heaven. + +Although Darius was thus the instrument of divine Providence in the +destruction of Babylon, he was unintentionally and unconsciously so. +In the terrible scenes connected with the siege and the storming of +the ill-fated city, it was the impulse of his own hatred and revenge +that he was directly obeying; he was not at all aware that he was, at +the same time, the messenger of the divine displeasure. The wretched +Babylonians, in the storming and destruction of their city, were +expiating a double criminality. Their pride, their wickedness, their +wanton cruelty toward the Jews, had brought upon them the condemnation +of God, while their political treason and rebellion, or, at least, +what was considered treason and rebellion aroused the implacable +resentment of their king. + +The Babylonians had been disposed to revolt even in the days of Cyrus. +They had been accustomed to consider their city as the most noble and +magnificent capital in the world, and they were displeased that Cyrus +did not make it the seat and center of his empire. Cyrus preferred +Susa; and Babylon, accordingly, though he called it one of his +capitals, soon fell to the rank of a provincial city. The nobles and +provincial leaders that remained there began accordingly to form plans +for revolting from the Persian dominion, with a view of restoring +their city to its ancient position and renown. + +They had a very favorable opportunity for maturing their plans, and +making their preparations for the execution of them during the time of +the magian usurpation; for while the false Smerdis was on the throne, +being shut up and concealed in his palace at Susa, the affairs of the +provinces were neglected; and when Darius and his accomplices +discovered the imposture and put Smerdis to death, there was +necessarily required, after so violent a revolution, a considerable +time before the affairs of the empire demanding attention at the +capital could be settled, so as to allow the government to turn their +thoughts at all toward the distant dependencies. The Babylonians +availed themselves of all these opportunities to put their city in the +best condition for resisting the Persian power. They strengthened +their defenses, and accumulated great stores of provisions, and took +measures for diminishing that part of the population which would be +useless in war. These measures were all concerted and carried into +effect in the most covert and secret manner; and the tidings came at +last to Susa that Babylon had openly revolted, before the government +of Darius was aware even of the existence of any disaffection. + +The time which the Babylonians chose for their rebellion at last was +one when the movable forces which Darius had at command were at the +west, engaged in a campaign on the shores of Asia Minor. Darius had +sent them there for the purpose of restoring a certain exile and +wanderer named Syloson to Samos, and making him the monarch of it. +Darius had been induced thus to interpose in Syloson's behalf by the +following very extraordinary circumstances. + +Syloson was the brother of Polycrates, whose unhappy history has +already been given. He was exiled from Samos some time before Darius +ascended the throne, and he became, consequently, a sort of soldier of +fortune, serving, like other such adventurers, wherever there was the +greatest prospect of glory and pay. In this capacity he followed the +army of Cambyses into Egypt in the memorable campaign described in the +first chapter of this volume. It happened, also, that Darius himself, +who was then a young noble in the Persian court, and yet of no +particular distinction, as there was then no reason to imagine that he +would ever be elevated to the throne, was also in Cambyses's army, and +the two young men became acquainted with one another there. + +While the army was at Memphis, an incident occurred in which these two +personages were actors, which, though it seemed unimportant at the +time, led, in the end, to vast and momentous results. The incident was +this: + +Syloson had a very handsome red cloak, which, as he appeared in it one +day, walking in the great square at Memphis, strongly attracted the +admiration of Darius. Darius asked Syloson if he would sell him the +cloak. Syloson said that he would not sell it, but would give it to +him. He thought, probably, that Darius would decline receiving it as a +present. If he did entertain that idea, it seems he was mistaken. +Darius praised him for his generosity, and accepted the gift. + +Syloson was then sorry that he had made so inconsiderate an offer, and +regretted very much the loss of his cloak. In process of time, the +campaign of Cambyses in Egypt was ended, and Darius returned to +Persia, leaving Syloson in the west. At length the conspiracy was +formed for dethroning Smerdis the magian, as has already been +described, and Darius was designated to reign in his stead. As the +news of the young noble's elevation spread into the western world, it +reached Syloson. He was much pleased at receiving the intelligence, +and he saw immediately that there was a prospect of his being able to +derive some advantage, himself, from the accession of his old +fellow-soldier to the throne. + +He immediately proceeded to Susa. He applied at the gates of the +palace for admission to the presence of the king. The porter asked him +who he was. He replied that he was a Greek who had formerly done +Darius a service, and he wished to see him. The porter carried the +message to the king. The king could not imagine who the stranger +should be. He endeavored in vain to recall to mind any instance in +which he had received a favor from a Greek. At length he ordered the +attendant to call the visitor in. + +Syloson was accordingly conducted into the king's presence. Darius +looked upon him, but did not know him. He directed the interpreters to +inquire what the service was which he had rendered the king, and when +he had rendered it. The Greek replied by relating the circumstance of +the cloak. Darius recollected the cloak, though he had forgotten the +giver. "Are you, indeed," said he, "the man who made me that present? +I thought then that you were very generous to me, and you shall see +that I do not undervalue the obligation now. I am at length, +fortunately, in a situation to requite the favor, and I will give you +such an abundance of gold and silver as shall effectually prevent your +being sorry for having shown a kindness to Darius Hystaspes." + +Syloson thanked the king in reply, but said that he did not wish for +gold and silver. Darius asked him what reward he did desire. He +replied that he wished Samos to be restored to him: "Samos," said he, +"was the possession of my brother. When he went away from the island, +he left it temporarily in the hands of Mæandrius, an officer of his +household. It still remains in the possession of this family, while I, +the rightful heir, am a homeless wanderer and exile, excluded from my +brother's dominions by one of his slaves." + +Darius immediately determined to accede to Syloson's request. He +raised an army and put it under the command of Otanes, who, it will be +recollected, was one of the seven conspirators that combined to +dethrone Smerdis the magian. He directed Otanes to accompany Syloson +to Samos, and to put him in possession of the island. Syloson was +particularly earnest in his request that no unnecessary violence +should be used, and no blood shed, or vindictive measures of any kind +adopted. Darius promised to comply with these desires, and gave his +orders to Otanes accordingly. + +Notwithstanding this, however, the expedition resulted in the almost +total destruction of the Samian population, in the following manner. +There was a citadel at Samos, to which the inhabitants retired when +they learned that Otanes had embarked his troops in ships on the +coast, and was advancing toward the island. Mæandrius was vexed and +angry at the prospect of being deprived of his possessions and his +power; and, as the people hated him on account of his extortion and +tyranny, he hated them in return, and cared not how much suffering his +measures might be the means of bringing upon them. He had a +subterranean and secret passage from the citadel to the shore of the +sea, where, in a secluded cove, were boats or vessels ready to take +him away. Having made these arrangements to secure his own safety, he +proceeded to take such a course and adopt such measures as should tend +most effectually to exasperate and offend the Persians, intending to +escape, himself, at the last moment, by this subterranean retreat, +and to leave the inhabitants of the island at the mercy of their +infuriated enemies. + +He had a brother whom he had shut up in a dungeon, and whose mind, +naturally depraved, and irritated by his injuries, was in a state of +malignant and furious despair. Mæandrius had pretended to be willing +to give up the island to the Persians. He had entered into +negotiations with them for this purpose, and the Persians considered +the treaty as in fact concluded. The leaders and officers of the army +had assembled, accordingly, before the citadel in a peaceful attitude, +waiting merely for the completion of the forms of surrender, when +Charilaus, Mæandrius's captive brother, saw them, by looking out +between the bars of his window, in the tower in which he was confined. +He sent an urgent message to Mæandrius, requesting to speak to him. +Mæandrius ordered the prisoner to be brought before him. The haggard +and wretched-looking captive, rendered half insane by the combined +influence of the confinement he had endured, and of the wild +excitement produced by the universal panic and confusion which reigned +around him, broke forth against his brother in the boldest and most +violent invectives. He reproached him in the most bitter terms for +being willing to yield so ingloriously, and without a struggle, to an +invading foe, whom he might easily repel. "You have courage and energy +enough, it seems," said he, "to make war upon an innocent and +defenseless brother, and to keep him for years in chains and in a +dungeon, but when an actual enemy appears, though he comes to despoil +you of all your possessions, and to send you into hopeless exile, and +though, if you had the ordinary courage and spirit of a man, you could +easily drive him away, yet you dare not face him. If you are too +cowardly and mean to do your duty yourself, give me your soldiers, and +I will do it for you. I will drive these Persians back into the sea +with as much pleasure as it would give me to drive you there!" + +Such a nature as that of Mæandrius can not be stung into a proper +sense of duty by reproaches like these. There seem to have been in his +heart no moral sensibilities of any kind, and there could be, of +course, no compunctions for the past, and no awakening of new and +better desires for the future. All the effect which was produced upon +his mind by these bitter denunciations was to convince him that to +comply with his brother's request would be to do the best thing now in +his power for widening, and extending, and making sure the misery and +mischief which were impending. He placed his troops, therefore, under +his brother's orders; and while the infuriated madman sallied forth at +the head of them to attack the astonished Persians on one side of the +citadel, Mæandrius made his escape through the under-ground passage on +the other. The Persians were so exasperated at what appeared to them +the basest treachery, that, as soon as they could recover their arms +and get once more into battle array, they commenced a universal +slaughter of the Samians. They spared neither age, sex, nor condition; +and when, at last, their vengeance was satisfied, and they put the +island into Syloson's hands, and withdrew, he found himself in +possession of an almost absolute solitude. + +[Illustration: THE BABYLONIANS DERIDING DARIUS.] + +It was while Otanes was absent on this enterprise, having with him a +large part of the disposable forces of the king, that the Babylonians +revolted. Darius was greatly incensed at hearing the tidings. +Sovereigns are always greatly incensed at a revolt on the part of +their subjects. The circumstances of the case, whatever they may be, +always seem to them to constitute a peculiar aggravation of the +offense. Darius was indignant that the Babylonians had attempted to +take advantage of his weakness by rebelling when his armies were +away. If they had risen when his armies were around him, he would +have been equally indignant with them for having dared to brave his +power. + +He assembled all the forces at his disposal, and advanced to Babylon. +The people of the city shut their gates against him, and derided him. +They danced and capered on the walls, making all sorts of gestures +expressive of contempt and defiance, accompanied with shouts and +outcries of ridicule and scorn. They had great confidence in the +strength of their defenses, and then, besides this, they probably +regarded Darius as a sort of usurper, who had no legitimate title to +the throne, and who would never be able to subdue any serious +resistance which might be offered to the establishment of his power. +It was from these considerations that they were emboldened to be +guilty of the folly of taunting and insulting their foes from the city +walls. + +Such incidents as this, of personal communications between masses of +enemies on the eve of a battle, were very common in ancient warfare, +though impossible in modern times. In those days, when the missiles +employed were thrown chiefly by the strength of the human arm alone, +the combatants could safely draw near enough together for each side to +hear the voices and to see the gesticulations of the other. Besiegers +could advance sufficiently close to a castle or citadel to parley +insultingly with the garrison upon the walls, and yet be safe from the +showers of darts and arrows which were projected toward them in +return. But all this is now changed. The reach of cannon, and even of +musketry, is so long, that combatants, approaching a conflict, are +kept at a very respectful distance apart, until the time arrives in +which the actual engagement is to begin. They reconnoiter each other +with spy-glasses from watch-towers on the walls, or from eminences in +the field, but they can hold no communication except by a formal +embassy, protected by a flag of truce, which, with its white and +distant fluttering, as it slowly advances over the green fields, warns +the gunners at the battery or on the bastion to point their artillery +another way. + +The Babylonians, on the walls of their city, reproached and taunted +their foes incessantly. "Take our advice," said they, "and go back +where you came from. You will only lose your time in besieging +Babylon. When mules have foals, you will take the city, and not till +then." + +The expression "when mules have foals" was equivalent in those days to +our proverbial phrase, "when the sky falls," being used to denote any +thing impossible or absurd, inasmuch as mules, like other hybrid +animals, do not produce young. It was thought in those times +absolutely impossible that they should do so; but it is now well known +that the case is not impossible, though very rare. + +It seems to have added very much to the interest of an historical +narrative in the minds of the ancient Greeks, to have some prodigy +connected with every great event; and, in order to gratify this +feeling, the writers appear in some instances to have fabricated a +prodigy for the occasion, and in others to have elevated some unusual, +though by no means supernatural circumstance, to the rank and +importance of one. The prodigy connected with this siege of Babylon +was the foaling of a mule. The mule belonged to a general in the army +of Darius, named Zopyrus. It was after Darius had been prosecuting the +siege of the city for a year and a half, without any progress +whatever toward the accomplishment of his end. The army began to +despair of success. Zopyrus, with the rest, was expecting that the +siege would be indefinitely prolonged, or, perhaps, absolutely +abandoned, when his attention was strongly attracted to the phenomenon +which had happened in respect to the mule. He remembered the taunt of +the Babylonian on the wall, and it seemed to him that the whole +occurrence portended that the time had now arrived when some way might +be devised for the capture of the city. + +Portents and prophecies are often the causes of their own fulfillment, +and this portent led Zopyrus to endeavor to devise some means to +accomplish the end in view. He went first, however, to Darius, to +converse with him upon the subject, with a view of ascertaining how +far he was really desirous of bringing the siege to a termination. He +wished to know whether the object was of sufficient importance in +Darius's mind to warrant any great sacrifice on his own part to effect +it. + +He found that it was so. Darius was extremely impatient to end the +siege and to capture the city; and Zopyrus saw at once that, if he +could in any way be the means of accomplishing the work, he should +entitle himself, in the highest possible degree, to the gratitude of +the king. + +He determined to go himself into Babylon as a pretended deserter from +Darius, with a view to obtaining an influence and a command within the +city, which should enable him afterward to deliver it up to the +besiegers; and, in order to convince the Babylonians that his +desertion was real, he resolved to mutilate himself in a manner so +dreadful as would effectually prevent their imagining that the +injuries which he suffered were inflicted by any contrivance of his +own. He accordingly cut off his hair and his ears, and mutilated his +face in a manner too shocking to be here detailed, inflicting injuries +which could never be repaired. He caused himself to be scourged, also, +until his whole body was covered with cuts and contusions. He then +went, wounded and bleeding as he was, into the presence of Darius, to +make known his plans. + +Darius expressed amazement and consternation at the terrible +spectacle. He leaped from his throne and rushed toward Zopyrus, +demanding who had dared to maltreat one of his generals in such a +manner. When Zopyrus replied that he had himself done the deed, the +king's astonishment was greater than before. He told Zopyrus that he +was insane. Some sudden paroxysm of madness had come over him. Zopyrus +replied that he was not insane; and he explained his design. His plan, +he said, was deliberately and calmly formed, and it should be steadily +and faithfully executed. "I did not make known my design to you," said +he, "before I had taken the preliminary steps, for I knew that you +would prevent my taking them. It is now too late for that, and nothing +remains but to reap, if possible, the advantage which may be derived +from what I have done." + +He then arranged with Darius the plans which he had formed, so far as +he needed the co-operation of the king in the execution of them. If he +could gain a partial command in the Babylonian army, he was to make a +sally from the city gates on a certain day, and attack a portion of +the Persian army, which Darius was to leave purposely exposed, in +order that he might gain credit with the Babylonians by destroying +them. From this he supposed that the confidence which the Babylonians +would repose in him would increase, and he might consequently receive +a greater command. Thus he might, by acting in concert with Darius +without, gradually gain such an ascendency within the city as finally +to have power to open the gates and let the besiegers in. Darius was +to station a detachment of a thousand men near a certain gate, leaving +them imperfectly armed, on the tenth day after Zopyrus entered the +city. These Zopyrus was to destroy. Seven days afterward, two thousand +more were to be stationed in a similar manner at another point; and +these were also to be destroyed by a second sally. Twenty days after +this, four thousand more were to be similarly exposed. Thus seven +thousand innocent and defenseless men would be slaughtered, but that, +as Zopyrus said, would be "of no consequence." The lives of men were +estimated by heroes and conquerors in those days only at their +numerical value in swelling the army roll. + +These things being all arranged, Zopyrus took leave of the King to go +to Babylon. As he left the Persian camp, he began to run, looking +round behind him continually, as if in flight. Some men, too, +pretended to pursue him. He fled toward one of the gates of the city. +The sentinels on the walls saw him coming. When he reached the gate, +the porter inside of it talked with him through a small opening, and +heard his story. The porter then reported the case to the superior +officers, and they commanded that the fugitive should be admitted. +When conducted into the presence of the magistrates, he related a +piteous story of the cruel treatment which he had received from +Darius, and of the difficulty which he had experienced in making his +escape from the tyrant's hands. He uttered, too, dreadful imprecations +against Darius, and expressed the most eager determination to be +revenged. He informed the Babylonians, moreover, that he was well +acquainted with all Darius's plans and designs, and with the +disposition which he had made of his army; and that, if they would, in +a few days, when his wounds should have in some measure healed, give +him a small command, he would show them, by actual trial, what he +could do to aid their cause. + +They acceded to this proposition, and furnished Zopyrus, at the end of +ten days, with a moderate force. Zopyrus, at the head of this force, +sallied forth from the gate which had been previously agreed upon +between him and Darius, and fell upon the unfortunate thousand that +had been stationed there for the purpose of being destroyed. They were +nearly defenseless, and Zopyrus, though his force was inferior, cut +them all to pieces before they could be re-enforced or protected, and +then retreated safely into the city again. He was received by the +Babylonians with the utmost exultation and joy. He had no difficulty +in obtaining, seven days afterward, the command of a larger force, +when, sallying forth from another gate, as had been agreed upon by +Darius, he gained another victory, destroying, on this occasion, twice +as many Persians as before. These exploits gained the pretended +deserter unbounded fame and honor within the city. The populace +applauded him with continual acclamations; and the magistrates invited +him to their councils, offered him high command, and governed their +own plans and measures by his advice. At length, on the twentieth day, +he made his third sally, at which time he destroyed and captured a +still greater number than before. This gave him such an influence and +position within the city, in respect to its defense, that he had no +difficulty in getting intrusted with the keys of certain gates--those, +namely, by which he had agreed that the army of Darius should be +admitted. + +When the time arrived, the Persians advanced to the attack of the city +in that quarter, and the Babylonians rallied as usual on the walls to +repel them. The contest had scarcely begun before they found that the +gates were open, and that the columns of the enemy were pouring in. +The city was thus soon wholly at the mercy of the conqueror. Darius +dismantled the walls, carried off the brazen gates, and crucified +three thousand of the most distinguished inhabitants; then +establishing over the rest a government of his own, he withdrew his +troops and returned to Susa. He bestowed upon Zopyrus, at Susa, all +possible rewards and honors. The marks of his wounds and mutilations +could never be effaced, but Darius often said that he would gladly +give up twenty Babylons to be able to efface them. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +THE INVASION OF SCYTHIA. + +B.C. 513 + +Darius's authority fully established throughout his +dominions.--The Scythians.--Ancient account of them.--Pictures of +savage life.--Their diversity.--Social instincts of man.--Their +universality.--Moral sentiments of mankind.--Religious +depravity.--Advice of Artabanus.--Emissaries sent forward.--The +petition of Oebazus.--Darius's wanton cruelty.--Place of +rendezvous.--The fleet of galleys.--Darius's march through Asia +Minor.--Monuments.--Arrival at the Bosporus.--The bridge of +boats.--Reward of Mandrocles.--The group of statuary.--The Cyanean +Islands.--Darius makes an excursion to them.--The two +monuments.--Inscriptions on them.--The troops cross the +bridge.--Movements of the fleet.--The River Tearus.--Its wonderful +sources.--The cairn.--Primitive mode of census-taking.--Instinctive +feeling of dependence on a supernatural power.--Strange religious +observance.--Arrival at the Danube.--Orders to destroy the +bridge.--Counsel of the Grecian general.--The bridge is +preserved.--Guard left to protect it.--Singular mode of +reckoning.--Probable reason for employing it.--Darius's determination +to return before the knots should be all untied. + + +In the reigns of ancient monarchs and conquerors, it often happened +that the first great transaction which called forth their energies was +the suppression of a rebellion within their dominions, and the second, +an expedition against some ferocious and half-savage nations beyond +their frontiers. Darius followed this general example. The suppression +of the Babylonian revolt established his authority throughout the +whole interior of his empire. If that vast, and populous, and wealthy +city was found unable to resist his power, no other smaller province +or capital could hope to succeed in the attempt. The whole empire of +Asia, therefore, from the capital at Susa, out to the extreme limits +and bounds to which Cyrus had extended it, yielded without any further +opposition to his sway. He felt strong in his position, and being +young and ardent in temperament, he experienced a desire to exercise +his strength. For some reason or other, he seems to have been not +quite prepared yet to grapple with the Greeks, and he concluded, +accordingly, first to test his powers in respect to foreign invasion +by a war upon the Scythians. This was an undertaking which required +some courage and resolution; for it was while making an incursion into +the country of the Scythians that Cyrus, his renowned predecessor, and +the founder of the Persian empire, had fallen. + +The term Scythians seems to have been a generic designation, applied +indiscriminately to vast hordes of half-savage tribes occupying those +wild and inhospitable regions of the north, that extended along the +shores of the Black and Caspian Seas, and the banks of the Danube. The +accounts which are given by the ancient historians of the manners and +customs of these people, are very inconsistent and contradictory; as, +in fact, the accounts of the characters of savages, and of the habits +and usages of savage life, have always been in every age. It is very +little that any one cultivated observer can really know, in respect to +the phases of character, the thoughts and feelings, the sentiments, +the principles and the faith, and even the modes of life, that prevail +among uncivilized aborigines living in forests, or roaming wildly over +uninclosed and trackless plains. Of those who have the opportunity to +observe them, accordingly, some extol, in the highest degree, their +rude but charming simplicity, their truth and faithfulness, the +strength of their filial and conjugal affection, and their superiority +of spirit in rising above the sordid sentiments and gross vices of +civilization. They are not the slaves, these writers say, of appetite +and passion. They have no inordinate love of gain; they are patient in +enduring suffering, grateful for kindness received, and inflexibly +firm in their adherence to the principles of honor and duty. Others, +on the other hand, see in savage life nothing but treachery, cruelty, +brutality, and crime. Man in his native state, as they imagine, is but +a beast, with just intelligence enough to give effect to his +depravity. Without natural affection, without truth, without a sense +of justice, or the means of making law a substitute for it, he lives +in a scene of continual conflict, in which the rights of the weak and +the defenseless are always overborne by brutal and tyrannical power. + +The explanation of this diversity is doubtless this, that in savage +life, as well as in every other state of human society, all the +varieties of human conduct and character are exhibited; and the +attention of each observer is attracted to the one or to the other +class of phenomena, according to the circumstances in which he is +placed when he makes his observations, or the mood of mind which +prevails within him when he records them. There must be the usual +virtues of social life, existing in a greater or less degree, in all +human communities; for such principles as a knowledge of the +distinction of right and wrong, the idea of property and of individual +rights, the obligation resting on every one to respect them, the sense +of justice, and of the ill desert of violence and cruelty, are all +_universal instincts of the human soul_, as universal and as essential +to humanity as maternal or filial affection, or the principle of +conjugal love. They were established by the great Author of nature as +constituent elements in the formation of man. Man could not continue +to exist, as a gregarious animal, without them. It would accordingly +be as impossible to find a community of men without these moral +sentiments generally prevalent among them, as to find vultures or +tigers that did not like to pursue and take their prey, or deer +without a propensity to fly from danger. The laws and usages of +civilized society are the expression and the result of these +sentiments, not the origin and foundation of them; and violence, +cruelty, and crime are the exceptions to their operation, very few, in +all communities, savage or civilized, in comparison with the vast +preponderance of cases in which they are obeyed. + +This view of the native constitution of the human character, which it +is obvious, on very slight reflection, must be true, is not at all +opposed, as it might at first appear to be, by the doctrine of the +theological writers in the Christian Church in respect to the native +depravity of man; for the depravity here referred to is a religious +depravity, an alienation of the heart from God, and a rebellious and +insubmissive spirit in respect to his law. Neither the Scriptures nor +the theological writers who interpret them ever call in question the +universal existence and prevalence of those instincts that are +essential to the social welfare of man. + +But we must return to the Scythians. + +The tribes which Darius proposed to attack occupied the countries +north of the Danube. His route, therefore, for the invasion of their +territories would lead him through Asia Minor, thence across the +Hellespont or the Bosporus into Thrace, and from Thrace across the +Danube. It was a distant and dangerous expedition. + +Darius had a brother named Artabanus. Artabanus was of opinion that +the enterprise which the king was contemplating was not only distant +and dangerous, but that the country of the Scythians was of so little +value that the end to be obtained by success would be wholly +inadequate to compensate for the exertions, the costs, and the hazards +which he must necessarily incur in the prosecution of it. But Darius +was not to be dissuaded. He thanked his brother for his advice, but +ordered the preparations for the expedition to go on. + +He sent emissaries forward, in advance, over the route that his army +was destined to take, transmitting orders to the several provinces +which were situated on the line of his march to prepare the way for +the passage of his troops. Among other preparations, they were to +construct a bridge of boats across the Bosporus at Chalcedon. This +work was intrusted to the charge and superintendence of an engineer of +Samos named Mandrocles. The people of the provinces were also to +furnish bodies of troops, both infantry and cavalry, to join the army +on its march. + +The soldiers that were enlisted to go on this remote and dangerous +expedition joined the army, as is usual in such cases, some willingly, +from love of adventure, or the hope of opportunities for plunder, and +for that unbridled indulgence of appetite and passion which soldiers +so often look forward to as a part of their reward; others from hard +compulsion, being required to leave friends and home, and all that +they held dear, under the terror of a stern and despotic edict which +they dared not disobey. It was even dangerous to ask for exemption. + +As an instance of this, it is said that there was a Persian named +Oebazus, who had three sons that had been drafted into the army. +Oebazus, desirous of not being left wholly alone in his old age, +made a request to the king that he would allow one of the sons to +remain at home with his father. Darius appeared to receive this +petition favorably. He told Oebazus that the request was so very +modest and considerate that he would grant more than he asked. He +would allow all three of his sons to remain with him. Oebazus +retired from the king's presence overjoyed at the thought that his +family was not to be separated at all. Darius ordered his guards to +kill the three young men, and to send the dead bodies home, with a +message to their father that his sons were restored to him, released +forever from all obligation to serve the king. + +The place of general rendezvous for the various forces which were to +join in the expedition, consisting of the army which marched with +Darius from Susa, and also of the troops and ships which the maritime +provinces of Asia Minor were to supply on the way, was on the shores +of the Bosporus, at the point where Mandrocles had constructed the +bridge.[G] The people of Ionia, a region situated in Asia Minor, on +the shores of the Ægean Sea, had been ordered to furnish a fleet of +galleys, which they were to build and equip, and then send to the +bridge. The destination of this fleet was to the Danube. It was to +pass up the Bosporus into the Euxine Sea, now called the Black Sea, +and thence into the mouth of the river. After ascending the Danube to +a certain point, the men were to land and build a bridge across that +river, using, very probably, their galleys for this purpose. In the +mean time, the army was to cross the Bosporus by the bridge which had +been erected there by Mandrocles, and pursue their way toward the +Danube by land, through the kingdom of Thrace. By this arrangement, it +was supposed that the bridge across the Danube would be ready by the +time that the main body of the army arrived on the banks of the river. +The idea of thus building in Asia Minor a bridge for the Danube, in +the form of a vast fleet of galleys, to be sent round through the +Black Sea to the mouths of the river, and thence up the river to its +place of destination, was original and grand. It strikingly marks the +military genius and skill which gave the Greeks so extended a fame, +for it was by the Greeks that the exploit was to be performed. + +[Footnote G: For the track of Darius on this expedition, see the map +at the commencement of this volume.] + +Darius marched magnificently through Asia Minor, on his way to the +Bosporus, at the head of an army of seventy thousand men. He moved +slowly, and the engineers and architects that accompanied him built +columns and monuments here and there, as he advanced, to commemorate +his progress. These structures were covered with inscriptions, which +ascribed to Darius, as the leader of the enterprise, the most +extravagant praise. At length the splendid array arrived at the place +of rendezvous on the Bosporus, where there was soon presented to view +a very grand and imposing scene. + +The bridge of boats was completed, and the Ionian fleet, consisting of +six hundred galleys, was at anchor near it in the stream. Long lines +of tents were pitched upon the shore, and thousands of horsemen and of +foot soldiers were drawn up in array, their banners flying, and their +armor glittering in the sun, and all eager to see and to welcome the +illustrious sovereign who had come, with so much pomp and splendor, to +take them under his command. The banks of the Bosporus were +picturesque and high, and all the eminences were crowded with +spectators, to witness the imposing magnificence of the spectacle. + +Darius encamped his army on the shore, and began to make the +preparations necessary for the final departure of the expedition. He +had been thus far within his own dominions. He was now, however, to +pass into another quarter of the globe, to plunge into new and unknown +dangers, among hostile, savage, and ferocious tribes. It was right +that he should pause until he had considered well his plans, and +secured attention to every point which could influence success. + +He first examined the bridge of boats. He was very much pleased with +the construction of it. He commended Mandrocles for his skill and +fidelity in the highest terms, and loaded him with rewards and honors. +Mandrocles used the money which Darius thus gave him in employing an +artist to form a piece of statuary which should at once commemorate +the building of the bridge and give to Darius the glory of it. The +group represented the Bosporus with the bridge thrown over it, and the +king on his throne reviewing his troops as they passed over the +structure. This statuary was placed, when finished, in a temple in +Greece, where it was universally admired. Darius was very much pleased +both with the idea of this sculpture on the part of Mandrocles, and +with the execution of it by the artist. He gave the bridge builder new +rewards; he recompensed the artist, also, with similar munificence. He +was pleased that they had contrived so happy a way of at the same time +commemorating the bridging of the Bosporus and rendering exalted honor +to him. + +The bridge was situated about the middle of the Bosporus; and as the +strait itself is about eighteen miles long, it was nine miles from the +bridge to the Euxine Sea. There is a small group of islands near the +mouth of this strait, where it opens into the sea, which were called +in those days the Cyanean Islands. They were famed in the time of +Darius for having once been floating islands, and enchanted. Their +supernatural properties had disappeared, but there was one attraction +which still pertained to them. They were situated beyond the limits of +the strait, and the visitor who landed upon them could take his +station on some picturesque cliff or smiling hill, and extend his view +far and wide over the blue waters of the Euxine Sea. + +Darius determined to make an excursion to these islands while the +fleet and the army were completing their preparations at the bridge. +He embarked, accordingly, on board a splendid galley, and, sailing +along the Bosporus till he reached the sea, he landed on one of the +islands. There was a temple there, consecrated to one of the Grecian +deities. Darius, accompanied by his attendants and followers, ascended +to this temple, and, taking a seat which had been provided for him +there, he surveyed the broad expanse of water which extended like an +ocean before him, and contemplated the grandeur of the scene with the +greatest admiration and delight. + +At length he returned to the bridge, where he found the preparations +for the movement of the fleet and of the army nearly completed. He +determined, before leaving the Asiatic shores, to erect a monument to +commemorate his expedition, on the spot from which he was to take his +final departure. He accordingly directed two columns of white marble +to be reared, and inscriptions to be cut upon them, giving such +particulars in respect to the expedition as it was desirable thus to +preserve. These inscriptions contained his own name in very +conspicuous characters as the leader of the enterprise; also an +enumeration of the various nations that had contributed to form his +army, with the numbers which each had furnished. There was a record of +corresponding particulars, too, in respect to the fleet. The +inscriptions were the same upon the two columns, except that upon the +one it was written in the Assyrian tongue, which was the general +language of the Persian empire, and upon the other in the Greek. Thus +the two monuments were intended, the one for the Asiatic, and the +other for the European world. + +At length the day of departure arrived. The fleet set sail, and the +immense train of the army put itself in motion to cross the +bridge.[H] The fleet went on through the Bosporus to the Euxine, and +thence along the western coast of that sea till it reached the mouths +of the Danube. The ships entered the river by one of the branches +which form the delta of the stream, and ascended for two days. This +carried them above the ramifications into which the river divides +itself at its mouth, to a spot where the current was confined to a +single channel, and where the banks were firm. Here they landed, and +while one part of the force which they had brought were occupied in +organizing guards and providing defenses to protect the ground, the +remainder commenced the work of arranging the vessels of the fleet, +side by side, across the stream, to form the bridge. + +[Footnote H: See Frontispiece.] + +In the mean time, Darius, leading the great body of the army, advanced +from the Bosporus by land. The country which the troops thus traversed +was Thrace. They met with various adventures as they proceeded, and +saw, as the accounts of the expedition state, many strange and +marvelous phenomena. They came, for example, to the sources of a very +wonderful river, which flows west and south toward the Ægean Sea. The +name of the river was the Tearus. It came from thirty-eight springs, +all issuing from the same rock, some hot and some cold. The waters of +the stream which was produced by the mingling of these fountains were +pure, limpid, and delicious, and were possessed of remarkable +medicinal properties, being efficacious for the cure of various +diseases. Darius was so much pleased with this river, that his army +halted to refresh themselves with its waters, and he caused one of his +monuments to be erected on the spot, the inscription of which +contained not only the usual memorials of the march, but also a +tribute to the salubrity of the waters of this magical stream. + +At one point in the course of the march through Thrace, Darius +conceived the idea of varying the construction of his line of +monuments by building a cairn. A cairn is a heap of stones, such as is +reared in the mountains of Scotland and of Switzerland by the +voluntary additions of every passer by, to commemorate a spot marked +as the scene of some accident or disaster. As each guide finishes the +story of the incident in the hearing of the party which he conducts, +each tourist who has listened to it adds his stone to the heap, until +the rude structure attains sometimes to a very considerable size. +Darius, fixing upon a suitable spot near one of his encampments, +commanded every soldier in the army to bring a stone and place it on +the pile. A vast mound rose rapidly from these contributions, which, +when completed, not only commemorated the march of the army, but +denoted, also, by the immense number of the stones entering into the +composition of the pile, the countless multitude of soldiers that +formed the expedition. + +There was a story told to Darius, as he was traversing these regions, +of a certain king, reigning over some one of the nations that occupied +them, who wished to make an enumeration of the inhabitants of his +realm. The mode which he adopted was to require every man in his +dominions to send him an arrow head. When all the arrow heads were in, +the vast collection was counted by the official arithmeticians, and +the total of the population was thus attained. The arrow heads were +then laid together in a sort of monumental pile. It was, perhaps, this +primitive mode of census-taking which suggested to Darius the idea of +his cairn. + +There was a tribe of barbarians through whose dominions Darius passed +on his way from the Bosporus to the Danube, that observed a custom in +their religious worship, which, though in itself of a shocking +character, suggests reflections of salutary influence for our own +minds. There is a universal instinct in the human heart, leading it +strongly to feel the need of help from an unseen and supernatural +world in its sorrows and trials; and it is almost always the case that +rude and savage nations, in their attempts to obtain this spiritual +aid, connect the idea of personal privation and suffering on their +part, self inflicted if necessary, as a means of seeking it. It seems +as if the instinctive conviction of personal guilt, which associates +itself so naturally and so strongly in the minds of men with all +conceptions of the unseen world and of divine power, demands something +like an expiation as an essential prerequisite to obtaining audience +and acceptance with the King of Heaven. The tribe of savages above +referred to manifested this feeling by a dreadful observance. Once in +every five years they were accustomed to choose by lot, with solemn +ceremonies, one of their number, to be sent as a legate or embassador +to their god. The victim, when chosen, was laid down upon the ground +in the midst of the vast assembly convened to witness the rite, while +officers designated for the purpose stood by, armed with javelins. +Other men, selected for their great personal strength, then took the +man from the ground by the hands and feet, and swinging him to and fro +three times to gain momentum, they threw him with all their force into +the air, and the armed men, when he came down, caught him on the +points of their javelins. If he was killed by this dreadful +impalement, all was right. He would bear the message of the wants and +necessities of the tribe to their god, and they might reasonably +expect a favorable reception. If, on the other hand, he did not die, +he was thought to be rejected by the god as a wicked man and an +unsuitable messenger. The unfortunate convalescent was, in such cases, +dismissed in disgrace, and another messenger chosen. + +The army of Darius reached the banks of the Danube at last, and they +found that the fleet of the Ionians had attained the point agreed upon +before them, and were awaiting their arrival. The vessels were soon +arranged in the form of a bridge across the stream, and as there was +no enemy at hand to embarrass them, the army soon accomplished the +passage. They were now fairly in the Scythian country, and +immediately began their preparations to advance and meet the foe. +Darius gave orders to have the bridge broken up, and the galleys +abandoned and destroyed, as he chose rather to take with him the whole +of his force, than to leave a guard behind sufficient to protect this +shipping. These orders were about to be executed, when a Grecian +general, who was attached to one of the bodies of troops which were +furnished from the provinces of Asia Minor, asked leave to speak to +the king. The king granted him an audience, when he expressed his +opinion as follows: + +"It seems to me to be more prudent, sire, to leave the bridge as it +is, under the care of those who have constructed it, as it may be that +we shall have occasion to use it on our return. I do not recommend the +preservation of it as a means of securing a retreat, for, in case we +meet the Scythians at all, I am confident of victory; but our enemy +consists of wandering hordes who have no fixed habitation, and their +country is entirely without cities or posts of any kind which they +will feel any strong interest in defending, and thus it is possible +that we may not be able to find any enemy to combat. Besides, if we +succeed in our enterprise as completely as we can desire, it will be +important, on many accounts, to preserve an open and free +communication with the countries behind us." + +The king approved of this counsel, and countermanded his orders for +the destruction of the bridge. He directed that the Ionian forces that +had accompanied the fleet should remain at the river to guard the +bridge. They were to remain thus on guard for two months, and then, if +Darius did not return, and if they heard no tidings of him, they were +at liberty to leave their post, and to go back, with their galleys, to +their own land again. + +Two months would seem to be a very short time to await the return of +an army going on such an expedition into boundless and trackless +wilds. There can, however, scarcely be any accidental error in the +statement of the time, as the mode which Darius adopted to enable the +guard thus left at the bridge to keep their reckoning was a very +singular one, and it is very particularly described. He took a cord, +it is said, and tied sixty knots in it. This cord he delivered to the +Ionian chiefs who were to be left in charge of the bridge, directing +them to untie one of the knots every day. When the cord should +become, by this process, wholly free, the detachment were also at +liberty. They might thereafter, at any time, abandon the post +intrusted to them, and return to their homes. + +We can not suppose that military men, capable of organizing a force of +seventy thousand troops for so distant an expedition, and possessed of +sufficient science and skill to bridge the Bosporus and the Danube, +could have been under any necessity of adopting so childish a method +as this as a real reliance in regulating their operations. It must be +recollected, however, that, though the commanders in these ancient +days were intelligent and strong-minded men, the common soldiers were +but children both in intellect and in ideas; and it was the custom of +all great commanders to employ outward and visible symbols to +influence and govern them. The sense of loneliness and desertion which +such soldiers would naturally feel in being left in solitude on the +banks of the river, would be much diminished by seeing before them a +marked and definite termination to the period of their stay, and to +have, in the cord hanging up in their camp, a visible token that the +remnant of time that remained was steadily diminishing day by day; +while, in the mean time, Darius was fully determined that, long before +the knots should be all untied, he would return to the river. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +THE RETREAT FROM SCYTHIA. + +B.C. 513 + +Motive for Darius's invasion.--The foundation of government.--Darius +without justification in invading Scythia.--Alarm of the +Scythians.--Condition of the tribes.--Men metamorphosed into +wolves.--Story of the Amazons.--Adventures of the Amazons.--Two of +them captured.--The corps of cavaliers.--Their maneuvers.--Success +of the cavaliers.--Matrimonial alliances.--The Amazons rule their +husbands.--They establish a separate tribe.--The Scythians send an +embassy to the neighboring tribes.--Habits of the Scythians.--Their +mode of warfare.--Message to Indathyrsus.--His reply.--The Scythian +cavalry.--Their attacks on the Persians.--Braying of the Persian +asses.--Scythians sent to the bridge.--Agreement with the +Ionians.--The Scythians change their policy.--The Scythians' strange +presents.--Various interpretations.--Opinions of the Persian +officers.--The Scythians draw up their forces.--The armies prepare +for battle.--Hunting the hare.--The Persians resolve to +retreat.--Stratagem and secret flight.--Surrender of the +camp.--Difficulties of the retreat.--The bridge partially +destroyed.--Darius arrives at the Danube.--The bridge repaired.--The +army returns to Asia. + + +The motive which dictated Darius's invasion of Scythia seems to have +been purely a selfish and domineering love of power. The attempts of a +stronger and more highly civilized state to extend its dominion over a +weaker and more lawless one, are not, however, necessarily and always +of this character. Divine Providence, in making men gregarious in +nature, has given them an instinct of organization, which is as +intrinsic and as essential a characteristic of the human soul as +maternal love or the principle of self-preservation. The right, +therefore, of organizations of men to establish law and order among +themselves, and to extend these principles to other communities around +them, so far as such interpositions are really promotive of the +interests and welfare of those affected by them, rests on precisely +the same foundation as the right of the father to govern the child. +This foundation is the existence and universality of an instinctive +principle implanted by the Creator in the human heart; a principle +which we are bound to submit to, both because it is a fundamental and +constituent element in the very structure of man, and because its +recognition and the acknowledgment of its authority are absolutely +essential to his continued existence. Wherever law and order, +therefore, among men do not exist, it may be properly established and +enforced by any neighboring organization that has power to do it, just +as wherever there is a group of children they may be justly controlled +and governed by their father. It seems equally unnecessary to invent a +fictitious and wholly imaginary _compact_ to justify the jurisdiction +in the one case as in the other. + +If the Scythians, therefore, had been in a state of confusion and +anarchy, Darius might justly have extended his own well-regulated and +settled government over them, and, in so doing, would have promoted +the general good of mankind. But he had no such design. It was a +desire for personal aggrandizement, and a love of fame and power, +which prompted him. He offered it as a pretext to justify his +invasion, that the Scythians, in former years, had made incursions +into the Persian dominions; but this was only a pretext. The +expedition was a wanton attack upon neighbors whom he supposed unable +to resist him, simply for the purpose of adding to his own already +gigantic power. + +When Darius commenced his march from the river, the Scythians had +heard rumors of his approach. They sent, as soon as they were aware of +the impending danger, to all the nations and tribes around them, in +order to secure their alliance and aid. These people were all +wandering and half-savage tribes, like the Scythians themselves, +though each seems to have possessed its own special and distinctive +mark of barbarity. One tribe were accustomed to carry home the heads +of the enemies which they had slain in battle, and each one, impaling +his own dreadful trophy upon a stake, would set it up upon his +house-top, over the chimney, where they imagined that it would have +the effect of a charm, and serve as a protection for the family. +Another tribe lived in habits of promiscuous intercourse, like the +lower orders of animals; and so, as the historian absurdly states, +being, in consequence of this mode of life, all connected together by +the ties of consanguinity, they lived in perpetual peace and good +will, without any envy, or jealousy, or other evil passion. A third +occupied a region so infested with serpents that they were once driven +wholly out of the country by them. It was said of these people that, +once in every year, they were all metamorphosed into wolves, and, +after remaining for a few days in this form, they were transformed +again into men. A fourth tribe painted their bodies blue and red, and +a fifth were cannibals. + +The most remarkable, however, of all the tales related about these +northern savages was the story of the Sauromateans and their Amazonian +wives. The Amazons were a nation of masculine and ferocious women, who +often figure in ancient histories and legends. They rode on horseback +astride like men, and their courage and strength in battle were such +that scarcely any troops could subdue them. It happened, however, upon +one time, that some Greeks conquered a body of them somewhere upon the +shores of the Euxine Sea, and took a large number of them prisoners. +They placed these prisoners on board of three ships, and put to sea. +The Amazons rose upon their captors and threw them overboard, and thus +obtained possession of the ships. They immediately proceeded toward +the shore, and landed, not knowing where they were. It happened to be +on the northwestern coast of the sea that they landed. Here they +roamed up and down the country, until presently they fell in with a +troop of horses. These they seized and mounted, arming themselves, at +the same time, either with the weapons which they had procured on +board the ships, or fabricated, themselves, on the shore. Thus +organized and equipped, they began to make excursions for plunder, and +soon became a most formidable band of marauders. The Scythians of the +country supposed that they were men, but they could learn nothing +certain respecting them. Their language, their appearance, their +manners, and their dress were totally new, and the inhabitants were +utterly unable to conceive who they were, and from what place they +could so suddenly and mysteriously have come. + +At last, in one of the encounters which took place, the Scythians took +two of these strange invaders prisoners. To their utter amazement, +they found that they were women. On making this discovery, they +changed their mode of dealing with them, and resolved upon a plan +based on the supposed universality of the instincts of their sex. +They enlisted a corps of the most handsome and vigorous young men that +could be obtained, and after giving them instructions, the nature of +which will be learned by the result, they sent them forth to meet the +Amazons. + +The corps of Scythian cavaliers went out to seek their female +antagonists with designs any thing but belligerent. They advanced to +the encampment of the Amazons, and hovered about for some time in +their vicinity, without, however, making any warlike demonstrations. +They had been instructed to show themselves as much as possible to the +enemy, but by no means to fight them. They would, accordingly, draw as +near to the Amazons as was safe, and linger there, gazing upon them, +as if under the influence of some sort of fascination. If the Amazons +advanced toward them, they would fall back, and if the advance +continued, they would retreat fast enough to keep effectually out of +the way. Then, when the Amazons turned, they would turn too, follow +them back, and linger near them, around their encampment, as before. + +The Amazonians were for a time puzzled with this strange demeanor, and +they gradually learned to look upon the handsome horsemen at first +without fear, and finally even without hostility. At length, one day, +one of the young horsemen, observing an Amazon who had strayed away +from the rest, followed and joined her. She did not repel him. They +were not able to converse together, as neither knew the language of +the other. They established a friendly intercourse, however, by looks +and signs, and after a time they separated, each agreeing to bring one +of their companions to the place of rendezvous on the following day. + +A friendly intercommunication being thus commenced, the example spread +very rapidly; matrimonial alliances began to be formed, and, in a +word, a short time only elapsed before the two camps were united and +intermingled, the Scythians and the Amazons being all paired together +in the most intimate relations of domestic life. Thus, true to the +instincts of their sex, the rude and terrible maidens decided, when +the alternative was fairly presented to them, in favor of husbands and +homes, rather than continuing the life they had led, of independence, +conflict, and plunder. It is curious to observe that the means by +which they were won, namely, a persevering display of admiration and +attentions, steadily continued, but not too eagerly and impatiently +pressed, and varied with an adroit and artful alternation of advances +and retreats, were precisely the same as those by which, in every age, +the attempt is usually made to win the heart of woman from hatred and +hostility to love. + +We speak of the Amazonians as having been won; but they were, in fact, +themselves the conquerors of their captors, after all; for it +appeared, in the end, that in the future plans and arrangements of the +united body, they ruled their Scythian husbands, and not the Scythians +them. The husbands wished to return home with their wives, whom, they +said, they would protect and maintain in the midst of their countrymen +in honor and in peace. The Amazons, however, were in favor of another +plan. Their habits and manners were such, they said, that they should +not be respected and beloved among any other people. They wished that +their husbands, therefore, would go home and settle their affairs, and +afterward return and join their wives again, and then that all +together should move to the eastward, until they should find a +suitable place to settle in by themselves. This plan was acceded to by +the husbands, and was carried into execution; and the result was the +planting of a new nation, called the Sauromateans, who thenceforth +took their place among the other barbarous tribes that dwelt upon the +northern shores of the Euxine Sea. + +Such was the character of the tribes and nations that dwelt in the +neighborhood of the Scythian country. As soon as Darius had passed the +river, the Scythians sent embassadors to all their people, proposing +to them to form a general alliance against the invader. "We ought to +make common cause against him," said they; "for if he subdues one +nation, it will only open the way for an attack upon the rest. Some of +us are, it is true, more remote than others from the immediate danger, +but it threatens us all equally in the end." + +The embassadors delivered their message, and some of the tribes +acceded to the Scythian proposals. Others, however, refused. The +quarrel, they said, was a quarrel between Darius and the Scythians +alone, and they were not inclined to bring upon themselves the +hostility of so powerful a sovereign by interfering. The Scythians +were very indignant at this refusal; but there was no remedy, and they +accordingly began to prepare to defend themselves as well as they +could, with the help of those nations that had expressed a willingness +to join them. + +The habits of the Scythians were nomadic and wandering, and their +country was one vast region of verdant and beautiful, and yet, in a +great measure, of uncultivated and trackless wilds. They had few towns +and villages, and those few were of little value. They adopted, +therefore, the mode of warfare which, in such a country and for such a +people, is always the wisest to be pursued. They retreated slowly +before Darius's advancing army, carrying off or destroying all such +property as might aid the king in respect to his supplies. They +organized and equipped a body of swift horsemen, who were ordered to +hover around Darius's camp, and bring intelligence to the Scythian +generals of every movement. These horsemen, too, were to harass the +flanks and the rear of the army, and to capture or destroy every man +whom they should find straying away from the camp. By this means they +kept the invading army continually on the alert, allowing them no +peace and no repose, while yet they thwarted and counteracted all the +plans and efforts which the enemy made to bring on a general battle. + +As the Persians advanced in pursuit of the enemy, the Scythians +retreated, and in this retreat they directed their course toward the +countries occupied by those nations that had refused to join in the +alliance. By this artful management they transferred the calamity and +the burden of the war to the territories of their neighbors. Darius +soon found that he was making no progress toward gaining his end. At +length he concluded to try the effect of a direct and open challenge. + +He accordingly sent embassadors to the Scythian chief, whose name was +Indathyrsus, with a message somewhat as follows: + +"Foolish man! how long will you continue to act in this absurd and +preposterous manner? It is incumbent on you to make a decision in +favor of one thing or the other. If you think that you are able to +contend with me, stop, and let us engage. If not, then acknowledge me +as your superior, and submit to my authority." + +The Scythian chief sent back the following reply: + +"We have no inducement to contend with you in open battle on the +field, because you are not doing us any injury, nor is it at present +in your power to do us any. We have no cities and no cultivated fields +that you can seize or plunder. Your roaming about our country, +therefore, does us no harm, and you are at liberty to continue it as +long as it gives you any pleasure. There is nothing on our soil that +you can injure, except one spot, and that is the place where the +sepulchres of our fathers lie. If you were to attack that spot--which +you may perhaps do, if you can find it--you may rely upon a battle. In +the mean time, you may go elsewhere, wherever you please. As to +acknowledging your superiority, we shall do nothing of the kind. We +defy you." + +Notwithstanding the refusal of the Scythians to give the Persians +battle, they yet made, from time to time, partial and unexpected +onsets upon their camp, seizing occasions when they hoped to find +their enemies off their guard. The Scythians had troops of cavalry +which were very efficient and successful in these attacks. These +horsemen were, however, sometimes thrown into confusion and driven +back by a very singular means of defense. It seems that the Persians +had brought with them from Europe, in their train, a great number of +asses, as beasts of burden, to transport the tents and the baggage of +the army. These asses were accustomed, in times of excitement and +danger, to set up a very terrific braying. It was, in fact, all that +they could do. Braying at a danger seems to be a very ridiculous mode +of attempting to avert it, but it was a tolerably effectual mode, +nevertheless, in this case at least; for the Scythian horses, who +would have faced spears and javelins, and the loudest shouts and +vociferations of human adversaries without any fear, were appalled and +put to flight at hearing the unearthly noises which issued from the +Persian camp whenever they approached it. Thus the mighty monarch of +the whole Asiatic world seemed to depend for protection against the +onsets of these rude and savage troops on the braying of his asses! + + * * * * * + +While these things were going on in the interior of the country, the +Scythians sent down a detachment of their forces to the banks of the +Danube, to see if they could not, in some way or other, obtain +possession of the bridge. They learned here what the orders were which +Darius had given to the Ionians who had been left in charge, in +respect to the time of their remaining at their post. The Scythians +told them that if they would govern themselves strictly by those +orders, and so break up the bridge and go down the river with their +boats as soon as the two months should have expired, they should not +be molested in the mean time. The Ionians agreed to this. The time was +then already nearly gone, and they promised that, so soon as it should +be fully expired, they would withdraw. + +The Scythian detachment sent back word to the main army acquainting +them with these facts, and the army accordingly resolved on a change +in their policy. Instead of harassing and distressing the Persians as +they had done, to hasten their departure, they now determined to +improve the situation of their enemies, and encourage them in their +hopes, so as to protract their stay. They accordingly allowed the +Persians to gain the advantage over them in small skirmishes, and they +managed, also, to have droves of cattle fall into their hands, from +time to time, so as to supply them with food. The Persians were quite +elated with these indications that the tide of fortune was about to +turn in their favor. + +While things were in this state, there appeared one day at the Persian +camp a messenger from the Scythians, who said that he had some +presents from the Scythian chief for Darius. The messenger was +admitted, and allowed to deliver his gifts. The gifts proved to be a +bird, a mouse, a frog, and five arrows. The Persians asked the bearer +of these strange offerings what the Scythians meant by them. He +replied that he had no explanations to give. His orders were, he said, +to deliver the presents and then return; and that they must, +accordingly, find out the meaning intended by the exercise of their +own ingenuity. + +When the messenger had retired, Darius and the Persians consulted +together, to determine what so strange a communication could mean. +They could not, however, come to any satisfactory decision. Darius +said that he thought the three animals might probably be intended to +denote the three kingdoms of nature to which the said animals +respectively belonged, viz., the earth, the air, and the water; and as +the giving up of weapons was a token of submission, the whole might +mean that the Scythians were now ready to give up the contest, and +acknowledge the right of the Persians to supreme and universal +dominion. + +The officers, however, did not generally concur in this opinion. They +saw no indications, they said, of any disposition on the part of the +Scythians to surrender. They thought it quite as probable that the +communication was meant to announce to those who received it threats +and defiance, as to express conciliation and submission. "It may +mean," said one of them, "that, unless you can fly like a bird into +the air, or hide like a mouse in the ground, or bury yourselves, like +the frog, in morasses and fens, you can not escape our arrows." + +There was no means of deciding positively between these contradictory +interpretations, but it soon became evident that the former of the two +was very far from being correct; for, soon after the present was +received, the Scythians were seen to be drawing up their forces in +array, as if preparing for battle. The two months had expired, and +they had reason to suppose that the party at the bridge had withdrawn, +as they had promised to do. Darius had been so far weakened by his +harassing marches, and the manifold privations and sufferings of his +men, that he felt some solicitude in respect to the result of a +battle, now that it seemed to be drawing near, although such a trial +of strength had been the object which he had been, from the beginning, +most eager to secure. + +The two armies were encamped at a moderate distance from each other, +with a plain, partly wooded, between them. While in this position, and +before any hostile action was commenced by either party, it was +observed from the camp of Darius that suddenly a great tumult arose +from the Scythian lines. Men were seen rushing in dense crowds this +way and that over the plain, with shouts and outcries, which, however, +had in them no expression of anger or fear, but rather one of gayety +and pleasure. Darius demanded what the strange tumult meant. Some +messengers were sent out to ascertain the cause, and on their return +they reported that the Scythians were hunting a hare, which had +suddenly made its appearance. The hare had issued from a thicket, and +a considerable portion of the army, officers and soldiers, had +abandoned their ranks to enjoy the sport of pursuing it, and were +running impetuously, here and there, across the plain, filling the air +with shouts of hilarity. + +"They do indeed despise us," said Darius, "since, on the eve of a +battle, they can lose all thoughts of us and of their danger, and +abandon their posts to hunt a hare!" + +That evening a council of war was held. It was concluded that the +Scythians must be very confident and strong in their position, and +that, if a general battle were to be hazarded, it would be very +doubtful what would be the result. The Persians concluded unanimously, +therefore, that the wisest plan would be for them to give up the +intended conquest, and retire from the country. Darius accordingly +proceeded to make his preparations for a secret retreat. + +He separated all the infirm and feeble portion of the army from the +rest, and informed them that he was going that night on a short +expedition with the main body of the troops, and that, while he was +gone, they were to remain and defend the camp. He ordered the men to +build the camp fires, and to make them larger and more numerous than +common, and then had the asses tied together in an unusual situation, +so that they should keep up a continual braying. These sounds, heard +all the night, and the light of the camp fires, were to lead the +Scythians to believe that the whole body of the Persians remained, as +usual, at the encampment, and thus to prevent all suspicion of their +flight. + +Toward midnight, Darius marched forth in silence and secrecy, with all +the vigorous and able-bodied forces under his command, leaving the +weary, the sick, and the infirm to the mercy of their enemies. The +long column succeeded in making good their retreat, without exciting +the suspicions of the Scythians. They took the route which they +supposed would conduct them most directly to the river. + +When the troops which remained in the camp found, on the following +morning, that they had been deceived and abandoned, they made signals +to the Scythians to come to them, and, when they came, the invalids +surrendered themselves and the camp to their possession. The Scythians +then, immediately, leaving a proper guard to defend the camp, set out +to follow the Persian army. Instead, however, of keeping directly upon +their track, they took a shorter course, which would lead them more +speedily to the river. The Persians, being unacquainted with the +country, got involved in fens and morasses, and other difficulties of +the way, and their progress was thus so much impeded that the +Scythians reached the river before them. + +They found the Ionians still there, although the two months had fully +expired. It is possible that the chiefs had received secret orders +from Darius not to hasten their departure, even after the knots had +all been untied; or perhaps they chose, of their own accord, to await +their sovereign's return. The Scythians immediately urged them to be +gone. "The time has expired," they said, "and you are no longer under +any obligation to wait. Return to your own country, and assert your +own independence and freedom, which you can safely do if you leave +Darius and his armies here." + +The Ionians consulted together on the subject, doubtful, at first, +what to do. They concluded that they would not comply with the +Scythian proposals, while yet they determined to pretend to comply +with them, in order to avoid the danger of being attacked. They +accordingly began to take the bridge to pieces, commencing on the +Scythian side of the stream. The Scythians, seeing the work thus going +on, left the ground, and marched back to meet the Persians. The +armies, however, fortunately for Darius, missed each other, and the +Persians arrived safely at the river, after the Scythians had left it. +They arrived in the night, and the advanced guard, seeing no +appearance of the bridge on the Scythian side, supposed that the +Ionians had gone. They shouted long and loud on the shore, and at +length an Egyptian, who was celebrated for the power of his voice, +succeeded in making the Ionians hear. The boats were immediately +brought back to their positions, the bridge was reconstructed, and +Darius's army recrossed the stream. + +The Danube being thus safely crossed, the army made the best of its +way back through Thrace, and across the Bosporus into Asia, and thus +ended Darius's great expedition against the Scythians. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +THE STORY OF HISTIÆUS. + +B.C. 504 + +Histiæus at the bridge on the Danube.--Darius's anxiety.--Darius's +gratitude.--Scythia abandoned.--Darius sends for Histiæus.--Petition +of Histiæus.--Histiæus organizes a colony.--The Pæonians.--Baseness +of the Pæonian chiefs.--Their stratagem.--The Pæonian +maiden.--Multiplicity of her avocations.--Darius and the maiden.--He +determines to make the Pæonians slaves.--Capture of the +Pæonians.--Megabyzus discovers Histiæus's city.--Histiæus +sent for.--Darius revokes his gift.--Histiæus goes to +Susa.--Artaphernes.--Island of Naxos.--Civil war there.--Action of +Aristagoras.--Co-operation of Artaphernes.--Darius consulted.--His +approval.--Preparations.--Sailing of the expedition.--Plan of the +commander.--Difficulty in the fleet.--Cruel discipline.--Dissension +between the commanders.--The expedition fails.--Chagrin of +Aristagoras.--He resolves to revolt.--Position of Histiæus.--His +uneasiness.--Singular mode of communication.--Its success.--Revolt +of Aristagoras.--Feigned indignation of Histiæus.--The Ionian +rebellion.--Its failure.--Death of Histiæus. + + +The nature of the government which was exercised in ancient times by a +royal despot like Darius, and the character of the measures and +management to which he was accustomed to resort to gain his political +ends, are, in many points, very strikingly illustrated by the story of +Histiæus. + +Histiæus was the Ionian chieftain who had been left in charge of the +bridge of boats across the Danube when Darius made his incursion into +Scythia. When, on the failure of the expedition, Darius returned to +the river, knowing, as he did, that the two months had expired, he +naturally felt a considerable degree of solicitude lest he should find +the bridge broken up and the vessels gone, in which case his situation +would be very desperate, hemmed in, as he would have been, between the +Scythians and the river. His anxiety was changed into terror when his +advanced guard arrived at the bank and found that no signs of the +bridge were to be seen. It is easy to imagine what, under these +circumstances, must have been the relief and joy of all the army, when +they heard friendly answers to their shouts, coming, through the +darkness of the night, over the waters of the river, assuring them +that their faithful allies were still at their posts, and that they +themselves would soon be in safety. + +Darius, though he was governed by no firm and steady principles of +justice, was still a man of many generous impulses. He was grateful +for favors, though somewhat capricious in his modes of requiting them. +He declared to Histiæus that he felt under infinite obligations to him +for his persevering fidelity, and that, as soon as the army should +have safely arrived in Asia, he would confer upon him such rewards as +would evince the reality of his gratitude. + +On his return from Scythia, Darius brought back the whole of his army +over the Danube, thus abandoning entirely the country of the +Scythians; but he did not transport the whole body across the +Bosporus. He left a considerable detachment of troops, under the +command of one of his generals, named Megabyzus, in Thrace, on the +European side, ordering Megabyzus to establish himself there, and to +reduce all the countries in that neighborhood to his sway. Darius +then proceeded to Sardis, which was the most powerful and wealthy of +his capitals in that quarter of the world. At Sardis, he was, as it +were, at home again, and he accordingly took an early opportunity to +send for Histiæus, as well as some others who had rendered him special +services in his late campaign, in order that he might agree with them +in respect to their reward. He asked Histiæus what favor he wished to +receive. + +Histiæus replied that he was satisfied, on the whole, with the +position which he already enjoyed, which was that of king or governor +of Miletus, an Ionian city, south of Sardis, and on the shores of the +Ægean Sea.[I] He should be pleased, however, he said, if the king +would assign him a certain small territory in Thrace, or, rather, on +the borders between Thrace and Macedonia, near the mouth of the River +Strymon. He wished to build a city there. The king immediately granted +this request, which was obviously very moderate and reasonable. He did +not, perhaps, consider that this territory, being in Thrace, or in its +immediate vicinity, came within the jurisdiction of Megabyzus, whom +he had left in command there, and that the grant might lead to some +conflict between the two generals. There was special danger of +jealousy and disagreement between them, for Megabyzus was a Persian, +and Histiæus was a Greek. + +[Footnote I: For these places, see the map at the commencement of the +next chapter.] + +Histiæus organized a colony, and, leaving a temporary and provisional +government at Miletus, he proceeded along the shores of the Ægean Sea +to the spot assigned him, and began to build his city. As the locality +was beyond the Thracian frontier, and at a considerable distance from +the head-quarters of Megabyzus, it is very probable that the +operations of Histiæus would not have attracted the Persian general's +attention for a considerable time, had it not been for a very +extraordinary and peculiar train of circumstances, which led him to +discover them. The circumstances were these: + +There was a nation or tribe called the Pæonians, who inhabited the +valley of the Strymon, which river came down from the interior of the +country, and fell into the sea near the place where Histiæus was +building his city. Among the Pæonian chieftains there were two who +wished to obtain the government of the country, but they were not +quite strong enough to effect their object. In order to weaken the +force which was opposed to them, they conceived the base design of +betraying their tribe to Darius, and inducing him to make them +captives. If their plan should succeed, a considerable portion of the +population would be taken away, and they could easily, they supposed, +obtain ascendency over the rest. In order to call the attention of +Darius to the subject, and induce him to act as they desired, they +resorted to the following stratagem. Their object seems to have been +to lead Darius to undertake a campaign against their countrymen, by +showing him what excellent and valuable slaves they would make. + +These two chieftains were brothers, and they had a very beautiful +sister; her form was graceful and elegant, and her countenance lovely. +They brought this sister with them to Sardis when Darius was there. +They dressed and decorated her in a very careful manner, but yet in a +style appropriate to the condition of a servant; and then, one day, +when the king was sitting in some public place in the city, as was +customary with Oriental sovereigns, they sent her to pass along the +street before him, equipped in such a manner as to show that she was +engaged in servile occupations. She had a jar, such as was then used +for carrying water, poised upon her head, and she was leading a horse +by means of a bridle hung over her arm. Her hands, being thus not +required either for the horse or for the vessel, were employed in +spinning, as she walked along, by means of a distaff and spindle. + +The attention of Darius was strongly attracted to the spectacle. The +beauty of the maiden, the novelty and strangeness of her costume, the +multiplicity of her avocations, and the ease and grace with which she +performed them, all conspired to awaken the monarch's curiosity. He +directed one of his attendants to follow her and see where she should +go. The attendant did so. The girl went to the river. She watered her +horse, filled her jar and placed it on her head, and then, hanging the +bridle on her arm again, she returned through the same streets, and +passed the king's palace as before, spinning as she walked along. + +The interest and curiosity of the king was excited more than ever by +the reappearance of the girl and by the report of his messenger. He +directed that she should be stopped and brought into his presence. She +came; and her brothers, who had been watching the whole scene from a +convenient spot near at hand, joined her and came too. The king asked +them who they were. They replied that they were Pæonians. He wished to +know where they lived. "On the banks of the River Strymon," they +replied, "near the confines of Thrace." He next asked whether all the +women of their country were accustomed to labor, and were as +ingenious, and dexterous, and beautiful as their sister. The brothers +replied that they were. + +Darius immediately determined to make the whole people slaves. He +accordingly dispatched a courier with the orders. The courier crossed +the Hellespont, and proceeded to the encampment of Megabyzus in +Thrace. He delivered his dispatches to the Persian general, commanding +him to proceed immediately to Pæonia, and there to take the whole +community prisoners, and bring them to Darius in Sardis. Megabyzus, +until this time, had known nothing of the people whom he was thus +commanded to seize. He, however, found some Thracian guides who +undertook to conduct him to their territory; and then, taking with him +a sufficient force, he set out on the expedition. The Pæonians heard +of his approach. Some prepared to defend themselves; others fled to +the mountains. The fugitives escaped, but those who attempted to +resist were taken. Megabyzus collected the unfortunate captives, +together with their wives and children, and brought them down to the +coast to embark them for Sardis. In doing this, he had occasion to +pass by the spot where Histiæus was building his city, and it was +then, for the first time, that Megabyzus became acquainted with the +plan. Histiæus was building a wall to defend his little territory on +the side of the land. Ships and galleys were going and coming on the +side of the sea. Every thing indicated that the work was rapidly and +prosperously advancing. + +Megabyzus did not interfere with the work; but, as soon as he arrived +at Sardis with his captives, and had delivered them to the king, he +introduced the subject of Histiæus's city, and represented to Darius +that it would be dangerous to the Persian interests to allow such an +enterprise to go on. "He will establish a strong post there," said +Megabyzus, "by means of which he will exercise a great ascendency over +all the neighboring seas. The place is admirably situated for a naval +station, as the country in the vicinity abounds with all the materials +for building and equipping ships. There are also mines of silver in +the mountains near, from which he will obtain a great supply of +treasure. By these means he will become so strong in a short period of +time, that, after you have returned to Asia, he will revolt from your +authority, carrying with him, perhaps, in his rebellion, all the +Greeks of Asia Minor." + +The king said that he was sorry that he had made the grant, and that +he would revoke it without delay. + +Megabyzus recommended that the king should not do this in an open or +violent manner, but that he should contrive some way to arrest the +progress of the undertaking without any appearance of suspicion or +displeasure. + +Darius accordingly sent for Histiæus to come to him at Sardis, saying +that there was a service of great importance on which he wished to +employ him. Histiæus, of course, obeyed such a summons with eager +alacrity. When he arrived, Darius expressed great pleasure at seeing +him once more, and said that he had constant need of his presence and +his counsels. He valued, above all price, the services of so faithful +a friend, and so sagacious and trusty an adviser. He was now, he said, +going to Susa, and he wished Histiæus to accompany him as his privy +counselor and confidential friend. It would be necessary, Darius +added, that he should give up his government of Miletus, and also the +city in Thrace which he had begun to build; but he should be exalted +to higher honors and dignities at Susa in their stead. He should have +apartments in the king's palace, and live in great luxury and +splendor. + +Histiæus was extremely disappointed and chagrined at this +announcement. He was obliged, however, to conceal his vexation and +submit to his fate. In a few days after this, he set out, with the +rest of Darius's court, for the Persian capital, leaving a nephew, +whose name was Aristagoras, as governor of Miletus in his stead. +Darius, on the other hand, committed the general charge of the whole +coast of Asia Minor to Artaphernes, one of his generals. Artaphernes +was to make Sardis his capital. He had not only the general command of +all the provinces extending along the shore, but also of all the +ships, and galleys, and other naval armaments which belonged to Darius +on the neighboring seas. Aristagoras, as governor of Miletus, was +under his general jurisdiction. The two officers were, moreover, +excellent friends. Aristagoras was, of course, a Greek, and +Artaphernes a Persian. + +Among the Greek islands situated in the Ægean Sea, one of the most +wealthy, important, and powerful at that time, was Naxos. It was +situated in the southern part of the sea, and about midway between the +shores of Asia Minor and Greece. It happened that, soon after Darius +had returned from Asia Minor to Persia, a civil war broke out in that +island, in which the common people were on one side and the nobles on +the other. The nobles were overcome in the contest, and fled from the +island. A party of them landed at Miletus, and called upon Aristagoras +to aid them in regaining possession of the island. + +Aristagoras replied that he would very gladly do it if he had the +power, but that the Persian forces on the whole coast, both naval and +military, were under the command of Artaphernes at Sardis. He said, +however, that he was on very friendly terms with Artaphernes, and that +he would, if the Naxians desired it, apply to him for his aid. The +Naxians seemed very grateful for the interest which Aristagoras took +in their cause, and said that they would commit the whole affair to +his charge. + +There was, however, much less occasion for gratitude than there +seemed, for Aristagoras was very far from being honest and sincere in +his offers of aid. He perceived, immediately on hearing the fugitives' +story, that a very favorable opportunity was opening for him to add +Naxos, and perhaps even the neighboring islands, to his own +government. It is always a favorable opportunity to subjugate a people +when their power of defense and of resistance is neutralized by +dissensions with one another. It is a device as old as the history of +mankind, and one resorted to now as often as ever, for ambitious +neighbors to interpose in behalf of the weaker party, in a civil war +waged in a country which they wish to make their own, and, beginning +with a war against a part, to end by subjugating the whole. This was +Aristagoras's plan. He proposed it to Artaphernes, representing to him +that a very favorable occasion had occurred for bringing the Greek +islands of the Ægean Sea under the Persian dominion. Naxos once +possessed, all the other islands around it would follow, he said, and +a hundred ships would make the conquest sure. + +Artaphernes entered very readily and very warmly into the plan. He +said that he would furnish two hundred instead of one hundred +galleys. He thought it was necessary, however, first to consult +Darius, since the affair was one of such importance; and besides, it +was not best to commence the undertaking until the spring. He would +immediately send a messenger to Darius to ascertain his pleasure, and, +in the mean time, as he did not doubt that Darius would fully approve +of the plan, he would have all necessary preparations made, so that +every thing should be in readiness as soon as the proper season for +active operations should arrive. + +Artaphernes was right in anticipating his brother's approval of the +design. The messenger returned from Susa with full authority from the +king for the execution of the project. The ships were built and +equipped, and every thing was made ready for the expedition. The +intended destination of the armament was, however, kept a profound +secret, as the invaders wished to surprise the people of Naxos when +off their guard. Aristagoras was to accompany the expedition as its +general leader, while an officer named Megabates, appointed by +Artaphernes for this purpose, was to take command of the fleet as a +sort of admiral. Thus there were two commanders--an arrangement which +almost always, in such cases, leads to a quarrel. It is a maxim in war +that _one_ bad general is better than two good ones. + +The expedition sailed from Miletus; and, in order to prevent the +people of Naxos from being apprised of their danger, the report had +been circulated that its destination was to be the Hellespont. +Accordingly, when the fleet sailed, it turned its course to the +northward, as if it were really going to the Hellespont. The plan of +the commander was to stop after proceeding a short distance, and then +to seize the first opportunity afforded by a wind from the north to +come down suddenly upon Naxos, before the population should have time +to prepare for defense. Accordingly, when they arrived opposite the +island of Chios, the whole fleet came to anchor near the land. The +ships were all ordered to be ready, at a moment's warning, for setting +sail; and, thus situated, the commanders were waiting for the wind to +change. + +Megabates, in going his rounds among the fleet while things were in +this condition, found one vessel entirely abandoned. The captain and +crew had all left it, and had gone ashore. They were not aware, +probably, how urgent was the necessity that they should be every +moment at their posts. The captain of this galley was a native of a +small town called Cnydus, and, as it happened, was a particular friend +of Aristagoras. His name was Syclax. Megabates, as the commander of +the fleet, was very much incensed at finding one of his subordinate +officers so derelict in duty. He sent his guards in pursuit of him; +and when Syclax was brought to his ship, Megabates ordered his head to +be thrust out through one of the small port-holes intended for the +oars, in the side of the ship, and then bound him in that +position--his head appearing thus to view, in the sight of all the +fleet, while his body remained within the vessel. "I am going to keep +him at his post," said Megabates, "and in such a way that every one +can _see_ that he is there." + +Aristagoras was much distressed at seeing his friend suffering so +severe and disgraceful a punishment. He went to Megabates and +requested the release of the prisoner, giving, at the same time, what +he considered satisfactory reasons for his having been absent from his +vessel. Megabates, however, was not satisfied, and refused to set +Syclax at liberty. Aristagoras then told Megabates that he mistook his +position in supposing that he was master of the expedition, and could +tyrannize over the men in that manner, as he pleased. "I will have you +understand," said he, "that I am the commander in this campaign, and +that Artaphernes, in making you the sailing-master of the fleet, had +no intention that you should set up your authority over mine." So +saying, he went away in a rage, and released Syclax from his durance +with his own hands. + +It was now the turn of Megabates to be enraged. He determined to +defeat the expedition. He sent immediately a secret messenger to warn +the Naxians of their enemies' approach. The Naxians immediately made +effectual preparations to defend themselves. The end of it was, that +when the fleet arrived, the island was prepared to receive it, and +nothing could be done. Aristagoras continued the siege four months; +but inasmuch as, during all this time, Megabates did every thing in +his power to circumvent and thwart every plan that Aristagoras formed, +nothing was accomplished. Finally, the expedition was broken up, and +Aristagoras returned home, disappointed and chagrined, all his hopes +blasted, and his own private finances thrown into confusion by the +great pecuniary losses which he himself had sustained. He had +contributed very largely, from his own private funds, in fitting out +the expedition, fully confident of success, and of ample reimbursement +for his expenses as the consequence of it. + +He was angry with himself, and angry with Megabates, and angry with +Artaphernes. He presumed, too, that Megabates would denounce him to +Artaphernes, and, through him, to Darius, as the cause of the failure +of the expedition. A sudden order might come at any moment, directing +that he should be beheaded. He began to consider the expediency of +revolting from the Persian power, and making common cause with the +Greeks against Darius. The danger of such a step was scarcely less +than that of remaining as he was. While he was pondering these +momentous questions in his mind, he was led suddenly to a decision by +a very singular circumstance, the proper explaining of which requires +the story to return, for a time, to Histiæus at Susa. + +Histiæus was very ill at ease in the possession of his forced +elevation and grandeur at Susa. He enjoyed great distinction there, it +is true, and a life of ease and luxury, but he wished for independence +and authority. He was, accordingly, very desirous to get back to his +former sphere of activity and power in Asia Minor. After revolving in +his mind the various plans which occurred to him for accomplishing +this purpose, he at last decided on inducing Aristagoras to revolt in +Ionia, and then attempting to persuade Darius to send him on to quell +the revolt. When once in Asia Minor, he would join the rebellion, and +bid Darius defiance. + +The first thing to be done was to contrive some safe and secret way to +communicate with Aristagoras. This he effected in the following +manner: There was a man in his court who was afflicted with some +malady of the eyes. Histiæus told him that if he would put himself +under _his_ charge he could effect a cure. It would be necessary, he +said, that the man should have his head shaved and scarified; that is, +punctured with a sharp instrument, previously dipped in some medicinal +compound. Then, after some further applications should have been made, +it would be necessary for the patient to go to Ionia, in Asia Minor, +where there was a physician who would complete the cure. + +The patient consented to this proposal. The head was shaved, and +Histiæus, while pretending to scarify it, pricked into the skin--as +sailors tattoo anchors on their arms--by means of a needle and a +species of ink which had probably no great medicinal virtue, the words +of a letter to Aristagoras, in which he communicated to him fully, +though very concisely, the particulars of his plan. He urged +Aristagoras to revolt, and promised that, if he would do so, he would +come on, himself, as soon as possible, and, under pretense of marching +to suppress the rebellion, he would really join and aid it. + +As soon as he had finished pricking this treasonable communication +into the patient's skin, he carefully enveloped the head in bandages, +which, he said, must on no account be disturbed. He kept the man shut +up, besides, in the palace, until the hair had grown, so as +effectually to conceal the writing, and then sent him to Ionia to have +the cure perfected. On his arrival at Ionia he was to find +Aristagoras, who would do what further was necessary. Histiæus +contrived, in the mean time, to send word to Aristagoras by another +messenger, that, as soon as such a patient should present himself, +Aristagoras was to shave his head. He did so, and the communication +appeared. We must suppose that the operations on the part of +Aristagoras for the purpose of completing the cure consisted, +probably, in pricking in more ink, so as to confuse and obliterate the +writing. + +Aristagoras was on the eve of throwing off the Persian authority when +he received this communication. It at once decided him to proceed. He +organized his forces and commenced his revolt. As soon as the news of +this rebellion reached Susa, Histiæus feigned great indignation, and +earnestly entreated Darius to commission him to go and suppress it. He +was confident, he said, that he could do it in a very prompt and +effectual manner. Darius was at first inclined to suspect that +Histiæus was in some way or other implicated in the movement; but +these suspicions were removed by the protestations which Histiæus +made, and at length he gave him leave to proceed to Miletus, +commanding him, however, to return to Susa again as soon as he should +have suppressed the revolt. + +When Histiæus arrived in Ionia he joined Aristagoras, and the two +generals, leaguing with them various princes and states of Greece, +organized a very extended and dangerous rebellion, which it gave the +troops of Darius infinite trouble to subdue. We can not here give an +account of the incidents and particulars of this war. For a time the +rebels prospered, and their cause seemed likely to succeed; but at +length the tide turned against them. Their towns were captured, their +ships were taken and destroyed, their armies cut to pieces. Histiæus +retreated from place to place, a wretched fugitive, growing more and +more distressed and destitute every day. At length, as he was flying +from a battle field, he arrested the arm of a Persian, who was +pursuing him with his weapon upraised, by crying out that he was +Histiæus the Milesian. The Persian, hearing this, spared his life, but +took him prisoner, and delivered him to Artaphernes. Histiæus begged +very earnestly that Artaphernes would send him to Darius alive, in +hopes that Darius would pardon him in consideration of his former +services at the bridge of the Danube. This was, however, exactly what +Artaphernes wished to prevent; so he crucified the wretched Histiæus +at Sardis, and then packed his head in salt and sent it to Darius. + +[Illustration: GRECIAN EMPIRE.] + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +THE INVASION OF GREECE AND THE BATTLE OF MARATHON. + +B.C. 512-490 + +Great battles.--Progress of the Persian empire.--Condition of +the Persian empire.--Plans of Darius.--Persian power in +Thrace.--Attempted negotiation with Macedon.--The seven +commissioners.--Their rudeness at the feast.--Stratagem of +Amyntas's son.--The commissioners killed.--Artifice of the +prince.--Darius's anger against the Athenians.--Civil dissensions +in Greece.--The tyrants.--Periander.--His message to a neighboring +potentate.--Periander's intolerable tyranny.--His wife +Melissa.--The ghost of Melissa.--A great sacrifice.--The reason +of Periander's rudeness to the assembly of females.--Labda the +cripple.--Prediction in respect to her progeny.--Conspiracy +to destroy Labda's child.--Its failure.--The child +secreted.--Fulfillment of the oracle.--Hippias of Athens.--His +barbarous cruelty.--Hippias among the Persians.--Wars between the +Grecian states.--Quarrel between Athens and Ægina.--The two wooden +statues.--Incursion of the Æginetans.--They carry off the +statues.--Attempt to recover the statues.--They fall upon their +knees.--The Athenian fugitive.--He is murdered by the women.--The +Persian army.--Its commander, Datis.--Sailing of the +fleet.--Various conquests.--Landing of the Persians.--State of +Athens.--The Greek army.--Miltiades and his colleagues.--Position +of the armies.--Miltiades's plan of attack.--Onset of the +Greeks.--Rout of the Persians.--Results of the battle.--Numbers +slain.--The field of Marathon.--The mound.--Song of the Greek. + + +In the history of a great military conqueror, there seems to be often +some one great battle which in importance and renown eclipses all the +rest. In the case of Hannibal it was the battle of Cannæ, in that of +Alexander the battle of Arbela. Cæsar's great conflict was at +Pharsalia, Napoleon's at Waterloo. Marathon was, in some respects, +Darius's Waterloo. The place is a beautiful plain, about twelve miles +north of the great city of Athens. The battle was the great final +contest between Darius and the Greeks, which, both on account of the +awful magnitude of the conflict, and the very extraordinary +circumstances which attended it, has always been greatly celebrated +among mankind. + +The whole progress of the Persian empire, from the time of the first +accession of Cyrus to the throne, was toward the westward, till it +reached the confines of Asia on the shores of the Ægean Sea. All the +shores and islands of this sea were occupied by the states and the +cities of Greece. The population of the whole region, both on the +European and Asiatic shores, spoke the same language, and possessed +the same vigorous, intellectual, and elevated character. Those on the +Asiatic side had been conquered by Cyrus, and their countries had been +annexed to the Persian empire. Darius had wished very strongly, at the +commencement of his reign, to go on in this work of annexation, and +had sent his party of commissioners to explore the ground, as is +related in a preceding chapter. He had, however, postponed the +execution of his plans, in order first to conquer the Scythian +countries north of Greece, thinking, probably, that this would make +the subsequent conquest of Greece itself more easy. By getting a firm +foothold in Scythia, he would, as it were, turn the flank of the +Grecian territories, which would tend to make his final descent upon +them more effectual and sure. + +This plan, however, failed; and yet, on his retreat from Scythia, +Darius did not withdraw his armies wholly from the European side of +the water. He kept a large force in Thrace, and his generals there +were gradually extending and strengthening their power, and preparing +for still greater conquests. They attempted to extend their dominion, +sometimes by negotiations, and sometimes by force, and they were +successful and unsuccessful by turns, whichever mode they employed. + +One very extraordinary story is told of an attempted negotiation with +Macedon, made with a view of bringing that kingdom, if possible, under +the Persian dominion, without the necessity of a resort to force. The +commanding general of Darius's armies in Thrace, whose name, as was +stated in the last chapter, was Megabyzus, sent seven Persian officers +into Macedon, not exactly to summon the Macedonians, in a peremptory +manner, to surrender to the Persians, nor, on the other hand, to +propose a voluntary alliance, but for something between the two. The +communication was to be in the form of a proposal, and yet it was to +be made in the domineering and overbearing manner with which the +tyrannical and the strong often make proposals to the weak and +defenseless. + +The seven Persians went to Macedon, which, as will be seen from the +map, was west of Thrace, and to the northward of the other Grecian +countries. Amyntas, the king of Macedon, gave them a very honorable +reception. At length, one day, at a feast to which they were invited +in the palace of Amyntas, they became somewhat excited with wine, and +asked to have the ladies of the court brought into the apartment. They +wished "to see them," they said. Amyntas replied that such a procedure +was entirely contrary to the usages and customs of their court; but +still, as he stood somewhat in awe of his visitors, or, rather, of the +terrible power which the delegation represented, and wished by every +possible means to avoid provoking a quarrel with them, he consented to +comply with their request. The ladies were sent for. They came in, +reluctant and blushing, their minds excited by mingled feelings of +indignation and shame. + +The Persians, becoming more and more excited and imperious under the +increasing influence of the wine, soon began to praise the beauty of +these new guests in a coarse and free manner, which overwhelmed the +ladies with confusion, and then to accost them familiarly and rudely, +and to behave toward them, in other respects, with so much impropriety +as to produce great alarm and indignation among all the king's +household. The king himself was much distressed, but he was afraid to +act decidedly. His son, a young man of great energy and spirit, +approached his father with a countenance and manner expressive of high +excitement, and begged him to retire from the feast, and leave him, +the son, to manage the affair. Amyntas reluctantly allowed himself to +be persuaded to go, giving his son many charges, as he went away, to +do nothing rashly or violently. As soon as the king was gone, the +prince made an excuse for having the ladies retire for a short time, +saying that they should soon return. The prince conducted them to +their apartment, and then selecting an equal number of tall and +smooth-faced boys, he disguised them to represent the ladies, and gave +each one a dagger, directing him to conceal it beneath his robe. These +counterfeit females were then introduced to the assembly in the place +of those who had retired. The Persians did not detect the deception. +It was evening, and, besides, their faculties were confused with the +effects of the wine. They approached the supposed ladies as they had +done before, with rude familiarity; and the boys, at a signal made by +the prince when the Persians were wholly off their guard, stabbed and +killed every one of them on the spot. + +Megabyzus sent an embassador to inquire what became of his seven +messengers; but the Macedonian prince contrived to buy this messenger +off by large rewards, and to induce him to send back some false but +plausible story to satisfy Megabyzus. Perhaps Megabyzus would not have +been so easily satisfied had it not been that the great Ionian +rebellion, under Aristagoras and Histiæus, as described in the last +chapter, broke out soon after, and demanded his attention in another +quarter of the realm. + +The Ionian rebellion postponed, for a time, Darius's designs on +Greece, but the effect of it was to make the invasion more certain and +more terrible in the end; for Athens, which was at that time one of +the most important and powerful of the Grecian cities, took a part in +that rebellion against the Persians. The Athenians sent forces to aid +those of Aristagoras and Histiæus, and, in the course of the war, the +combined army took and burned the city of Sardis. When this news +reached Darius, he was excited to a perfect phrensy of resentment and +indignation against the Athenians for coming thus into his own +dominions to assist rebels, and there destroying one of his most +important capitals. He uttered the most violent and terrible threats +against them, and, to prevent his anger from getting cool before the +preparations should be completed for vindicating it, he made an +arrangement, it was said, for having a slave call out to him every day +at table, "Remember the Athenians!" + +It was a circumstance favorable to Darius's designs against the states +of Greece that they were not united among themselves. There was no +general government under which the whole naval and military force of +that country could be efficiently combined, so as to be directed, in a +concentrated and energetic form, against a common enemy. On the other +hand, the several cities formed, with the territories adjoining them, +so many separate states, more or less connected, it is true, by +confederations and alliances, but still virtually independent, and +often hostile to each other. Then, besides these external and +international quarrels, there was a great deal of internal dissension. +The monarchical and the democratic principle were all the time +struggling for the mastery. Military despots were continually rising +to power in the various cities, and after they had ruled, for a time, +over their subjects with a rod of iron, the people would rise in +rebellion and expel them from their thrones. These revolutions were +continually taking place, attended, often, by the strangest and most +romantic incidents, which evinced, on the part of the actors in them, +that extraordinary combination of mental sagacity and acumen with +childish and senseless superstition so characteristic of the times. + +It is not surprising that the populace often rebelled against the +power of these royal despots, for they seem to have exercised their +power, when their interests or their passions excited them to do it, +in the most tyrannical and cruel manner. One of them, it was said, a +king of Corinth, whose name was Periander, sent a messenger, on one +occasion, to a neighboring potentate--with whom he had gradually come +to entertain very friendly relations--to inquire by what means he +could most certainly and permanently secure the continuance of his +power. The king thus applied to gave no direct reply, but took the +messenger out into his garden, talking with him by the way about the +incidents of his journey, and other indifferent topics. He came, at +length, to a field where grain was growing, and as he walked along, he +occupied himself in cutting off, with his sword, every head of the +grain which raised itself above the level of the rest. After a short +time he returned to the house, and finally dismissed the messenger +without giving him any answer whatever to the application that he had +made. The messenger returned to Periander, and related what had +occurred. "I understand his meaning," said Periander. "I must contrive +some way to remove all those who, by their talents, their influence, +or their power, rise above the general level of the citizens." +Periander began immediately to act on this recommendation. Whoever, +among the people of Corinth, distinguished himself above the rest, was +marked for destruction. Some were banished, some were slain, and some +were deprived of their influence, and so reduced to the ordinary +level, by the confiscation of their property, the lives and fortunes +of all the citizens of the state being wholly in the despot's hands. + +This same Periander had a wife whose name was Melissa. A very +extraordinary tale is related respecting her, which, though mainly +fictitious, had a foundation, doubtless, in fact, and illustrates very +remarkably the despotic tyranny and the dark superstition of the +times. Melissa died and was buried; but her garments, for some reason +or other, were not burned, as was usual in such cases. Now, among the +other oracles of Greece, there was one where departed spirits could be +consulted. It was called the oracle of the dead. Periander, having +occasion to consult an oracle in order to find the means of recovering +a certain article of value which was lost, sent to this place to call +up and consult the ghost of Melissa. The ghost appeared, but refused +to answer the question put to her, saying, with frightful solemnity, + +"I am cold; I am cold; I am naked and cold. My clothes were not +burned; I am naked and cold." + +When this answer was reported to Periander, he determined to make a +great sacrifice and offering, such as should at once appease the +restless spirit. He invited, therefore, a general assembly of the +women of Corinth to witness some spectacle in a temple, and when they +were convened, he surrounded them with his guards, seized them, +stripped them of most of their clothing, and then let them go free. +The clothes thus taken were then all solemnly burned, as an expiatory +offering, with invocations to the shade of Melissa. + +The account adds, that when this was done, a second messenger was +dispatched to the oracle of the dead, and the spirit, now clothed and +comfortable in its grave, answered the inquiry, informing Periander +where the lost article might be found. + +The rude violence which Periander resorted to in this case seems not +to have been dictated by any particular desire to insult or injure the +women of Corinth, but was resorted to simply as the easiest and most +convenient way of obtaining what he needed. He wanted a supply of +valuable and costly female apparel, and the readiest mode of obtaining +it was to bring together an assembly of females dressed for a public +occasion, and then disrobe them. The case only shows to what an +extreme and absolute supremacy the lofty and domineering spirit of +ancient despotism attained. + +It ought, however, to be related, in justice to these abominable +tyrants, that they often evinced feelings of commiseration and +kindness; sometimes, in fact, in very singular ways. There was, for +example, in one of the cities, a certain family that had obtained the +ascendency over the rest of the people, and had held it for some time +as an established aristocracy, taking care to preserve their rank and +power from generation to generation, by intermarrying only with one +another. At length, in one branch of the family, there grew up a young +girl named Labda, who had been a cripple from her birth, and, on +account of her deformity, none of the nobles would marry her. A man of +obscure birth, however, one of the common people, at length took her +for his wife. His name was Eetion. One day, Eetion went to Delphi to +consult an oracle, and as he was entering the temple, the Pythian[J] +called out to him, saying that a stone should proceed from Labda which +should overwhelm tyrants and usurpers, and free the state. The nobles, +when they heard of this, understood the prediction to mean that the +destruction of their power was, in some way or other, to be effected +by means of Labda's child, and they determined to prevent the +fulfillment of the prophecy by destroying the babe itself so soon as +it should be born. + +[Footnote J: For a full account of these oracles, see the history of +Cyrus the Great.] + +They accordingly appointed ten of their number to go to the place +where Eetion lived and kill the child. The method which they were to +adopt was this: They were to ask to see the infant on their arrival at +the house, and then it was agreed that whichever of the ten it was to +whom the babe was handed, he should dash it down upon the stone floor +with all his force, by which means it would, as they supposed, +certainly be killed. + +This plan being arranged, the men went to the house, inquired, with +hypocritical civility, after the health of the mother, and desired to +see the child. It was accordingly brought to them. The mother put it +into the hands of one of the conspirators, and the babe looked up into +his face and smiled. This mute expression of defenseless and confiding +innocence touched the murderer's heart. He could not be such a monster +as to dash such an image of trusting and happy helplessness upon the +stones. He looked upon the child, and then gave it into the hands of +the one next to him, and he gave it to the next, and thus it passed +through the hands of all the ten. No one was found stern and +determined enough to murder it, and at last they gave the babe back to +its mother and went away. + +The sequel of this story was, that the conspirators, when they reached +the gate, stopped to consult together, and after many mutual +criminations and recriminations, each impugning the courage and +resolution of the rest, and all joining in special condemnation of the +man to whom the child had at first been given, they went back again, +determined, in some way or other, to accomplish their purpose. But +Labda had, in the mean time, been alarmed at their extraordinary +behavior, and had listened, when they stopped at the gate, to hear +their conversation. She hastily hid the babe in a corn measure; and +the conspirators, after looking in every part of the house in vain, +gave up the search, supposing that their intended victim had been +hastily sent away. They went home, and not being willing to +acknowledge that their resolution had failed at the time of trial, +they agreed to say that their undertaking had succeeded, and that the +child had been destroyed. The babe lived, however, and grew up to +manhood, and then, in fulfillment of the prediction announced by the +oracle, he headed a rebellion against the nobles, deposed them from +their power, and reigned in their stead. + +One of the worst and most reckless of the Greek tyrants of whom we +have been speaking was Hippias of Athens. His father, Pisistratus, had +been hated all his life for his cruelties and his crimes; and when he +died, leaving two sons, Hippias and Hipparchus, a conspiracy was +formed to kill the sons, and thus put an end to the dynasty. +Hipparchus was killed, but Hippias escaped the danger, and seized the +government himself alone. He began to exercise his power in the most +cruel and wanton manner, partly under the influence of resentment and +passion, and partly because he thought his proper policy was to strike +terror into the hearts of the people as a means of retaining his +dominion. One of the conspirators by whom his brother had been slain, +accused Hippias's warmest and best friends as his accomplices in that +deed, in order to revenge himself on Hippias by inducing him to +destroy his own adherents and supporters. Hippias fell into the snare; +he condemned to death all whom the conspirator accused, and his +reckless soldiers executed his friends and foes together. When any +protested their innocence, he put them to the torture to make them +confess their guilt. Such indiscriminate cruelty only had the effect +to league the whole population of Athens against the perpetrator of +it. There was at length a general insurrection against him, and he was +dethroned. He made his escape to Sardis, and there tendered his +services to Artaphernes, offering to conduct the Persian armies to +Greece, and aid them in getting possession of the country, on +condition that, if they succeeded, the Persians would make him the +governor of Athens. Artaphernes made known these offers to Darius, and +they were eagerly accepted. It was, however, very impolitic to accept +them. The aid which the invaders could derive from the services of +such a guide, were far more than counterbalanced by the influence +which his defection and the espousal of his cause by the Persians +would produce in Greece. It banded the Athenians and their allies +together in the most enthusiastic and determined spirit of resistance, +against a man who had now added the baseness of treason to the wanton +wickedness of tyranny. + +Besides these internal dissensions between the people of the several +Grecian states and their kings, there were contests between one state +and another, which Darius proposed to take advantage of in his +attempts to conquer the country. There was one such war in particular, +between Athens and the island of Ægina, on the effects of which, in +aiding him in his operations against the Athenians, Darius placed +great reliance. Ægina was a large and populous island not far from +Athens. In accounting for the origin of the quarrel between the two +states, the Greek historians relate the following marvelous story: + +Ægina, as will be seen from the map, was situated in the middle of a +bay, southwest from Athens. On the other side of the bay, opposite +from Athens, there was a city, near the shore, called Epidaurus. It +happened that the people of Epidaurus were at one time suffering from +famine, and they sent a messenger to the oracle at Delphi to inquire +what they should do to obtain relief. The Pythian answered that they +must erect two statues to certain goddesses, named Damia and Auxesia, +and that then the famine would abate. They asked whether they were to +make the statues of brass or of marble. The priestess replied, "Of +neither, but of wood." They were, she said, to use for the purpose the +wood of the garden olive. + +This species of olive was a sacred tree, and it happened that, at this +time, there were no trees of the kind that were of sufficient size for +the purpose intended except at Athens; and the Epidaurians, +accordingly, sent to Athens to obtain leave to supply themselves with +wood for the sculptor by cutting down one of the trees from the sacred +grove. The Athenians consented to this, on condition that the +Epidaurians would offer a certain yearly sacrifice at two temples in +Athens, which they named. This sacrifice, they seemed to imagine, +would make good to the city whatever of injury their religious +interests might suffer from the loss of the sacred tree. The +Epidaurians agreed to the condition; the tree was felled; blocks from +it, of proper size, were taken to Epidaurus, and the statues were +carved. They were set up in the city with the usual solemnities, and +the famine soon after disappeared. + +Not many years after this, a war, for some cause or other, broke out +between Epidaurus and Ægina. The people of Ægina crossed the water in +a fleet of galleys, landed at Epidaurus, and, after committing various +ravages, they seized these images, and bore them away in triumph as +trophies of their victory. They set them up in a public place in the +middle of their own island, and instituted games and spectacles around +them, which they celebrated with great festivity and parade. The +Epidaurians, having thus lost their statues, ceased to make the annual +offering at Athens which they had stipulated for, in return for +receiving the wood from which the statues were carved. The Athenians +complained. The Epidaurians replied that they had continued to make +the offering as long as they had kept the statues; but that now, the +statues being in other hands, they were absolved from the obligation. +The Athenians next demanded the statues themselves of the people of +Ægina. They refused to surrender them. The Athenians then invaded the +island, and proceeded to the spot where the statues had been erected. +They had been set up on massive and heavy pedestals. The Athenians +attempted to get them down, but could not separate them from their +fastenings. They then changed their plan, and undertook to move the +pedestals too, by dragging them with ropes. They were arrested in this +undertaking by an earthquake, accompanied by a solemn and terrible +sound of thunder, which warned them that they were provoking the anger +of Heaven. + +The statues, too, miraculously fell on their knees, and remained fixed +in that posture! + +The Athenians, terrified at these portentous signs, abandoned their +undertaking and fled toward the shore. They were, however, intercepted +by the people of Ægina, and some allies whom they had hastily summoned +to their aid, and the whole party was destroyed except one single man. +He escaped. + +This single fugitive, however, met with a worse fate than that of his +comrades. He went to Athens, and there the wives and sisters of the +men who had been killed thronged around him to hear his story. They +were incensed that he alone had escaped, as if his flight had been a +sort of betrayal and desertion of his companions. They fell upon him, +therefore, with one accord, and pierced and wounded him on all sides +with a sort of pin, or clasp, which they used as a fastening for their +dress. They finally killed him. + +The Athenian magistrates were unable to bring any of the perpetrators +of this crime to conviction and punishment; but a law was made, in +consequence of the occurrence, forbidding the use of that sort of +fastening for the dress to all the Athenian women forever after. The +people of Ægina, on the other hand, rejoiced and gloried in the deed +of the Athenian women, and they made the clasps which were worn upon +their island of double size, in honor of it. + +The war, thus commenced between Athens and Ægina, went on for a long +time, increasing in bitterness and cruelty as the injuries increased +in number and magnitude which the belligerent parties inflicted on +each other. + +Such was the state of things in Greece when Darius organized his great +expedition for the invasion of the country. He assembled an immense +armament, though he did not go forth himself to command it. He placed +the whole force under the charge of a Persian general named Datis. A +considerable part of the army which Datis was to command was raised in +Persia; but orders had been sent on that large accessions to the army, +consisting of cavalry, foot soldiers, ships, and seamen, and every +other species of military force, should be raised in all the provinces +of Asia Minor, and be ready to join it at various places of +rendezvous. + +Darius commenced his march at Susa with the troops which had been +collected there, and proceeded westward till he reached the +Mediterranean at Cilicia, which is at the northeast corner of that +sea. Here large re-enforcements joined him; and there was also +assembled at this point an immense fleet of galleys, which had been +provided to convey the troops to the Grecian seas. The troops +embarked, and the fleet advanced along the southern shores of Asia +Minor to the Ægean Sea, where they turned to the northward toward the +island of Samos, which had been appointed as a rendezvous. At Samos +they were joined by still greater numbers coming from Ionia, and the +various provinces and islands on that coast that were already under +the Persian dominion. When they were ready for their final departure, +the immense fleet, probably one of the greatest and most powerful +which had then ever been assembled, set sail, and steered their course +to the northwest, among the islands of the Ægean Sea. As they moved +slowly on, they stopped to take possession of such islands as came in +their way. The islanders, in some cases, submitted to them without a +struggle. In others, they made vigorous but perfectly futile attempts +to resist. In others still, the terrified inhabitants abandoned their +homes, and fled in dismay to the fastnesses of the mountains. The +Persians destroyed the cities and towns whose inhabitants they could +not conquer, and took the children from the most influential families +of the islands which they did subdue, as hostages to hold their +parents to their promises when their conquerors should have gone. + +[Illustration: THE INVASION OF GREECE.] + +The mighty fleet advanced thus, by slow degrees, from conquest to +conquest, toward the Athenian shores. The vast multitude of galleys +covered the whole surface of the water, and as they advanced, +propelled each by a triple row of oars, they exhibited to the +fugitives who had gained the summits of the mountains the appearance +of an immense swarm of insects, creeping, by an almost imperceptible +advance, over the smooth expanse of the sea. + +The fleet, guided all the time by Hippias, passed on, and finally +entered the strait between the island of Euboea and the main land to +the northward of Athens. Here, after some operations on the island, +the Persians finally brought their ships into a port on the Athenian +side, and landed. Hippias made all the arrangements, and superintended +the disembarkation. + +In the mean time, all was confusion and dismay in the city of Athens. +The government, as soon as they heard of the approach of this terrible +danger, had sent an express to the city of Sparta, asking for aid. The +aid had been promised, but it had not yet arrived. The Athenians +gathered together all the forces at their command on the northern side +of the city, and were debating the question, with great anxiety and +earnestness, whether they should shut themselves up within the walls, +and await the onset of their enemies there, or go forth to meet them +on the way. The whole force which the Greeks could muster consisted +of but about ten thousand men, while the Persian host contained over a +hundred thousand. It seemed madness to engage in a contest on an open +field against such an overwhelming disparity of numbers. A majority of +voices were, accordingly, in favor of remaining within the +fortifications of the city, and awaiting an attack. + +The command of the army had been intrusted, not to one man, but to a +commission of three generals, a sort of triumvirate, on whose joint +action the decision of such a question devolved. Two of the three were +in favor of taking a defensive position; but the third, the celebrated +Miltiades, was so earnest and so decided in favor of attacking the +enemy themselves, instead of waiting to be attacked, that his opinion +finally carried the day, and the other generals resigned their portion +of authority into his hands, consenting that he should lead the Greek +army into battle, if he dared to take the responsibility of doing so. + +The two armies were at this time encamped in sight of each other on +the plain of Marathon, between the mountain and the sea. They were +nearly a mile apart. The countless multitude of the Persians extended +as far as the eye could reach, with long lines of tents in the +distance, and thousands of horsemen on the plain, all ready for the +charge. The Greeks, on the other hand, occupied a small and isolated +spot, in a compact form, without cavalry, without archers, without, in +fact, any weapons suitable either for attack or defense, except in a +close encounter hand to hand. Their only hope of success depended on +the desperate violence of the onset they were to make upon the vast +masses of men spread out before them. On the one side were immense +numbers, whose force, vast as it was, must necessarily be more or less +impeded in its operations, and slow. It was to be overpowered, +therefore, if overpowered at all, by the utmost fierceness and +rapidity of action--by sudden onsets, unexpected and furious assaults, +and heavy, vigorous, and rapid blows. Miltiades, therefore, made all +his arrangements with reference to that mode of warfare. Such soldiers +as the Greeks, too, were admirably adapted to execute such designs, +and the immense and heterogeneous mass of Asiatic nations which +covered the plain before them was exactly the body for such an +experiment to be made upon. Glorying in their numbers and confident of +victory, they were slowly advancing, without the least idea that the +little band before them could possibly do them any serious harm. They +had actually brought with them, in the train of the army, some blocks +of marble, with which they were going to erect a monument of their +victory, on the field of battle, as soon as the conflict was over! + +At length the Greeks began to put themselves in motion. As they +advanced, they accelerated their march more and more, until just +before reaching the Persian lines, when they began to run. The +astonishment of the Persians at this unexpected and daring onset soon +gave place, first to the excitement of personal conflict, and then to +universal terror and dismay; for the headlong impetuosity of the +Greeks bore down all opposition, and the desperate swordsmen cut their +way through the vast masses of the enemy with a fierce and desperate +fury that nothing could withstand. Something like a contest continued +for some hours; but, at the end of that time, the Persians were flying +in all directions, every one endeavoring, by the track which he found +most practicable for himself, to make his way to the ships on the +shore. Vast multitudes were killed in this headlong flight; others +became entangled in the morasses and fens, and others still strayed +away, and sought, in their terror, a hopeless refuge in the defiles of +the mountains. Those who escaped crowded in confusion on board their +ships, and pushed off from the shore, leaving the whole plain covered +with their dead and dying companions. + +The Greeks captured an immense amount of stores and baggage, which +were of great cost and value. They took possession, too, of the marble +blocks which the Persians had brought to immortalize their victory, +and built with them a monument, instead, to commemorate their defeat. +They counted the dead. Six thousand Persians, and only two hundred +Greeks, were found. The bodies of the Greeks were collected together, +and buried on the field, and an immense mound was raised over the +grave. This mound has continued to stand at Marathon to the present +day. + +The battle of Marathon was one of those great events in the history of +the human race which continue to attract, from age to age, the +admiration of mankind. They who look upon war, in all its forms, as +only the perpetration of an unnatural and atrocious crime, which rises +to dignity and grandeur only by the very enormity of its guilt, can +not but respect the courage, the energy, and the cool and determined +resolution with which the little band of Greeks went forth to stop the +torrent of foes which all the nations of a whole continent had +combined to pour upon them. The field has been visited in every age by +thousands of travelers, who have upon the spot offered their tribute +of admiration to the ancient heroes that triumphed there. The plain is +found now, as of old, overlooking the sea, and the mountains inland, +towering above the plain. The mound, too, still remains, which was +reared to consecrate the memory of the Greeks who fell. They who visit +it stand and survey the now silent and solitary scene, and derive from +the influence and spirit of the spot new strength and energy to meet +the great difficulties and dangers of life which they themselves have +to encounter. The Greeks themselves, of the present day, +notwithstanding the many sources of discouragement and depression with +which they have to contend, must feel at Marathon some rising spirit +of emulation in contemplating the lofty mental powers and the +undaunted spirit of their sires. Byron makes one of them sing, + + "The mountains look on Marathon, + And Marathon looks on the sea; + And musing there an hour alone, + I dreamed that Greece might still be free; + For, standing on the Persians' grave, + I could not deem myself a slave." + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +THE DEATH OF DARIUS. + +B.C. 490-485 + +The Persian fleet sails southward.--Fate of Hippias.--Omens.--The +dream and the sneeze.--Hippias falls in battle.--Movements of the +Persian fleet.--The Persian fleet returns to Asia.--Anxiety of +Datis.--Datis finds a stolen statue.--Island of Delos.--Account of +the sacred island.--Its present condition.--Disposition of the +army.--Darius's reception of Datis.--Subsequent history of +Miltiades.--His great popularity.--Miltiades's influence +at Athens.--His ambitious designs.--Island and city of +Paros.--Appearance of the modern town.--Miltiades's proposition to +the Athenians.--They accept it.--Miltiades marches against +Paros.--Its resistance.--Miltiades is discouraged.--The captive +priestess.--Miltiades's interview with the priestess.--Her +instructions.--Miltiades attempts to enter the temple of Ceres.--He +dislocates a limb.--Miltiades returns to Athens.--He is +impeached.--Miltiades is condemned.--He dies of his wound.--The fine +paid.--Proposed punishment of Timo.--Timo saved by the Delphic +oracle.--Another expedition against Greece.--Preparations.--Necessity +for settling the succession.--Darius's two sons.--Their claims to the +throne.--Xerxes declared heir.--Death of Darius.--Character of +Darius.--Ground of his renown. + + +The city of Athens and the plain of Marathon are situated upon a +peninsula. The principal port by which the city was ordinarily +approached was on the southern shore of the peninsula, though the +Persians had landed on the northern side. Of course, in their retreat +from the field of battle, they fled to the north. When they were +beyond the reach of their enemies and fairly at sea, they were at +first somewhat perplexed to determine what to do. Datis was extremely +unwilling to return to Darius with the news of such a defeat. On the +other hand, there seemed but little hope of any other result if he +were to attempt a second landing. + +Hippias, their Greek guide, was killed in the battle. He expected to +be killed, for his mind, on the morning of the battle, was in a state +of great despondency and dejection. Until that time he had felt a +strong and confident expectation of success, but his feelings had then +been very suddenly changed. His confidence had arisen from the +influence of a dream, his dejection from a cause more frivolous still; +so that he was equally irrational in his hope and in his despair. + +The omen which seemed to him to portend success to the enterprise in +which he had undertaken to act as guide, was merely that he dreamed +one night that he saw, and spent some time in company with, his +mother. In attempting to interpret this dream in the morning, it +seemed to him that Athens, his native city, was represented by his +mother, and that the vision denoted that he was about to be restored +to Athens again. He was extremely elated at this supernatural +confirmation of his hopes, and would have gone into the battle certain +of victory, had it not been that another circumstance occurred at the +time of the landing to blast his hopes. He had, himself, the general +charge of the disembarkation. He stationed the ships at their proper +places near the shore, and formed the men upon the beach as they +landed. While he was thus engaged, standing on the sand, he suddenly +sneezed. He was an old man, and his teeth--those that remained--were +loose. One of them was thrown out in the act of sneezing, and it fell +into the sand. Hippias was alarmed at this occurrence, considering it +a bad omen. He looked a long time for the tooth in vain, and then +exclaimed that all was over. The joining of his tooth to his mother +earth was the event to which his dream referred, and there was now no +hope of any further fulfillment of it. He went on mechanically, after +this, in marshaling his men and preparing for battle, but his mind was +oppressed with gloomy forebodings. He acted, in consequence, feebly +and with indecision; and when the Greeks explored the field on the +morning after the battle, his body was found among the other mutilated +and ghastly remains which covered the ground. + +As the Persian fleet moved, therefore, along the coast of Attica, they +had no longer their former guide. They were still, however, very +reluctant to leave the country. They followed the shore of the +peninsula until they came to the promontory of Sunium, which forms the +southeastern extremity of it. They doubled this cape, and then +followed the southern shore of the peninsula until they arrived at the +point opposite to Athens on that side. In the mean time, however, the +Spartan troops which had been sent for to aid the Athenians in the +contest, but which had not arrived in time to take part in the +battle, reached the ground; and the indications which the Persians +observed, from the decks of their galleys, that the country was +thoroughly aroused, and was every where ready to receive them, +deterred them from making any further attempts to land. After +lingering, therefore, a short time near the shore, the fleet directed +its course again toward the coasts of Asia. + +The mind of Datis was necessarily very ill at ease. He dreaded the +wrath of Darius; for despots are very prone to consider military +failures as the worst of crimes. The expedition had not, however, been +entirely a failure. Datis had conquered many of the Greek islands, and +he had with him, on board his galleys, great numbers of prisoners, and +a vast amount of plunder which he had obtained from them. Still, the +greatest and most important of the objects which Darius had +commissioned him to accomplish had been entirely defeated, and he +felt, accordingly, no little anxiety in respect to the reception which +he was to expect at Susa. + +One night he had a dream which greatly disturbed him. He awoke in the +morning with an impression upon his mind, which he had derived from +the dream, that some temple had been robbed by his soldiers in the +course of his expedition, and that the sacrilegious booty which had +been obtained was concealed somewhere in the fleet. He immediately +ordered a careful search to be instituted, in which every ship was +examined. At length they found, concealed in one of the galleys, a +golden statue of Apollo. Datis inquired what city it had been taken +from. They answered from Delium. Delium was on the coast of Attica, +near the place where the Persians had landed, at the time of their +advance on Marathon. Datis could not safely or conveniently go back +there to restore it to its place. He determined, therefore, to deposit +it at Delos for safe keeping, until it could be returned to its proper +home. + +Delos was a small but very celebrated island near the center of the +Ægean Sea, and but a short distance from the spot where the Persian +fleet was lying when Datis made this discovery. It was a sacred +island, devoted to religious rites, and all contention, and violence, +and, so far as was possible, all suffering and death, were excluded +from it. The sick were removed from it; the dead were not buried +there; armed ships and armed men laid aside their hostility to each +other when they approached it. Belligerent fleets rode at anchor, +side by side, in peace, upon the smooth waters of its little port, and +an enchanting picture of peace, tranquillity, and happiness was seen +upon its shores. A large natural fountain, or spring, thirty feet in +diameter, and inclosed partly by natural rocks and partly by an +artificial wall, issued from the ground in the center of the island, +and sent forth a beautiful and fertilizing rill into a rich and happy +valley, through which it meandered, deviously, for several miles, +seeking the sea. There was a large and populous city near the port, +and the whole island was adorned with temples, palaces, colonnades, +and other splendid architectural structures, which made it the +admiration of all mankind. All this magnificence and beauty have, +however, long since passed away. The island is now silent, deserted, +and desolate, a dreary pasture, where cattle browse and feed, with +stupid indifference, among the ancient ruins. Nothing living remains +of the ancient scene of grandeur and beauty but the fountain. That +still continues to pour up its clear and pellucid waters with a +ceaseless and eternal flow. + +It was to this Delos that Datis determined to restore the golden +statue. He took it on board his own galley, and proceeded with it, +himself, to the sacred island. He deposited it in the great temple of +Apollo, charging the priests to convey it, as soon as a convenient +opportunity should occur, to its proper destination at Delium. + +The Persian fleet, after this business was disposed of, set sail +again, and pursued its course toward the coasts of Asia, where at +length the expedition landed in safety. + +The various divisions of the army were then distributed in the +different provinces where they respectively belonged, and Datis +commenced his march with the Persian portion of the troops, and with +his prisoners and plunder, for Susa, feeling, however, very uncertain +how he should be received on his arrival there. Despotic power is +always capricious; and the character of Darius, which seems to have +been naturally generous and kind, and was rendered cruel and +tyrannical only through the influence of the position in which he had +been placed, was continually presenting the most opposite and +contradictory phases. The generous elements of it, fortunately for +Datis, seemed to be in the ascendency when the remnant of the Persian +army arrived at Susa. Darius received the returning general without +anger, and even treated the prisoners with humanity. + +Before finally leaving the subject of this celebrated invasion, which +was brought to an end in so remarkable a manner by the great battle of +Marathon, it may be well to relate the extraordinary circumstances +which attended the subsequent history of Miltiades, the great +commander in that battle on the Greek side. Before the conflict, he +seems to have had no official superiority over the other generals, +but, by the resolute decision with which he urged the plan of giving +the Persians battle, and the confidence and courage which he +manifested in expressing his readiness to take the responsibility of +the measure, he placed himself virtually at the head of the Greek +command. The rest of the officers acquiesced in his pre-eminence, and, +waiving their claims to an equal share of the authority, they allowed +him to go forward and direct the operations of the day. If the day had +been lost, Miltiades, even though he had escaped death upon the field, +would have been totally and irretrievably ruined; but as it was won, +the result of the transaction was that he was raised to the highest +pinnacle of glory and renown. + +And yet in this, as in all similar cases, the question of success or +of failure depended upon causes wholly beyond the reach of human +foresight or control. The military commander who acts in such +contingencies is compelled to stake every thing dear to him on results +which are often as purely hazardous as the casting of a die. + +The influence of Miltiades in Athens after the Persian troops were +withdrawn was paramount and supreme. Finding himself in possession of +this ascendency, he began to form plans for other military +undertakings. It proved, in the end, that it would have been far +better for him to have been satisfied with the fame which he had +already acquired. + +Some of the islands in the Ægean Sea he considered as having taken +part with the Persians in the invasion, to such an extent, at least, +as to furnish him with a pretext for making war upon them. The one +which he had specially in view, in the first instance, was Paros. +Paros is a large and important island situated near the center of the +southern portion of the Ægean Sea. It is of an oval form, and is about +twelve miles long. The surface of the land is beautifully diversified +and very picturesque, while, at the same time, the soil is very +fertile. In the days of Miltiades, it was very wealthy and populous, +and there was a large city, called also Paros, on the western coast of +the island, near the sea. There is a modern town built upon the site +of the former city, which presents a very extraordinary appearance, as +the dwellings are formed, in a great measure, of materials obtained +from the ancient ruins. Marble columns, sculptured capitals, and +fragments of what were once magnificent entablatures, have been used +to construct plain walls, or laid in obscure and neglected +pavements--all, however, still retaining, notwithstanding their +present degradation, unequivocal marks of the nobleness of their +origin. The quarries where the ancient Parian marble was obtained were +situated on this island, not very far from the town. They remain to +the present day in the same state in which the ancient workmen left +them. + +In the time of Miltiades the island and the city of Paros were both +very wealthy and very powerful. Miltiades conceived the design of +making a descent upon the island, and levying an immense contribution +upon the people, in the form of a fine, for what he considered their +treason in taking part with the enemies of their countrymen. In order +to prevent the people of Paros from preparing for defense, Miltiades +intended to keep the object of his expedition secret for a time. He +therefore simply proposed to the Athenians that they should equip a +fleet and put it under his command. He had an enterprise in view, he +said, the nature of which he could not particularly explain, but he +was very confident of its success, and, if successful, he should +return, in a short time, laden with spoils which would enrich the +city, and amply reimburse the people for the expenses they would have +incurred. The force which he asked for was a fleet of seventy vessels. + +So great was the popularity and influence which Miltiades had acquired +by his victory at Marathon, that this somewhat extraordinary +proposition was readily complied with. The fleet was equipped, and +crews were provided, and the whole armament was placed under +Miltiades's command. The men themselves who were embarked on board of +the galleys did not know whither they were going. Miltiades promised +them victory and an abundance of gold as their reward; for the rest, +they must trust, he said, to him, as he could not explain the actual +destination of the enterprise without endangering its success. The +men were all satisfied with these conditions, and the fleet set sail. + +When it arrived on the coast of Paros, the Parians were, of course, +taken by surprise, but they made immediate preparations for a very +vigorous resistance. Miltiades commenced a siege, and sent a herald to +the city, demanding of them, as the price of their ransom, an immense +sum of money, saying, at the same time, that, unless they delivered up +that sum, or, at least, gave security for the payment of it, he would +not leave the place until the city was captured, and, when captured, +it should be wholly destroyed. The Parians rejected the demand, and +engaged energetically in the work of completing and strengthening +their defenses. They organized companies of workmen to labor during +the night, when their operations would not be observed, in building +new walls, and re-enforcing every weak or unguarded point in the line +of the fortifications. It soon appeared that the Parians were making +far more rapid progress in securing their position than Miltiades was +in his assaults upon it. Miltiades found that an attack upon a +fortified island in the Ægean Sea was a different thing from +encountering the undisciplined hordes of Persians on the open plains +of Marathon. There it was a contest between concentrated courage and +discipline on the one hand, and a vast expansion of pomp and parade on +the other; whereas now he found that the courage and discipline on his +part were met by an equally indomitable resolution on the part of his +opponents, guided, too, by an equally well-trained experience and +skill. In a word, it was Greek against Greek at Paros, and Miltiades +began at length to perceive that his prospect of success was growing +very doubtful and dim. + +This state of things, of course, filled the mind of Miltiades with +great anxiety and distress; for, after the promises which he had made +to the Athenians, and the blind confidence which he had asked of them +in proposing that they should commit the fleet so unconditionally to +his command, he could not return discomfited to Athens without +involving himself in the most absolute disgrace. While he was in this +perplexity, it happened that some of his soldiers took captive a +Parian female, one day, among other prisoners. She proved to be a +priestess, from one of the Parian temples. Her name was Timo. The +thought occurred to Miltiades that, since all human means at his +command had proved inadequate to accomplish his end, he might, +perhaps, through this captive priestess, obtain some superhuman aid. +As she had been in the service of a Parian temple, she would naturally +have an influence with the divinities of the place, or, at least, she +would be acquainted with the proper means of propitiating their favor. + +Miltiades, accordingly, held a private interview with Timo, and asked +her what he should do to propitiate the divinities of Paros so far as +to enable him to gain possession of the city. She replied that she +could easily point out the way, if he would but follow her +instructions. Miltiades, overjoyed, promised readily that he would do +so. She then gave him her instructions secretly. What they were is not +known, except so far as they were revealed by the occurrences that +followed. + +There was a temple consecrated to the goddess Ceres near to the city, +and so connected with it, it seems, as to be in some measure included +within the defenses. The approach to this temple was guarded by a +palisade. There were, however, gates which afforded access, except +when they were fastened from within. Miltiades, in obedience to Timo's +instructions, went privately, in the night, perhaps, and with very +few attendants, to this temple. He attempted to enter by the gates, +which he had expected, it seems, to find open. They were, however, +fastened against him. He then undertook to scale the palisade. He +succeeded in doing this, not, however, without difficulty, and then +advanced toward the temple, in obedience to the instructions which he +had received from Timo. The account states that the act, whatever it +was, that Timo had directed him to perform, instead of being, as he +supposed, a means of propitiating the favor of the divinity, was +sacrilegious and impious; and Miltiades, as he approached the temple, +was struck suddenly with a mysterious and dreadful horror of mind, +which wholly overwhelmed him. Rendered almost insane by this +supernatural remorse and terror, he turned to fly. He reached the +palisade, and, in endeavoring to climb over it, his precipitation and +haste caused him to fall. His attendants ran to take him up. He was +helpless and in great pain. They found he had dislocated a joint in +one of his limbs. He received, of course, every possible attention; +but, instead of recovering from the injury, he found that the +consequences of it became more and more serious every day. In a word, +the great conqueror of the Persians was now wholly overthrown, and lay +moaning on his couch as helpless as a child. + +He soon determined to abandon the siege of Paros and return to Athens. +He had been about a month upon the island, and had laid waste the +rural districts, but, as the city had made good its defense against +him, he returned without any of the rich spoil which he had promised. +The disappointment which the people of Athens experienced on his +arrival, turned soon into a feeling of hostility against the author of +the calamity. Miltiades found that the fame and honor which he had +gained at Marathon were gone. They had been lost almost as suddenly as +they had been acquired. The rivals and enemies who had been silenced +by his former success were now brought out and made clamorous against +him by his present failure. They attributed the failure to his own +mismanagement of the expedition, and one orator, at length, advanced +articles of impeachment against him, on a charge of having been bribed +by the Persians to make his siege of Paros only a feint. Miltiades +could not defend himself from these criminations, for he was lying, at +the time, in utter helplessness, upon his couch of pain. The +dislocation of the limb had ended in an open wound, which at length, +having resisted all the attempts of the physicians to stop its +progress, had begun to mortify, and the life of the sufferer was fast +ebbing away. His son Cimon did all in his power to save his father +from both the dangers that threatened him. He defended his character +in the public tribunals, and he watched over his person in the cell in +the prison. These filial efforts were, however, in both cases +unavailing. Miltiades was condemned by the tribunal, and he died of +his wound. + +The penalty exacted of him by the sentence was a very heavy fine. The +sum demanded was the amount which the expedition to Paros had cost the +city, and which, as it had been lost through the agency of Miltiades, +it was adjudged that he should refund. This sentence, as well as the +treatment in general which Miltiades received from his countrymen, has +been since considered by mankind as very unjust and cruel. It was, +however, only following out, somewhat rigidly, it is true, the +essential terms and conditions of a military career. It results from +principles inherent in the very nature of war, that we are never to +look for the ascendency of justice and humanity in any thing +pertaining to it. It is always power, and not right, that determines +possession; it is success, not merit, that gains honors and rewards; +and they who assent to the genius and spirit of military rule thus +far, must not complain if they find that, on the same principle, it is +failure and not crime which brings condemnation and destruction. + +When Miltiades was dead, Cimon found that he could not receive his +father's body for honorable interment unless he paid the fine. He had +no means, himself, of doing this. He succeeded, however, at length, in +raising the amount, by soliciting contributions from the family +friends of his father. He paid the fine into the city treasury, and +then the body of the hero was deposited in its long home. + +The Parians were at first greatly incensed against the priestess Timo, +as it seemed to them that she had intended to betray the city to +Miltiades. They wished to put her to death, but they did not dare to +do it. It might be considered an impious sacrilege to punish a +priestess. They accordingly sent to the oracle at Delphi to state the +circumstances of the case, and to inquire if they might lawfully put +the priestess to death. She had been guilty, they said, of pointing +out to an enemy the mode by which he might gain possession of their +city; and, what was worse, she had, in doing so, attempted to admit +him to those solemn scenes and mysteries in the temple which it was +not lawful for any man to behold. The oracle replied that the +priestess must not be punished, for she had done no wrong. It had been +decreed by the gods that Miltiades should be destroyed, and Timo had +been employed by them as the involuntary instrument of conducting him +to his fate. The people of Paros acquiesced in this decision, and Timo +was set free. + + * * * * * + +But to return to Darius. His desire to subdue the Greeks and to add +their country to his dominions, and his determination to accomplish +his purpose, were increased and strengthened, not diminished, by the +repulse which his army had met with at the first invasion. He was +greatly incensed against the Athenians, as if he considered their +courage and energy in defending their country an audacious outrage +against himself, and a crime. He resolved to organize a new +expedition, still greater and more powerful than the other. Of this +armament he determined to take the command himself in person, and to +make the preparations for it on a scale of such magnitude as that the +expedition should be worthy to be led by the great sovereign of half +the world. He accordingly transmitted orders to all the peoples, +nations, languages, and realms, in all his dominions, to raise their +respective quotas of troops, horses, ships, and munitions of war, and +prepare to assemble at such place of rendezvous as he should designate +when all should be ready. + +Some years elapsed before these arrangements were matured, and when at +last the time seemed to have arrived for carrying his plans into +effect, he deemed it necessary, before he commenced his march, to +settle the succession of his kingdom; for he had several sons, who +might each claim the throne, and involve the empire in disastrous +civil wars in attempting to enforce their claims, in case he should +never return. The historians say that there was a law of Persia +forbidding the sovereign to leave the realm without previously fixing +upon a successor. It is difficult to see, however, by what power or +authority such a law could have been enacted, or to believe that +monarchs like Darius would recognize an abstract obligation to law of +any kind, in respect to their own political action. There is a +species of law regulating the ordinary dealings between man and man, +that springs up in all communities, whether savage or civilized, from +custom, and from the action of judicial tribunals, which the most +despotic and absolute sovereigns feel themselves bound, so far as +relates to the private affairs of their subjects, to respect and +uphold; but, in regard to their own personal and governmental acts and +measures, they very seldom know any other authority than the impulses +of their own sovereign will. + +Darius had several sons, among whom there were two who claimed the +right to succeed their father on the throne. One was the oldest son of +a wife whom Darius had married before he became king. His name was +Artobazanes. The other was the son of Atossa, the daughter of Cyrus, +whom Darius had married _after_ his accession to the throne. His name +was Xerxes. Artobazanes claimed that he was entitled to be his +father's heir, since he was his oldest son. Xerxes, on the other hand, +maintained that, at the period of the birth of Artobazanes, Darius was +not a king. He was then in a private station, and sons could properly +inherit only what their fathers possessed at the time when they were +born. He himself, on the other hand, was the oldest son which his +father had had, _being a king_, and he was, consequently, the true +inheritor of the kingdom. Besides, being the son of Atossa, he was the +grandson of Cyrus, and the hereditary rights, therefore, of that great +founder of the empire had descended to him. + +Darius decided the question in favor of Xerxes, and then made +arrangements for commencing his march, with a mind full of the elation +and pride which were awakened by the grandeur of his position and the +magnificence of his schemes. These schemes, however, he did not live +to execute. He suddenly fell sick and died, just as he was ready to +set out upon his expedition, and Xerxes, his son, reigned in his +stead. + +Xerxes immediately took command of the vast preparations which his +father had made, and went on with the prosecution of the enterprise. +The expedition which followed deserves, probably, in respect to the +numbers engaged in it, the distance which it traversed, the +immenseness of the expenses involved, and the magnitude of its +results, to be considered the greatest military undertaking which +human ambition and power have ever attempted to effect. The narrative, +however, both of its splendid adventures and of its ultimate fate, +belongs to the history of Xerxes. + +The greatness of Darius was the greatness of position and not of +character. He was the absolute sovereign of nearly half the world, +and, as such, was held up very conspicuously to the attention of +mankind, who gaze with a strong feeling of admiration and awe upon +these vast elevations of power, as they do upon the summits of +mountains, simply because they are high. Darius performed no great +exploit, and he accomplished no great object while he lived; and he +did not even leave behind him any strong impressions of personal +character. There is in his history, and in the position which he +occupies in the minds of men, greatness without dignity, success +without merit, vast and long-continued power without effects +accomplished or objects gained, and universal and perpetual renown +without honor or applause. The world admire Cæsar, Hannibal, +Alexander, Alfred, and Napoleon for the deeds which they performed. +They admire Darius only on account of the elevation on which he stood. +In the same lofty position, they would have admired, probably, just as +much, the very horse whose neighing placed him there. + + THE END. + + + + +TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES + +1. Minor changes have been made to correct typesetters' errors, and to +ensure consistent spelling and punctuation in this etext; otherwise, +every effort has been made to remain true to the original book. + +2. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Darius the Great + Makers of History + +Author: Jacob Abbott + +Release Date: January 13, 2009 [EBook #27802] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DARIUS THE GREAT *** + + + + +Produced by D Alexander and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was +produced from images generously made available by The +Internet Archive) + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<h2> Makers of History</h2> + +<h1> Darius the Great</h1> + +<h3> BY</h3> + +<h2> JACOB ABBOTT</h2> + +<p class="center">WITH ENGRAVINGS</p> + +<p class="gap"> </p> + +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 124px;"> +<img src="images/i001.jpg" width="124" height="150" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<p class="smallgap"> </p> + +<p class="center">NEW YORK AND LONDON</p> + +<p class="center">HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS</p> + +<p class="center">1904 +</p> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p class="center">Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year one thousand<br /> +eight hundred and fifty, by</p> + +<p class="center" ><span class="smcap">Harper & Brothers</span>,</p> + +<p class="center">in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District<br /> +of New York.</p> + +<p class="center">Copyright, 1878, by <span class="smcap">Jacob Abbott</span>.</p> + +<hr class="large" /> +<p><a name="Frontispiece" id="Frontispiece"></a></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/i003.jpg" class="jpg3" width="500" height="288" alt="Darius crossing the Bosporus." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Darius crossing the Bosporus.</span></span></div> + +<hr class="large" /> +<h2><a name="PREFACE" id="PREFACE"></a>PREFACE.</h2> + +<p>In describing the character and the action of the personages whose +histories form the subjects of this series, the writer makes no +attempt to darken the colors in which he depicts their deeds of +violence and wrong, or to increase, by indignant denunciations, the +obloquy which heroes and conquerors have so often brought upon +themselves, in the estimation of mankind, by their ambition, their +tyranny, or their desperate and reckless crimes. In fact, it seems +desirable to diminish, rather than to increase, the spirit of +censoriousness which often leads men so harshly to condemn the errors +and sins of others, committed in circumstances of temptation to which +they themselves were never exposed. Besides, to denounce or vituperate +guilt, in a narrative of the transactions in which it was displayed, +has little influence in awakening a healthy sensitiveness in the +conscience of the reader. We observe, accordingly, that in the +narratives of the sacred Scriptures, such denunciations are seldom +found. The story of Absalom's undutifulness and rebellion, of David's +adultery and murder, of Herod's tyranny, and all other narratives of +crime, are related in a calm, simple, impartial, and forbearing +spirit, which leads us to condemn the sins, but not to feel a +pharisaical resentment and wrath against the sinner.</p> + +<p>This example, so obviously proper and right, the writer of this series +has made it his endeavor in all respects to follow.</p> + +<hr class="large" /> +<h2><a name="CONTENTS" id="CONTENTS"></a>CONTENTS.</h2> + +<div class="centered"> +<table border="0" width="70%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="1" summary="CONTENTS"> + +<tr> +<td align="right">Chapter</td> +<td align="left"> </td> +<td align="right">Page</td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="right">I.</td> +<td align="left">CAMBYSES</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#DARIUS_THE_GREAT">13</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="right">II.</td> +<td align="left">THE END OF CAMBYSES</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Chapter_II">38</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="right">III.</td> +<td align="left">SMERDIS THE MAGIAN</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Chapter_III">59</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="right">IV.</td> +<td align="left">THE ACCESSION OF DARIUS</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Chapter_IV">82</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="right">V.</td> +<td align="left">THE PROVINCES</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Chapter_V">99</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="right">VI.</td> +<td align="left">THE RECONNOITERING OF GREECE</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Chapter_VI">123</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="right">VII.</td> +<td align="left">THE REVOLT OF BABYLON</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Chapter_VII">144</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="right">VIII.</td> +<td align="left">THE INVASION OF SCYTHIA</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Chapter_VIII">167</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="right">IX.</td> +<td align="left">THE RETREAT FROM SCYTHIA</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Chapter_IX">189</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="right">X.</td> +<td align="left">THE STORY OF HISTIÆUS</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Chapter_X">210</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="right">XI.</td> +<td align="left">THE INVASION OF GREECE</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Chapter_XI">233</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="right">XII.</td> +<td align="left">THE DEATH OF DARIUS</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Chapter_XII">264</a></td></tr> +</table></div> + +<hr class="large" /> +<h2><a name="ENGRAVINGS" id="ENGRAVINGS"></a>ENGRAVINGS.</h2> + +<div class="centered"> +<table border="0" width="70%" cellpadding="2" cellspacing="1" summary="ENGRAVINGS"> + +<tr> +<td align="left"> </td> +<td align="right">Page</td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left"><a href="#Empire">MAP</a> OF THE PERSIAN EMPIRE</td> +<td align="right"> </td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">DARIUS CROSSING THE BOSPORUS</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Frontispiece"><i>Frontispiece.</i></a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">THE ARMY OF CAMBYSES OVERWHELMED IN THE DESERT</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_35">35</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">PHÆDYMA FEELING FOR SMERDIS'S EARS</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_69">69</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">THE INDIAN GOLD HUNTERS</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_121">121</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">THE BABYLONIANS DERIDING DARIUS FROM THE WALL</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_156">156</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">MAP OF GREECE</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_232">232</a></td></tr> + +<tr> +<td align="left">THE INVASION OF GREECE</td> +<td align="right"><a href="#Page_256">256</a></td></tr> +</table></div> + +<hr class="large" /> + +<p><a name="Empire" id="Empire"> </a></p> +<div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/i010.jpg" class="jpg2" width="500" height="297" alt="" title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="DARIUS_THE_GREAT" id="DARIUS_THE_GREAT"></a>DARIUS THE GREAT</h2> + +<h2><a name="Chapter_I" id="Chapter_I"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter I.</span></h2> + +<h2><span class="smcap">Cambyses.</span></h2> + +<h3>B.C. 530-524</h3> + +<div class="sidenote">Cyrus the Great.</div> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:50px;line-height:32px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">A</span><span style="margin-left:0%;">bout</span> five or six hundred years before Christ, almost the whole of the +interior of Asia was united in one vast empire. The founder of this +empire was Cyrus the Great. He was originally a Persian; and the whole +empire is often called the Persian monarchy, taking its name from its +founder's native land.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His extended conquests.</div> + +<p>Cyrus was not contented with having annexed to his dominion all the +civilized states of Asia. In the latter part of his life, he conceived +the idea that there might possibly be some additional glory and power +to be acquired in subduing certain half-savage regions in the north, +beyond the Araxes. He accordingly raised an army, and set off on an +expedition for this purpose, against a country which was governed by a +barbarian queen named Tomyris. He met with a variety of adventures on +this <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</a></span>expedition, all of which are fully detailed in our history of +Cyrus. There is, however, only one occurrence that it is necessary to +allude to particularly here. That one relates to a remarkable dream +which he had one night, just after he had crossed the river.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Cambyses and Smerdis.<br />Hystaspes and Darius.</div> + +<p>To explain properly the nature of this dream, it is necessary first to +state that Cyrus had two sons. Their names were Cambyses and Smerdis. +He had left them in Persia when he set out on his expedition across +the Araxes. There was also a young man, then about twenty years of +age, in one of his capitals, named Darius. He was the son of one of +the nobles of Cyrus's court. His father's name was Hystaspes. +Hystaspes, besides being a noble of the court, was also, as almost all +nobles were in those days, an officer of the army. He accompanied +Cyrus in his march into the territories of the barbarian queen, and +was with him there, in camp, at the time when this narrative +commences.</p> + +<p>Cyrus, it seems, felt some misgivings in respect to the result of his +enterprise; and, in order to insure the tranquillity of his empire +during his absence, and the secure transmission of his power to his +rightful successor in case he should never return, he established his +son Cambyses <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</a></span>as regent of his realms before he crossed the Araxes, +and delivered the government of the empire, with great formality, into +his hands. This took place upon the frontier, just before the army +passed the river. The mind of a father, under such circumstances, +would naturally be occupied, in some degree, with thoughts relating to +the arrangements which his son would make, and to the difficulties he +would be likely to encounter in managing the momentous concerns which +had been committed to his charge. The mind of Cyrus was undoubtedly so +occupied, and this, probably, was the origin of the remarkable dream.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Dream of Cyrus.<br />His anxiety and fears.</div> + +<p>His dream was, that Darius appeared to him in a vision, with vast +wings growing from his shoulders. Darius stood, in the vision, on the +confines of Europe and Asia, and his wings, expanded either way, +overshadowed the whole known world. When Cyrus awoke and reflected on +this ominous dream, it seemed to him to portend some great danger to +the future security of his empire. It appeared to denote that Darius +was one day to bear sway over all the world. Perhaps he might be even +then forming ambitious and treasonable designs. Cyrus immediately sent +for Hystaspes, the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</a></span>father of Darius; when he came to his tent, he +commanded him to go back to Persia, and keep a strict watch over the +conduct of his son until he himself should return. Hystaspes received +this commission, and departed to execute it; and Cyrus, somewhat +relieved, perhaps, of his anxiety by this measure of precaution, went +on with his army toward his place of destination.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Accession of Cambyses.</div> + +<p>Cyrus never returned. He was killed in battle; and it would seem that, +though the import of his dream was ultimately fulfilled, Darius was +not, at that time, meditating any schemes of obtaining possession of +the throne, for he made no attempt to interfere with the regular +transmission of the imperial power from Cyrus to Cambyses his son. At +any rate, it was so transmitted. The tidings of Cyrus's death came to +the capital, and Cambyses, his son, reigned in his stead.</p> + +<div class="sidenote3">War with Egypt.</div> + +<p>The great event of the reign of Cambyses was a war with Egypt, which +originated in the following very singular manner:</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Origin of the war with Egypt.<br />Ophthalmia.</div> + +<p>It has been found, in all ages of the world, that there is some +peculiar quality of the soil, or climate, or atmosphere of Egypt which +tends to produce an inflammation of the eyes. The inhabitants +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</a></span>themselves have at all times been very subject to this disease, and +foreign armies marching into the country are always very seriously +affected by it. Thousands of soldiers in such armies are sometimes +disabled from this cause, and many are made incurably blind. Now a +country which produces a disease in its worst form and degree, will +produce also, generally, the best physicians for that disease. At any +rate, this was supposed to be the case in ancient times; and +accordingly, when any powerful potentate in those days was afflicted +himself with ophthalmia, or had such a case in his family, Egypt was +the country to send to for a physician.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Egyptian physician.</div> + +<p>Now it happened that Cyrus himself, at one time in the course of his +life, was attacked with this disease, and he dispatched an embassador +to Amasis, who was then king of Egypt, asking him to send him a +physician. Amasis, who, like all the other absolute sovereigns of +those days, regarded his subjects as slaves that were in all respects +entirely at his disposal, selected a physician of distinction from +among the attendants about his court, and ordered him to repair to +Persia. The physician was extremely reluctant to go. He had a wife and +family, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</a></span>from whom he was very unwilling to be separated; but the +orders were imperative, and he must obey. He set out on the journey, +therefore, but he secretly resolved to devise some mode of revenging +himself on the king for the cruelty of sending him.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His plan of revenge.</div> + +<p>He was well received by Cyrus, and, either by his skill as a +physician, or from other causes, he acquired great influence at the +Persian court. At last he contrived a mode of revenging himself on the +Egyptian king for having exiled him from his native land. The king had +a daughter, who was a lady of great beauty. Her father was very +strongly attached to her. The physician recommended to Cyrus to send +to Amasis and demand this daughter in marriage. As, however, Cyrus was +already married, the Egyptian princess would, if she came, be his +concubine rather than his wife, or, if considered a wife, it could +only be a secondary and subordinate place that she could occupy. The +physician knew that, under these circumstances, the King of Egypt +would be extremely unwilling to send her to Cyrus, while he would yet +scarcely dare to refuse; and the hope of plunging him into extreme +embarrassment and distress, by means of such a demand from so powerful +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</a></span>a sovereign, was the motive which led the physician to recommend the +measure.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Demand of Cyrus.</div> + +<p>Cyrus was pleased with the proposal, and sent, accordingly, to make +the demand. The king, as the physician had anticipated, could not +endure to part with his daughter in such a way, nor did he, on the +other hand, dare to incur the displeasure of so powerful a monarch by +a direct and open refusal. He finally resolved upon escaping from the +difficulty by a stratagem.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Stratagem of the King of Egypt.</div> + +<p>There was a young and beautiful captive princess in his court named +Nitetis. Her father, whose name was Apries, had been formerly the King +of Egypt, but he had been dethroned and killed by Amasis. Since the +downfall of her family, Nitetis had been a captive; but, as she was +very beautiful and very accomplished, Amasis conceived the design of +sending her to Cyrus, under the pretense that she was the daughter +whom Cyrus had demanded. He accordingly brought her forth, provided +her with the most costly and splendid dresses, loaded her with +presents, ordered a large retinue to attend her, and sent her forth to +Persia.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Resentment of Cassandane.<br />Threats of Cambyses.</div> + +<p>Cyrus was at first very much pleased with his new bride. Nitetis +became, in fact, his principal favorite; though, of course, his other +wife, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</a></span>whose name was Cassandane, and her children, Cambyses and +Smerdis, were jealous of her, and hated her. One day, a Persian lady +was visiting at the court, and as she was standing near Cassandane, +and saw her two sons, who were then tall and handsome young men, she +expressed her admiration of them, and said to Cassandane, "How proud +and happy you must be!" "No," said Cassandane; "on the contrary, I am +very miserable; for, though I am the mother of these children, the +king neglects and despises me. All his kindness is bestowed on this +Egyptian woman." Cambyses, who heard this conversation, sympathized +deeply with Cassandane in her resentment. "Mother," said he, "be +patient, and I will avenge you. As soon as I am king, I will go to +Egypt and turn the whole country upside down."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Future conquests.</div> + +<p>In fact, the tendency which there was in the mind of Cambyses to look +upon Egypt as the first field of war and conquest for him, so soon as +he should succeed to the throne, was encouraged by the influence of +his father; for Cyrus, although he was much captivated by the charms +of the lady whom the King of Egypt had sent him, was greatly incensed +against the king for having practiced upon him such a deception. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</a></span>Besides, all the important countries in Asia were already included +within the Persian dominions. It was plain that if any future progress +were to be made in extending the empire, the regions of Europe and +Africa must be the theatre of it. Egypt seemed the most accessible and +vulnerable point beyond the confines of Asia; and thus, though Cyrus +himself, being advanced somewhat in years, and interested, moreover, +in other projects, was not prepared to undertake an enterprise into +Africa himself, he was very willing that such plans should be +cherished by his son.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Temperament and character of Cambyses.<br />Impetuosity of Cambyses.</div> + +<p>Cambyses was an ardent, impetuous, and self-willed boy, such as the +sons of rich and powerful men are very apt to become. They imbibe, by +a sort of sympathy, the ambitious and aspiring spirit of their +fathers; and as all their childish caprices and passions are generally +indulged, they never learn to submit to control. They become vain, +self-conceited, reckless, and cruel. The conqueror who founds an +empire, although even his character generally deteriorates very +seriously toward the close of his career, still usually knows +something of moderation and generosity. His son, however, who inherits +his father's power, seldom inherits <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</a></span>the virtues by which the power +was acquired. These truths, which we see continually exemplified all +around us, on a small scale, in the families of the wealthy and the +powerful, were illustrated most conspicuously, in the view of all +mankind, in the case of Cyrus and Cambyses. The father was prudent, +cautious, wise, and often generous and forbearing. The son grew up +headstrong, impetuous, uncontrolled, and uncontrollable. He had the +most lofty ideas of his own greatness and power, and he felt a supreme +contempt for the rights, and indifference to the happiness of all the +world besides. His history gives us an illustration of the worst which +the principle of hereditary sovereignty can do, as the best is +exemplified in the case of Alfred of England.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Preparations for the Egyptian war.</div> + +<p>Cambyses, immediately after his father's death, began to make +arrangements for the Egyptian invasion. The first thing to be +determined was the mode of transporting his armies thither. Egypt is a +long and narrow valley, with the rocks and deserts of Arabia on one +side, and those of Sahara on the other. There is no convenient mode of +access to it except by sea, and Cambyses had no naval force sufficient +for a maritime expedition.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">Desertion of Phanes.<br />His narrow escape.</div> + +<p>While he was revolving the subject in his mind, there arrived in his +capital of Susa, where he was then residing, a deserter from the army +of Amasis in Egypt. The name of this deserter was Phanes. He was a +Greek, having been the commander of a body of Greek troops who were +employed by Amasis as auxiliaries in his army. He had had a quarrel +with Amasis, and had fled to Persia, intending to join Cambyses in the +expedition which he was contemplating, in order to revenge himself on +the Egyptian king. Phanes said, in telling his story, that he had had +a very narrow escape from Egypt; for, as soon as Amasis had heard that +he had fled, he dispatched one of his swiftest vessels, a galley of +three banks of oars, in hot pursuit of the fugitive. The galley +overtook the vessel in which Phanes had taken passage just as it was +landing in Asia Minor. The Egyptian officers seized it and made Phanes +prisoner. They immediately began to make their preparations for the +return voyage, putting Phanes, in the mean time, under the charge of +guards, who were instructed to keep him very safely. Phanes, however, +cultivated a good understanding with his guards, and presently invited +them to drink wine with him. In the end, he got them intoxicated, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</a></span>and +while they were in that state he made his escape from them, and then, +traveling with great secrecy and caution until he was beyond their +reach, he succeeded in making his way to Cambyses in Susa.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Information given by Phanes.<br />Treaty with the Arabian king.</div> + +<p>Phanes gave Cambyses a great deal of information in respect to the +geography of Egypt, the proper points of attack, the character and +resources of the king, and communicated, likewise, a great many other +particulars which it was very important that Cambyses should know. He +recommended that Cambyses should proceed to Egypt by land, through +Arabia; and that, in order to secure a safe passage, he should send +first to the King of the Arabs, by a formal embassy, asking permission +to cross his territories with an army, and engaging the Arabians to +aid him, if possible, in the transit. Cambyses did this. The Arabs +were very willing to join in any projected hostilities against the +Egyptians; they offered Cambyses a free passage, and agreed to aid his +army on their march. To the faithful fulfillment of these stipulations +the Arab chief bound himself by a treaty, executed with the most +solemn forms and ceremonies.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Plan for providing water.<br />Account of Herodotus.</div> + +<p>The great difficulty to be encountered in traversing the deserts which +Cambyses would <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</a></span>have to cross on his way to Egypt was the want of +water. To provide for this necessity, the king of the Arabs sent a +vast number of camels into the desert, laden with great sacks or bags +full of water. These camels were sent forward just before the army of +Cambyses came on, and they deposited their supplies along the route at +the points where they would be most needed. Herodotus, the Greek +traveler, who made a journey into Egypt not a great many years after +these transactions, and who wrote subsequently a full description of +what he saw and heard there, gives an account of another method by +which the Arab king was said to have conveyed water into the desert, +and that was by a canal or pipe, made of the skins of oxen, which he +laid along the ground, from a certain river of his dominions, to a +distance of twelve days' journey over the sands! This story Herodotus +says he did not believe, though elsewhere in the course of his history +he gravely relates, as true history, a thousand tales infinitely more +improbable than the idea of a leathern pipe or hose like this to serve +for a conduit of water.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">A great battle.<br />Defeat of the Egyptians.</div> + +<p>By some means or other, at all events, the Arab chief provided +supplies of water in the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">[Pg 26]</a></span>desert for Cambyses's army, and the troops +made the passage safely. They arrived, at length, on the frontiers of +Egypt.<a name="FNanchor_A_1" id="FNanchor_A_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_A_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> Here they found that Amasis, the king, was dead, and +Psammenitus, his son, had succeeded him. Psammenitus came forward to +meet the invaders. A great battle was fought. The Egyptians were +routed. Psammenitus fled up the Nile to the city of Memphis, taking +with him such broken remnants of his army as he could get together +after the battle, and feeling extremely incensed and exasperated +against the invader. In fact, Cambyses had now no excuse or pretext +whatever for waging such a war against Egypt. The monarch who had +deceived his father was dead, and there had never been any cause of +complaint against his son or against the Egyptian people. Psammenitus, +therefore, regarded the invasion of Egypt by Cambyses as a wanton and +wholly unjustifiable aggression, and he determined, in his own mind, +that such invaders deserved no mercy, and that he would show them +none. Soon after this, a galley on the river, belonging to Cambyses, +containing a crew <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[Pg 27]</a></span>of two hundred men, fell into his hands. The +Egyptians, in their rage, tore these Persians all to pieces. This +exasperated Cambyses in his turn, and the war went on, attended by the +most atrocious cruelties on both sides.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Inhuman conduct of Cambyses.</div> + +<p>In fact, Cambyses, in this Egyptian campaign, pursued such a career of +inhuman and reckless folly, that people at last considered him insane. +He began with some small semblance of moderation, but he proceeded, in +the end, to the perpetration of the most terrible excesses of violence +and wrong.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His treatment of Psammenitus.<br />The train of captive maidens.</div> + +<p>As to his moderation, his treatment of Psammenitus personally is +almost the only instance that we can record. In the course of the war, +Psammenitus and all his family fell into Cambyses's hands as captives. +A few days afterward, Cambyses conducted the unhappy king without the +gates of the city to exhibit a spectacle to him. The spectacle was +that of his beloved daughter, clothed in the garments of a slave, and +attended by a company of other maidens, the daughters of the nobles +and other persons of distinction belonging to his court, all going +down to the river, with heavy jugs, to draw water. The fathers of all +these hapless maidens had been brought out with Psammenitus <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[Pg 28]</a></span>to +witness the degradation and misery of their children. The maidens +cried and sobbed aloud as they went along, overwhelmed with shame and +terror. Their fathers manifested the utmost agitation and distress. +Cambyses stood smiling by, highly enjoying the spectacle. Psammenitus +alone appeared unmoved. He gazed on the scene silent, motionless, and +with a countenance which indicated no active suffering; he seemed to +be in a state of stupefaction and despair. Cambyses was disappointed, +and his pleasure was marred at finding that his victim did not feel +more acutely the sting of the torment with which he was endeavoring to +goad him.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The young men.<br />Scenes of distress and suffering.<br />Composure of Psammenitus.</div> + +<p>When this train had gone by, another came. It was a company of young +men, with halters about their necks, going to execution. Cambyses had +ordered that for every one of the crew of his galley that the +Egyptians had killed, ten Egyptians should be executed. This +proportion would require two thousand victims, as there had been two +hundred in the crew. These victims were to be selected from among the +sons of the leading families; and their parents, after having seen +their delicate and gentle daughters go to their servile toil, were now +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[Pg 29]</a></span>next to behold their sons march in a long and terrible array to +execution. The son of Psammenitus was at the head of the column. The +Egyptian parents who stood around Psammenitus wept and lamented aloud, +as one after another saw his own child in the train. Psammenitus +himself, however, remained as silent and motionless, and with a +countenance as vacant as before. Cambyses was again disappointed. The +pleasure which the exhibition afforded him was incomplete without +visible manifestations of suffering in the victim for whose torture it +was principally designed.</p> + +<p>After this train of captives had passed, there came a mixed collection +of wretched and miserable men, such as the siege and sacking of a city +always produces in countless numbers. Among these was a venerable man +whom Psammenitus recognized as one of his friends. He had been a man +of wealth and high station; he had often been at the court of the +king, and had been entertained at his table. He was now, however, +reduced to the last extremity of distress, and was begging of the +people something to keep him from starving. The sight of this man in +such a condition seemed to awaken the king from his blank and +death-like despair. He <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[Pg 30]</a></span>called his old friend by name in a tone of +astonishment and pity, and burst into tears.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Feelings of the father.<br />His explanation of them.</div> + +<p>Cambyses, observing this, sent a messenger to Psammenitus to inquire +what it meant. "He wishes to know," said the messenger, "how it +happens that you could see your own daughter set at work as a slave, +and your son led away to execution unmoved, and yet feel so much +commiseration for the misfortunes of a stranger." We might suppose +that any one possessing the ordinary susceptibilities of the human +soul would have understood without an explanation the meaning of this, +though it is not surprising that such a heartless monster as Cambyses +did not comprehend it. Psammenitus sent him word that he could not +help weeping for his friend, but that his distress and anguish on +account of his children were too great for tears.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Cambyses relents.</div> + +<p>The Persians who were around Cambyses began now to feel a strong +sentiment of compassion for the unhappy king, and to intercede with +Cambyses in his favor. They begged him, too, to spare Psammenitus's +son. It will interest those of our readers who have perused our +history of Cyrus to know that Crœsus, the captive king of Lydia, +whom they will recollect <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[Pg 31]</a></span>to have been committed to Cambyses's charge +by his father, just before the close of his life, when he was setting +forth on his last fatal expedition, and who accompanied Cambyses on +this invasion of Egypt, was present on this occasion, and was one of +the most earnest interceders in Psammenitus's favor. Cambyses allowed +himself to be persuaded. They sent off a messenger to order the +execution of the king's son to be stayed; but he arrived too late. The +unhappy prince had already fallen. Cambyses was so far appeased by the +influence of these facts, that he abstained from doing Psammenitus or +his family any further injury.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His treatment of the body of Amasis.</div> + +<p>He, however, advanced up the Nile, ravaging and plundering the country +as he went on, and at length, in the course of his conquests, he +gained possession of the tomb in which the embalmed body of Amasis was +deposited. He ordered this body to be taken out of its sarcophagus, +and treated with every mark of ignominy. His soldiers, by his orders, +beat it with rods, as if it could still feel, and goaded it, and cut +it with swords. They pulled the hair out of the head by the roots, and +loaded the lifeless form with every conceivable mark of insult and +ignominy. Finally, Cambyses ordered the mutilated <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[Pg 32]</a></span>remains that were +left to be burned, which was a procedure as abhorrent to the ideas and +feelings of the Egyptians as could possibly be devised.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Cambyses's desecrations.<br />The sacred bull Apis.</div> + +<p>Cambyses took every opportunity to insult the religious, or as, +perhaps, we ought to call them, the superstitious feelings of the +Egyptians. He broke into their temples, desecrated their altars, and +subjected every thing which they held most sacred to insult and +ignominy. Among their objects of religious veneration was the sacred +bull called Apis. This animal was selected from time to time, from the +country at large, by the priests, by means of certain marks which they +pretended to discover upon its body, and which indicated a divine and +sacred character. The sacred bull thus found was kept in a magnificent +temple, and attended and fed in a most sumptuous manner. In serving +him, the attendants used vessels of gold.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Cambyses stabs the sacred bull.</div> + +<p>Cambyses arrived at the city where Apis was kept at a time when the +priests were celebrating some sacred occasion with festivities and +rejoicings. He was himself then returning from an unsuccessful +expedition which he had made, and, as he entered the town, stung with +vexation and anger at his defeat, the gladness and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[Pg 33]</a></span>joy which the +Egyptians manifested in their ceremonies served only to irritate him, +and to make him more angry than ever. He killed the priests who were +officiating. He then demanded to be taken into the edifice to see the +sacred animal, and there, after insulting the feelings of the +worshipers in every possible way by ridicule and scornful words, he +stabbed the innocent bull with his dagger. The animal died of the +wound, and the whole country was filled with horror and indignation. +The people believed that this deed would most assuredly bring down +upon the impious perpetrator of it the judgments of heaven.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His mad expeditions.<br />The sand storm.</div> + +<p>Cambyses organized, while he was in Egypt, several mad expeditions +into the surrounding countries. In a fit of passion, produced by an +unsatisfactory answer to an embassage, he set off suddenly, and +without any proper preparation, to march into Ethiopia. The provisions +of his army were exhausted before he had performed a fifth part of the +march. Still, in his infatuation, he determined to go on. The soldiers +subsisted for a time on such vegetables as they could find by the way; +when these failed, they slaughtered and ate their beasts of burden; +and finally, in the extremity of their famine, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">[Pg 34]</a></span>they began to kill and +devour one another; then, at length, Cambyses concluded to return. He +sent off, too, at one time, a large army across the desert toward the +Temple of Jupiter Ammon, without any of the necessary precautions for +such a march. This army never reached their destination, and they +never returned. The people of the Oasis said that they were overtaken +by a sand storm in the desert, and were all overwhelmed.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">[Pg 35-6]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/i033.jpg" class="ispace jpg3" width="500" height="292" alt="The Army of Cambyses overwhelmed in the Desert." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Army of Cambyses overwhelmed in the Desert.</span></span></div> + +<div class="sidenote2">Cambyses a wine-bibber.<br />Brutal act of Cambyses.</div> + +<p>There was a certain officer in attendance on Cambyses named Prexaspes. +He was a sort of confidential friend and companion of the king; and +his son, who was a fair, and graceful, and accomplished youth, was the +king's cup-bearer, which was an office of great consideration and +honor. One day Cambyses asked Prexaspes what the Persians generally +thought of him. Prexaspes replied that they thought and spoke well of +him in all respects but one. The king wished to know what the +exception was. Prexaspes rejoined, that it was the general opinion +that he was too much addicted to wine. Cambyses was offended at this +reply; and, under the influence of the feeling, so wholly unreasonable +and absurd, which so often leads men to be angry with the innocent +medium <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">[Pg 37]</a></span>through which there comes to them any communication which they do not +like, he determined to punish Prexaspes for his freedom. He ordered +his son, therefore, the cup-bearer, to take his place against the wall +on the other side of the room. "Now," said he, "I will put what the +Persians say to the test." As he said this, he took up a bow and arrow +which were at his side, and began to fit the arrow to the string. +"If," said he, "I do not shoot him exactly through the heart, it shall +prove that the Persians are right. If I do, then they are wrong, as it +will show that I do not drink so much as to make my hand unsteady." So +saying, he drew the bow, the arrow flew through the air and pierced +the poor boy's breast. He fell, and Cambyses coolly ordered the +attendants to open the body, and let Prexaspes see whether the arrow +had not gone through the heart.</p> + +<div class="sidenote3">He is deemed insane.</div> + +<p>These, and a constant succession of similar acts of atrocious and +reckless cruelty and folly, led the world to say that Cambyses was +insane.</p> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">[Pg 38]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="Chapter_II" id="Chapter_II"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter II.</span></h2> + +<h2><span class="smcap">The End of Cambyses.</span></h2> + +<h3>B.C. 523-522</h3> + +<div class="sidenote">Cambyses's profligate conduct.<br />He marries his own sisters.</div> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:50px;line-height:32px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">A</span><span style="margin-left:0%;">mong</span> the other acts of profligate wickedness which have blackened +indelibly and forever Cambyses's name, he married two of his own +sisters, and brought one of them with him to Egypt as his wife. The +natural instincts of all men, except those whose early life has been +given up to the most shameless and dissolute habits of vice, are +sufficient to preserve them from such crimes as these. Cambyses +himself felt, it seems, some misgivings when contemplating the first +of these marriages; and he sent to a certain council of judges, whose +province it was to interpret the laws, asking them their opinion of +the rightfulness of such a marriage. Kings ask the opinion of their +legal advisers in such cases, not because they really wish to know +whether the act in question is right or wrong, but because, having +themselves determined upon the performance of it, they wish their +counselors to give it a sort of legal sanction, in order to justify +the deed, and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">[Pg 39]</a></span>diminish the popular odium which it might otherwise +incur.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Consultation of the Persian judges.<br />Their opinion.</div> + +<p>The Persian judges whom Cambyses consulted on this occasion understood +very well what was expected of them. After a grave deliberation, they +returned answer to the king that, though they could find no law +allowing a man to marry his sister, they found many which authorized a +king of Persia to do whatever he thought best. Cambyses accordingly +carried his plan into execution. He married first the older sister, +whose name was Atossa. Atossa became subsequently a personage of great +historical distinction. The daughter of Cyrus, the wife of Darius, and +the mother of Xerxes, she was the link that bound together the three +most magnificent potentates of the whole Eastern world. How far these +sisters were willing participators in the guilt of their incestuous +marriages we can not now know. The one who went with Cambyses into +Egypt was of a humane, and gentle, and timid disposition, being in +these respects wholly unlike her brother; and it may be that she +merely yielded, in the transaction of her marriage, to her brother's +arbitrary and imperious will.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Smerdis.<br />Jealousy of Cambyses.<br />The two magi.</div> + +<p>Besides this sister, Cambyses had brought <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</a></span>his brother Smerdis with +him into Egypt. Smerdis was younger than Cambyses, but he was superior +to him in strength and personal accomplishments. Cambyses was very +jealous of this superiority. He did not dare to leave his brother in +Persia, to manage the government in his stead during his absence, lest +he should take advantage of the temporary power thus committed to his +hands, and usurp the throne altogether. He decided, therefore, to +bring Smerdis with him into Egypt, and to leave the government of the +state in the hands of a regency composed of two <i>magi</i>. These magi +were public officers of distinction, but, having no hereditary claims +to the crown, Cambyses thought there would be little danger of their +attempting to usurp it. It happened, however, that the name of one of +these magi was Smerdis. This coincidence between the magian's name and +that of the prince led, in the end, as will presently be seen, to very +important consequences.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Cambyses suspicious.</div> + +<p>The uneasiness and jealousy which Cambyses felt in respect to his +brother was not wholly allayed by the arrangement which he thus made +for keeping him in his army, and so under his own personal observation +and command. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</a></span>Smerdis evinced, on various occasions, so much strength +and skill, that Cambyses feared his influence among the officers and +soldiers, and was rendered continually watchful, suspicious, and +afraid. A circumstance at last occurred which excited his jealousy +more than ever, and he determined to send Smerdis home again to +Persia. The circumstance was this:</p> + +<div class="sidenote">He plans an invasion of Ethiopia.</div> + +<p>After Cambyses had succeeded in obtaining full possession of Egypt, he +formed, among his other wild and desperate schemes, the design of +invading the territories of a nation of Ethiopians who lived in the +interior of Africa, around and beyond the sources of the Nile. The +Ethiopians were celebrated for their savage strength and bravery. +Cambyses wished to obtain information respecting them and their +country before setting out on his expedition against them, and he +determined to send spies into their country to obtain it. But, as +Ethiopia was a territory so remote, and as its institutions and +customs, and the language, the dress, and the manners of its +inhabitants were totally different from those of all the other nations +of the earth, and were almost wholly unknown to the Persian army, it +was impossible to send Persians in disguise, with any hope that they +could enter <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</a></span>and explore the country without being discovered. It was +very doubtful, in fact, whether, if such spies were to be sent, they +could succeed in reaching Ethiopia at all.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Island of Elephantine.<br />The Icthyophagi.<br />Classes of savage nations.</div> + +<p>Now there was, far up the Nile, near the cataracts, at a place where +the river widens and forms a sort of bay, a large and fertile island +called Elephantine, which was inhabited by a half-savage tribe called +the Icthyophagi. They lived mainly by fishing on the river, and, +consequently, they had many boats, and were accustomed to make long +excursions up and down the stream. Their name was, in fact, derived +from their occupation. It was a Greek word, and might be translated +"Fishermen."<a name="FNanchor_B_2" id="FNanchor_B_2"></a><a href="#Footnote_B_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a> The manners and customs of half-civilized or savage +nations depend entirely, of course, upon the modes in which they +procure their subsistence. Some depend on hunting wild beasts, some on +rearing flocks and herds of tame animals, some on cultivating the +ground, and some on fishing in rivers or in the sea. These four +different modes of procuring food result in as many totally diverse +modes of life: it is a curious fact, however, that while a nation of +hunters differs very essentially from a nation of herdsmen or <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</a></span>of +fishermen, though they may live, perhaps, in the same neighborhood +with them, still, all nations of hunters, however widely they may be +separated in geographical position, very strongly resemble one another +in character, in customs, in institutions, and in all the usages of +life. It is so, moreover, with all the other types of national +constitution mentioned above. The Greeks observed these +characteristics of the various savage tribes with which they became +acquainted, and whenever they met with a tribe that lived by fishing, +they called them Icthyophagi.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Embassadors sent to Ethiopia.</div> + +<p>Cambyses sent to the Icthyophagi of the island of Elephantine, +requiring them to furnish him with a number of persons acquainted with +the route to Ethiopia and with the Ethiopian language, that he might +send them as an embassy. He also provided some presents to be sent as +a token of friendship to the Ethiopian king. The presents were, +however, only a pretext, to enable the embassadors, who were, in fact, +spies, to go to the capital and court of the Ethiopian monarch in +safety, and bring back to Cambyses all the information which they +should be able to obtain.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The presents.</div> + +<p>The presents consisted of such toys and ornaments <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</a></span>as they thought +would most please the fancy of a savage king. There were some purple +vestments of a very rich and splendid dye, and a golden chain for the +neck, golden bracelets for the wrists, an alabaster box of very +precious perfumes, and other similar trinkets and toys. There was also +a large vessel filled with wine.</p> + +<p>The Icthyophagi took these presents, and set out on their expedition. +After a long and toilsome voyage and journey, they came to the country +of the Ethiopians, and delivered their presents, together with the +message which Cambyses had intrusted to them. The presents, they said, +had been sent by Cambyses as a token of his desire to become the +friend and ally of the Ethiopian king.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Ethiopian king detects the imposture.<br />The Ethiopian king's opinion of Cambyses's presents.</div> + +<p>The king, instead of being deceived by this hypocrisy, detected the +imposture at once. He knew very well, he said, what was the motive of +Cambyses in sending such an embassage to him, and he should advise +Cambyses to be content with his own dominions, instead of planning +aggressions of violence, and schemes and stratagems of deceit against +his neighbors, in order to get possession of theirs. He then began to +look at the presents which the embassadors had <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</a></span>brought, which, +however, he appeared very soon to despise. The purple vest first +attracted his attention. He asked whether that was the true, natural +color of the stuff, or a false one. The messengers told him that the +linen was dyed, and began to explain the process to him. The mind of +the savage potentate, however, instead of being impressed, as the +messengers supposed he would have been through their description, with +a high idea of the excellence and superiority of Persian art, only +despised the false show of what he considered an artificial and +fictitious beauty. "The beauty of Cambyses's dresses," said he, "is as +deceitful, it seems, as the fair show of his professions of +friendship." As to the golden bracelets and necklaces, the king looked +upon them with contempt. He thought that they were intended for +fetters and chains, and said that, however well they might answer +among the effeminate Persians, they were wholly insufficient to +confine such sinews as he had to deal with. The wine, however, he +liked. He drank it with great pleasure, and told the Icthyophagi that +it was the only article among all their presents that was worth +receiving.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Ethiopian bow.</div> + +<p>In return for the presents which Cambyses had sent him, the King of +the Ethiopians, who <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</a></span>was a man of prodigious size and strength, took +down his bow and gave it to the Icthyophagi, telling them to carry it +to Cambyses as a token of his defiance, and to ask him to see if he +could find a man in all his army who could bend it. "Tell Cambyses," +he added, "that when his soldiers are able to bend such bows as that, +it will be time for him to think of invading the territories of the +Ethiopians; and that, in the mean time, he ought to consider himself +very fortunate that the Ethiopians were not grasping and ambitious +enough to attempt the invasion of his."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Return of the Icthyophagi.</div> + +<p>When the Icthyophagi returned to Cambyses with this message, the +strongest men in the Persian camp were of course greatly interested in +examining and trying the bow. Smerdis was the only one that could be +found who was strong enough to bend it; and he, by the superiority to +the others which he thus evinced, gained great renown. Cambyses was +filled with jealousy and anger. He determined to send Smerdis back +again to Persia. "It will be better," thought he to himself, "to incur +whatever danger there may be of his exciting revolt at home, than to +have him present in my court, subjecting me to continual mortification +and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</a></span>chagrin by the perpetual parade of his superiority."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Jealousy of Cambyses.<br />He orders Smerdis to be murdered.</div> + +<p>His mind was, however, not at ease after his brother had gone. +Jealousy and suspicion in respect to Smerdis perplexed his waking +thoughts and troubled his dreams. At length, one night, he thought he +saw Smerdis seated on a royal throne in Persia, his form expanded +supernaturally to such a prodigious size that he touched the heavens +with his head. The next day, Cambyses, supposing that the dream +portended danger that Smerdis would be one day in possession of the +throne, determined to put a final and perpetual end to all these +troubles and fears, and he sent for an officer of his court, +Prexaspes—the same whose son he shot through the heart with an arrow, +as described in the last chapter—and commanded him to proceed +immediately to Persia, and there to find Smerdis, and kill him. The +murder of Prexaspes's son, though related in the last chapter as an +illustration of Cambyses's character, did not actually take place till +after Prexaspes returned from this expedition.</p> + +<p>Prexaspes went to Persia, and executed the orders of the king by the +assassination of Smerdis. There are different accounts of the mode +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</a></span>which he adopted for accomplishing his purpose. One is, that he +contrived some way to drown him in the sea; another, that he poisoned +him; and a third, that he killed him in the forests, when he was out +on a hunting excursion. At all events, the deed was done, and +Prexaspes went back to Cambyses, and reported to him that he had +nothing further to fear from his brother's ambition.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Cambyses grows more cruel.<br />Twelve noblemen buried alive.<br />Cambyses's cruelty to his sister.<br /></div> + +<p>In the mean time, Cambyses went on from bad to worse in his +government, growing every day more despotic and tyrannical, and +abandoning himself to fits of cruelty and passion which became more +and more excessive and insane. At one time, on some slight +provocation, he ordered twelve distinguished noblemen of his court to +be buried alive. It is astonishing that there can be institutions and +arrangements in the social state which will give one man such an +ascendency over others that such commands can be obeyed. On another +occasion, Cambyses's sister and wife, who had mourned the death of her +brother Smerdis, ventured a reproach to Cambyses for having destroyed +him. She was sitting at table, with some plant or flower in her hand, +which she slowly picked to pieces, putting the fragments on the table. +She <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</a></span>asked Cambyses whether he thought the flower looked fairest and +best in fragments, or in its original and natural integrity. "It +looked best, certainly," Cambyses said, "when it was whole." "And +yet," said she, "you have begun to take to pieces and destroy our +family, as I have destroyed this flower." Cambyses sprang upon his +unhappy sister, on hearing this reproof, with the ferocity of a tiger. +He threw her down and leaped upon her. The attendants succeeded in +rescuing her and bearing her away; but she had received a fatal +injury. She fell immediately into a premature and unnatural sickness, +and died.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The venerable Crœsus.</div> + +<p>These fits of sudden and terrible passion to which Cambyses was +subject, were often followed, when they had passed by, as is usual in +such cases, with remorse and misery; and sometimes the officers of +Cambyses, anticipating a change in their master's feelings, did not +execute his cruel orders, but concealed the object of his blind and +insensate vengeance until the paroxysm was over. They did this once in +the case of Crœsus. Crœsus, who was now a venerable man, +advanced in years, had been for a long time the friend and faithful +counselor of Cambyses's father. He had known Cambyses <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</a></span>himself from +his boyhood, and had been charged by his father to watch over him and +counsel him, and aid him, on all occasions which might require it, +with his experience and wisdom. Cambyses, too, had been solemnly +charged by his father Cyrus, at the last interview that he had with +him before his death, to guard and protect Crœsus, as his father's +ancient and faithful friend, and to treat him, as long as he lived, +with the highest consideration and honor.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His advice to Cambyses.</div> + +<p>Under these circumstances, Crœsus considered himself justified in +remonstrating one day with Cambyses against his excesses and his +cruelty. He told him that he ought not to give himself up to the +control of such violent and impetuous passions; that, though his +Persian soldiers and subjects had borne with him thus far, he might, +by excessive oppression and cruelty, exhaust their forbearance and +provoke them to revolt against him, and that thus he might suddenly +lose his power, through his intemperate and inconsiderate use of it. +Crœsus apologized for offering these counsels, saying that he felt +bound to warn Cambyses of his danger, in obedience to the injunctions +of Cyrus, his father.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Cambyses's rage at Crœsus.<br />He attempts to kill him.</div> + +<p>Cambyses fell into a violent passion at hearing <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</a></span>these words. He told +Crœsus that he was amazed at his presumption in daring to offer him +advice, and then began to load his venerable counselor with the +bitterest invectives and reproaches. He taunted him with his own +misfortunes, in losing, as he had done, years before, his own kingdom +of Lydia, and then accused him of having been the means, through his +foolish counsels, of leading his father, Cyrus, into the worst of the +difficulties which befell him toward the close of his life. At last, +becoming more and more enraged by the reaction upon himself of his own +angry utterance, he told Crœsus that he had hated him for a long +time, and for a long time had wished to punish him; "and now," said +he, "you have given me an opportunity." So saying, he seized his bow, +and began to fit an arrow to the string. Crœsus fled. Cambyses +ordered his attendants to pursue him, and when they had taken him, to +kill him. The officers knew that Cambyses would regret his rash and +reckless command as soon as his anger should have subsided, and so, +instead of slaying Crœsus, they concealed him. A few days after, +when the tyrant began to express his remorse and sorrow at having +destroyed his venerable friend in the heat of passion, and to mourn +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</a></span>his death, they told him that Crœsus was still alive. They had +ventured, they said, to save him, till they could ascertain whether it +was the king's real and deliberate determination that he must die. The +king was overjoyed to find Crœsus still alive, but he would not +forgive those who had been instrumental in saving him. He ordered +every one of them to be executed.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The declaration of the oracle.<br />Ecbatane, Susa, and Babylon.</div> + +<p>Cambyses was the more reckless and desperate in these tyrannical +cruelties because he believed that he possessed a sort of charmed +life. He had consulted an oracle, it seems, in Media, in respect to +his prospects of life, and the oracle had informed him that he would +die at Ecbatane. Now Ecbatane was one of the three great capitals of +his empire, Susa and Babylon being the others. Ecbatane was the most +northerly of these cities, and the most remote from danger. Babylon +and Susa were the points where the great transactions of government +chiefly centered, while Ecbatane was more particularly the private +residence of the kings. It was their refuge in danger, their retreat +in sickness and age. In a word, Susa was their seat of government, +Babylon their great commercial emporium, but Ecbatane was their home.</p> + +<p>And thus as the oracle, when Cambyses inquired <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</a></span>in respect to the +circumstances of his death, had said that it was decreed by the fates +that he should die at Ecbatane, it meant, as he supposed, that he +should die in peace, in his bed, at the close of the usual period +allotted to the life of man. Considering thus that the fates had +removed all danger of a sudden and violent death from his path, he +abandoned himself to his career of vice and folly, remembering only +the substance of the oracle, while the particular form of words in +which it was expressed passed from his mind.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Cambyses returns northward.<br />He enters Syria.<br />A herald proclaims Smerdis.</div> + +<p>At length Cambyses, after completing his conquests in Egypt, returned +to the northward along the shores of the Mediterranean Sea, until he +came into Syria. The province of Galilee, so often mentioned in the +sacred Scriptures, was a part of Syria. In traversing Galilee at the +head of the detachment of troops that was accompanying him, Cambyses +came, one day, to a small town, and encamped there. The town itself +was of so little importance that Cambyses did not, at the time of his +arriving at it, even know its name. His encampment at the place, +however, was marked by a very memorable event, namely, he met with a +herald here, who was traveling through Syria, saying <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</a></span>that he had been +sent from Susa to proclaim to the people of Syria that Smerdis, the +son of Cyrus, had assumed the throne, and to enjoin upon them all to +obey no orders except such as should come from him!</p> + +<p>Cambyses had supposed that Smerdis was dead. Prexaspes, when he had +returned from Susa, had reported that he had killed him. He now, +however, sent for Prexaspes, and demanded of him what this +proclamation could mean. Prexaspes renewed, and insisted upon, his +declaration that Smerdis was dead. He had destroyed him with his own +hands, and had seen him buried. "If the dead can rise from the grave," +added Prexaspes, "then Smerdis may perhaps, raise a revolt and appear +against you; but not otherwise."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The herald seized.</div> + +<p>Prexaspes then recommended that the king should send and seize the +herald, and inquire particularly of him in respect to the government +in whose name he was acting. Cambyses did so. The herald was taken and +brought before the king. On being questioned whether it was true that +Smerdis had really assumed the government and commissioned him to make +proclamation of the fact, he replied that it was so. He had not seen +Smerdis himself, he said, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">[Pg 55]</a></span>for he kept himself shut up very closely in +his palace; but he was informed of his accession by one of the magians +whom Cambyses had left in command. It was by him, he said, that he had +been commissioned to proclaim Smerdis as king.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Probable explanation.<br />Rage of Cambyses.</div> + +<p>Prexaspes then said that he had no doubt that the two magians whom +Cambyses had left in charge of the government had contrived to seize +the throne. He reminded Cambyses that the name of one of them was +Smerdis, and that probably that was the Smerdis who was usurping the +supreme command. Cambyses said that he was convinced that this +supposition was true. His dream, in which he had seen a vision of +Smerdis, with his head reaching to the heavens, referred, he had no +doubt, to the magian Smerdis, and not to his brother. He began +bitterly to reproach himself for having caused his innocent brother to +be put to death; but the remorse which he thus felt for his crime, in +assassinating an imaginary rival, soon gave way to rage and resentment +against the real usurper. He called for his horse, and began to mount +him in hot haste, to give immediate orders, and make immediate +preparations for marching to Susa.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Cambyses mortally wounded.</div> + +<p>As he bounded into the saddle, with his mind <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[Pg 56]</a></span>in this state of +reckless desperation, the sheath, by some accident or by some +carelessness caused by his headlong haste, fell from his sword, and +the naked point of the weapon pierced his thigh. The attendants took +him from his horse, and conveyed him again to his tent. The wound, on +examination, proved to be a very dangerous one, and the strong +passions, the vexation, the disappointment, the impotent rage, which +were agitating the mind of the patient, exerted an influence extremely +unfavorable to recovery. Cambyses, terrified at the prospect of death, +asked what was the name of the town where he was lying. They told him +it was Ecbatane.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His remorse and despair.</div> + +<p>He had never thought before of the possibility that there might be +some other Ecbatane besides his splendid royal retreat in Media; but +now, when he learned that was the name of the place where he was then +encamped, he felt sure that his hour was come, and he was overwhelmed +with remorse and despair.</p> + +<p>He suffered, too, inconceivable pain and anguish from his wound. The +sword had pierced to the bone, and the inflammation which had +supervened was of the worst character. After some days, the acuteness +of the agony which he at first endured passed gradually away, though +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[Pg 57]</a></span>the extent of the injury resulting from the wound was growing every +day greater and more hopeless. The sufferer lay, pale, emaciated, and +wretched, on his couch, his mind, in every interval of bodily agony, +filling up the void with the more dreadful sufferings of horror and +despair.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Cambyses calls his nobles about him.<br />His dying declaration.</div> + +<p>At length, on the twentieth day after his wound had been received, he +called the leading nobles of his court and officers of his army about +his bedside, and said to them that he was about to die, and that he +was compelled, by the calamity which had befallen him, to declare to +them what he would otherwise have continued to keep concealed. The +person who had usurped the throne under the name of Smerdis, he now +said, was not, and could not be, his brother Smerdis, the son of +Cyrus. He then proceeded to give them an account of the manner in +which his fears in respect to his brother had been excited by his +dream, and of the desperate remedy that he had resorted to in ordering +him to be killed. He believed, he said, that the usurper was Smerdis +the magian, whom he had left as one of the regents when he set out on +his Egyptian campaign. He urged them, therefore, not to submit to his +sway, but to go back to Media, and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[Pg 58]</a></span>if they could not conquer him and +put him down by open war, to destroy him by deceit and stratagem, or +in any way whatever by which the end could be accomplished. Cambyses +urged this with so much of the spirit of hatred and revenge beaming in +his hollow and glassy eye as to show that sickness, pain, and the +approach of death, which had made so total a change in the wretched +sufferer's outward condition, had altered nothing within.</p> + +<div class="sidenote3">Death of Cambyses.</div> + +<p>Very soon after making this communication to his nobles, Cambyses +expired.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His dying declaration discredited.</div> + +<p>It will well illustrate the estimate which those who knew him best, +formed of this great hero's character, to state, that those who heard +this solemn declaration did not believe one word of it from beginning +to end. They supposed that the whole story which the dying tyrant had +told them, although he had scarcely breath enough left to tell it, was +a fabrication, dictated by his fraternal jealousy and hate. They +believed that it was really the true Smerdis who had been proclaimed +king, and that Cambyses had invented, in his dying moments, the story +of his having killed him, in order to prevent the Persians from +submitting peaceably to his reign.</p> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[Pg 59]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="Chapter_III" id="Chapter_III"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter III.</span></h2> + +<h2><span class="smcap">Smerdis the Magian.</span></h2> + +<h3>B.C. 520</h3> + +<div class="sidenote">Usurpation of the magians.<br />Circumstances favoring it.</div> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:50px;line-height:32px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">C</span><span style="margin-left:0%;">ambyses</span> and his friends had been right in their conjectures that it +was Smerdis the magian who had usurped the Persian throne. This +Smerdis resembled, it was said, the son of Cyrus in his personal +appearance as well as in name. The other magian who had been +associated with him in the regency when Cambyses set out from Persia +on his Egyptian campaign was his brother. His name was Patizithes. +When Cyrus had been some time absent, these magians, having in the +mean time, perhaps, heard unfavorable accounts of his conduct and +character, and knowing the effect which such wanton tyranny must have +in alienating from him the allegiance of his subjects, conceived the +design of taking possession of the empire in their own name. The great +distance of Cambyses and his army from home, and his long-continued +absence, favored this plan. Their own position, too, as they were +already in possession of the capitals and the fortresses of the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[Pg 60]</a></span>country, aided them; and then the name of Smerdis, being the same +with that of the brother of Cambyses, was a circumstance that greatly +promoted the success of the undertaking. In addition to all these +general advantages, the cruelty of Cambyses was the means of +furnishing them with a most opportune occasion for putting their plans +into execution.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Murder of Smerdis not known.<br />He is supposed to be alive.</div> + +<p>The reader will recollect that, as was related in the last chapter, +Cambyses first sent his brother Smerdis home, and afterward, when +alarmed by his dream, he sent Prexaspes to murder him. Now the return +of Smerdis was publicly and generally known, while his assassination +by Prexaspes was kept a profound secret. Even the Persians connected +with Cambyses's court in Egypt had not heard of the perpetration of +this crime, until Cambyses confessed it on his dying bed, and even +then, as was stated in the last chapter, they did not believe it. It +is not probable that it was known in Media and Persia; so that, after +Prexaspes accomplished his work, and returned to Cambyses with the +report of it, it was probably generally supposed that his brother was +still alive, and was residing somewhere in one or another of the royal +palaces.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[Pg 61]</a></span></p><div class="sidenote">Precautions taken by Smerdis.<br />Effect of Cambyses's measures.</div> + +<p>Such royal personages were often accustomed to live thus, in a state +of great seclusion, spending their time in effeminate pleasures within +the walls of their palaces, parks, and gardens. When the royal +Smerdis, therefore, secretly and suddenly disappeared, it would be +very easy for the magian Smerdis, with the collusion of a moderate +number of courtiers and attendants, to take his place, especially if +he continued to live in retirement, and exhibited himself as little as +possible to public view. Thus it was that Cambyses himself, by the +very crimes which he committed to shield himself from all danger of a +revolt, opened the way which specially invited it, and almost insured +its success. Every particular step that he took, too, helped to +promote the end. His sending Smerdis home; his waiting an interval, +and then sending Prexaspes to destroy him; his ordering his +assassination to be secret—these, and all the other attendant +circumstances, were only so many preliminary steps, preparing the way +for the success of the revolution which was to accomplish his ruin. He +was, in a word, his own destroyer. Like other wicked men, he found, in +the end, that the schemes of wickedness which he had malignantly aimed +at the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[Pg 62]</a></span>destruction of others, had been all the time slowly and surely +working out his own.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Opinion in regard to Smerdis.<br />Acquiescence of the people.</div> + +<p>The people of Persia, therefore, were prepared by Cambyses's own acts +to believe that the usurper Smerdis was really Cyrus's son, and, next +to Cambyses, the heir to the throne. The army of Cambyses, too, in +Egypt, believed the same. It was natural that they should do so for +they placed no confidence whatever in Cambyses's dying declarations; +and since intelligence, which seemed to be official, came from Susa +declaring that Smerdis was still alive, and that he had actually taken +possession of the throne, there was no apparent reason for doubting +the fact. Besides, Prexaspes, as soon as Cambyses was dead, considered +it safer for him to deny than to confess having murdered the prince. +He therefore declared that Cambyses's story was false, and that he had +no doubt that Smerdis, the monarch in whose name the government was +administered at Susa, was the son of Cyrus, the true and rightful heir +to the throne. Thus all parties throughout the empire acquiesced +peaceably in what they supposed to be the legitimate succession.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Dangerous situation of Smerdis.<br />Arrangement with Patizithes.</div> + +<p>In the mean time, the usurper had placed himself in an exceedingly +dizzy and precarious <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[Pg 63]</a></span>situation, and one which it would require a +great deal of address and skillful management to sustain. The plan +arranged between himself and his brother for a division of the +advantages which they had secured by their joint and common cunning +was, that Smerdis was to enjoy the ease and pleasure, and Patizithes +the substantial power of the royalty which they had so stealthily +seized. This was the safest plan. Smerdis, by living secluded, and +devoting himself to retired and private pleasures, was the more likely +to escape public observation; while Patizithes, acting as his prime +minister of state, could attend councils, issue orders, review troops, +dispatch embassies, and perform all the other outward functions of +supreme command, with safety as well as pleasure. Patizithes seems to +have been, in fact, the soul of the whole plan. He was ambitious and +aspiring in character, and if he could only himself enjoy the actual +exercise of royal power, he was willing that his brother should enjoy +the honor of possessing it. Patizithes, therefore, governed the realm, +acting, however, in all that he did, in Smerdis's name.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Smerdis lives in retirement.<br />Special grounds of apprehension.</div> + +<p>Smerdis, on his part, was content to take possession of the palaces, +the parks, and the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[Pg 64]</a></span>gardens of Media and Persia, and to live in them +in retired and quiet luxury and splendor. He appeared seldom in +public, and then only under such circumstances as should not expose +him to any close observation on the part of the spectators. His +figure, air, and manner, and the general cast of his countenance, were +very much like those of the prince whom he was attempting to +personate. There was one mark, however, by which he thought that there +was danger that he might be betrayed, and that was, his ears had been +cut off. This had been done many years before, by command of Cyrus, on +account of some offense of which he had been guilty. The marks of the +mutilation could, indeed, on public occasions, be concealed by the +turban, or helmet, or other head-dress which he wore; but in private +there was great danger either that the loss of the ears, or the +studied effort to conceal it, should be observed. Smerdis was, +therefore, very careful to avoid being seen in private, by keeping +himself closely secluded. He shut himself up in the apartments of his +palace at Susa, within the citadel, and never invited the Persian +nobles to visit him there.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Cambyses's wives.</div> + +<p>Among the other means of luxury and pleasure which Smerdis found in +the royal palaces, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[Pg 65]</a></span>and which he appropriated to his own enjoyment, +were Cambyses's wives. In those times, Oriental princes and +potentates—as is, in fact, the case at the present day, in many +Oriental countries—possessed a great number of wives, who were bound +to them by different sorts of matrimonial ties, more or less +permanent, and bringing them into relations more or less intimate with +their husband and sovereign. These wives were in many respects in the +condition of slaves: in one particular they were especially so, +namely, that on the death of a sovereign they descended, like any +other property, to the heir, who added as many of them as he pleased +to his own seraglio. Until this was done, the unfortunate women were +shut up in close seclusion on the death of their lord, like mourners +who retire from the world when suffering any great and severe +bereavement.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Smerdis appropriates them.</div> + +<p>The wives of Cambyses were appropriated by Smerdis to himself on his +taking possession of the throne and hearing of Cambyses's death. Among +them was Atossa, who has already been mentioned as the daughter of +Cyrus, and, of course, the sister of Cambyses as well as his wife. In +order to prevent these court ladies from being the means, in any way, +of discovering <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[Pg 66]</a></span>the imposture which he was practicing, the magian +continued to keep them all closely shut up in their several separate +apartments, only allowing a favored few to visit him, one by one, in +turn, while he prevented their having any communication with one +another.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Phædyma.<br />Measures of Otanes.</div> + +<p>The name of one of these ladies was Phædyma. She was the daughter of a +Persian noble of the highest rank and influence, named Otanes. Otanes, +as well as some other nobles of the court, had observed and reflected +upon the extraordinary circumstances connected with the accession of +Smerdis to the throne, and the singular mode of life that he led in +secluding himself, in a manner so extraordinary for a Persian monarch, +from all intercourse with his nobles and his people. The suspicions of +Otanes and his associates were excited, but no one dared to +communicate his thoughts to the others. At length, however, Otanes, +who was a man of great energy as well as sagacity and discretion, +resolved that he would take some measures to ascertain the truth.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Otanes's communications with his daughter.<br />Her replies.</div> + +<p>He first sent a messenger to Phædyma, his daughter, asking of her +whether it was really Smerdis, the son of Cyrus, who received her when +she went to visit the king. Phædyma, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[Pg 67]</a></span>in return, sent her father word +that she did not know, for she had never seen Smerdis, the son of +Cyrus, before the death of Cambyses. She therefore could not say, of +her own personal knowledge, whether the king was the genuine Smerdis +or not. Otanes then sent to Phædyma a second time, requesting her to +ask the queen Atossa. Atossa was the sister of Smerdis the prince, and +had known him from his childhood. Phædyma sent back word to her father +that she could not speak to Atossa, for she was kept closely shut up +in her own apartments, without the opportunity to communicate with any +one. Otanes then sent a third time to his daughter, telling her that +there was one remaining mode by which she might ascertain the truth, +and that was, the next time that she visited the king, to feel for his +ears when he was asleep. If it was Smerdis the magian, she would find +that he had none. He urged his daughter to do this by saying that, if +the pretended king was really an impostor, the imposture ought to be +made known, and that she, being of noble birth, ought to have the +courage and energy to assist in discovering it. To this Phædyma +replied that she would do as her father desired, though she knew that +she hazarded her life in <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[Pg 68]</a></span>the attempt. "If he has no ears," said she, +"and if I awaken him in attempting to feel for them, he will kill me; +I am sure that he will kill me on the spot."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Phædyma discovers the deception.</div> + +<p>The next time that it came to Phædyma's turn to visit the king, she +did as her father had requested. She passed her hand very cautiously +beneath the king's turban, and found that his ears had been cut off +close to his head. Early in the morning she communicated the knowledge +of the fact to her father.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[Pg 69-70]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/i067.jpg" class="ispace jpg3" width="500" height="291" alt="Phædyma feeling for Smerdis's Ears." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">Phædyma feeling for Smerdis's Ears.</span></span></div> + +<div class="sidenote2">Otanes and the six nobles.<br />Arrival of Darius.</div> + +<p>Otanes immediately made the case known to two of his friends, Persian +nobles, who had, with him, suspected the imposture, and had consulted +together before in respect to the means of detecting it. The question +was, what was now to be done. After some deliberation, it was agreed +that each of them should communicate the discovery which they had made +to one other person, such as each should select from among the circle +of his friends as the one on whose resolution, prudence, and fidelity +he could most implicitly rely. This was done, and the number admitted +to the secret was thus increased to six. At this juncture it happened +that Darius, the son of Hystaspes, the young man who has already been +mentioned as the subject of Cyrus's <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[Pg 71]</a></span>dream, came to Susa. Darius was a man of great prominence and +popularity. His father, Hystaspes, was at that time the governor of +the province of Persia, and Darius had been residing with him in that +country. As soon as the six conspirators heard of his arrival, they +admitted him to their councils, and thus their number was increased to +seven.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Secret consultations.<br />Various opinions.</div> + +<p>They immediately began to hold secret consultations for the purpose of +determining how it was best to proceed, first binding themselves by +the most solemn oaths never to betray one another, however their +undertaking might end. Darius told them that he had himself discovered +the imposture and usurpation of Smerdis, and that he had come from +Persia for the purpose of slaying him; and that now, since it appeared +that the secret was known to so many, he was of opinion that they +ought to act at once with the utmost decision. He thought there would +be great danger in delay.</p> + +<p>Otanes, on the other hand, thought that they were not yet ready for +action. They must first increase their numbers. Seven persons were too +few to attempt to revolutionize an empire. He commended the courage +and resolution which Darius displayed, but he thought that a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">[Pg 72]</a></span>more +cautious and deliberate policy would be far more likely to conduct +them to a safe result.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Views of Darius.</div> + +<p>Darius replied that the course which Otanes recommended would +certainly ruin them. "If we make many other persons acquainted with +our plans," said he, "there will be some, notwithstanding all our +precautions, who will betray us, for the sake of the immense rewards +which they well know they would receive in that case from the king. +No," he added, "we must act ourselves, and alone. We must do nothing +to excite suspicion, but must go at once into the palace, penetrate +boldly into Smerdis's presence, and slay him before he has time to +suspect our designs."</p> + +<p>"But we can not get into his presence," replied Otanes. "There are +guards stationed at every gate and door, who will not allow us to +pass. If we attempt to kill them, a tumult will be immediately raised, +and the alarm given, and all our designs will thus be baffled."</p> + +<p>"There will be little difficulty about the guards," said Darius. "They +know us all, and, from deference to our rank and station, they will +let us pass without suspicion, especially if we act boldly and +promptly, and do not give them time to stop and consider what to do. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">[Pg 73]</a></span>Besides, I can say that I have just arrived from Persia with +important dispatches for the king, and that I must be admitted +immediately into his presence. If a falsehood must be told, so let it +be. The urgency of the crisis demands and sanctions it."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Apology for a falsehood.</div> + +<p>It may seem strange to the reader, considering the ideas and habits of +the times, that Darius should have even thought it necessary to +apologize to his confederates for his proposal of employing falsehood +in the accomplishment of their plans; and it is, in fact, altogether +probable that the apology which he is made to utter is his +historian's, and not his own.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Opinion of Gobryas.</div> + +<p>The other conspirators had remained silent during this discussion +between Darius and Otanes; but now a third, whose name was Gobryas, +expressed his opinion in favor of the course which Darius recommended. +He was aware, he said, that, in attempting to force their way into the +king's presence and kill him by a sudden assault, they exposed +themselves to the most imminent danger; but it was better for them to +die in the manly attempt to bring back the imperial power again into +Persian hands, where it properly belonged, than to acquiesce any +further in its continuance in the possession <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">[Pg 74]</a></span>of the ignoble Median +priests who had so treacherously usurped it.</p> + +<p>To this counsel they all finally agreed, and began to make +arrangements for carrying their desperate enterprise into execution.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Uneasiness of the magi.<br />Situation of Prexaspes.</div> + +<p>In the mean time, very extraordinary events were transpiring in +another part of the city. The two magi, Smerdis the king and +Patizithes his brother, had some cause, it seems, to fear that the +nobles about the court, and the officers of the Persian army, were not +without suspicions that the reigning monarch was not the real son of +Cyrus. Rumors that Smerdis had been killed by Prexaspes, at the +command of Cambyses, were in circulation. These rumors were +contradicted, it is true, in private, by Prexaspes, whenever he was +forced to speak of the subject; but he generally avoided it; and he +spoke, when he spoke at all, in that timid and undecided tone which +men usually assume when they are persisting in a lie. In the mean +time, the gloomy recollections of his past life, the memory of his +murdered son, remorse for his own crime in the assassination of +Smerdis, and anxiety on account of the extremely dangerous position in +which he had placed himself by his false denial of it, all conspired +to harass <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">[Pg 75]</a></span>his mind with perpetual restlessness and misery, and to +make life a burden.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Measures of the magi.<br />An assembly of the people.</div> + +<p>In order to do something to quiet the suspicions which the magi feared +were prevailing, they did not know how extensively, they conceived the +plan of inducing Prexaspes to declare in a more public and formal +manner what he had been asserting timidly in private, namely, that +Smerdis had not been killed. They accordingly convened an assembly of +the people in a court-yard of the palace, or perhaps took advantage of +some gathering casually convened, and proposed that Prexaspes should +address them from a neighboring tower. Prexaspes was a man of high +rank and of great influence, and the magi thought that his public +espousal of their cause, and his open and decided contradiction of the +rumor that he had killed Cambyses's brother, would fully convince the +Persians that it was really the rightful monarch that had taken +possession of the throne.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Decision of Prexaspes.<br />His speech from the tower.<br />Death of Prexaspes.</div> + +<p>But the strength even of a strong man, when he has a lie to carry, +soon becomes very small. That of Prexaspes was already almost +exhausted and gone. He had been wavering and hesitating before, and +this proposal, that he should commit himself so formally and solemnly, +and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">[Pg 76]</a></span>in so public a manner, to statements wholly and absolutely +untrue, brought him to a stand. He decided, desperately, in his own +mind, that he would go on in his course of falsehood, remorse, and +wretchedness no longer. He, however, pretended to accede to the +propositions of the magi. He ascended the tower, and began to address +the people. Instead, however, of denying that he had murdered Smerdis, +he fully confessed to the astonished audience that he had really +committed that crime; he openly denounced the reigning Smerdis as an +impostor, and called upon all who heard him to rise at once, destroy +the treacherous usurper, and vindicate the rights of the true Persian +line. As he went on, with vehement voice and gestures, in this speech, +the utterance of which he knew sealed his own destruction, he became +more and more excited and reckless. He denounced his hearers in the +severest language if they failed to obey his injunctions, and +imprecated upon them, in that event, all the curses of Heaven. The +people listened to this strange and sudden phrensy of eloquence in +utter amazement, motionless and silent; and before they or the +officers of the king's household who were present had time even to +consider what to do, Prexaspes,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">[Pg 77]</a></span> coming abruptly to the conclusion of +his harangue, threw himself headlong from the parapet of the tower, +and came down among them, lifeless and mangled, on the pavement below.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The conspirators.</div> + +<p>Of course, all was now tumult and commotion in the court-yard, and it +happened to be just at this juncture that the seven conspirators came +from the place of their consultation to the palace, with a view of +executing their plans. They were soon informed of what had taken +place. Otanes was now again disposed to postpone their attempt upon +the life of the king. The event which had occurred changed, he said, +the aspect of the subject, and they must wait until the tumult and +excitement should have somewhat subsided. But Darius was more eager +than ever in favor of instantaneous action. He said that there was not +a moment to be lost; for the magi, so soon as they should be informed +of the declarations and of the death of Prexaspes, would be alarmed, +and would take at once the most effectual precautions to guard against +any sudden assault or surprise.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The omen.</div> + +<p>These arguments, at the very time in which Darius was offering them +with so much vehemence and earnestness, were strengthened by a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">[Pg 78]</a></span>very +singular sort of confirmation; for while the conspirators stood +undetermined, they saw a flock of birds moving across the sky, which, +on their more attentively regarding them, proved to be seven hawks +pursuing two vultures. This they regarded an omen, intended to signify +to them, by a divine intimation, that they ought to proceed. They +hesitated, therefore, no longer.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The conspirators enter the palace.<br />Combat with the magi.</div> + +<p>They went together to the outer gates of the palace. The action of the +guards who were stationed there was just what Darius had predicted +that it would be. Awed by the imposing spectacle of the approach of +seven nobles of the highest distinction, who were advancing, too, with +an earnest and confident air, as if expecting no obstacle to their +admission, they gave way at once, and allowed them to enter. The +conspirators went on until they came to the inner apartments, where +they found eunuchs in attendance at the doors. The eunuchs resisted, +and demanded angrily why the guards had let the strangers in. "Kill +them," said the conspirators, and immediately began to cut them down. +The magi were within, already in consternation at the disclosures of +Prexaspes, of which they had just been informed. They heard the tumult +and the outcries of the eunuchs <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">[Pg 79]</a></span>at the doors, and seized their arms, +the one a bow and the other a spear. The conspirators rushed in. The +bow was useless in the close combat which ensued, and the magian who +had taken it turned and fled. The other defended himself with his +spear for a moment, and wounded severely two of his assailants. The +wounded conspirators fell. Three others of the number continued the +unequal combat with the armed magian, while Darius and Gobryas rushed +in pursuit of the other.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Flight of Smerdis.</div> + +<p>The flying magian ran from one apartment to another until he reached a +dark room, into which the blind instinct of fear prompted him to rush, +in the vain hope of concealment. Gobryas was foremost; he seized the +wretched fugitive by the waist, and struggled to hold him, while the +magian struggled to get free. Gobryas called upon Darius, who was +close behind him, to strike. Darius, brandishing his sword, looked +earnestly into the obscure retreat, that he might see where to strike.</p> + +<p>"Strike!" exclaimed Gobryas. "Why do you not strike?"</p> + +<p>"I can not see," said Darius, "and I am afraid of wounding you."</p> + +<p>"No matter," said Gobryas, struggling desperately <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">[Pg 80]</a></span>all the time with +his frantic victim. "Strike quick, if you kill us both."</p> + +<div class="sidenote3">Smerdis is killed.</div> + +<p>Darius struck. Gobryas loosened his hold, and the magian fell upon the +floor, and there, stabbed again through the heart by Darius's sword, +almost immediately ceased to breathe.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Exultation of the conspirators.</div> + +<p>They dragged the body to the light, and cut off the head. They did the +same with the other magian, whom they found that their confederates +had killed when they returned to the apartments where they had left +them contending. The whole body of the conspirators then, except the +two who were wounded, exulting in their success, and wild with the +excitement which such deeds always awaken, went forth into the streets +of the city, bearing the heads upon pikes as the trophies of their +victory. They summoned the Persian soldiers to arms, and announced +every where that they had ascertained that the king was a priest and +an impostor, and not their legitimate sovereign, and that they had +consequently killed him. They called upon the people to kill the +magians wherever they could find them, as if the whole class were +implicated in the guilt of the usurping brothers.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">General massacre of the magians.</div> + +<p>The populace in all countries are easily excited by such denunciations +and appeals as <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">[Pg 81]</a></span>these. The Persians armed themselves, and ran to and +fro every where in pursuit of the unhappy magians, and before night +vast numbers of them were slain.</p> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="Chapter_IV" id="Chapter_IV"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter IV.</span></h2> + +<h2><span class="smcap">The Accession of Darius.</span></h2> + +<h3>B.C. 520</h3> + +<div class="sidenote">Confusion at Susa.<br />No heir to the throne.</div> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:50px;line-height:32px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">F</span><span style="margin-left:0%;">or</span> several days after the assassination of the magi the city was +filled with excitement, tumults, and confusion. There was no heir, of +the family of Cyrus, entitled to succeed to the vacant throne, for +neither Cambyses, nor Smerdis his brother, had left any sons. There +was, indeed, a daughter of Smerdis, named Parmys, and there were also +still living two daughters of Cyrus. One was Atossa, whom we have +already mentioned as having been married to Cambyses, her brother, and +as having been afterward taken by Smerdis the magian as one of his +wives. These princesses, though of royal lineage, seem neither of them +to have been disposed to assert any claims to the throne at such a +crisis. The mass of the community were stupefied with astonishment at +the sudden revolution which had occurred. No movement was made toward +determining the succession. For five days nothing was done.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Five days' interregnum.<br />Provisional government.</div> + +<p>During this period, all the subordinate functions <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</a></span>of government in +the provinces, cities, and towns, and among the various garrisons and +encampments of the army, went on, of course, as usual, but the general +administration of the government had no head. The seven confederates +had been regarded, for the time being, as a sort of provisional +government, the army and the country in general, so far as appears, +looking to them for the means of extrication from the political +difficulties in which this sudden revolution had involved them, and +submitting, in the mean time, to their direction and control. Such a +state of things, it was obvious, could not long last; and after five +days, when the commotion had somewhat subsided, they began to consider +it necessary to make some arrangements of a more permanent character, +the power to make such arrangements as they thought best resting with +them alone. They accordingly met for consultation.</p> + +<p>Herodotus the historian,<a name="FNanchor_C_3" id="FNanchor_C_3"></a><a href="#Footnote_C_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a> on whose narrative of these events we have +mainly to rely for all <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</a></span>the information respecting them which is now +to be attained, gives a very minute and dramatic account of the +deliberations of the conspirators on this occasion. The account is, in +fact, too dramatic to be probably true.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Consultation of the confederates.<br />Otanes in favor of a republic.<br />Otanes's republic.</div> + +<p>Otanes, in this discussion, was in favor of establishing a republic. +He did not think it safe or wise to intrust the supreme power again to +any single individual. It was proved, he said, by universal +experience, that when any one person was raised to such an elevation +above his fellow-men, he became suspicious, jealous, insolent, and +cruel. He lost all regard for the welfare and happiness of others, and +became supremely devoted to the preservation of his own greatness and +power by any means, however tyrannical, and to the accomplishment of +the purposes of his own despotic will. The best and most valuable +citizens were as likely to become the victims of his oppression as the +worst. In fact, tyrants generally chose their favorites, he said, from +among the most abandoned men and women in their realms, such +characters being the readiest instruments of their guilty pleasures +and their crimes. Otanes referred very particularly to the case of +Cambyses as an example of the extreme lengths to which the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</a></span>despotic +insolence and cruelty of a tyrant could go. He reminded his colleagues +of the sufferings and terrors which they had endured while under his +sway, and urged them very strongly not to expose themselves to such +terrible evils and dangers again. He proposed, therefore, that they +should establish a republic, under which the officers of government +should be elected, and questions of public policy be determined, in +assemblies of the people.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Principles of representation.<br />Large assemblies.</div> + +<p>It must be understood, however, by the reader, that a republic, as +contemplated and intended by Otanes in this speech, was entirely +different from the mode of government which that word denotes at the +present day. They had little idea, in those times, of the principle of +representation, by which the thousand separate and detached +communities of a great empire can choose <i>delegates</i>, who are to +deliberate, speak, and act for them in the assemblies where the great +governmental decisions are ultimately made. By this principle of +representation, the people can really all share in the exercise of +power. Without it they can not, for it is impossible that the people +of a great state can ever be brought together in one assembly; nor, +even if it were practicable to bring <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</a></span>them thus together, would it be +possible for such a concourse to deliberate or act. The action of any +assembly which goes beyond a very few hundred in numbers, is always, +in fact, the action exclusively of the small knot of leaders who call +and manage it. Otanes, therefore, as well as all other advocates of +republican government in ancient times, meant that the supreme power +should be exercised, not by the great mass of the people included +within the jurisdiction in question, but by such a portion of certain +privileged classes as could be brought together in the capital. It was +such a sort of republic as would be formed in this country if the +affairs of the country at large, and the municipal and domestic +institutions of all the states, were regulated and controlled by laws +enacted, and by governors appointed, at great municipal meetings held +in the city of New York.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Nature of ancient republics.</div> + +<p>This was, in fact, the nature of all the republics of ancient times. +They were generally small, and the city in whose free citizens the +supreme power resided, constituted by far the most important portion +of the body politic. The Roman republic, however, became at one period +very large. It overspread almost the whole of Europe; but, widely +extended as it was in <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</a></span>territory, and comprising innumerable states +and kingdoms within its jurisdiction, the vast concentration of power +by which the whole was governed, vested entirely and exclusively in +noisy and tumultuous assemblies convened in the Roman forum.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Nature of a representative republic.</div> + +<p>Even if the idea of a representative system of government, such as is +adopted in modern times, and by means of which the people of a great +and extended empire can exercise, conveniently and efficiently, a +general sovereignty held in common by them all, had been understood in +ancient times, it is very doubtful whether it could, in those times, +have been carried into effect, for want of certain facilities which +are enjoyed in the present age, and which seem essential for the safe +and easy action of so vast and complicated a system as a great +representative government must necessarily be. The regular transaction +of business at public meetings, and the orderly and successful +management of any extended system of elections, requires a great deal +of writing; and the general circulation of newspapers, or something +exercising the great function which it is the object of newspapers to +fulfill, that of keeping the people at large in some degree informed +in respect <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</a></span>to the progress of public affairs, seems essential to the +successful working of a system of representative government comprising +any considerable extent of territory.</p> + +<p>However this may be, whether a great representative system would or +would not have been practicable in ancient times if it had been tried, +it is certain that it was never tried. In all ancient republics, the +sovereignty resided, essentially, in a privileged class of the people +of the capital. The territories governed were provinces, held in +subjection as dependencies, and compelled to pay tribute; and this was +the plan which Otanes meant to advocate when recommending a republic, +in the Persian council.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Megabyzus.<br />He opposes the plan of Otanes.<br />Speech of Megabyzus.</div> + +<p>The name of the second speaker in this celebrated consultation was +Megabyzus. He opposed the plan of Otanes. He concurred fully, he said, +in all that Otanes had advanced in respect to the evils of a monarchy, +and to the oppression and tyranny to which a people were exposed whose +liberties and lives were subject to the despotic control of a single +human will. But in order to avoid one extreme, it was not necessary to +run into the evils of the other. The disadvantages and dangers of +popular control in the management of the affairs of state <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</a></span>were +scarcely less than those of a despotism. Popular assemblies were +always, he said, turbulent, passionate, capricious. Their decisions +were controlled by artful and designing demagogues. It was not +possible that masses of the common people could have either the +sagacity to form wise counsels, or the energy and steadiness to +execute them. There could be no deliberation, no calmness, no secrecy +in their consultations. A populace was always governed by excitements, +which spread among them by a common sympathy; and they would give way +impetuously to the most senseless impulses, as they were urged by +their fear, their resentment, their exultation, their hate, or by any +other passing emotion of the hour.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">He proposes an oligarchy.</div> + +<p>Megabyzus therefore disapproved of both a monarchy and a republic. He +recommended an oligarchy. "We are now," said he, "already seven. Let +us select from the leading nobles in the court and officers of the +army a small number of men, eminent for talents and virtue, and thus +form a select and competent body of men, which shall be the depository +of the supreme power. Such a plan avoids the evils and inconveniences +of both the other systems. There can be no tyranny or oppression +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</a></span>under such a system; for, if any one of so large a number should be +inclined to abuse his power, he will be restrained by the rest. On the +other hand, the number will not be so large as to preclude prudence +and deliberation in counsel, and the highest efficiency and energy in +carrying counsels into effect."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Speech of Darius.<br />He advocates a monarchy.</div> + +<p>When Megabyzus had completed his speech, Darius expressed his opinion. +He said that the arguments of those who had already spoken appeared +plausible, but that the speakers had not dealt quite fairly by the +different systems whose merits they had discussed, since they had +compared a good administration of one form of government with a bad +administration of another. Every thing human was, he admitted, subject +to imperfection and liable to abuse; but on the supposition that each +of the three forms which had been proposed were equally well +administered, the advantage, he thought, would be strongly on the side +of monarchy. Control exercised by a single mind and will was far more +concentrated and efficient than that proceeding from any conceivable +combination. The forming of plans could be, in that case, more secret +and wary, and the execution of them more immediate and prompt. Where +power was lodged <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</a></span>in many hands, all energetic exercise of it was +paralyzed by the dissensions, the animosities and the contending +struggles of envious and jealous rivals. These struggles, in fact, +usually resulted in the predominance of some one, more energetic or +more successful than the rest, the aristocracy or the democracy +running thus, of its own accord, to a despotism in the end, showing +that there were natural causes always tending to the subjection of +nations of men to the control of one single will.</p> + +<p>Besides all this, Darius added, in conclusion, that the Persians had +always been accustomed to a monarchy, and it would be a very dangerous +experiment to attempt to introduce a new system, which would require +so great a change in all the habits and usages of the people.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Four of the seven confederates concur with Darius.</div> + +<p>Thus the consultation went on. At the end of it, it appeared that four +out of the seven agreed with Darius in preferring a monarchy. This was +a majority, and thus the question seemed to be settled. Otanes said +that he would make no opposition to any measures which they might +adopt to carry their decision into effect, but that he would not +himself be subject to the monarchy which they might establish. "I do +not wish," he added, "either to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</a></span>govern others or to have others +govern me. You may establish a kingdom, therefore, if you choose, and +designate the monarch in any mode that you see fit to adopt, but he +must not consider me as one of his subjects. I myself, and all my +family and dependents, must be wholly free from his control."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Otanes withdraws.</div> + +<p>This was a very unreasonable proposition, unless, indeed, Otanes was +willing to withdraw altogether from the community to which he thus +refused to be subject; for, by residing within it, he necessarily +enjoyed its protection, and ought, therefore, to bear his portion of +its burdens, and to be amenable to its laws. Notwithstanding this, +however, the conspirators acceded to the proposal, and Otanes +withdrew.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Agreement made by the rest.</div> + +<p>The remaining six of the confederates then proceeded with their +arrangements for the establishment of a monarchy. They first agreed +that one of their own number should be the king, and that on +whomsoever the choice should fall, the other five, while they +submitted to his dominion, should always enjoy peculiar privileges and +honors at his court. They were at all times to have free access to the +palaces and to the presence of the king, and it was from among their +daughters alone that the king was <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</a></span>to choose his wives. These and some +other similar points having been arranged, the manner of deciding +which of the six should be the king remained to be determined. The +plan which they adopted, and the circumstances connected with the +execution of it, constitute, certainly, one of the most extraordinary +of all the strange transactions recorded in ancient times. It is +gravely related by Herodotus as sober truth. How far it is to be +considered as by any possibility credible, the reader must judge, +after knowing what the story is.</p> + +<div class="sidenote3">Singular mode of deciding which should be the king.</div> + +<p>They agreed, then, that on the following morning they would all meet +on horseback at a place agreed upon beyond the walls of the city, and +that the one whose horse should neigh first should be the king! The +time when this ridiculous ceremony was to be performed was sunrise.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The groom Œbases.</div> + +<p>As soon as this arrangement was made the parties separated, and each +went to his own home. Darius called his groom, whose name was +Œbases, and ordered him to have his horse ready at sunrise on the +next morning, explaining to him, at the same time, the plan which had +been formed for electing the king. "If that is the mode which is to be +adopted," said <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</a></span>Œbases, "you need have no concern, for I can +arrange it very easily so as to have the lot fall upon you." Darius +expressed a strong desire to have this accomplished, if it were +possible, and Œbases went away.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His method of making Darius's horse neigh.</div> + +<p>The method which Œbases adopted was to lead Darius's horse out to +the ground that evening, in company with another, the favorite +companion, it seems, of the animal. Now the attachment of the horse to +his companion is very strong, and his recollection of localities very +vivid, and Œbases expected that when the horse should approach the +ground on the following morning, he would be reminded of the company +which he enjoyed there the night before, and neigh. The result was as +he anticipated. As the horsemen rode up to the appointed place, the +horse of Darius neighed the first, and Darius was unanimously +acknowledged king.</p> + +<p>In respect to the credibility of this famous story, the first thought +which arises in the mind is, that it is utterly impossible that sane +men, acting in so momentous a crisis, and where interests so vast and +extended were at stake, could have resorted to a plan so childish and +ridiculous as this. Such a mode of designating a leader, seriously +adopted, would have done discredit <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</a></span>to a troop of boys making +arrangements for a holiday; and yet here was an empire extending for +thousands of miles through the heart of a vast continent, comprising, +probably, fifty nations and many millions of people, with capitals, +palaces, armies, fleets, and all the other appointments and machinery +of an immense dominion, to be appropriated and disposed of absolutely, +and, so far as they could see, forever. It seems incredible that men +possessing such intelligence, and information, and extent of view as +we should suppose that officers of their rank and station would +necessarily acquire, could have attempted to decide such a momentous +question in so ridiculous and trivial a manner. And yet the account is +seriously recorded by Herodotus as sober history, and the story has +been related again and again, from that day to this, by every +successive generation of historians, without any particular question +of its truth.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Probable truth or falsehood of this account.<br />Ancient statesmen.<br />Their character and position.</div> + +<p>And it may possibly be that it is true. It is a case in which the +apparent improbability is far greater than the real. In the first +place, it would seem that, in all ages of the world, the acts and +decisions of men occupying positions of the most absolute and exalted +power have been controlled, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</a></span>to a much greater degree, by caprice and +by momentary impulse, than mankind have generally supposed. Looking up +as we do to these vast elevations from below, they seem invested with +a certain sublimity and grandeur which we imagine must continually +impress the minds of those who occupy them, and expand and strengthen +their powers, and lead them to act, in all respects, with the +circumspection, the deliberation, and the far-reaching sagacity which +the emergencies continually arising seem to require. And this is, in +fact, in some degree the case with the statesmen and political leaders +raised to power under the constitutional governments of modern times. +Such statesmen are clothed with their high authority, in one way or +another, by the combined and deliberate action of vast masses of men, +and every step which they take is watched, in reference to its +influence on the condition and welfare of these masses, by many +millions; so that such men live and act under a continual sense of +responsibility, and they appreciate, in some degree, the momentous +importance of their doings. But the absolute and independent +sovereigns of the Old World, who held their power by conquest or by +inheritance, though raised sometimes <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</a></span>to very vast and giddy +elevations, seem to have been unconscious, in many instances, of the +dignity and grandeur of their standing, and to have considered their +acts only as they affected their own personal and temporary interests. +Thus, though placed on a great elevation, they took only very narrow +and circumscribed views; they saw nothing but the objects immediately +around them; and they often acted, accordingly, in the most frivolous +and capricious manner.</p> + +<p>It was so, undoubtedly, with these six conspirators. In deciding which +of their number should be king, they thought nothing of the interests +of the vast realms, and of the countless millions of people whose +government was to be provided for. The question, as they considered +it, was doubtless merely which of them should have possession of the +royal palaces, and be the center and the object of royal pomp and +parade in the festivities and celebrations of the capital.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The conspirators governed, in their decision, by +superstitious feelings.<br />The conspirators do homage to Darius.</div> + +<p>And in the mode of decision which they adopted, it may be that some +degree of superstitious feeling mingled. The action and the voices of +animals were considered, in those days, as supernatural omens, +indicating the will of heaven. These conspirators may have expected, +accordingly, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</a></span>in the neighing of the horse, a sort of divine +intimation in respect to the disposition of the crown. This idea is +confirmed by the statement which the account of this transaction +contains, that immediately after the neighing of Darius's horse, it +thundered, although there were no clouds in the sky from which the +thunder could be supposed naturally to come. The conspirators, at all +events, considered it solemnly decided that Darius was to be king. +They all dismounted from their horses and knelt around him, in +acknowledgment of their allegiance and subjection.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The equestrian statue.</div> + +<p>It seems that Darius, after he became established on his throne, +considered the contrivance by which, through the assistance of his +groom, he had obtained the prize, not as an act of fraud which it was +incumbent on him to conceal, but as one of brilliant sagacity which he +was to avow and glory in. He caused a magnificent equestrian statue to +be sculptured, representing himself mounted on his neighing horse. +This statue he set up in a public place with this inscription:</p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p><span class="smcap">Darius, son of Hystaspes, obtained the sovereignty of Persia +by the sagacity of his horse and the ingenious contrivance +of Œbases His Groom.</span></p></div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[Pg 99]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="Chapter_V" id="Chapter_V"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter V.</span></h2> + +<h2><span class="smcap">The Provinces.</span></h2> + +<h3>B.C. 520</h3> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:50px;line-height:32px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">S</span><span style="margin-left:0%;">everal</span> of the events and incidents which occurred immediately after +the accession of Darius to the throne, illustrate in a striking manner +the degree in which the princes and potentates of ancient days were +governed by caprice and passionate impulse even in their public acts. +One of the most remarkable of these was the case of Intaphernes.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Intaphernes.<br />He is denied admittance to Darius.<br />Intaphernes's cruelty to the two guards.</div> + +<p>Intaphernes was one of the seven conspirators who combined to depose +the magian and place Darius on the throne. By the agreement which they +made with each other before it was decided which should be the king, +each of them was to have free access to the king's presence at all +times. One evening, soon after Darius became established on his +throne, Intaphernes went to the palace, and was proceeding to enter +the apartment of the king without ceremony, when he was stopped by two +officers, who told him that the king had retired. Intaphernes was +incensed at the officers' insolence, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[Pg 100]</a></span>as he called it. He drew his +sword, and cut off their noses and their ears. Then he took the bridle +off from his horse at the palace gate, and tied the officers together; +and then, leaving them in this helpless and miserable condition, he +went away.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius's apprehensions.</div> + +<p>The officers immediately repaired to the king, and presented +themselves to him, a frightful spectacle, wounded and bleeding, and +complaining bitterly of Intaphernes as the author of the injuries +which they had received. The king was at first alarmed for his own +safety. He feared that the conspirators had all combined together to +rebel against his authority, and that this daring insult offered to +his personal attendants, in his very palace, was the first outbreak of +it. He accordingly sent for the conspirators one by one, to ask of +them whether they approved of what Intaphernes had done. They promptly +disavowed all connection with Intaphernes in the act, and all approval +of it, and declared their determination to adhere to the decision that +they had made, by which Darius had been placed on the throne.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Intaphernes and family arrested.<br />They are condemned to die.</div> + +<p>Darius then, after taking proper precautions to guard against any +possible attempts at resistance, sent soldiers to seize Intaphernes, +and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[Pg 101]</a></span>also his son, and all of his family, relatives, and friends who +were capable of bearing arms; for he suspected that Intaphernes had +meditated a rebellion, and he thought that, if so, these men would +most probably be his accomplices. The prisoners were brought before +him. There was, indeed, no proof that they were engaged in any plan of +rebellion, nor even that any plan of rebellion whatever had been +formed; but this circumstance afforded them no protection. The +liberties and the lives of all subjects were at the supreme and +absolute disposal of these ancient kings. Darius thought it possible +that the prisoners had entertained, or might entertain, some +treasonable designs, and he conceived that he should, accordingly, +feel safer if they were removed out of the way. He decreed, therefore, +that they must all die.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Alternative offered to Intaphernes's wife.</div> + +<p>While the preparations were making for the execution, the wife of +Intaphernes came continually to the palace of Darius, begging for an +audience, that she might intercede for the lives of her friends. +Darius was informed of this, and at last, pretending to be moved with +compassion for her distress, he sent her word that he would pardon one +of the criminals for her sake, and that she might decide which one it +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[Pg 102]</a></span>should be. His real motive in making this proposal seems to have been +to enjoy the perplexity and anguish which the heart of a woman must +suffer in being compelled thus to decide, in a question of life and +death, between a husband and a son.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Her strange decision.</div> + +<p>The wife of Intaphernes did not decide in favor of either of these. +She gave the preference, on the other hand, to a brother. Darius was +very much surprised at this result, and sent a messenger to her to +inquire how it happened that she could pass over and abandon to their +fate her husband and her son, in order to save the life of her +brother, who was certainly to be presumed less near and dear to her. +To which she gave this extraordinary reply, that the loss of her +husband and her son might perhaps be repaired, since it was not +impossible that she might be married again, and that she might have +another son; but that, inasmuch as both her father and mother were +dead, she could never have another brother. The death of her present +brother would, therefore, be an irreparable loss.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Death of Intaphernes.</div> + +<p>The king was so much pleased with the novelty and unexpectedness of +this turn of thought, that he gave her the life of her son in addition +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[Pg 103]</a></span>to that of her brother. All the rest of the family circle of +relatives and friends, together with Intaphernes himself, he ordered +to be slain.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The provinces.<br />The governors.<br />Their independence.</div> + +<p>Darius had occasion to be so much displeased, too, shortly after his +accession to the throne, with the governor of one of his provinces, +that he was induced to order him to be put to death. The circumstances +connected with this governor's crime, and the manner of his execution, +illustrate very forcibly the kind of government which was administered +by these military despots in ancient times. It must be premised that +great empires, like that over which Darius had been called to rule, +were generally divided into provinces. The inhabitants of these +provinces, each community within its own borders, went on, from year +to year, in their various pursuits of peaceful industry, governed +mainly, in their relations to each other, by the natural sense of +justice instinctive in man, and by those thousand local institutions +and usages which are always springing up in all human communities +under the influence of this principle. There were governors stationed +over these provinces, whose main duty it was to collect and remit to +the king the tribute which the province was required to furnish him. +These governors <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[Pg 104]</a></span>were, of course, also to suppress any domestic +outbreak of violence, and to repel any foreign invasion which might +occur. A sufficient military force was placed at their disposal to +enable them to fulfill these functions. They paid these troops, of +course, from sums which they collected in their provinces under the +same system by which they collected the tribute. This made them, in a +great measure, independent of the king in the maintenance of their +armies. They thus intrenched themselves in their various capitals at +the head of these troops, and reigned over their respective dominions +almost as if they were kings themselves. They had, in fact, very +little connection with the supreme monarch, except to send him the +annual tribute which they had collected from their people, and to +furnish, also, their quota of troops in case of a national war. In the +time of our Savior, Pilate was such a governor, intrusted by the +Romans with the charge of Judea, and Matthew was one of the tax +gatherers employed to collect the tribute.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Power of the governors.</div> + +<p>Of course, the governors of such provinces, as we have already said, +were, in a great measure, independent of the king. He had, ordinarily, +no officers of justice whose jurisdiction <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">[Pg 105]</a></span>could control, peacefully, +such powerful vassals. The only remedy in most cases, when they were +disobedient and rebellious, was to raise an army and go forth to make +war upon them, as in the case of any foreign state. This was attended +with great expense, and trouble, and hazard. The governors, when +ambitious and aspiring, sometimes managed their resources with so much +energy and military skill as to get the victory over their sovereign +in the contests in which they engaged with them, and then they would +gain vast accessions to the privileges and powers which they exercised +in their own departments; and they would sometimes overthrow their +discomfited sovereign entirely, and take possession of his throne +themselves in his stead.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Oretes, governor of Sardis.</div> + +<p>Oretes was the name of one of these governors in the time of Darius. +He had been placed by Cyrus, some years before, in charge of one of +the provinces into which the kingdom of Lydia had been divided. The +seat of government was Sardis.<a name="FNanchor_D_4" id="FNanchor_D_4"></a><a href="#Footnote_D_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</a> He was a capricious and cruel +tyrant, as, in fact, almost all such governors <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">[Pg 106]</a></span>were. We will relate +an account of one of the deeds which he performed some time before +Darius ascended the throne, and which sufficiently illustrates his +character.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Conversation between Oretes and Mitrobates.<br />Polycrates.</div> + +<p>He was one day sitting at the gates of his palace in Sardis, in +conversation with the governor of a neighboring territory who had come +to visit him. The name of this guest was Mitrobates. As the two +friends were boasting to one another, as such warriors are accustomed +to do, of the deeds of valor and prowess which they had respectively +performed, Mitrobates said that Oretes could not make any great +pretensions to enterprise and bravery so long as he allowed the Greek +island of Samos, which was situate at a short distance from the Lydian +coast, to remain independent, when it would be so easy to annex it to +the Persian empire. "You are afraid of Polycrates, I suppose," said +he. Polycrates was the king of Samos.</p> + +<p>Oretes was stung by this taunt, but, instead of revenging himself on +Mitrobates, the author of it, he resolved on destroying Polycrates, +though he had no reason other than this for any feeling of enmity +toward him.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Dominion of Polycrates.</div> + +<p>Polycrates, although the seat of his dominion <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">[Pg 107]</a></span>was a small island in +the Ægean Sea, was a very wealthy, and powerful, and prosperous +prince. All his plans and enterprises had been remarkably successful. +He had built and equipped a powerful fleet, and had conquered many +islands in the neighborhood of his own. He was projecting still wider +schemes of conquests, and hoped, in fact, to make himself the master +of all the seas.</p> + +<p>A very curious incident is related of Polycrates, which illustrates +very strikingly the childish superstition which governed the minds of +men in those ancient days. It seems that in the midst of his +prosperity, his friend and ally, the King of Egypt—for these events, +though narrated here, occurred before the invasion of Egypt by +Cambyses—sent to him a letter, of which the following is the purport.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Letter of Amasis.<br />Suggestion of Amasis.</div> + +<p class="right">"<i>Amasis, king of Egypt, to Polycrates.</i></p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"It always gives me great satisfaction and pleasure to hear +of the prosperity of a friend and ally, unless it is too +absolutely continuous and uninterrupted. Something like an +alternation of good and ill fortune is best for man; I have +never known an instance of a very long-continued course of +unmingled and uninterrupted <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">[Pg 108]</a></span>success that did not end, at +last, in overwhelming and terrible calamity. I am anxious, +therefore, for you, and my anxiety will greatly increase if +this extraordinary and unbroken prosperity should continue +much longer. I counsel you, therefore, to break the current +yourself, if fortune will not break it. Bring upon yourself +some calamity, or loss, or suffering, as a means of averting +the heavier evils which will otherwise inevitably befall +you. It is a general and substantial welfare only that can +be permanent and final."</p></div> + +<div class="sidenote">Adopted by Polycrates.<br />Polycrates throws away his ring.</div> + +<p>Polycrates seemed to think there was good sense in this suggestion. He +began to look around him to see in what way he could bring upon +himself some moderate calamity or loss, and at length decided on the +destruction of a very valuable signet ring which he kept among his +treasures. The ring was made with very costly jewels set in gold, and +was much celebrated both for its exquisite workmanship and also for +its intrinsic value. The loss of this ring would be, he thought, a +sufficient calamity to break the evil charm of an excessive and +unvaried current of good fortune. Polycrates, therefore, ordered one +of the largest vessels in <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">[Pg 109]</a></span>his navy, a fifty-oared galley, to be +equipped and manned, and, embarking in it with a large company of +attendants, he put to sea. When he was at some distance from the +island, he took the ring, and in the presence of all his attendants, +he threw it forth into the water, and saw it sink, to rise, as he +supposed, no more.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Its singular recovery.</div> + +<p>But Fortune, it seems, was not to be thus outgeneraled. A few days +after Polycrates had returned, a certain fisherman on the coast took, +in his nets, a fish of very extraordinary size and beauty; so +extraordinary, in fact, that he felt it incumbent on him to make a +present of it to the king. The servants of Polycrates, on opening the +fish for the purpose of preparing it for the table, to their great +astonishment and gratification, found the ring within. The king was +overjoyed at thus recovering his lost treasure; he had, in fact, +repented of his rashness in throwing it away, and had been bitterly +lamenting its loss. His satisfaction and pleasure were, therefore, +very great in regaining it; and he immediately sent to Amasis an +account of the whole transaction, expecting that Amasis would share in +his joy.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Predictions of Amasis.</div> + +<p>Amasis, however, sent word back to him in reply, that he considered +the return of the ring <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">[Pg 110]</a></span>in that almost miraculous manner as an +extremely unfavorable omen. "I fear," said he, "that it is decreed by +the Fates that you must be overwhelmed, at last, by some dreadful +calamity, and that no measures of precaution which you can adopt will +avail to avert it. It seems to me, too," he added, "that it is +incumbent on me to withdraw from all alliance and connection with you, +lest I should also, at last, be involved in your destined +destruction."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Their fulfillment.</div> + +<p>Whether this extraordinary story was true, or whether it was all +fabricated after the fall of Polycrates, as a dramatic embellishment +of his history, we can not now know. The result, however, corresponded +with these predictions of Amasis, if they were really made; for it was +soon after these events that the conversation took place at Sardis +between Oretes and Mitrobates, at the gates of the palace, which led +Oretes to determine on effecting Polycrates's destruction.</p> + +<p>In executing the plans which he thus formed, Oretes had not the +courage and energy necessary for an open attack on Polycrates, and he +consequently resolved on attempting to accomplish his end by treachery +and stratagem.</p> + +<p>The plan which he devised was this: He sent <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">[Pg 111]</a></span>a messenger to Polycrates +with a letter of the following purport:</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Letter of Oretes.</div> + +<p class="right">"<i>Oretes, governor of Sardis, to Polycrates of Samos.</i></p> + +<div class="blockquot"><p>"I am aware, sire, of the plans which you have long been +entertaining for extending your power among the islands and +over the waters of the Mediterranean, until you shall have +acquired the supreme and absolute dominion of the seas. I +should like to join you in this enterprise. You have ships +and men, and I have money. Let us enter into an alliance +with each other. I have accumulated in my treasuries a large +supply of gold and silver, which I will furnish for the +expenses of the undertaking. If you have any doubt of my +sincerity in making these offers, and of my ability to +fulfill them, send some messenger in whom you have +confidence, and I will lay the evidence before him."</p></div> + +<div class="sidenote">His hypocrisy.<br />The pretended treasure.</div> + +<p>Polycrates was much pleased at the prospect of a large accession to +his funds, and he sent the messenger, as Oretes had proposed. Oretes +prepared to receive him by filling a large number of boxes nearly full +with heavy stones, and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">[Pg 112]</a></span>then placing a shallow layer of gold or silver +coin at the top. These boxes were then suitably covered and secured, +with the fastenings usually adopted in those days, and placed away in +the royal treasuries. When the messenger arrived, the boxes were +brought out and opened, and were seen by the messenger to be full, as +he supposed, of gold and silver treasure. The messenger went back to +Polycrates, and reported that all which Oretes had said was true; and +Polycrates then determined to go to the main land himself to pay +Oretes a visit, that they might mature together their plans for the +intended campaigns. He ordered a fifty-oared galley to be prepared to +convey him.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Fears of Polycrates's daughter.<br />Oretes murders Polycrates.</div> + +<p>His daughter felt a presentiment, it seems, that some calamity was +impending. She earnestly entreated her father not to go. She had had a +dream, she said, about him, which had frightened her excessively, and +which she was convinced portended some terrible danger. Polycrates +paid no attention to his daughter's warnings. She urged them more and +more earnestly, until, at last, she made her father angry, and then +she desisted. Polycrates then embarked on board his splendid galley, +and sailed away. As soon as he landed in the dominions of Oretes, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">[Pg 113]</a></span>the +monster seized him and put him to death, and then ordered his body to +be nailed to a cross, for exhibition to all passers by, as a public +spectacle. The train of attendants and servants that accompanied +Polycrates on this expedition were all made slaves, except a few +persons of distinction, who were sent home in a shameful and +disgraceful manner. Among the attendants who were detained in +captivity by Oretes was a celebrated family physician, named +Democedes, whose remarkable and romantic adventures will be the +subject of the next chapter.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">He commits other murders.</div> + +<p>Oretes committed several other murders and assassinations in this +treacherous manner, without any just ground for provocation. In these +deeds of violence and cruelty, he seems to have acted purely under the +influence of that wanton and capricious malignity which the possession +of absolute and irresponsible power so often engenders in the minds of +bad men. It is doubtful, however, whether these cruelties and crimes +would have particularly attracted the attention of Darius, so long as +he was not himself directly affected by them. The central government, +in these ancient empires, generally interested itself very little in +the contentions and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">[Pg 114]</a></span>quarrels of the governors of the provinces, +provided that the tribute was efficiently collected and regularly +paid.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Oretes destroys Darius's messenger.</div> + +<p>A case, however, soon occurred, in Oretes's treacherous and bloody +career, which arrested the attention of Darius and aroused his ire. +Darius had sent a messenger to Oretes, with certain orders, which, it +seems, Oretes did not like to obey. After delivering his dispatches +the bearer set out on his return, and was never afterward heard of. +Darius ascertained, to his own satisfaction at least, that Oretes had +caused his messenger to be waylaid and killed, and that the bodies +both of horse and rider had been buried, secretly, in the solitudes of +the mountains, in order to conceal the evidences of the deed.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius is incensed.<br />Plan of Darius for punishing Oretes.</div> + +<p>Darius determined on punishing this crime. Some consideration was, +however, required, in order to determine in what way his object could +best be effected. The province of Oretes was at a great distance from +Susa, and Oretes was strongly established there, at the head of a +great force. His guards were bound, it is true, to obey the orders of +Darius, but it was questionable whether they would do so. To raise an +army and march against the rebellious governor <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">[Pg 115]</a></span>would be an expensive +and hazardous undertaking, and perhaps, too, it would prove that such +a measure was not necessary. All things considered, Darius determined +to try the experiment of acting, by his own direct orders, upon the +troops and guards in Oretes's capital, with the intention of resorting +subsequently to an armed force of his own, if that should be at last +required.</p> + +<p>He accordingly called together a number of his officers and nobles, +selecting those on whose resolution and fidelity he could most +confidently rely, and made the following address to them:</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His proposal.</div> + +<p>"I have an enterprise which I wish to commit to the charge of some one +of your number who is willing to undertake it, which requires no +military force, and no violent measures of any kind, but only wisdom, +sagacity, and courage. I wish to have Oretes, the governor of Sardis, +brought to me, dead or alive. He has perpetrated innumerable crimes, +and now, in addition to all his other deeds of treacherous violence, +he has had the intolerable insolence to put to death one of my +messengers. Which of you will volunteer to bring him, dead or alive, +to me?"</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Commission of Bagæus.</div> + +<p>This proposal awakened a great enthusiasm <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">[Pg 116]</a></span>among the nobles to whom it +was addressed. Nearly thirty of them volunteered their services to +execute the order. Darius concluded to decide between these +competitors by lot. The lot fell upon a certain man named Bagæus, and +he immediately began to form his plans and make his arrangements for +the expedition.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His plan.<br />Oretes beheaded.</div> + +<p>He caused a number of different orders to be prepared, beginning with +directions of little moment, and proceeding to commands of more and +more weighty importance, all addressed to the officers of Oretes's +army and to his guards. These orders were all drawn up in writing with +great formality, and were signed by the name of Darius, and sealed +with his seal; they, moreover, named Bagæus as the officer selected by +the king to superintend the execution of them. Provided with these +documents, Bagæus proceeded to Sardis, and presented himself at the +court of Oretes. He presented his own personal credentials, and with +them some of his most insignificant orders. Neither Oretes nor his +guards felt any disposition to disobey them. Bagæus, being thus +received and recognized as the envoy of the king, continued to present +new decrees and edicts, from time to time, as occasions occurred in +which he thought the guards <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">[Pg 117]</a></span>would be ready to obey them, until he +found the habit, on their part, of looking to him as the +representative of the supreme power sufficiently established; for +their disposition to obey him was not merely tested, it was +strengthened by every new act of obedience. When he found, at length, +that his hold upon the guards was sufficiently strong, he produced his +two final decrees, one ordering the guards to depose Oretes from his +power, and the other to behead him. Both the commands were obeyed.</p> + +<p>The events and incidents which have been described in this chapter +were of no great importance in themselves, but they illustrate, more +forcibly than any general description would do the nature and the +operation of the government exercised by Darius throughout the vast +empire over which he found himself presiding.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Divisions of Darius's empire.<br />Tribute of the satrapies.<br />The white horses.</div> + +<p>Such personal and individual contests and transactions were not all +that occupied his attention. He devoted a great deal of thought and of +time to the work of arranging, in a distinct and systematic manner, +the division of his dominions into provinces, and to regulating +precisely the amount of tribute to be required of each, and the modes +of collecting it. He divided his empire into twenty great districts, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">[Pg 118]</a></span>each of which was governed by a ruler called a <i>satrap</i>. He fixed the +amount of tribute which each of these districts was to pay, making it +greater or less as the soil and the productions of the country varied +in fertility and abundance. In some cases this tribute was to be paid +in gold, in others in silver, and in others in peculiar commodities, +natural to the country of which they were required. For example, one +satrapy, which comprised a country famous for its horses, was obliged +to furnish one white horse for every day in the year. This made three +hundred and sixty annually, that being the number of days in the +Persian year. Such a supply, furnished yearly, enabled the king soon +to have a very large troop of white horses; and as the horses were +beautifully caparisoned, and the riders magnificently armed, the body +of cavalry thus formed was one of the most splendid in the world.</p> + +<p>The satrapies were numbered from the west toward the east. The western +portion of Asia Minor constituted the first, and the East Indian +nations the twelfth and last. The East Indians had to pay their +tribute in ingots of gold. Their country produced gold.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The gold of India.</div> + +<p>As it is now forever too late to separate the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">[Pg 119]</a></span>facts from the fiction +of ancient history, and determine what is to be rejected as false and +what received as true, our only resource is to tell the whole story +just as it comes down to us, leaving it to each reader to decide for +himself what he will believe. In this view of the subject, we will +conclude this chapter by relating the manner in which it was said in +ancient times that these Indian nations obtained their gold.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Mode of gathering it.<br />The wonderful ants.<br />Their prodigious size.</div> + +<p>The gold country was situated in remote and dreary deserts, inhabited +only by wild beasts and vermin, among which last there was, it seems, +a species of ants, which were of enormous size, and wonderful +fierceness and voracity, and which could run faster than the fleetest +horse or camel. These ants, in making their excavations, would bring +up from beneath the surface of the ground all the particles of gold +which came in their way, and throw them out around their hills. The +Indians then would penetrate into these deserts, mounted on the +fleetest camels that they could procure, and leading other camels, not +so fleet, by their sides. They were provided, also, with bags for +containing the golden sands. When they arrived at the ant hills, they +would dismount, and, gathering up the gold which the ants had +discarded, would <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">[Pg 120]</a></span>fill their bags with the utmost possible dispatch, +and then mount their camels and ride away. The ants, in the mean time, +would take the alarm, and begin to assemble to attack them; but as +their instinct prompted them to wait until considerable numbers were +collected before they commenced their attack, the Indians had time to +fill their bags and begin their flight before their enemies were +ready. Then commenced the chase, the camels running at their full +speed, and the swarms of ants following, and gradually drawing nearer +and nearer. At length, when nearly overtaken, the Indians would +abandon the camels that they were leading, and fly on, more swiftly, +upon those which they rode. While the ants were busy in devouring the +victims thus given up to them, the authors of all the mischief would +make good their escape, and thus carry off their gold to a place of +safety. These famous ants were bigger than foxes!</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">[Pg 121-2]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/i119.jpg" class="ispace jpg3" width="500" height="288" alt="The Indian Gold Hunter." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Indian Gold Hunter.</span></span> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">[Pg 123]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="Chapter_VI" id="Chapter_VI"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter VI.</span></h2> + +<h2><span class="smcap">The Reconnoitering of Greece.</span></h2> + +<h3>B.C. 519</h3> + +<div class="sidenote">The reconnoitering party.</div> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:50px;line-height:32px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">T</span><span style="margin-left:0%;">he</span> great event in the history of Darius—the one, in fact, on account +of which it was, mainly, that his name and his career have been so +widely celebrated among mankind, was an attempt which he made, on a +very magnificent scale, for the invasion and conquest of Greece. +Before commencing active operations in this grand undertaking, he sent +a reconnoitering party to examine and explore the ground. This +reconnoitering party met with a variety of extraordinary adventures in +the course of its progress, and the history of it will accordingly +form the subject of this chapter.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The physician Democedes.<br />Story of Democedes.<br />His boyhood.</div> + +<p>The guide to this celebrated reconnoitering party was a certain Greek +physician named Democedes. Though Democedes was called a Greek, he +was, really, an Italian by birth. His native town was Crotona, which +may be found exactly at the ball of the foot on the map of Italy. It +was by a very singular series of adventures that he passed from this +remote village <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">[Pg 124]</a></span>in the west, over thousands of miles by land and sea, +to Susa, Darius's capital. He began by running away from his father +while he was still a boy. He said that he was driven to this step by +the intolerable strictness and cruelty of his father's government. +This, however, is always the pretext of turbulent and ungovernable +young men, who abandon their parents and their homes when the favors +and the protection necessary during their long and helpless infancy +have been all received, and the time is beginning to arrive for making +some return.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Democedes at Ægina.</div> + +<p>Democedes was ingenious and cunning, and fond of roving adventure. In +running away from home, he embarked on board a ship, as such +characters generally do at the present day, and went to sea. After +meeting with various adventures, he established himself in the island +of Ægina, in the Ægean sea, where he began to practice as a physician, +though he had had no regular education in that art. In his practice he +evinced so much medical skill, or, at least, exercised so much +adroitness in leading people to believe that he possessed it, as to +give him very soon a wide and exalted reputation. The people of Ægina +appointed him their physician, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">[Pg 125]</a></span>and assigned him a large salary for +his services in attending upon the sick throughout the island. This +was the usual practice in those days. A town, or an island, or any +circumscribed district of country, would appoint a physician as a +public officer, who was to devote his attention, at a fixed annual +salary, to any cases of sickness which might arise in the community, +wherever his services were needed, precisely as physicians serve in +hospitals and public institutions in modern times.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">At Athens.</div> + +<p>Democedes remained at Ægina two years, during which time his celebrity +increased and extended more and more, until, at length, he received an +appointment from the city of Athens, with the offer of a greatly +increased salary. He accepted the appointment, and remained in Athens +one year, when he received still more advantageous offers from +Polycrates, the king of Samos, whose history was given so fully in the +last chapter.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">At the court of Polycrates.<br />Democedes a captive.</div> + +<p>Democedes remained for some time in the court of Polycrates, where he +was raised to the highest distinction, and loaded with many honors. He +was a member of the household of the king, enjoyed his confidence in a +high degree, and attended him, personally, on all his expeditions. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">[Pg 126]</a></span>At +last, when Polycrates went to Sardis, as is related in the last +chapter, to receive the treasures of Oretes, and concert with him the +plans for their proposed campaigns, Democedes accompanied him as +usual; and when Polycrates was slain, and his attendants and followers +were made captive by Oretes, the unfortunate physician was among the +number. By this reverse, he found that he had suddenly fallen from +affluence, ease, and honor, to the condition of a neglected and +wretched captive in the hands of a malignant and merciless tyrant.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">He is sent to Darius.<br />Democedes is cast into prison.</div> + +<p>Democedes pined in this confinement for a long time; when, at length, +Oretes himself was killed by the order of Darius, it might have been +expected that the hour of his deliverance had arrived. But it was not +so; his condition was, in fact, made worse, and not better by it; for +Bagæus, the commissioner of Darius, instead of inquiring into the +circumstances relating to the various members of Oretes's family, and +redressing the wrongs which any of them might be suffering, simply +seized the whole company, and brought them all to Darius in Susa, as +trophies of his triumph, and tokens of the faithfulness and efficiency +with which he had executed <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">[Pg 127]</a></span>the work that Darius had committed to his +charge. Thus Democedes was borne away, in hopeless bondage, thousands +of miles farther from his native land than before, and with very +little prospect of being ever able to return. He arrived at Susa, +destitute, squalid, and miserable. His language was foreign, his rank +and his professional skill unknown, and all the marks which might +indicate the refinement and delicacy of the modes of life to which he +had been accustomed were wholly disguised by his present destitution +and wretchedness. He was sent with the other captives to the prisons, +where he was secured, like them, with fetters and chains, and was soon +almost entirely forgotten.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His wretched condition.</div> + +<p>He might have taken some measures for making his character, and his +past celebrity and fame as a physician known; but he did not dare to +do this, for fear that Darius might learn to value his medical skill, +and so detain him as a slave for the sake of his services. He thought +that the chance was greater that some turn of fortune, or some +accidental change in the arrangements of government might take place, +by which he might be set at liberty, as an insignificant and worthless +captive, whom <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">[Pg 128]</a></span>there was no particular motive for detaining, than if +he were transferred to the king's household as a slave, and his value +as an artisan—for medical practice was, in those days, simply an +art—were once known. He made no effort, therefore, to bring his true +character to light, but pined silently in his dungeon, in rags and +wretchedness, and in a mental despondency which was gradually sinking +into despair.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius sprains his ankle.</div> + +<p>About this time, it happened that Darius was one day riding furiously +in a chase, and coming upon some sudden danger, he attempted to leap +from his horse. He fell and sprained his ankle. He was taken up by the +attendants, and carried home. His physicians were immediately called +to attend to the case. They were Egyptians. Egypt was, in fact, +considered the great seat and centre of learning and of the arts in +those days, and no royal household was complete without Egyptian +physicians.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Egyptian physicians baffled.<br />Sufferings of Darius.</div> + +<p>The learning and skill, however, of the Egyptians in Darius's court +were entirely baffled by the sprain. They thought that the joint was +dislocated, and they turned and twisted the foot with so much +violence, in their attempts to restore the bones to their proper +position, as greatly to increase the pain and the inflammation. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">[Pg 129]</a></span>Darius spent a week in extreme and excruciating suffering. He could +not sleep day nor night, but tossed in continual restlessness and +anguish on his couch, made constantly worse instead of better by every +effort of his physicians to relieve him.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">He sends for Democedes.</div> + +<p>At length somebody informed him that there was a Greek physician among +the captives that came from Sardis, and recommended that Darius should +send for him. The king, in his impatience and pain, was ready for any +experiment which promised the least hope of relief, and he ordered +that Democedes should be immediately summoned. The officers +accordingly went to the prison and brought out the astonished captive, +without any notice or preparation, and conducted him, just as he was, +ragged and wretched, and shackled with iron fetters upon his feet, +into the presence of the king. The fetters which such captives wore +were intended to allow them to walk, slowly and with difficulty, while +they impeded the movements of the feet so as effectually to prevent +any long or rapid flight, or any escape at all from free pursuers.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Democedes's denial.</div> + +<p>Democedes, when questioned by Darius, denied at first that he +possessed any medical <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">[Pg 130]</a></span>knowledge or skill. Darius was, however, not +deceived by these protestations. It was very customary, in those days +of royal tyranny, for those who possessed any thing valuable to +conceal the possession of it: concealment was often their only +protection. Darius, who was well aware of this tendency, did not +believe the assurances of Democedes, and in the irritation and +impatience caused by his pain, he ordered the captive to be taken out +and put to the torture, in order to make him confess that he was +really a physician.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">He treats the sprain successfully.</div> + +<p>Democedes yielded without waiting to be actually put to the test. He +acknowledged at once, for fear of the torture, that he had had some +experience in medical practice, and the sprained ankle was immediately +committed to his charge. On examining the case, he thought that the +harsh and violent operations which the Egyptian physicians had +attempted were not required. He treated the inflamed and swollen joint +in the gentlest manner. He made fomenting and emollient applications, +which soothed the pain, subdued the inflammation, and allayed the +restlessness and the fever. The royal sufferer became quiet and calm, +and in a short time fell asleep.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">[Pg 131]</a></span></p><div class="sidenote">Darius's recovery.</div> + +<p>In a word, the king rapidly recovered; and, overwhelmed with gratitude +toward the benefactor whose skill had saved him from such suffering, +he ordered that, in place of his single pair of iron fetters, he +should have two pairs of fetters of gold!</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The golden fetters.</div> + +<p>It might at first be imagined that such a strange token of regard as +this could be intended only as a jest and an insult; but there is no +doubt that Darius meant it seriously as a compliment and an honor. He +supposed that Democedes, of course, considered his condition of +captivity as a fixed and permanent one; and that his fetters were not, +in themselves, an injustice or disgrace, but the necessary and +unavoidable concomitant of his lot, so that the sending of golden +fetters to a slave was very naturally, in his view, like presenting a +golden crutch to a cripple. Democedes received the equivocal donation +with great good nature. He even ventured upon a joke on the subject to +the convalescent king. "It seems, sire," said he "that in return for +my saving your limb and your life, you double my servitude. You have +given me two chains instead of one."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Democedes released.<br />Honors conferred on him.</div> + +<p>The king, who was now in a much better humor to be pleased than when, +writhing in anguish, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">[Pg 132]</a></span>he had ordered Democedes to be put to the +torture, laughed at this reply, and released the captive from the +bonds entirely. He ordered him to be conducted by the attendants to +the apartments of the palace, where the wives of Darius and the other +ladies of the court resided, that they might see him and express their +gratitude. "This is the physician," said the eunuchs, who introduced +him, "that cured the king." The ladies welcomed him with the utmost +cordiality, and loaded him with presents of gold and silver as he +passed through their apartments. The king made arrangements, too, +immediately, for providing him with a magnificent house in Susa, and +established him there in great luxury and splendor, with costly +furniture and many attendants, and all other marks of distinction and +honor. In a word, Democedes found himself, by means of another +unexpected change of fortune, suddenly elevated to a height as lofty +as his misery and degradation had been low. He was, however, a captive +still.</p> + +<p>The Queen Atossa, the daughter of Cyrus, who has already been +mentioned as the wife of Cambyses and of Smerdis the magian, was one +of the wives of Darius. Her sister Antystone <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">[Pg 133]</a></span>was another. A third was +Phædyma, the daughter of Otanes, the lady who had been so +instrumental, in connection with Atossa, in the discovery of the +magian imposture. It happened that, some time after the curing of +Darius's sprain, Atossa herself was sick. Her malady was of such a +nature, that for some time she kept it concealed, from a feeling of +delicacy.<a name="FNanchor_E_5" id="FNanchor_E_5"></a><a href="#Footnote_E_5" class="fnanchor">[E]</a> At length, terrified by the danger which threatened her, +she sent for Democedes, and made her case known to him. He said that +he could cure her, but she must first promise to grant him, if he did +so, a certain favor which he should ask. She must promise beforehand +to grant it, whatever it might be. It was nothing, he said, that +should in any way compromise her honor.</p> + +<div class="sidenote3">Atossa cured by Democedes.</div> + +<p>Atossa agreed to these conditions, and Democedes undertook her case. +Her malady was soon cured; and when she asked him what was the favor +which he wished to demand, he replied,</p> + +<div class="sidenote3">His conditions.</div> + +<p>"Persuade Darius to form a plan for the invasion of Greece, and to +send me, with a small company of attendants, to explore the country, +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</a></span>and obtain for him all the necessary preliminary information. In this +way I shall see my native land once more."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Atossa with Darius.<br />She suggests the invasion of Greece.</div> + +<p>Atossa was faithful in her promise. She availed herself of the first +favorable opportunity, when it became her turn to visit the king, to +direct his mind, by a dexterous conversation, toward the subject of +the enlargement of his empire. He had vast forces and resources, she +said, at his command, and might easily enter upon a career of conquest +which would attract the admiration of the world. Darius replied that +he had been entertaining some views of that nature. He had thought, he +said, of attacking the Scythians: these Scythians were a group of +semi-savage nations on the north of his dominions. Atossa represented +to him that subduing the Scythians would be too easy a conquest, and +that it would be a far nobler enterprise, and more worthy of his +talents and his vast resources, to undertake an expedition into +Europe, and attempt the conquest of Greece. "You have all the means at +your command essential for the success of such an undertaking, and you +have in your court a man who can give you, or can obtain for you, all +the necessary information in respect to the country, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</a></span>to enable you to +form the plan of your campaigns."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The exploring party.<br />Democedes appointed guide.</div> + +<p>The ambition of Darius was fired by these suggestions. He began +immediately to form projects and schemes. In a day or two he organized +a small party of Persian officers of distinction, in whom he had great +confidence, to go on an exploring tour into Greece. They were provided +with a suitable company of attendants, and with every thing necessary +for their journey, and Democedes was directed to prepare to go with +them as their guide. They were to travel simply as a party of Persian +noblemen, on an excursion of curiosity and pleasure, concealing their +true design; and as Democedes their guide, though born in Italy, was +in all important points a Greek, and was well acquainted with the +countries through which they were to pass, they supposed that they +could travel every where without suspicion. Darius charged the +Persians to keep a diligent watch over Democedes, and not to allow +him, on any account to leave them, but to bring him back to Susa +safely with them on their return.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Designs of Democedes.<br />Darius baffled.</div> + +<p>As for Democedes, he had no intention whatever of returning to Persia, +though he kept his designs of making his escape entirely concealed. +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</a></span>Darius, with seeming generosity, said to him, while he was making his +preparations, "I recommend to you to take with you all your private +wealth and treasures, to distribute, for presents, among your friends +in Greece and Italy. I will bestow more upon you here on your return." +Democedes regarded this counsel with great suspicion. He imagined that +the king, in giving him this permission, wished to ascertain, by +observing whether he would really take with him all his possessions, +the existence of any secret determination in his mind not to come back +to Susa. If this were Darius's plan, it was defeated by the sagacious +vigilance and cunning of the physician. He told the king, in reply, +that he preferred to leave his effects in Persia, that they might be +ready for his use on his return. The king then ordered a variety of +costly articles to be provided and given to Democedes, to be taken +with him and presented to his friends in Greece and Italy. They +consisted of vessels of gold and silver, pieces of Persian armor of +beautiful workmanship, and articles of dress, expensive and splendid. +These were all carefully packed, and the various other necessary +preparations were made for the long journey.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</a></span></p><div class="sidenote">The expedition sets out.<br />City of Sidon.</div> + +<p>At length the expedition set out. They traveled by land westward, +across the continent, till they reached the eastern shores of the +Mediterranean Sea. The port at which they arrived was Sidon, the city +so often mentioned in the Scriptures as a great pagan emporium of +commerce. The city of Sidon was in the height of its glory at this +time, being one of the most important ports of the Mediterranean for +all the western part of Asia. Caravans of travelers came to it by +land, bringing on the backs of camels the productions of Arabia, +Persia, and all the East; and fleets of ships by sea, loaded with the +corn, and wine, and oil of the Western nations.</p> + +<p>At Sidon the land journey of the expedition was ended. Here they +bought two large and splendid ships, galleys of three banks of oars, +to convey them to Greece. These galleys were for their own personal +accommodation. There was a third vessel, called a transport, for the +conveyance of their baggage, which consisted mainly of the packages of +rich and costly presents which Darius had prepared. Some of these +presents were for the friends of Democedes, as has been already +explained, and others had been provided as gifts and offerings from +the king <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</a></span>himself to such distinguished personages as the travelers +might visit on their route. When the vessels were ready, and the +costly cargo was on board, the company of travelers embarked, and the +little fleet put to sea.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The sea voyage.<br />The Grecian coasts examined.<br />Arrival at Tarentum.</div> + +<p>The Grecian territories are endlessly divided and indented by the +seas, whose irregular and winding shores form promontories, +peninsulas, and islands without number, which are accessible in every +part by water. The Persian explorers cruised about among these coasts +under Democedes's guidance, examining every thing, and noting +carefully all the information which they could obtain, either by +personal observation or by inquiring of others, which might be of +service to Darius in his intended invasion. Democedes allowed them to +take their own time, directing their course, however, steadily, though +slowly, toward his own native town of Crotona. The expedition landed +in various places, and were every where well received. It was not for +the interest of Democedes that they should yet be intercepted. In +fact, the name and power of Darius were very much feared, or, at +least, very highly respected in all the Grecian territory, and the +people were little inclined to molest a peaceful party of Persians +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</a></span>traveling like ordinary tourists, and under the guidance, too, of a +distinguished countryman of their own, whose name was, in some degree, +a guarantee for the honesty and innocence of their intentions. At +length, however, after spending some time in the Grecian seas, the +little squadron moved still farther west, toward the coast of Italy, +and arrived finally at Tarentum. Tarentum was the great port on the +Grecian side of Italy. It was at the head of the spacious bay which +sets up between the heel and the ball of the foot of the boot-shaped +peninsula. Crotona, Democedes's native town, to which he was now +desirous to return, was southwest of Tarentum, about two hundred miles +along the shore.<a name="FNanchor_F_6" id="FNanchor_F_6"></a><a href="#Footnote_F_6" class="fnanchor">[F]</a></p> + +<div class="sidenote">Suspicions of the authorities.<br />The Persians seized.<br />Escape of Democedes.</div> + +<p>It was a very curious and extraordinary circumstance that, though the +expedition had been thus far allowed to go and come as its leaders +pleased, without any hinderance or suspicion, yet now, the moment that +they touched a point from which Democedes could easily reach his home, +the authorities on shore, in some way or other, obtained some +intimation of the true character of their enterprise. The Prince of +Tarentum seized the ships. He made the Persians <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</a></span>themselves prisoners +also, and shut them up; and, in order effectually to confine the +ships, he took away the helms from them, so that they could not be +steered, and were thus entirely disabled. The expedition being thus, +for the time at least, broken up, Democedes said, coolly, that he +would take the opportunity to make a little excursion along the coast, +and visit his friends at Crotona!</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Release of the Persians.<br />Tumult at Crotona.</div> + +<p>It was another equally suspicious circumstance in respect to the +probability that this seizure was the result of Democedes's +management, that, as soon as he was safely away, the Prince of +Tarentum set his prisoners at liberty, releasing, at the same time, +the ships from the seizure, and sending the helms on board. The +Persians were indignant at the treatment which they had received, and +set sail immediately along the coast toward Crotona in pursuit of +Democedes. They found him in the market-place in Crotona, haranguing +the people, and exciting, by his appearance and his discourse, a great +and general curiosity. They attempted to seize him as a fugitive, and +called upon the people of Crotona to aid them, threatening them with +the vengeance of Darius if they refused. A part of the people were +disposed to comply <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</a></span>with this demand, while others rallied to defend +their townsman. A great tumult ensued; but, in the end, the party of +Democedes was victorious. He was not only thus personally rescued, +but, as he informed the people that the transport vessel which +accompanied the expedition contained property that belonged to him, +they seized that too, and gave it up to Democedes, saying to the +Persians that, though they must give up the transport, the galleys +remained at their service to convey them back to their own country +whenever they wished to go.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Conduct of Democedes.</div> + +<p>The Persians had now no other alternative but to return home. They +had, it is true, pretty nearly accomplished the object of their +undertaking; but, if any thing remained to be done, they could not now +attempt it with any advantage, as they had lost their guide, and a +great portion of the effects which had been provided by Darius to +enable them to propitiate the favor of the princes and potentates into +whose power they might fall. They accordingly began to make +preparations for sailing back again to Sidon, while Democedes +established himself in great magnificence and splendor in Crotona. +When, at length, the Persians were ready to sail, Democedes wished +them a very pleasant <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</a></span>voyage, and desired them to give his best +respects to Darius, and inform him that he could not return at present +to Persia, as he was making arrangements to be married!</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The expedition returns.<br />Misfortunes.<br />Cillus.</div> + +<p>The disasters which had befallen these Persian reconnoiterers thus far +were only the beginning of their troubles. Their ships were driven by +contrary winds out of their course, and they were thrown at last upon +the coast of Iapygia, a country occupying the heel of Italy. Here they +were seized by the inhabitants and made slaves. It happened that there +was living in this wild country at that time a man of wealth and of +cultivation, who had been exiled from Tarentum on account of some +political offenses. His name was Cillus. He heard the story of these +unhappy foreigners, and interested himself in their fate. He thought +that, by rescuing them from their captivity and sending them home, he +should make Darius his friend, and secure, perhaps, his aid in +effecting his own restoration to his native land. He accordingly paid +the ransom which was demanded for the captives, and set them free. He +then aided them in making arrangements for their return to Persia, and +the unfortunate messengers found their way back at last to the court +of Darius, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</a></span>without their guide, without any of the splendid +appointments with which they had gone forth, but stripped of every +thing, and glad to escape with their lives.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Arrival at Susa.<br />Reception by Darius.</div> + +<p>They had some cause to fear, too, the anger of Darius, for the +insensate wrath of a tyrant is awakened as often by calamity as by +crime. Darius, however, was in this instance graciously disposed. He +received the unfortunate commissioners in a favorable manner. He took +immediate measures for rewarding Cillus for having ransomed them. He +treasured up, too, the information which they had obtained respecting +Greece, though he was prevented by circumstances, which we will +proceed to describe, from immediately putting into execution his plans +of invasion and conquest there.</p> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="Chapter_VII" id="Chapter_VII"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter VII.</span></h2> + +<h2><span class="smcap">The Revolt of Babylon.</span></h2> + +<h3>B.C. 516-514</h3> + +<div class="sidenote">City of Babylon.</div> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:50px;line-height:32px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">T</span><span style="margin-left:0%;">he</span> city of Babylon, originally the capital of the Assyrian empire, +was conquered by Cyrus, the founder of the Persian monarchy, when he +annexed the Assyrian empire to his dominions. It was a vast and a very +magnificent and wealthy city; and Cyrus made it, for a time, one of +his capitals.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The captive Jews.</div> + +<p>When Cyrus made this conquest of Babylon, he found the Jews in +captivity there. They had been made captive by Nebuchadnezzar, a +previous king of Babylon, as is related in the Scriptures. The holy +prophets of Judea had predicted that after seventy years the captives +should return, and that Babylon itself should afterward be destroyed. +The first prediction was fulfilled by the victory of Cyrus. It +devolved on Darius to execute the second of these solemn and +retributive decrees of heaven.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Wickedness of the Babylonians.</div> + +<p>Although Darius was thus the instrument of divine Providence in the +destruction of Babylon, he was unintentionally and unconsciously so. +In the terrible scenes connected with the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</a></span>siege and the storming of +the ill-fated city, it was the impulse of his own hatred and revenge +that he was directly obeying; he was not at all aware that he was, at +the same time, the messenger of the divine displeasure. The wretched +Babylonians, in the storming and destruction of their city, were +expiating a double criminality. Their pride, their wickedness, their +wanton cruelty toward the Jews, had brought upon them the condemnation +of God, while their political treason and rebellion, or, at least, +what was considered treason and rebellion aroused the implacable +resentment of their king.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Causes of discontent.</div> + +<p>The Babylonians had been disposed to revolt even in the days of Cyrus. +They had been accustomed to consider their city as the most noble and +magnificent capital in the world, and they were displeased that Cyrus +did not make it the seat and center of his empire. Cyrus preferred +Susa; and Babylon, accordingly, though he called it one of his +capitals, soon fell to the rank of a provincial city. The nobles and +provincial leaders that remained there began accordingly to form plans +for revolting from the Persian dominion, with a view of restoring +their city to its ancient position and renown.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Preparations of the Babylonians for revolt.<br />Their secrecy.</div> + +<p>They had a very favorable opportunity for <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</a></span>maturing their plans, and +making their preparations for the execution of them during the time of +the magian usurpation; for while the false Smerdis was on the throne, +being shut up and concealed in his palace at Susa, the affairs of the +provinces were neglected; and when Darius and his accomplices +discovered the imposture and put Smerdis to death, there was +necessarily required, after so violent a revolution, a considerable +time before the affairs of the empire demanding attention at the +capital could be settled, so as to allow the government to turn their +thoughts at all toward the distant dependencies. The Babylonians +availed themselves of all these opportunities to put their city in the +best condition for resisting the Persian power. They strengthened +their defenses, and accumulated great stores of provisions, and took +measures for diminishing that part of the population which would be +useless in war. These measures were all concerted and carried into +effect in the most covert and secret manner; and the tidings came at +last to Susa that Babylon had openly revolted, before the government +of Darius was aware even of the existence of any disaffection.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Time chosen for revolt.</div> + +<p>The time which the Babylonians chose for <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</a></span>their rebellion at last was +one when the movable forces which Darius had at command were at the +west, engaged in a campaign on the shores of Asia Minor. Darius had +sent them there for the purpose of restoring a certain exile and +wanderer named Syloson to Samos, and making him the monarch of it. +Darius had been induced thus to interpose in Syloson's behalf by the +following very extraordinary circumstances.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Story of Syloson.</div> + +<p>Syloson was the brother of Polycrates, whose unhappy history has +already been given. He was exiled from Samos some time before Darius +ascended the throne, and he became, consequently, a sort of soldier of +fortune, serving, like other such adventurers, wherever there was the +greatest prospect of glory and pay. In this capacity he followed the +army of Cambyses into Egypt in the memorable campaign described in the +first chapter of this volume. It happened, also, that Darius himself, +who was then a young noble in the Persian court, and yet of no +particular distinction, as there was then no reason to imagine that he +would ever be elevated to the throne, was also in Cambyses's army, and +the two young men became acquainted with one another there.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">[Pg 148]</a></span></p><p>While the army was at Memphis, an incident occurred in which these two +personages were actors, which, though it seemed unimportant at the +time, led, in the end, to vast and momentous results. The incident was +this:</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Syloson's red cloak.<br />He gives it to Darius.</div> + +<p>Syloson had a very handsome red cloak, which, as he appeared in it one +day, walking in the great square at Memphis, strongly attracted the +admiration of Darius. Darius asked Syloson if he would sell him the +cloak. Syloson said that he would not sell it, but would give it to +him. He thought, probably, that Darius would decline receiving it as a +present. If he did entertain that idea, it seems he was mistaken. +Darius praised him for his generosity, and accepted the gift.</p> + +<p>Syloson was then sorry that he had made so inconsiderate an offer, and +regretted very much the loss of his cloak. In process of time, the +campaign of Cambyses in Egypt was ended, and Darius returned to +Persia, leaving Syloson in the west. At length the conspiracy was +formed for dethroning Smerdis the magian, as has already been +described, and Darius was designated to reign in his stead. As the +news of the young noble's elevation spread into the western world, it +reached Syloson. He was <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">[Pg 149]</a></span>much pleased at receiving the intelligence, +and he saw immediately that there was a prospect of his being able to +derive some advantage, himself, from the accession of his old +fellow-soldier to the throne.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Syloson goes to Susa.</div> + +<p>He immediately proceeded to Susa. He applied at the gates of the +palace for admission to the presence of the king. The porter asked him +who he was. He replied that he was a Greek who had formerly done +Darius a service, and he wished to see him. The porter carried the +message to the king. The king could not imagine who the stranger +should be. He endeavored in vain to recall to mind any instance in +which he had received a favor from a Greek. At length he ordered the +attendant to call the visitor in.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Interview with Darius.</div> + +<p>Syloson was accordingly conducted into the king's presence. Darius +looked upon him, but did not know him. He directed the interpreters to +inquire what the service was which he had rendered the king, and when +he had rendered it. The Greek replied by relating the circumstance of +the cloak. Darius recollected the cloak, though he had forgotten the +giver. "Are you, indeed," said he, "the man who made me that present? +I thought then that <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">[Pg 150]</a></span>you were very generous to me, and you shall see +that I do not undervalue the obligation now. I am at length, +fortunately, in a situation to requite the favor, and I will give you +such an abundance of gold and silver as shall effectually prevent your +being sorry for having shown a kindness to Darius Hystaspes."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Request of Syloson.</div> + +<p>Syloson thanked the king in reply, but said that he did not wish for +gold and silver. Darius asked him what reward he did desire. He +replied that he wished Samos to be restored to him: "Samos," said he, +"was the possession of my brother. When he went away from the island, +he left it temporarily in the hands of Mæandrius, an officer of his +household. It still remains in the possession of this family, while I, +the rightful heir, am a homeless wanderer and exile, excluded from my +brother's dominions by one of his slaves."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius grants it.</div> + +<p>Darius immediately determined to accede to Syloson's request. He +raised an army and put it under the command of Otanes, who, it will be +recollected, was one of the seven conspirators that combined to +dethrone Smerdis the magian. He directed Otanes to accompany Syloson +to Samos, and to put him in possession of the island. Syloson was +particularly earnest <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">[Pg 151]</a></span>in his request that no unnecessary violence +should be used, and no blood shed, or vindictive measures of any kind +adopted. Darius promised to comply with these desires, and gave his +orders to Otanes accordingly.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Citadel of Samos.<br />Measures of Mæandrius.</div> + +<p>Notwithstanding this, however, the expedition resulted in the almost +total destruction of the Samian population, in the following manner. +There was a citadel at Samos, to which the inhabitants retired when +they learned that Otanes had embarked his troops in ships on the +coast, and was advancing toward the island. Mæandrius was vexed and +angry at the prospect of being deprived of his possessions and his +power; and, as the people hated him on account of his extortion and +tyranny, he hated them in return, and cared not how much suffering his +measures might be the means of bringing upon them. He had a +subterranean and secret passage from the citadel to the shore of the +sea, where, in a secluded cove, were boats or vessels ready to take +him away. Having made these arrangements to secure his own safety, he +proceeded to take such a course and adopt such measures as should tend +most effectually to exasperate and offend the Persians, intending to +escape, himself, at the last moment, by this subterranean <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">[Pg 152]</a></span>retreat, +and to leave the inhabitants of the island at the mercy of their +infuriated enemies.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Hypocrisy of Mæandrius.<br />His brother Charilaus.<br />Reproaches of Charilaus.</div> + +<p>He had a brother whom he had shut up in a dungeon, and whose mind, +naturally depraved, and irritated by his injuries, was in a state of +malignant and furious despair. Mæandrius had pretended to be willing +to give up the island to the Persians. He had entered into +negotiations with them for this purpose, and the Persians considered +the treaty as in fact concluded. The leaders and officers of the army +had assembled, accordingly, before the citadel in a peaceful attitude, +waiting merely for the completion of the forms of surrender, when +Charilaus, Mæandrius's captive brother, saw them, by looking out +between the bars of his window, in the tower in which he was confined. +He sent an urgent message to Mæandrius, requesting to speak to him. +Mæandrius ordered the prisoner to be brought before him. The haggard +and wretched-looking captive, rendered half insane by the combined +influence of the confinement he had endured, and of the wild +excitement produced by the universal panic and confusion which reigned +around him, broke forth against his brother in the boldest and most +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">[Pg 153]</a></span>violent invectives. He reproached him in the most bitter terms for +being willing to yield so ingloriously, and without a struggle, to an +invading foe, whom he might easily repel. "You have courage and energy +enough, it seems," said he, "to make war upon an innocent and +defenseless brother, and to keep him for years in chains and in a +dungeon, but when an actual enemy appears, though he comes to despoil +you of all your possessions, and to send you into hopeless exile, and +though, if you had the ordinary courage and spirit of a man, you could +easily drive him away, yet you dare not face him. If you are too +cowardly and mean to do your duty yourself, give me your soldiers, and +I will do it for you. I will drive these Persians back into the sea +with as much pleasure as it would give me to drive you there!"</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Character of Mæandrius.<br />Attack of Charilaus.<br />Slaughter of the Samians.</div> + +<p>Such a nature as that of Mæandrius can not be stung into a proper +sense of duty by reproaches like these. There seem to have been in his +heart no moral sensibilities of any kind, and there could be, of +course, no compunctions for the past, and no awakening of new and +better desires for the future. All the effect which was produced upon +his mind by these bitter denunciations was to convince him that <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">[Pg 154]</a></span>to +comply with his brother's request would be to do the best thing now in +his power for widening, and extending, and making sure the misery and +mischief which were impending. He placed his troops, therefore, under +his brother's orders; and while the infuriated madman sallied forth at +the head of them to attack the astonished Persians on one side of the +citadel, Mæandrius made his escape through the under-ground passage on +the other. The Persians were so exasperated at what appeared to them +the basest treachery, that, as soon as they could recover their arms +and get once more into battle array, they commenced a universal +slaughter of the Samians. They spared neither age, sex, nor condition; +and when, at last, their vengeance was satisfied, and they put the +island into Syloson's hands, and withdrew, he found himself in +possession of an almost absolute solitude.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">[Pg 155-6]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/i154.jpg" class="ispace jpg3" width="500" height="295" alt="The Babylonians deriding Darius." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Babylonians deriding Darius.</span></span> +</div> + +<div class="sidenote2">Revolt of Babylon.</div> + +<p>It was while Otanes was absent on this enterprise, having with him a +large part of the disposable forces of the king, that the Babylonians +revolted. Darius was greatly incensed at hearing the tidings. +Sovereigns are always greatly incensed at a revolt on the part of +their subjects. The circumstances of the case, whatever they may be, +always seem to them to constitute <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">[Pg 157]</a></span>a peculiar aggravation of the offense. Darius was indignant that the +Babylonians had attempted to take advantage of his weakness by +rebelling when his armies were away. If they had risen when his armies +were around him, he would have been equally indignant with them for +having dared to brave his power.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Insults and jeers of the Babylonians.</div> + +<p>He assembled all the forces at his disposal, and advanced to Babylon. +The people of the city shut their gates against him, and derided him. +They danced and capered on the walls, making all sorts of gestures +expressive of contempt and defiance, accompanied with shouts and +outcries of ridicule and scorn. They had great confidence in the +strength of their defenses, and then, besides this, they probably +regarded Darius as a sort of usurper, who had no legitimate title to +the throne, and who would never be able to subdue any serious +resistance which might be offered to the establishment of his power. +It was from these considerations that they were emboldened to be +guilty of the folly of taunting and insulting their foes from the city +walls.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Ancient mode of warfare.<br />Modern warfare.</div> + +<p>Such incidents as this, of personal communications between masses of +enemies on the eve of a battle, were very common in ancient <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">[Pg 158]</a></span>warfare, +though impossible in modern times. In those days, when the missiles +employed were thrown chiefly by the strength of the human arm alone, +the combatants could safely draw near enough together for each side to +hear the voices and to see the gesticulations of the other. Besiegers +could advance sufficiently close to a castle or citadel to parley +insultingly with the garrison upon the walls, and yet be safe from the +showers of darts and arrows which were projected toward them in +return. But all this is now changed. The reach of cannon, and even of +musketry, is so long, that combatants, approaching a conflict, are +kept at a very respectful distance apart, until the time arrives in +which the actual engagement is to begin. They reconnoiter each other +with spy-glasses from watch-towers on the walls, or from eminences in +the field, but they can hold no communication except by a formal +embassy, protected by a flag of truce, which, with its white and +distant fluttering, as it slowly advances over the green fields, warns +the gunners at the battery or on the bastion to point their artillery +another way.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Taunt of the Babylonians.</div> + +<p>The Babylonians, on the walls of their city, reproached and taunted +their foes incessantly. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">[Pg 159]</a></span>"Take our advice," said they, "and go back +where you came from. You will only lose your time in besieging +Babylon. When mules have foals, you will take the city, and not till +then."</p> + +<p>The expression "when mules have foals" was equivalent in those days to +our proverbial phrase, "when the sky falls," being used to denote any +thing impossible or absurd, inasmuch as mules, like other hybrid +animals, do not produce young. It was thought in those times +absolutely impossible that they should do so; but it is now well known +that the case is not impossible, though very rare.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Fabricating prodigies.<br />The mule of Zopyrus.</div> + +<p>It seems to have added very much to the interest of an historical +narrative in the minds of the ancient Greeks, to have some prodigy +connected with every great event; and, in order to gratify this +feeling, the writers appear in some instances to have fabricated a +prodigy for the occasion, and in others to have elevated some unusual, +though by no means supernatural circumstance, to the rank and +importance of one. The prodigy connected with this siege of Babylon +was the foaling of a mule. The mule belonged to a general in the army +of Darius, named Zopyrus. It was after Darius had been prosecuting the +siege of the city for a year and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">[Pg 160]</a></span>a half, without any progress +whatever toward the accomplishment of his end. The army began to +despair of success. Zopyrus, with the rest, was expecting that the +siege would be indefinitely prolonged, or, perhaps, absolutely +abandoned, when his attention was strongly attracted to the phenomenon +which had happened in respect to the mule. He remembered the taunt of +the Babylonian on the wall, and it seemed to him that the whole +occurrence portended that the time had now arrived when some way might +be devised for the capture of the city.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Interview with Darius.</div> + +<p>Portents and prophecies are often the causes of their own fulfillment, +and this portent led Zopyrus to endeavor to devise some means to +accomplish the end in view. He went first, however, to Darius, to +converse with him upon the subject, with a view of ascertaining how +far he was really desirous of bringing the siege to a termination. He +wished to know whether the object was of sufficient importance in +Darius's mind to warrant any great sacrifice on his own part to effect +it.</p> + +<p>He found that it was so. Darius was extremely impatient to end the +siege and to capture the city; and Zopyrus saw at once that, if he +could in any way be the means of accomplishing <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">[Pg 161]</a></span>the work, he should +entitle himself, in the highest possible degree, to the gratitude of +the king.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Desperate plan of Zopyrus.<br />He mutilates himself.</div> + +<p>He determined to go himself into Babylon as a pretended deserter from +Darius, with a view to obtaining an influence and a command within the +city, which should enable him afterward to deliver it up to the +besiegers; and, in order to convince the Babylonians that his +desertion was real, he resolved to mutilate himself in a manner so +dreadful as would effectually prevent their imagining that the +injuries which he suffered were inflicted by any contrivance of his +own. He accordingly cut off his hair and his ears, and mutilated his +face in a manner too shocking to be here detailed, inflicting injuries +which could never be repaired. He caused himself to be scourged, also, +until his whole body was covered with cuts and contusions. He then +went, wounded and bleeding as he was, into the presence of Darius, to +make known his plans.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius's astonishment.</div> + +<p>Darius expressed amazement and consternation at the terrible +spectacle. He leaped from his throne and rushed toward Zopyrus, +demanding who had dared to maltreat one of his generals in such a +manner. When Zopyrus replied <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">[Pg 162]</a></span>that he had himself done the deed, the +king's astonishment was greater than before. He told Zopyrus that he +was insane. Some sudden paroxysm of madness had come over him. Zopyrus +replied that he was not insane; and he explained his design. His plan, +he said, was deliberately and calmly formed, and it should be steadily +and faithfully executed. "I did not make known my design to you," said +he, "before I had taken the preliminary steps, for I knew that you +would prevent my taking them. It is now too late for that, and nothing +remains but to reap, if possible, the advantage which may be derived +from what I have done."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Final arrangements.</div> + +<p>He then arranged with Darius the plans which he had formed, so far as +he needed the co-operation of the king in the execution of them. If he +could gain a partial command in the Babylonian army, he was to make a +sally from the city gates on a certain day, and attack a portion of +the Persian army, which Darius was to leave purposely exposed, in +order that he might gain credit with the Babylonians by destroying +them. From this he supposed that the confidence which the Babylonians +would repose in him would increase, and he might consequently receive +a greater command. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">[Pg 163]</a></span>Thus he might, by acting in concert with Darius +without, gradually gain such an ascendency within the city as finally +to have power to open the gates and let the besiegers in. Darius was +to station a detachment of a thousand men near a certain gate, leaving +them imperfectly armed, on the tenth day after Zopyrus entered the +city. These Zopyrus was to destroy. Seven days afterward, two thousand +more were to be stationed in a similar manner at another point; and +these were also to be destroyed by a second sally. Twenty days after +this, four thousand more were to be similarly exposed. Thus seven +thousand innocent and defenseless men would be slaughtered, but that, +as Zopyrus said, would be "of no consequence." The lives of men were +estimated by heroes and conquerors in those days only at their +numerical value in swelling the army roll.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Zopyrus leaves the Persian camp.<br />Success of Zopyrus's stratagem.<br />His piteous story.</div> + +<p>These things being all arranged, Zopyrus took leave of the King to go +to Babylon. As he left the Persian camp, he began to run, looking +round behind him continually, as if in flight. Some men, too, +pretended to pursue him. He fled toward one of the gates of the city. +The sentinels on the walls saw him coming. When <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">[Pg 164]</a></span>he reached the gate, +the porter inside of it talked with him through a small opening, and +heard his story. The porter then reported the case to the superior +officers, and they commanded that the fugitive should be admitted. +When conducted into the presence of the magistrates, he related a +piteous story of the cruel treatment which he had received from +Darius, and of the difficulty which he had experienced in making his +escape from the tyrant's hands. He uttered, too, dreadful imprecations +against Darius, and expressed the most eager determination to be +revenged. He informed the Babylonians, moreover, that he was well +acquainted with all Darius's plans and designs, and with the +disposition which he had made of his army; and that, if they would, in +a few days, when his wounds should have in some measure healed, give +him a small command, he would show them, by actual trial, what he +could do to aid their cause.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The three victories.<br />Zopyrus intrusted with power in Babylon.</div> + +<p>They acceded to this proposition, and furnished Zopyrus, at the end of +ten days, with a moderate force. Zopyrus, at the head of this force, +sallied forth from the gate which had been previously agreed upon +between him and Darius, and fell upon the unfortunate thousand <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">[Pg 165]</a></span>that +had been stationed there for the purpose of being destroyed. They were +nearly defenseless, and Zopyrus, though his force was inferior, cut +them all to pieces before they could be re-enforced or protected, and +then retreated safely into the city again. He was received by the +Babylonians with the utmost exultation and joy. He had no difficulty +in obtaining, seven days afterward, the command of a larger force, +when, sallying forth from another gate, as had been agreed upon by +Darius, he gained another victory, destroying, on this occasion, twice +as many Persians as before. These exploits gained the pretended +deserter unbounded fame and honor within the city. The populace +applauded him with continual acclamations; and the magistrates invited +him to their councils, offered him high command, and governed their +own plans and measures by his advice. At length, on the twentieth day, +he made his third sally, at which time he destroyed and captured a +still greater number than before. This gave him such an influence and +position within the city, in respect to its defense, that he had no +difficulty in getting intrusted with the keys of certain gates—those, +namely, by which he had agreed that the army of Darius should be +admitted.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">[Pg 166]</a></span></p><div class="sidenote">Zopyrus admits the Persians.<br />Fall of Babylon.</div> + +<p>When the time arrived, the Persians advanced to the attack of the city +in that quarter, and the Babylonians rallied as usual on the walls to +repel them. The contest had scarcely begun before they found that the +gates were open, and that the columns of the enemy were pouring in. +The city was thus soon wholly at the mercy of the conqueror. Darius +dismantled the walls, carried off the brazen gates, and crucified +three thousand of the most distinguished inhabitants; then +establishing over the rest a government of his own, he withdrew his +troops and returned to Susa. He bestowed upon Zopyrus, at Susa, all +possible rewards and honors. The marks of his wounds and mutilations +could never be effaced, but Darius often said that he would gladly +give up twenty Babylons to be able to efface them.</p> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">[Pg 167]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="Chapter_VIII" id="Chapter_VIII"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter VIII.</span></h2> + +<h2><span class="smcap">The Invasion of Scythia.</span></h2> + +<h3>B.C. 513</h3> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius's authority fully established throughout his +dominions.</div> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:50px;line-height:32px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">I</span><span style="margin-left:0%;">n</span> the reigns of ancient monarchs and conquerors, it often happened +that the first great transaction which called forth their energies was +the suppression of a rebellion within their dominions, and the second, +an expedition against some ferocious and half-savage nations beyond +their frontiers. Darius followed this general example. The suppression +of the Babylonian revolt established his authority throughout the +whole interior of his empire. If that vast, and populous, and wealthy +city was found unable to resist his power, no other smaller province +or capital could hope to succeed in the attempt. The whole empire of +Asia, therefore, from the capital at Susa, out to the extreme limits +and bounds to which Cyrus had extended it, yielded without any further +opposition to his sway. He felt strong in his position, and being +young and ardent in temperament, he experienced a desire to exercise +his strength. For some reason or other, he seems to have <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">[Pg 168]</a></span>been not +quite prepared yet to grapple with the Greeks, and he concluded, +accordingly, first to test his powers in respect to foreign invasion +by a war upon the Scythians. This was an undertaking which required +some courage and resolution; for it was while making an incursion into +the country of the Scythians that Cyrus, his renowned predecessor, and +the founder of the Persian empire, had fallen.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Scythians.<br />Ancient account of them.<br />Pictures of savage life.</div> + +<p>The term Scythians seems to have been a generic designation, applied +indiscriminately to vast hordes of half-savage tribes occupying those +wild and inhospitable regions of the north, that extended along the +shores of the Black and Caspian Seas, and the banks of the Danube. The +accounts which are given by the ancient historians of the manners and +customs of these people, are very inconsistent and contradictory; as, +in fact, the accounts of the characters of savages, and of the habits +and usages of savage life, have always been in every age. It is very +little that any one cultivated observer can really know, in respect to +the phases of character, the thoughts and feelings, the sentiments, +the principles and the faith, and even the modes of life, that prevail +among uncivilized aborigines living in forests, or roaming wildly over +uninclosed<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">[Pg 169]</a></span> and trackless plains. Of those who have the opportunity to +observe them, accordingly, some extol, in the highest degree, their +rude but charming simplicity, their truth and faithfulness, the +strength of their filial and conjugal affection, and their superiority +of spirit in rising above the sordid sentiments and gross vices of +civilization. They are not the slaves, these writers say, of appetite +and passion. They have no inordinate love of gain; they are patient in +enduring suffering, grateful for kindness received, and inflexibly +firm in their adherence to the principles of honor and duty. Others, +on the other hand, see in savage life nothing but treachery, cruelty, +brutality, and crime. Man in his native state, as they imagine, is but +a beast, with just intelligence enough to give effect to his +depravity. Without natural affection, without truth, without a sense +of justice, or the means of making law a substitute for it, he lives +in a scene of continual conflict, in which the rights of the weak and +the defenseless are always overborne by brutal and tyrannical power.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Their diversity.<br />Social instincts of man.<br />Their universality.<br />Moral sentiments of mankind.</div> + +<p>The explanation of this diversity is doubtless this, that in savage +life, as well as in every other state of human society, all the +varieties <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">[Pg 170]</a></span>of human conduct and character are exhibited; and the +attention of each observer is attracted to the one or to the other +class of phenomena, according to the circumstances in which he is +placed when he makes his observations, or the mood of mind which +prevails within him when he records them. There must be the usual +virtues of social life, existing in a greater or less degree, in all +human communities; for such principles as a knowledge of the +distinction of right and wrong, the idea of property and of individual +rights, the obligation resting on every one to respect them, the sense +of justice, and of the ill desert of violence and cruelty, are all +<i>universal instincts of the human soul</i>, as universal and as essential +to humanity as maternal or filial affection, or the principle of +conjugal love. They were established by the great Author of nature as +constituent elements in the formation of man. Man could not continue +to exist, as a gregarious animal, without them. It would accordingly +be as impossible to find a community of men without these moral +sentiments generally prevalent among them, as to find vultures or +tigers that did not like to pursue and take their prey, or deer +without a propensity to fly from danger. The laws and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">[Pg 171]</a></span>usages of +civilized society are the expression and the result of these +sentiments, not the origin and foundation of them; and violence, +cruelty, and crime are the exceptions to their operation, very few, in +all communities, savage or civilized, in comparison with the vast +preponderance of cases in which they are obeyed.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Religious depravity.</div> + +<p>This view of the native constitution of the human character, which it +is obvious, on very slight reflection, must be true, is not at all +opposed, as it might at first appear to be, by the doctrine of the +theological writers in the Christian Church in respect to the native +depravity of man; for the depravity here referred to is a religious +depravity, an alienation of the heart from God, and a rebellious and +insubmissive spirit in respect to his law. Neither the Scriptures nor +the theological writers who interpret them ever call in question the +universal existence and prevalence of those instincts that are +essential to the social welfare of man.</p> + +<p>But we must return to the Scythians.</p> + +<p>The tribes which Darius proposed to attack occupied the countries +north of the Danube. His route, therefore, for the invasion of their +territories would lead him through Asia Minor, thence across the +Hellespont or the Bosporus <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">[Pg 172]</a></span>into Thrace, and from Thrace across the +Danube. It was a distant and dangerous expedition.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Advice of Artabanus.</div> + +<p>Darius had a brother named Artabanus. Artabanus was of opinion that +the enterprise which the king was contemplating was not only distant +and dangerous, but that the country of the Scythians was of so little +value that the end to be obtained by success would be wholly +inadequate to compensate for the exertions, the costs, and the hazards +which he must necessarily incur in the prosecution of it. But Darius +was not to be dissuaded. He thanked his brother for his advice, but +ordered the preparations for the expedition to go on.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Emissaries sent forward.</div> + +<p>He sent emissaries forward, in advance, over the route that his army +was destined to take, transmitting orders to the several provinces +which were situated on the line of his march to prepare the way for +the passage of his troops. Among other preparations, they were to +construct a bridge of boats across the Bosporus at Chalcedon. This +work was intrusted to the charge and superintendence of an engineer of +Samos named Mandrocles. The people of the provinces were also to +furnish bodies of troops, both infantry and cavalry, to join the army +on its march.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">[Pg 173]</a></span></p><p>The soldiers that were enlisted to go on this remote and dangerous +expedition joined the army, as is usual in such cases, some willingly, +from love of adventure, or the hope of opportunities for plunder, and +for that unbridled indulgence of appetite and passion which soldiers +so often look forward to as a part of their reward; others from hard +compulsion, being required to leave friends and home, and all that +they held dear, under the terror of a stern and despotic edict which +they dared not disobey. It was even dangerous to ask for exemption.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The petition of Œbazus.<br />Darius's wanton cruelty.</div> + +<p>As an instance of this, it is said that there was a Persian named +Œbazus, who had three sons that had been drafted into the army. +Œbazus, desirous of not being left wholly alone in his old age, +made a request to the king that he would allow one of the sons to +remain at home with his father. Darius appeared to receive this +petition favorably. He told Œbazus that the request was so very +modest and considerate that he would grant more than he asked. He +would allow all three of his sons to remain with him. Œbazus +retired from the king's presence overjoyed at the thought that his +family was not to be separated at all. Darius ordered his guards to +kill the three young <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">[Pg 174]</a></span>men, and to send the dead bodies home, with a +message to their father that his sons were restored to him, released +forever from all obligation to serve the king.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Place of rendezvous.<br />The fleet of galleys.</div> + +<p>The place of general rendezvous for the various forces which were to +join in the expedition, consisting of the army which marched with +Darius from Susa, and also of the troops and ships which the maritime +provinces of Asia Minor were to supply on the way, was on the shores +of the Bosporus, at the point where Mandrocles had constructed the +bridge.<a name="FNanchor_G_7" id="FNanchor_G_7"></a><a href="#Footnote_G_7" class="fnanchor">[G]</a> The people of Ionia, a region situated in Asia Minor, on +the shores of the Ægean Sea, had been ordered to furnish a fleet of +galleys, which they were to build and equip, and then send to the +bridge. The destination of this fleet was to the Danube. It was to +pass up the Bosporus into the Euxine Sea, now called the Black Sea, +and thence into the mouth of the river. After ascending the Danube to +a certain point, the men were to land and build a bridge across that +river, using, very probably, their galleys for this purpose. In the +mean time, the army was to cross the Bosporus by the bridge which <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">[Pg 175]</a></span>had +been erected there by Mandrocles, and pursue their way toward the +Danube by land, through the kingdom of Thrace. By this arrangement, it +was supposed that the bridge across the Danube would be ready by the +time that the main body of the army arrived on the banks of the river. +The idea of thus building in Asia Minor a bridge for the Danube, in +the form of a vast fleet of galleys, to be sent round through the +Black Sea to the mouths of the river, and thence up the river to its +place of destination, was original and grand. It strikingly marks the +military genius and skill which gave the Greeks so extended a fame, +for it was by the Greeks that the exploit was to be performed.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius's march through Asia Minor.<br />Monuments.<br />Arrival at the Bosporus.</div> + +<p>Darius marched magnificently through Asia Minor, on his way to the +Bosporus, at the head of an army of seventy thousand men. He moved +slowly, and the engineers and architects that accompanied him built +columns and monuments here and there, as he advanced, to commemorate +his progress. These structures were covered with inscriptions, which +ascribed to Darius, as the leader of the enterprise, the most +extravagant praise. At length the splendid array arrived at the place +of rendezvous on the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">[Pg 176]</a></span>Bosporus, where there was soon presented to view +a very grand and imposing scene.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The bridge of boats.</div> + +<p>The bridge of boats was completed, and the Ionian fleet, consisting of +six hundred galleys, was at anchor near it in the stream. Long lines +of tents were pitched upon the shore, and thousands of horsemen and of +foot soldiers were drawn up in array, their banners flying, and their +armor glittering in the sun, and all eager to see and to welcome the +illustrious sovereign who had come, with so much pomp and splendor, to +take them under his command. The banks of the Bosporus were +picturesque and high, and all the eminences were crowded with +spectators, to witness the imposing magnificence of the spectacle.</p> + +<p>Darius encamped his army on the shore, and began to make the +preparations necessary for the final departure of the expedition. He +had been thus far within his own dominions. He was now, however, to +pass into another quarter of the globe, to plunge into new and unknown +dangers, among hostile, savage, and ferocious tribes. It was right +that he should pause until he had considered well his plans, and +secured attention to every point which could influence success.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">[Pg 177]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">Reward of Mandrocles.<br />The group of statuary.</div> + +<p>He first examined the bridge of boats. He was very much pleased with +the construction of it. He commended Mandrocles for his skill and +fidelity in the highest terms, and loaded him with rewards and honors. +Mandrocles used the money which Darius thus gave him in employing an +artist to form a piece of statuary which should at once commemorate +the building of the bridge and give to Darius the glory of it. The +group represented the Bosporus with the bridge thrown over it, and the +king on his throne reviewing his troops as they passed over the +structure. This statuary was placed, when finished, in a temple in +Greece, where it was universally admired. Darius was very much pleased +both with the idea of this sculpture on the part of Mandrocles, and +with the execution of it by the artist. He gave the bridge builder new +rewards; he recompensed the artist, also, with similar munificence. He +was pleased that they had contrived so happy a way of at the same time +commemorating the bridging of the Bosporus and rendering exalted honor +to him.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Cyanean Islands.</div> + +<p>The bridge was situated about the middle of the Bosporus; and as the +strait itself is about eighteen miles long, it was nine miles from the +bridge to the Euxine Sea. There is a small <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">[Pg 178]</a></span>group of islands near the +mouth of this strait, where it opens into the sea, which were called +in those days the Cyanean Islands. They were famed in the time of +Darius for having once been floating islands, and enchanted. Their +supernatural properties had disappeared, but there was one attraction +which still pertained to them. They were situated beyond the limits of +the strait, and the visitor who landed upon them could take his +station on some picturesque cliff or smiling hill, and extend his view +far and wide over the blue waters of the Euxine Sea.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius makes an excursion to them.</div> + +<p>Darius determined to make an excursion to these islands while the +fleet and the army were completing their preparations at the bridge. +He embarked, accordingly, on board a splendid galley, and, sailing +along the Bosporus till he reached the sea, he landed on one of the +islands. There was a temple there, consecrated to one of the Grecian +deities. Darius, accompanied by his attendants and followers, ascended +to this temple, and, taking a seat which had been provided for him +there, he surveyed the broad expanse of water which extended like an +ocean before him, and contemplated the grandeur of the scene with the +greatest admiration and delight.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[Pg 179]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">The two monuments.<br />Inscriptions on them.</div> + +<p>At length he returned to the bridge, where he found the preparations +for the movement of the fleet and of the army nearly completed. He +determined, before leaving the Asiatic shores, to erect a monument to +commemorate his expedition, on the spot from which he was to take his +final departure. He accordingly directed two columns of white marble +to be reared, and inscriptions to be cut upon them, giving such +particulars in respect to the expedition as it was desirable thus to +preserve. These inscriptions contained his own name in very +conspicuous characters as the leader of the enterprise; also an +enumeration of the various nations that had contributed to form his +army, with the numbers which each had furnished. There was a record of +corresponding particulars, too, in respect to the fleet. The +inscriptions were the same upon the two columns, except that upon the +one it was written in the Assyrian tongue, which was the general +language of the Persian empire, and upon the other in the Greek. Thus +the two monuments were intended, the one for the Asiatic, and the +other for the European world.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The troops cross the bridge.<br />Movements of the fleet.</div> + +<p>At length the day of departure arrived. The fleet set sail, and the +immense train of the army <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[Pg 180]</a></span>put itself in motion to cross the +bridge.<a name="FNanchor_H_8" id="FNanchor_H_8"></a><a href="#Footnote_H_8" class="fnanchor">[H]</a> The fleet went on through the Bosporus to the Euxine, and +thence along the western coast of that sea till it reached the mouths +of the Danube. The ships entered the river by one of the branches +which form the delta of the stream, and ascended for two days. This +carried them above the ramifications into which the river divides +itself at its mouth, to a spot where the current was confined to a +single channel, and where the banks were firm. Here they landed, and +while one part of the force which they had brought were occupied in +organizing guards and providing defenses to protect the ground, the +remainder commenced the work of arranging the vessels of the fleet, +side by side, across the stream, to form the bridge.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The River Tearus.<br />Its wonderful sources.</div> + +<p>In the mean time, Darius, leading the great body of the army, advanced +from the Bosporus by land. The country which the troops thus traversed +was Thrace. They met with various adventures as they proceeded, and +saw, as the accounts of the expedition state, many strange and +marvelous phenomena. They came, for example, to the sources of a very +wonderful river, which flows west and south toward the Ægean <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[Pg 181]</a></span>Sea. The +name of the river was the Tearus. It came from thirty-eight springs, +all issuing from the same rock, some hot and some cold. The waters of +the stream which was produced by the mingling of these fountains were +pure, limpid, and delicious, and were possessed of remarkable +medicinal properties, being efficacious for the cure of various +diseases. Darius was so much pleased with this river, that his army +halted to refresh themselves with its waters, and he caused one of his +monuments to be erected on the spot, the inscription of which +contained not only the usual memorials of the march, but also a +tribute to the salubrity of the waters of this magical stream.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The cairn.</div> + +<p>At one point in the course of the march through Thrace, Darius +conceived the idea of varying the construction of his line of +monuments by building a cairn. A cairn is a heap of stones, such as is +reared in the mountains of Scotland and of Switzerland by the +voluntary additions of every passer by, to commemorate a spot marked +as the scene of some accident or disaster. As each guide finishes the +story of the incident in the hearing of the party which he conducts, +each tourist who has listened to it adds his stone to the heap, until +the rude structure <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[Pg 182]</a></span>attains sometimes to a very considerable size. +Darius, fixing upon a suitable spot near one of his encampments, +commanded every soldier in the army to bring a stone and place it on +the pile. A vast mound rose rapidly from these contributions, which, +when completed, not only commemorated the march of the army, but +denoted, also, by the immense number of the stones entering into the +composition of the pile, the countless multitude of soldiers that +formed the expedition.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Primitive mode of census-taking.</div> + +<p>There was a story told to Darius, as he was traversing these regions, +of a certain king, reigning over some one of the nations that occupied +them, who wished to make an enumeration of the inhabitants of his +realm. The mode which he adopted was to require every man in his +dominions to send him an arrow head. When all the arrow heads were in, +the vast collection was counted by the official arithmeticians, and +the total of the population was thus attained. The arrow heads were +then laid together in a sort of monumental pile. It was, perhaps, this +primitive mode of census-taking which suggested to Darius the idea of +his cairn.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Instinctive feeling of dependence on a supernatural power.<br />Strange religious observance.</div> + +<p>There was a tribe of barbarians through whose dominions Darius passed +on his way from <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[Pg 183]</a></span>the Bosporus to the Danube, that observed a custom in +their religious worship, which, though in itself of a shocking +character, suggests reflections of salutary influence for our own +minds. There is a universal instinct in the human heart, leading it +strongly to feel the need of help from an unseen and supernatural +world in its sorrows and trials; and it is almost always the case that +rude and savage nations, in their attempts to obtain this spiritual +aid, connect the idea of personal privation and suffering on their +part, self inflicted if necessary, as a means of seeking it. It seems +as if the instinctive conviction of personal guilt, which associates +itself so naturally and so strongly in the minds of men with all +conceptions of the unseen world and of divine power, demands something +like an expiation as an essential prerequisite to obtaining audience +and acceptance with the King of Heaven. The tribe of savages above +referred to manifested this feeling by a dreadful observance. Once in +every five years they were accustomed to choose by lot, with solemn +ceremonies, one of their number, to be sent as a legate or embassador +to their god. The victim, when chosen, was laid down upon the ground +in the midst of the vast assembly <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">[Pg 184]</a></span>convened to witness the rite, while +officers designated for the purpose stood by, armed with javelins. +Other men, selected for their great personal strength, then took the +man from the ground by the hands and feet, and swinging him to and fro +three times to gain momentum, they threw him with all their force into +the air, and the armed men, when he came down, caught him on the +points of their javelins. If he was killed by this dreadful +impalement, all was right. He would bear the message of the wants and +necessities of the tribe to their god, and they might reasonably +expect a favorable reception. If, on the other hand, he did not die, +he was thought to be rejected by the god as a wicked man and an +unsuitable messenger. The unfortunate convalescent was, in such cases, +dismissed in disgrace, and another messenger chosen.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Arrival at the Danube.<br />Orders to destroy the bridge.</div> + +<p>The army of Darius reached the banks of the Danube at last, and they +found that the fleet of the Ionians had attained the point agreed upon +before them, and were awaiting their arrival. The vessels were soon +arranged in the form of a bridge across the stream, and as there was +no enemy at hand to embarrass them, the army soon accomplished the +passage. They <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">[Pg 185]</a></span>were now fairly in the Scythian country, and +immediately began their preparations to advance and meet the foe. +Darius gave orders to have the bridge broken up, and the galleys +abandoned and destroyed, as he chose rather to take with him the whole +of his force, than to leave a guard behind sufficient to protect this +shipping. These orders were about to be executed, when a Grecian +general, who was attached to one of the bodies of troops which were +furnished from the provinces of Asia Minor, asked leave to speak to +the king. The king granted him an audience, when he expressed his +opinion as follows:</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Counsel of the Grecian general.</div> + +<p>"It seems to me to be more prudent, sire, to leave the bridge as it +is, under the care of those who have constructed it, as it may be that +we shall have occasion to use it on our return. I do not recommend the +preservation of it as a means of securing a retreat, for, in case we +meet the Scythians at all, I am confident of victory; but our enemy +consists of wandering hordes who have no fixed habitation, and their +country is entirely without cities or posts of any kind which they +will feel any strong interest in defending, and thus it is possible +that we may not be able to find any enemy to combat. Besides, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">[Pg 186]</a></span>if we +succeed in our enterprise as completely as we can desire, it will be +important, on many accounts, to preserve an open and free +communication with the countries behind us."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The bridge is preserved.<br />Guard left to protect it.</div> + +<p>The king approved of this counsel, and countermanded his orders for +the destruction of the bridge. He directed that the Ionian forces that +had accompanied the fleet should remain at the river to guard the +bridge. They were to remain thus on guard for two months, and then, if +Darius did not return, and if they heard no tidings of him, they were +at liberty to leave their post, and to go back, with their galleys, to +their own land again.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Singular mode of reckoning.</div> + +<p>Two months would seem to be a very short time to await the return of +an army going on such an expedition into boundless and trackless +wilds. There can, however, scarcely be any accidental error in the +statement of the time, as the mode which Darius adopted to enable the +guard thus left at the bridge to keep their reckoning was a very +singular one, and it is very particularly described. He took a cord, +it is said, and tied sixty knots in it. This cord he delivered to the +Ionian chiefs who were to be left in charge of the bridge, directing +them to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">[Pg 187]</a></span>untie one of the knots every day. When the cord should +become, by this process, wholly free, the detachment were also at +liberty. They might thereafter, at any time, abandon the post +intrusted to them, and return to their homes.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Probable reason for employing it.<br />Darius's determination to return before the knots should be +all untied.</div> + +<p>We can not suppose that military men, capable of organizing a force of +seventy thousand troops for so distant an expedition, and possessed of +sufficient science and skill to bridge the Bosporus and the Danube, +could have been under any necessity of adopting so childish a method +as this as a real reliance in regulating their operations. It must be +recollected, however, that, though the commanders in these ancient +days were intelligent and strong-minded men, the common soldiers were +but children both in intellect and in ideas; and it was the custom of +all great commanders to employ outward and visible symbols to +influence and govern them. The sense of loneliness and desertion which +such soldiers would naturally feel in being left in solitude on the +banks of the river, would be much diminished by seeing before them a +marked and definite termination to the period of their stay, and to +have, in the cord hanging up in their camp, a visible token that the +remnant of time that remained was steadily <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">[Pg 188]</a></span>diminishing day by day; +while, in the mean time, Darius was fully determined that, long before +the knots should be all untied, he would return to the river.</p> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">[Pg 189]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="Chapter_IX" id="Chapter_IX"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter IX.</span></h2> + +<h2><span class="smcap">The Retreat from Scythia.</span></h2> + +<h3>B.C. 513</h3> + +<div class="sidenote">Motive for Darius's invasion.<br />The foundation of government.</div> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:50px;line-height:32px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">T</span><span style="margin-left:0%;">he</span> motive which dictated Darius's invasion of Scythia seems to have +been purely a selfish and domineering love of power. The attempts of a +stronger and more highly civilized state to extend its dominion over a +weaker and more lawless one, are not, however, necessarily and always +of this character. Divine Providence, in making men gregarious in +nature, has given them an instinct of organization, which is as +intrinsic and as essential a characteristic of the human soul as +maternal love or the principle of self-preservation. The right, +therefore, of organizations of men to establish law and order among +themselves, and to extend these principles to other communities around +them, so far as such interpositions are really promotive of the +interests and welfare of those affected by them, rests on precisely +the same foundation as the right of the father to govern the child. +This foundation is the existence and universality of an instinctive +principle <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">[Pg 190]</a></span>implanted by the Creator in the human heart; a principle +which we are bound to submit to, both because it is a fundamental and +constituent element in the very structure of man, and because its +recognition and the acknowledgment of its authority are absolutely +essential to his continued existence. Wherever law and order, +therefore, among men do not exist, it may be properly established and +enforced by any neighboring organization that has power to do it, just +as wherever there is a group of children they may be justly controlled +and governed by their father. It seems equally unnecessary to invent a +fictitious and wholly imaginary <i>compact</i> to justify the jurisdiction +in the one case as in the other.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius without justification in invading Scythia.</div> + +<p>If the Scythians, therefore, had been in a state of confusion and +anarchy, Darius might justly have extended his own well-regulated and +settled government over them, and, in so doing, would have promoted +the general good of mankind. But he had no such design. It was a +desire for personal aggrandizement, and a love of fame and power, +which prompted him. He offered it as a pretext to justify his +invasion, that the Scythians, in former years, had made incursions +into the Persian dominions; <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">[Pg 191]</a></span>but this was only a pretext. The +expedition was a wanton attack upon neighbors whom he supposed unable +to resist him, simply for the purpose of adding to his own already +gigantic power.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Alarm of the Scythians.<br />Condition of the tribes.<br />Men metamorphosed into wolves.</div> + +<p>When Darius commenced his march from the river, the Scythians had +heard rumors of his approach. They sent, as soon as they were aware of +the impending danger, to all the nations and tribes around them, in +order to secure their alliance and aid. These people were all +wandering and half-savage tribes, like the Scythians themselves, +though each seems to have possessed its own special and distinctive +mark of barbarity. One tribe were accustomed to carry home the heads +of the enemies which they had slain in battle, and each one, impaling +his own dreadful trophy upon a stake, would set it up upon his +house-top, over the chimney, where they imagined that it would have +the effect of a charm, and serve as a protection for the family. +Another tribe lived in habits of promiscuous intercourse, like the +lower orders of animals; and so, as the historian absurdly states, +being, in consequence of this mode of life, all connected together by +the ties of consanguinity, they lived in perpetual peace <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">[Pg 192]</a></span>and good +will, without any envy, or jealousy, or other evil passion. A third +occupied a region so infested with serpents that they were once driven +wholly out of the country by them. It was said of these people that, +once in every year, they were all metamorphosed into wolves, and, +after remaining for a few days in this form, they were transformed +again into men. A fourth tribe painted their bodies blue and red, and +a fifth were cannibals.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Story of the Amazons.<br />Adventures of the Amazons.</div> + +<p>The most remarkable, however, of all the tales related about these +northern savages was the story of the Sauromateans and their Amazonian +wives. The Amazons were a nation of masculine and ferocious women, who +often figure in ancient histories and legends. They rode on horseback +astride like men, and their courage and strength in battle were such +that scarcely any troops could subdue them. It happened, however, upon +one time, that some Greeks conquered a body of them somewhere upon the +shores of the Euxine Sea, and took a large number of them prisoners. +They placed these prisoners on board of three ships, and put to sea. +The Amazons rose upon their captors and threw them overboard, and thus +obtained possession of the ships. They immediately proceeded<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">[Pg 193]</a></span> toward +the shore, and landed, not knowing where they were. It happened to be +on the northwestern coast of the sea that they landed. Here they +roamed up and down the country, until presently they fell in with a +troop of horses. These they seized and mounted, arming themselves, at +the same time, either with the weapons which they had procured on +board the ships, or fabricated, themselves, on the shore. Thus +organized and equipped, they began to make excursions for plunder, and +soon became a most formidable band of marauders. The Scythians of the +country supposed that they were men, but they could learn nothing +certain respecting them. Their language, their appearance, their +manners, and their dress were totally new, and the inhabitants were +utterly unable to conceive who they were, and from what place they +could so suddenly and mysteriously have come.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Two of them captured.</div> + +<p>At last, in one of the encounters which took place, the Scythians took +two of these strange invaders prisoners. To their utter amazement, +they found that they were women. On making this discovery, they +changed their mode of dealing with them, and resolved upon a plan +based on the supposed universality of the instincts <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">[Pg 194]</a></span>of their sex. +They enlisted a corps of the most handsome and vigorous young men that +could be obtained, and after giving them instructions, the nature of +which will be learned by the result, they sent them forth to meet the +Amazons.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The corps of cavaliers.<br />Their maneuvers.</div> + +<p>The corps of Scythian cavaliers went out to seek their female +antagonists with designs any thing but belligerent. They advanced to +the encampment of the Amazons, and hovered about for some time in +their vicinity, without, however, making any warlike demonstrations. +They had been instructed to show themselves as much as possible to the +enemy, but by no means to fight them. They would, accordingly, draw as +near to the Amazons as was safe, and linger there, gazing upon them, +as if under the influence of some sort of fascination. If the Amazons +advanced toward them, they would fall back, and if the advance +continued, they would retreat fast enough to keep effectually out of +the way. Then, when the Amazons turned, they would turn too, follow +them back, and linger near them, around their encampment, as before.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Success of the cavaliers.</div> + +<p>The Amazonians were for a time puzzled with this strange demeanor, and +they gradually <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">[Pg 195]</a></span>learned to look upon the handsome horsemen at first +without fear, and finally even without hostility. At length, one day, +one of the young horsemen, observing an Amazon who had strayed away +from the rest, followed and joined her. She did not repel him. They +were not able to converse together, as neither knew the language of +the other. They established a friendly intercourse, however, by looks +and signs, and after a time they separated, each agreeing to bring one +of their companions to the place of rendezvous on the following day.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Matrimonial alliances.</div> + +<p>A friendly intercommunication being thus commenced, the example spread +very rapidly; matrimonial alliances began to be formed, and, in a +word, a short time only elapsed before the two camps were united and +intermingled, the Scythians and the Amazons being all paired together +in the most intimate relations of domestic life. Thus, true to the +instincts of their sex, the rude and terrible maidens decided, when +the alternative was fairly presented to them, in favor of husbands and +homes, rather than continuing the life they had led, of independence, +conflict, and plunder. It is curious to observe that the means by +which they were won, namely, a persevering display of admiration <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">[Pg 196]</a></span>and +attentions, steadily continued, but not too eagerly and impatiently +pressed, and varied with an adroit and artful alternation of advances +and retreats, were precisely the same as those by which, in every age, +the attempt is usually made to win the heart of woman from hatred and +hostility to love.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Amazons rule their husbands.<br />They establish a separate tribe.</div> + +<p>We speak of the Amazonians as having been won; but they were, in fact, +themselves the conquerors of their captors, after all; for it +appeared, in the end, that in the future plans and arrangements of the +united body, they ruled their Scythian husbands, and not the Scythians +them. The husbands wished to return home with their wives, whom, they +said, they would protect and maintain in the midst of their countrymen +in honor and in peace. The Amazons, however, were in favor of another +plan. Their habits and manners were such, they said, that they should +not be respected and beloved among any other people. They wished that +their husbands, therefore, would go home and settle their affairs, and +afterward return and join their wives again, and then that all +together should move to the eastward, until they should find a +suitable place to settle in by themselves. This plan was acceded to by +the husbands, and was <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">[Pg 197]</a></span>carried into execution; and the result was the +planting of a new nation, called the Sauromateans, who thenceforth +took their place among the other barbarous tribes that dwelt upon the +northern shores of the Euxine Sea.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Scythians send an embassy to the neighboring tribes.</div> + +<p>Such was the character of the tribes and nations that dwelt in the +neighborhood of the Scythian country. As soon as Darius had passed the +river, the Scythians sent embassadors to all their people, proposing +to them to form a general alliance against the invader. "We ought to +make common cause against him," said they; "for if he subdues one +nation, it will only open the way for an attack upon the rest. Some of +us are, it is true, more remote than others from the immediate danger, +but it threatens us all equally in the end."</p> + +<p>The embassadors delivered their message, and some of the tribes +acceded to the Scythian proposals. Others, however, refused. The +quarrel, they said, was a quarrel between Darius and the Scythians +alone, and they were not inclined to bring upon themselves the +hostility of so powerful a sovereign by interfering. The Scythians +were very indignant at this refusal; but there was no remedy, and they +accordingly began to prepare to defend themselves as well <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">[Pg 198]</a></span>as they +could, with the help of those nations that had expressed a willingness +to join them.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Habits of the Scythians.<br />Their mode of warfare.</div> + +<p>The habits of the Scythians were nomadic and wandering, and their +country was one vast region of verdant and beautiful, and yet, in a +great measure, of uncultivated and trackless wilds. They had few towns +and villages, and those few were of little value. They adopted, +therefore, the mode of warfare which, in such a country and for such a +people, is always the wisest to be pursued. They retreated slowly +before Darius's advancing army, carrying off or destroying all such +property as might aid the king in respect to his supplies. They +organized and equipped a body of swift horsemen, who were ordered to +hover around Darius's camp, and bring intelligence to the Scythian +generals of every movement. These horsemen, too, were to harass the +flanks and the rear of the army, and to capture or destroy every man +whom they should find straying away from the camp. By this means they +kept the invading army continually on the alert, allowing them no +peace and no repose, while yet they thwarted and counteracted all the +plans and efforts which the enemy made to bring on a general battle.</p> + +<p>As the Persians advanced in pursuit of the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">[Pg 199]</a></span>enemy, the Scythians +retreated, and in this retreat they directed their course toward the +countries occupied by those nations that had refused to join in the +alliance. By this artful management they transferred the calamity and +the burden of the war to the territories of their neighbors. Darius +soon found that he was making no progress toward gaining his end. At +length he concluded to try the effect of a direct and open challenge.</p> + +<p>He accordingly sent embassadors to the Scythian chief, whose name was +Indathyrsus, with a message somewhat as follows:</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Message to Indathyrsus.</div> + +<p>"Foolish man! how long will you continue to act in this absurd and +preposterous manner? It is incumbent on you to make a decision in +favor of one thing or the other. If you think that you are able to +contend with me, stop, and let us engage. If not, then acknowledge me +as your superior, and submit to my authority."</p> + +<p>The Scythian chief sent back the following reply:</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His reply.</div> + +<p>"We have no inducement to contend with you in open battle on the +field, because you are not doing us any injury, nor is it at present +in your power to do us any. We have no cities and no cultivated fields +that you can seize <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">[Pg 200]</a></span>or plunder. Your roaming about our country, +therefore, does us no harm, and you are at liberty to continue it as +long as it gives you any pleasure. There is nothing on our soil that +you can injure, except one spot, and that is the place where the +sepulchres of our fathers lie. If you were to attack that spot—which +you may perhaps do, if you can find it—you may rely upon a battle. In +the mean time, you may go elsewhere, wherever you please. As to +acknowledging your superiority, we shall do nothing of the kind. We +defy you."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Scythian cavalry.<br />Their attacks on the Persians.<br />Braying of the Persian asses.</div> + +<p>Notwithstanding the refusal of the Scythians to give the Persians +battle, they yet made, from time to time, partial and unexpected +onsets upon their camp, seizing occasions when they hoped to find +their enemies off their guard. The Scythians had troops of cavalry +which were very efficient and successful in these attacks. These +horsemen were, however, sometimes thrown into confusion and driven +back by a very singular means of defense. It seems that the Persians +had brought with them from Europe, in their train, a great number of +asses, as beasts of burden, to transport the tents and the baggage of +the army. These asses were accustomed, in times of excitement and +danger, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">[Pg 201]</a></span>to set up a very terrific braying. It was, in fact, all that +they could do. Braying at a danger seems to be a very ridiculous mode +of attempting to avert it, but it was a tolerably effectual mode, +nevertheless, in this case at least; for the Scythian horses, who +would have faced spears and javelins, and the loudest shouts and +vociferations of human adversaries without any fear, were appalled and +put to flight at hearing the unearthly noises which issued from the +Persian camp whenever they approached it. Thus the mighty monarch of +the whole Asiatic world seemed to depend for protection against the +onsets of these rude and savage troops on the braying of his asses!</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<div class="sidenote">Scythians sent to the bridge.<br />Agreement with the Ionians.</div> + +<p>While these things were going on in the interior of the country, the +Scythians sent down a detachment of their forces to the banks of the +Danube, to see if they could not, in some way or other, obtain +possession of the bridge. They learned here what the orders were which +Darius had given to the Ionians who had been left in charge, in +respect to the time of their remaining at their post. The Scythians +told them that if they would govern themselves strictly by those +orders, and so break up the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">[Pg 202]</a></span>bridge and go down the river with their +boats as soon as the two months should have expired, they should not +be molested in the mean time. The Ionians agreed to this. The time was +then already nearly gone, and they promised that, so soon as it should +be fully expired, they would withdraw.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Scythians change their policy.</div> + +<p>The Scythian detachment sent back word to the main army acquainting +them with these facts, and the army accordingly resolved on a change +in their policy. Instead of harassing and distressing the Persians as +they had done, to hasten their departure, they now determined to +improve the situation of their enemies, and encourage them in their +hopes, so as to protract their stay. They accordingly allowed the +Persians to gain the advantage over them in small skirmishes, and they +managed, also, to have droves of cattle fall into their hands, from +time to time, so as to supply them with food. The Persians were quite +elated with these indications that the tide of fortune was about to +turn in their favor.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Scythians' strange presents.</div> + +<p>While things were in this state, there appeared one day at the Persian +camp a messenger from the Scythians, who said that he had some +presents from the Scythian chief for Darius. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">[Pg 203]</a></span>The messenger was +admitted, and allowed to deliver his gifts. The gifts proved to be a +bird, a mouse, a frog, and five arrows. The Persians asked the bearer +of these strange offerings what the Scythians meant by them. He +replied that he had no explanations to give. His orders were, he said, +to deliver the presents and then return; and that they must, +accordingly, find out the meaning intended by the exercise of their +own ingenuity.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Various interpretations.</div> + +<p>When the messenger had retired, Darius and the Persians consulted +together, to determine what so strange a communication could mean. +They could not, however, come to any satisfactory decision. Darius +said that he thought the three animals might probably be intended to +denote the three kingdoms of nature to which the said animals +respectively belonged, viz., the earth, the air, and the water; and as +the giving up of weapons was a token of submission, the whole might +mean that the Scythians were now ready to give up the contest, and +acknowledge the right of the Persians to supreme and universal +dominion.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Opinions of the Persian officers.</div> + +<p>The officers, however, did not generally concur in this opinion. They +saw no indications, they said, of any disposition on the part of the +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">[Pg 204]</a></span>Scythians to surrender. They thought it quite as probable that the +communication was meant to announce to those who received it threats +and defiance, as to express conciliation and submission. "It may +mean," said one of them, "that, unless you can fly like a bird into +the air, or hide like a mouse in the ground, or bury yourselves, like +the frog, in morasses and fens, you can not escape our arrows."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Scythians draw up their forces.</div> + +<p>There was no means of deciding positively between these contradictory +interpretations, but it soon became evident that the former of the two +was very far from being correct; for, soon after the present was +received, the Scythians were seen to be drawing up their forces in +array, as if preparing for battle. The two months had expired, and +they had reason to suppose that the party at the bridge had withdrawn, +as they had promised to do. Darius had been so far weakened by his +harassing marches, and the manifold privations and sufferings of his +men, that he felt some solicitude in respect to the result of a +battle, now that it seemed to be drawing near, although such a trial +of strength had been the object which he had been, from the beginning, +most eager to secure.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The armies prepare for battle.<br />Hunting the hare.</div> + +<p>The two armies were encamped at a moderate <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">[Pg 205]</a></span>distance from each other, +with a plain, partly wooded, between them. While in this position, and +before any hostile action was commenced by either party, it was +observed from the camp of Darius that suddenly a great tumult arose +from the Scythian lines. Men were seen rushing in dense crowds this +way and that over the plain, with shouts and outcries, which, however, +had in them no expression of anger or fear, but rather one of gayety +and pleasure. Darius demanded what the strange tumult meant. Some +messengers were sent out to ascertain the cause, and on their return +they reported that the Scythians were hunting a hare, which had +suddenly made its appearance. The hare had issued from a thicket, and +a considerable portion of the army, officers and soldiers, had +abandoned their ranks to enjoy the sport of pursuing it, and were +running impetuously, here and there, across the plain, filling the air +with shouts of hilarity.</p> + +<p>"They do indeed despise us," said Darius, "since, on the eve of a +battle, they can lose all thoughts of us and of their danger, and +abandon their posts to hunt a hare!"</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Persians resolve to retreat.</div> + +<p>That evening a council of war was held. It was concluded that the +Scythians must be very <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">[Pg 206]</a></span>confident and strong in their position, and +that, if a general battle were to be hazarded, it would be very +doubtful what would be the result. The Persians concluded unanimously, +therefore, that the wisest plan would be for them to give up the +intended conquest, and retire from the country. Darius accordingly +proceeded to make his preparations for a secret retreat.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Stratagem and secret flight.</div> + +<p>He separated all the infirm and feeble portion of the army from the +rest, and informed them that he was going that night on a short +expedition with the main body of the troops, and that, while he was +gone, they were to remain and defend the camp. He ordered the men to +build the camp fires, and to make them larger and more numerous than +common, and then had the asses tied together in an unusual situation, +so that they should keep up a continual braying. These sounds, heard +all the night, and the light of the camp fires, were to lead the +Scythians to believe that the whole body of the Persians remained, as +usual, at the encampment, and thus to prevent all suspicion of their +flight.</p> + +<p>Toward midnight, Darius marched forth in silence and secrecy, with all +the vigorous and able-bodied forces under his command, leaving <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">[Pg 207]</a></span>the +weary, the sick, and the infirm to the mercy of their enemies. The +long column succeeded in making good their retreat, without exciting +the suspicions of the Scythians. They took the route which they +supposed would conduct them most directly to the river.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Surrender of the camp.<br />Difficulties of the retreat.</div> + +<p>When the troops which remained in the camp found, on the following +morning, that they had been deceived and abandoned, they made signals +to the Scythians to come to them, and, when they came, the invalids +surrendered themselves and the camp to their possession. The Scythians +then, immediately, leaving a proper guard to defend the camp, set out +to follow the Persian army. Instead, however, of keeping directly upon +their track, they took a shorter course, which would lead them more +speedily to the river. The Persians, being unacquainted with the +country, got involved in fens and morasses, and other difficulties of +the way, and their progress was thus so much impeded that the +Scythians reached the river before them.</p> + +<p>They found the Ionians still there, although the two months had fully +expired. It is possible that the chiefs had received secret orders +from Darius not to hasten their departure, even <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">[Pg 208]</a></span>after the knots had +all been untied; or perhaps they chose, of their own accord, to await +their sovereign's return. The Scythians immediately urged them to be +gone. "The time has expired," they said, "and you are no longer under +any obligation to wait. Return to your own country, and assert your +own independence and freedom, which you can safely do if you leave +Darius and his armies here."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The bridge partially destroyed.<br />Darius arrives at the Danube.<br />The bridge repaired.</div> + +<p>The Ionians consulted together on the subject, doubtful, at first, +what to do. They concluded that they would not comply with the +Scythian proposals, while yet they determined to pretend to comply +with them, in order to avoid the danger of being attacked. They +accordingly began to take the bridge to pieces, commencing on the +Scythian side of the stream. The Scythians, seeing the work thus going +on, left the ground, and marched back to meet the Persians. The +armies, however, fortunately for Darius, missed each other, and the +Persians arrived safely at the river, after the Scythians had left it. +They arrived in the night, and the advanced guard, seeing no +appearance of the bridge on the Scythian side, supposed that the +Ionians had gone. They shouted long and loud on the shore, and at +length an Egyptian, who <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">[Pg 209]</a></span>was celebrated for the power of his voice, +succeeded in making the Ionians hear. The boats were immediately +brought back to their positions, the bridge was reconstructed, and +Darius's army recrossed the stream.</p> + +<div class="sidenote3">The army returns to Asia.</div> + +<p>The Danube being thus safely crossed, the army made the best of its +way back through Thrace, and across the Bosporus into Asia, and thus +ended Darius's great expedition against the Scythians.</p> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">[Pg 210]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="Chapter_X" id="Chapter_X"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter X.</span></h2> + +<h2><span class="smcap">The Story of Histiæus.</span></h2> + +<h3>B.C. 504</h3> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:50px;line-height:32px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">T</span><span style="margin-left:0%;">he</span> nature of the government which was exercised in ancient times by a +royal despot like Darius, and the character of the measures and +management to which he was accustomed to resort to gain his political +ends, are, in many points, very strikingly illustrated by the story of +Histiæus.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Histiæus at the bridge on the Danube.<br />Darius's anxiety.</div> + +<p>Histiæus was the Ionian chieftain who had been left in charge of the +bridge of boats across the Danube when Darius made his incursion into +Scythia. When, on the failure of the expedition, Darius returned to +the river, knowing, as he did, that the two months had expired, he +naturally felt a considerable degree of solicitude lest he should find +the bridge broken up and the vessels gone, in which case his situation +would be very desperate, hemmed in, as he would have been, between the +Scythians and the river. His anxiety was changed into terror when his +advanced guard arrived at the bank and found that no signs of the +bridge were <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">[Pg 211]</a></span>to be seen. It is easy to imagine what, under these +circumstances, must have been the relief and joy of all the army, when +they heard friendly answers to their shouts, coming, through the +darkness of the night, over the waters of the river, assuring them +that their faithful allies were still at their posts, and that they +themselves would soon be in safety.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius's gratitude.</div> + +<p>Darius, though he was governed by no firm and steady principles of +justice, was still a man of many generous impulses. He was grateful +for favors, though somewhat capricious in his modes of requiting them. +He declared to Histiæus that he felt under infinite obligations to him +for his persevering fidelity, and that, as soon as the army should +have safely arrived in Asia, he would confer upon him such rewards as +would evince the reality of his gratitude.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Scythia abandoned.<br />Darius sends for Histiæus.</div> + +<p>On his return from Scythia, Darius brought back the whole of his army +over the Danube, thus abandoning entirely the country of the +Scythians; but he did not transport the whole body across the +Bosporus. He left a considerable detachment of troops, under the +command of one of his generals, named Megabyzus, in Thrace, on the +European side, ordering Megabyzus to establish himself there, and to +reduce <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">[Pg 212]</a></span>all the countries in that neighborhood to his sway. Darius +then proceeded to Sardis, which was the most powerful and wealthy of +his capitals in that quarter of the world. At Sardis, he was, as it +were, at home again, and he accordingly took an early opportunity to +send for Histiæus, as well as some others who had rendered him special +services in his late campaign, in order that he might agree with them +in respect to their reward. He asked Histiæus what favor he wished to +receive.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Petition of Histiæus.</div> + +<p>Histiæus replied that he was satisfied, on the whole, with the +position which he already enjoyed, which was that of king or governor +of Miletus, an Ionian city, south of Sardis, and on the shores of the +Ægean Sea.<a name="FNanchor_I_9" id="FNanchor_I_9"></a><a href="#Footnote_I_9" class="fnanchor">[I]</a> He should be pleased, however, he said, if the king +would assign him a certain small territory in Thrace, or, rather, on +the borders between Thrace and Macedonia, near the mouth of the River +Strymon. He wished to build a city there. The king immediately granted +this request, which was obviously very moderate and reasonable. He did +not, perhaps, consider that this territory, being in Thrace, or in its +immediate vicinity, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">[Pg 213]</a></span>came within the jurisdiction of Megabyzus, whom +he had left in command there, and that the grant might lead to some +conflict between the two generals. There was special danger of +jealousy and disagreement between them, for Megabyzus was a Persian, +and Histiæus was a Greek.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Histiæus organizes a colony.</div> + +<p>Histiæus organized a colony, and, leaving a temporary and provisional +government at Miletus, he proceeded along the shores of the Ægean Sea +to the spot assigned him, and began to build his city. As the locality +was beyond the Thracian frontier, and at a considerable distance from +the head-quarters of Megabyzus, it is very probable that the +operations of Histiæus would not have attracted the Persian general's +attention for a considerable time, had it not been for a very +extraordinary and peculiar train of circumstances, which led him to +discover them. The circumstances were these:</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Pæonians.<br />Baseness of the Pæonian chiefs.</div> + +<p>There was a nation or tribe called the Pæonians, who inhabited the +valley of the Strymon, which river came down from the interior of the +country, and fell into the sea near the place where Histiæus was +building his city. Among the Pæonian chieftains there were two who +wished to obtain the government of the country, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">[Pg 214]</a></span>but they were not +quite strong enough to effect their object. In order to weaken the +force which was opposed to them, they conceived the base design of +betraying their tribe to Darius, and inducing him to make them +captives. If their plan should succeed, a considerable portion of the +population would be taken away, and they could easily, they supposed, +obtain ascendency over the rest. In order to call the attention of +Darius to the subject, and induce him to act as they desired, they +resorted to the following stratagem. Their object seems to have been +to lead Darius to undertake a campaign against their countrymen, by +showing him what excellent and valuable slaves they would make.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Their stratagem.<br />The Pæonian maiden.<br />Multiplicity of her avocations.</div> + +<p>These two chieftains were brothers, and they had a very beautiful +sister; her form was graceful and elegant, and her countenance lovely. +They brought this sister with them to Sardis when Darius was there. +They dressed and decorated her in a very careful manner, but yet in a +style appropriate to the condition of a servant; and then, one day, +when the king was sitting in some public place in the city, as was +customary with Oriental sovereigns, they sent her to pass along the +street before him, equipped in such a <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">[Pg 215]</a></span>manner as to show that she was +engaged in servile occupations. She had a jar, such as was then used +for carrying water, poised upon her head, and she was leading a horse +by means of a bridle hung over her arm. Her hands, being thus not +required either for the horse or for the vessel, were employed in +spinning, as she walked along, by means of a distaff and spindle.</p> + +<p>The attention of Darius was strongly attracted to the spectacle. The +beauty of the maiden, the novelty and strangeness of her costume, the +multiplicity of her avocations, and the ease and grace with which she +performed them, all conspired to awaken the monarch's curiosity. He +directed one of his attendants to follow her and see where she should +go. The attendant did so. The girl went to the river. She watered her +horse, filled her jar and placed it on her head, and then, hanging the +bridle on her arm again, she returned through the same streets, and +passed the king's palace as before, spinning as she walked along.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius and the maiden.</div> + +<p>The interest and curiosity of the king was excited more than ever by +the reappearance of the girl and by the report of his messenger. He +directed that she should be stopped and brought into his presence. She +came; and her <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">[Pg 216]</a></span>brothers, who had been watching the whole scene from a +convenient spot near at hand, joined her and came too. The king asked +them who they were. They replied that they were Pæonians. He wished to +know where they lived. "On the banks of the River Strymon," they +replied, "near the confines of Thrace." He next asked whether all the +women of their country were accustomed to labor, and were as +ingenious, and dexterous, and beautiful as their sister. The brothers +replied that they were.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">He determines to make the Pæonians slaves.<br />Capture of the Pæonians.<br />Megabyzus discovers Histiæus's city.</div> + +<p>Darius immediately determined to make the whole people slaves. He +accordingly dispatched a courier with the orders. The courier crossed +the Hellespont, and proceeded to the encampment of Megabyzus in +Thrace. He delivered his dispatches to the Persian general, commanding +him to proceed immediately to Pæonia, and there to take the whole +community prisoners, and bring them to Darius in Sardis. Megabyzus, +until this time, had known nothing of the people whom he was thus +commanded to seize. He, however, found some Thracian guides who +undertook to conduct him to their territory; and then, taking with him +a sufficient force, he set out on the expedition. The Pæonians heard +of his approach. Some <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">[Pg 217]</a></span>prepared to defend themselves; others fled to +the mountains. The fugitives escaped, but those who attempted to +resist were taken. Megabyzus collected the unfortunate captives, +together with their wives and children, and brought them down to the +coast to embark them for Sardis. In doing this, he had occasion to +pass by the spot where Histiæus was building his city, and it was +then, for the first time, that Megabyzus became acquainted with the +plan. Histiæus was building a wall to defend his little territory on +the side of the land. Ships and galleys were going and coming on the +side of the sea. Every thing indicated that the work was rapidly and +prosperously advancing.</p> + +<p>Megabyzus did not interfere with the work; but, as soon as he arrived +at Sardis with his captives, and had delivered them to the king, he +introduced the subject of Histiæus's city, and represented to Darius +that it would be dangerous to the Persian interests to allow such an +enterprise to go on. "He will establish a strong post there," said +Megabyzus, "by means of which he will exercise a great ascendency over +all the neighboring seas. The place is admirably situated for a naval +station, as the country in the vicinity abounds with all the materials +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">[Pg 218]</a></span>for building and equipping ships. There are also mines of silver in +the mountains near, from which he will obtain a great supply of +treasure. By these means he will become so strong in a short period of +time, that, after you have returned to Asia, he will revolt from your +authority, carrying with him, perhaps, in his rebellion, all the +Greeks of Asia Minor."</p> + +<p>The king said that he was sorry that he had made the grant, and that +he would revoke it without delay.</p> + +<p>Megabyzus recommended that the king should not do this in an open or +violent manner, but that he should contrive some way to arrest the +progress of the undertaking without any appearance of suspicion or +displeasure.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Histiæus sent for.<br />Darius revokes his gift.</div> + +<p>Darius accordingly sent for Histiæus to come to him at Sardis, saying +that there was a service of great importance on which he wished to +employ him. Histiæus, of course, obeyed such a summons with eager +alacrity. When he arrived, Darius expressed great pleasure at seeing +him once more, and said that he had constant need of his presence and +his counsels. He valued, above all price, the services of so faithful +a friend, and so sagacious and trusty an adviser. He was now, he said, +going to Susa, and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_219" id="Page_219">[Pg 219]</a></span>he wished Histiæus to accompany him as his privy +counselor and confidential friend. It would be necessary, Darius +added, that he should give up his government of Miletus, and also the +city in Thrace which he had begun to build; but he should be exalted +to higher honors and dignities at Susa in their stead. He should have +apartments in the king's palace, and live in great luxury and +splendor.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Histiæus goes to Susa.<br />Artaphernes.</div> + +<p>Histiæus was extremely disappointed and chagrined at this +announcement. He was obliged, however, to conceal his vexation and +submit to his fate. In a few days after this, he set out, with the +rest of Darius's court, for the Persian capital, leaving a nephew, +whose name was Aristagoras, as governor of Miletus in his stead. +Darius, on the other hand, committed the general charge of the whole +coast of Asia Minor to Artaphernes, one of his generals. Artaphernes +was to make Sardis his capital. He had not only the general command of +all the provinces extending along the shore, but also of all the +ships, and galleys, and other naval armaments which belonged to Darius +on the neighboring seas. Aristagoras, as governor of Miletus, was +under his general jurisdiction. The two officers were, moreover, +excellent friends. Aristagoras <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_220" id="Page_220">[Pg 220]</a></span>was, of course, a Greek, and +Artaphernes a Persian.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Island of Naxos.<br />Civil war there.</div> + +<p>Among the Greek islands situated in the Ægean Sea, one of the most +wealthy, important, and powerful at that time, was Naxos. It was +situated in the southern part of the sea, and about midway between the +shores of Asia Minor and Greece. It happened that, soon after Darius +had returned from Asia Minor to Persia, a civil war broke out in that +island, in which the common people were on one side and the nobles on +the other. The nobles were overcome in the contest, and fled from the +island. A party of them landed at Miletus, and called upon Aristagoras +to aid them in regaining possession of the island.</p> + +<p>Aristagoras replied that he would very gladly do it if he had the +power, but that the Persian forces on the whole coast, both naval and +military, were under the command of Artaphernes at Sardis. He said, +however, that he was on very friendly terms with Artaphernes, and that +he would, if the Naxians desired it, apply to him for his aid. The +Naxians seemed very grateful for the interest which Aristagoras took +in their cause, and said that they would commit the whole affair to +his charge.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_221" id="Page_221">[Pg 221]</a></span></p><div class="sidenote">Action of Aristagoras.</div> + +<p>There was, however, much less occasion for gratitude than there +seemed, for Aristagoras was very far from being honest and sincere in +his offers of aid. He perceived, immediately on hearing the fugitives' +story, that a very favorable opportunity was opening for him to add +Naxos, and perhaps even the neighboring islands, to his own +government. It is always a favorable opportunity to subjugate a people +when their power of defense and of resistance is neutralized by +dissensions with one another. It is a device as old as the history of +mankind, and one resorted to now as often as ever, for ambitious +neighbors to interpose in behalf of the weaker party, in a civil war +waged in a country which they wish to make their own, and, beginning +with a war against a part, to end by subjugating the whole. This was +Aristagoras's plan. He proposed it to Artaphernes, representing to him +that a very favorable occasion had occurred for bringing the Greek +islands of the Ægean Sea under the Persian dominion. Naxos once +possessed, all the other islands around it would follow, he said, and +a hundred ships would make the conquest sure.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Co-operation of Artaphernes.</div> + +<p>Artaphernes entered very readily and very warmly into the plan. He +said that he would <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_222" id="Page_222">[Pg 222]</a></span>furnish two hundred instead of one hundred +galleys. He thought it was necessary, however, first to consult +Darius, since the affair was one of such importance; and besides, it +was not best to commence the undertaking until the spring. He would +immediately send a messenger to Darius to ascertain his pleasure, and, +in the mean time, as he did not doubt that Darius would fully approve +of the plan, he would have all necessary preparations made, so that +every thing should be in readiness as soon as the proper season for +active operations should arrive.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius consulted.<br />His approval.<br />Preparations.</div> + +<p>Artaphernes was right in anticipating his brother's approval of the +design. The messenger returned from Susa with full authority from the +king for the execution of the project. The ships were built and +equipped, and every thing was made ready for the expedition. The +intended destination of the armament was, however, kept a profound +secret, as the invaders wished to surprise the people of Naxos when +off their guard. Aristagoras was to accompany the expedition as its +general leader, while an officer named Megabates, appointed by +Artaphernes for this purpose, was to take command of the fleet as a +sort of admiral. Thus there <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_223" id="Page_223">[Pg 223]</a></span>were two commanders—an arrangement which +almost always, in such cases, leads to a quarrel. It is a maxim in war +that <i>one</i> bad general is better than two good ones.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Sailing of the expedition.<br />Plan of the commander.</div> + +<p>The expedition sailed from Miletus; and, in order to prevent the +people of Naxos from being apprised of their danger, the report had +been circulated that its destination was to be the Hellespont. +Accordingly, when the fleet sailed, it turned its course to the +northward, as if it were really going to the Hellespont. The plan of +the commander was to stop after proceeding a short distance, and then +to seize the first opportunity afforded by a wind from the north to +come down suddenly upon Naxos, before the population should have time +to prepare for defense. Accordingly, when they arrived opposite the +island of Chios, the whole fleet came to anchor near the land. The +ships were all ordered to be ready, at a moment's warning, for setting +sail; and, thus situated, the commanders were waiting for the wind to +change.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Difficulty in the fleet.<br />Cruel discipline.</div> + +<p>Megabates, in going his rounds among the fleet while things were in +this condition, found one vessel entirely abandoned. The captain and +crew had all left it, and had gone ashore. They were not aware, +probably, how urgent <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_224" id="Page_224">[Pg 224]</a></span>was the necessity that they should be every +moment at their posts. The captain of this galley was a native of a +small town called Cnydus, and, as it happened, was a particular friend +of Aristagoras. His name was Syclax. Megabates, as the commander of +the fleet, was very much incensed at finding one of his subordinate +officers so derelict in duty. He sent his guards in pursuit of him; +and when Syclax was brought to his ship, Megabates ordered his head to +be thrust out through one of the small port-holes intended for the +oars, in the side of the ship, and then bound him in that +position—his head appearing thus to view, in the sight of all the +fleet, while his body remained within the vessel. "I am going to keep +him at his post," said Megabates, "and in such a way that every one +can <i>see</i> that he is there."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Dissension between the commanders.</div> + +<p>Aristagoras was much distressed at seeing his friend suffering so +severe and disgraceful a punishment. He went to Megabates and +requested the release of the prisoner, giving, at the same time, what +he considered satisfactory reasons for his having been absent from his +vessel. Megabates, however, was not satisfied, and refused to set +Syclax at liberty. Aristagoras then told Megabates that he mistook his +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_225" id="Page_225">[Pg 225]</a></span>position in supposing that he was master of the expedition, and could +tyrannize over the men in that manner, as he pleased. "I will have you +understand," said he, "that I am the commander in this campaign, and +that Artaphernes, in making you the sailing-master of the fleet, had +no intention that you should set up your authority over mine." So +saying, he went away in a rage, and released Syclax from his durance +with his own hands.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The expedition fails.</div> + +<p>It was now the turn of Megabates to be enraged. He determined to +defeat the expedition. He sent immediately a secret messenger to warn +the Naxians of their enemies' approach. The Naxians immediately made +effectual preparations to defend themselves. The end of it was, that +when the fleet arrived, the island was prepared to receive it, and +nothing could be done. Aristagoras continued the siege four months; +but inasmuch as, during all this time, Megabates did every thing in +his power to circumvent and thwart every plan that Aristagoras formed, +nothing was accomplished. Finally, the expedition was broken up, and +Aristagoras returned home, disappointed and chagrined, all his hopes +blasted, and his own private finances thrown into confusion by the +great pecuniary <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_226" id="Page_226">[Pg 226]</a></span>losses which he himself had sustained. He had +contributed very largely, from his own private funds, in fitting out +the expedition, fully confident of success, and of ample reimbursement +for his expenses as the consequence of it.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Chagrin of Aristagoras.<br />He resolves to revolt.</div> + +<p>He was angry with himself, and angry with Megabates, and angry with +Artaphernes. He presumed, too, that Megabates would denounce him to +Artaphernes, and, through him, to Darius, as the cause of the failure +of the expedition. A sudden order might come at any moment, directing +that he should be beheaded. He began to consider the expediency of +revolting from the Persian power, and making common cause with the +Greeks against Darius. The danger of such a step was scarcely less +than that of remaining as he was. While he was pondering these +momentous questions in his mind, he was led suddenly to a decision by +a very singular circumstance, the proper explaining of which requires +the story to return, for a time, to Histiæus at Susa.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Position of Histiæus.<br />His uneasiness.</div> + +<p>Histiæus was very ill at ease in the possession of his forced +elevation and grandeur at Susa. He enjoyed great distinction there, it +is true, and a life of ease and luxury, but he wished for independence +and authority. He was, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_227" id="Page_227">[Pg 227]</a></span>accordingly, very desirous to get back to his +former sphere of activity and power in Asia Minor. After revolving in +his mind the various plans which occurred to him for accomplishing +this purpose, he at last decided on inducing Aristagoras to revolt in +Ionia, and then attempting to persuade Darius to send him on to quell +the revolt. When once in Asia Minor, he would join the rebellion, and +bid Darius defiance.</p> + +<p>The first thing to be done was to contrive some safe and secret way to +communicate with Aristagoras. This he effected in the following +manner: There was a man in his court who was afflicted with some +malady of the eyes. Histiæus told him that if he would put himself +under <i>his</i> charge he could effect a cure. It would be necessary, he +said, that the man should have his head shaved and scarified; that is, +punctured with a sharp instrument, previously dipped in some medicinal +compound. Then, after some further applications should have been made, +it would be necessary for the patient to go to Ionia, in Asia Minor, +where there was a physician who would complete the cure.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Singular mode of communication.</div> + +<p>The patient consented to this proposal. The head was shaved, and +Histiæus, while pretending to scarify it, pricked into the skin—as +sailors <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_228" id="Page_228">[Pg 228]</a></span>tattoo anchors on their arms—by means of a needle and a +species of ink which had probably no great medicinal virtue, the words +of a letter to Aristagoras, in which he communicated to him fully, +though very concisely, the particulars of his plan. He urged +Aristagoras to revolt, and promised that, if he would do so, he would +come on, himself, as soon as possible, and, under pretense of marching +to suppress the rebellion, he would really join and aid it.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Its success.</div> + +<p>As soon as he had finished pricking this treasonable communication +into the patient's skin, he carefully enveloped the head in bandages, +which, he said, must on no account be disturbed. He kept the man shut +up, besides, in the palace, until the hair had grown, so as +effectually to conceal the writing, and then sent him to Ionia to have +the cure perfected. On his arrival at Ionia he was to find +Aristagoras, who would do what further was necessary. Histiæus +contrived, in the mean time, to send word to Aristagoras by another +messenger, that, as soon as such a patient should present himself, +Aristagoras was to shave his head. He did so, and the communication +appeared. We must suppose that the operations on the part of +Aristagoras for the purpose of completing the cure <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_229" id="Page_229">[Pg 229]</a></span>consisted, +probably, in pricking in more ink, so as to confuse and obliterate the +writing.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Revolt of Aristagoras.<br />Feigned indignation of Histiæus.</div> + +<p>Aristagoras was on the eve of throwing off the Persian authority when +he received this communication. It at once decided him to proceed. He +organized his forces and commenced his revolt. As soon as the news of +this rebellion reached Susa, Histiæus feigned great indignation, and +earnestly entreated Darius to commission him to go and suppress it. He +was confident, he said, that he could do it in a very prompt and +effectual manner. Darius was at first inclined to suspect that +Histiæus was in some way or other implicated in the movement; but +these suspicions were removed by the protestations which Histiæus +made, and at length he gave him leave to proceed to Miletus, +commanding him, however, to return to Susa again as soon as he should +have suppressed the revolt.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The Ionian rebellion.<br />Its failure.<br />Death of Histiæus.</div> + +<p>When Histiæus arrived in Ionia he joined Aristagoras, and the two +generals, leaguing with them various princes and states of Greece, +organized a very extended and dangerous rebellion, which it gave the +troops of Darius infinite trouble to subdue. We can not here give an +account of the incidents and particulars of this war. For a time the +rebels prospered, and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_230" id="Page_230">[Pg 230]</a></span>their cause seemed likely to succeed; but at +length the tide turned against them. Their towns were captured, their +ships were taken and destroyed, their armies cut to pieces. Histiæus +retreated from place to place, a wretched fugitive, growing more and +more distressed and destitute every day. At length, as he was flying +from a battle field, he arrested the arm of a Persian, who was +pursuing him with his weapon upraised, by crying out that he was +Histiæus the Milesian. The Persian, hearing this, spared his life, but +took him prisoner, and delivered him to Artaphernes. Histiæus begged +very earnestly that Artaphernes would send him to Darius alive, in +hopes that Darius would pardon him in consideration of his former +services at the bridge of the Danube. This was, however, exactly what +Artaphernes wished to prevent; so he crucified the wretched Histiæus +at Sardis, and then packed his head in salt and sent it to Darius.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_232" id="Page_232">[Pg 231-2]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/i230.jpg" class="ispace jpg" width="500" height="293" alt="GRECIAN EMPIRE." title="" /> +</div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_233" id="Page_233">[Pg 233]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="Chapter_XI" id="Chapter_XI"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter XI.</span></h2> + +<h2><span class="smcap">The Invasion of Greece and the<br /> Battle of Marathon.</span></h2> + +<h3>B.C. 512-490</h3> + +<div class="sidenote">Great battles.</div> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:50px;line-height:32px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">I</span><span style="margin-left:0%;">n</span> the history of a great military conqueror, there seems to be often +some one great battle which in importance and renown eclipses all the +rest. In the case of Hannibal it was the battle of Cannæ, in that of +Alexander the battle of Arbela. Cæsar's great conflict was at +Pharsalia, Napoleon's at Waterloo. Marathon was, in some respects, +Darius's Waterloo. The place is a beautiful plain, about twelve miles +north of the great city of Athens. The battle was the great final +contest between Darius and the Greeks, which, both on account of the +awful magnitude of the conflict, and the very extraordinary +circumstances which attended it, has always been greatly celebrated +among mankind.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Progress of the Persian empire.<br />Condition of the Persian empire.<br />Plans of Darius.</div> + +<p>The whole progress of the Persian empire, from the time of the first +accession of Cyrus to the throne, was toward the westward, till it +reached the confines of Asia on the shores of the Ægean Sea. All the +shores and islands of <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_234" id="Page_234">[Pg 234]</a></span>this sea were occupied by the states and the +cities of Greece. The population of the whole region, both on the +European and Asiatic shores, spoke the same language, and possessed +the same vigorous, intellectual, and elevated character. Those on the +Asiatic side had been conquered by Cyrus, and their countries had been +annexed to the Persian empire. Darius had wished very strongly, at the +commencement of his reign, to go on in this work of annexation, and +had sent his party of commissioners to explore the ground, as is +related in a preceding chapter. He had, however, postponed the +execution of his plans, in order first to conquer the Scythian +countries north of Greece, thinking, probably, that this would make +the subsequent conquest of Greece itself more easy. By getting a firm +foothold in Scythia, he would, as it were, turn the flank of the +Grecian territories, which would tend to make his final descent upon +them more effectual and sure.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Persian power in Thrace.</div> + +<p>This plan, however, failed; and yet, on his retreat from Scythia, +Darius did not withdraw his armies wholly from the European side of +the water. He kept a large force in Thrace, and his generals there +were gradually extending and strengthening their power, and preparing +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_235" id="Page_235">[Pg 235]</a></span>for still greater conquests. They attempted to extend their dominion, +sometimes by negotiations, and sometimes by force, and they were +successful and unsuccessful by turns, whichever mode they employed.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Attempted negotiation with Macedon.</div> + +<p>One very extraordinary story is told of an attempted negotiation with +Macedon, made with a view of bringing that kingdom, if possible, under +the Persian dominion, without the necessity of a resort to force. The +commanding general of Darius's armies in Thrace, whose name, as was +stated in the last chapter, was Megabyzus, sent seven Persian officers +into Macedon, not exactly to summon the Macedonians, in a peremptory +manner, to surrender to the Persians, nor, on the other hand, to +propose a voluntary alliance, but for something between the two. The +communication was to be in the form of a proposal, and yet it was to +be made in the domineering and overbearing manner with which the +tyrannical and the strong often make proposals to the weak and +defenseless.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The seven commissioners.</div> + +<p>The seven Persians went to Macedon, which, as will be seen from the +map, was west of Thrace, and to the northward of the other Grecian +countries. Amyntas, the king of Macedon, gave them a very honorable +reception. At <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_236" id="Page_236">[Pg 236]</a></span>length, one day, at a feast to which they were invited +in the palace of Amyntas, they became somewhat excited with wine, and +asked to have the ladies of the court brought into the apartment. They +wished "to see them," they said. Amyntas replied that such a procedure +was entirely contrary to the usages and customs of their court; but +still, as he stood somewhat in awe of his visitors, or, rather, of the +terrible power which the delegation represented, and wished by every +possible means to avoid provoking a quarrel with them, he consented to +comply with their request. The ladies were sent for. They came in, +reluctant and blushing, their minds excited by mingled feelings of +indignation and shame.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Their rudeness at the feast.<br />Stratagem of Amyntas's son.<br />The commissioners killed.</div> + +<p>The Persians, becoming more and more excited and imperious under the +increasing influence of the wine, soon began to praise the beauty of +these new guests in a coarse and free manner, which overwhelmed the +ladies with confusion, and then to accost them familiarly and rudely, +and to behave toward them, in other respects, with so much impropriety +as to produce great alarm and indignation among all the king's +household. The king himself was much distressed, but he was afraid to +act decidedly. <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_237" id="Page_237">[Pg 237]</a></span>His son, a young man of great energy and spirit, +approached his father with a countenance and manner expressive of high +excitement, and begged him to retire from the feast, and leave him, +the son, to manage the affair. Amyntas reluctantly allowed himself to +be persuaded to go, giving his son many charges, as he went away, to +do nothing rashly or violently. As soon as the king was gone, the +prince made an excuse for having the ladies retire for a short time, +saying that they should soon return. The prince conducted them to +their apartment, and then selecting an equal number of tall and +smooth-faced boys, he disguised them to represent the ladies, and gave +each one a dagger, directing him to conceal it beneath his robe. These +counterfeit females were then introduced to the assembly in the place +of those who had retired. The Persians did not detect the deception. +It was evening, and, besides, their faculties were confused with the +effects of the wine. They approached the supposed ladies as they had +done before, with rude familiarity; and the boys, at a signal made by +the prince when the Persians were wholly off their guard, stabbed and +killed every one of them on the spot.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_238" id="Page_238">[Pg 238]</a></span></p><div class="sidenote">Artifice of the prince.</div> + +<p>Megabyzus sent an embassador to inquire what became of his seven +messengers; but the Macedonian prince contrived to buy this messenger +off by large rewards, and to induce him to send back some false but +plausible story to satisfy Megabyzus. Perhaps Megabyzus would not have +been so easily satisfied had it not been that the great Ionian +rebellion, under Aristagoras and Histiæus, as described in the last +chapter, broke out soon after, and demanded his attention in another +quarter of the realm.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius's anger against the Athenians.</div> + +<p>The Ionian rebellion postponed, for a time, Darius's designs on +Greece, but the effect of it was to make the invasion more certain and +more terrible in the end; for Athens, which was at that time one of +the most important and powerful of the Grecian cities, took a part in +that rebellion against the Persians. The Athenians sent forces to aid +those of Aristagoras and Histiæus, and, in the course of the war, the +combined army took and burned the city of Sardis. When this news +reached Darius, he was excited to a perfect phrensy of resentment and +indignation against the Athenians for coming thus into his own +dominions to assist rebels, and there destroying one of his most +important <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_239" id="Page_239">[Pg 239]</a></span>capitals. He uttered the most violent and terrible threats +against them, and, to prevent his anger from getting cool before the +preparations should be completed for vindicating it, he made an +arrangement, it was said, for having a slave call out to him every day +at table, "Remember the Athenians!"</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Civil dissensions in Greece.<br />The tyrants.</div> + +<p>It was a circumstance favorable to Darius's designs against the states +of Greece that they were not united among themselves. There was no +general government under which the whole naval and military force of +that country could be efficiently combined, so as to be directed, in a +concentrated and energetic form, against a common enemy. On the other +hand, the several cities formed, with the territories adjoining them, +so many separate states, more or less connected, it is true, by +confederations and alliances, but still virtually independent, and +often hostile to each other. Then, besides these external and +international quarrels, there was a great deal of internal dissension. +The monarchical and the democratic principle were all the time +struggling for the mastery. Military despots were continually rising +to power in the various cities, and after they had ruled, for a time, +over their subjects with a rod of iron, the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_240" id="Page_240">[Pg 240]</a></span>people would rise in +rebellion and expel them from their thrones. These revolutions were +continually taking place, attended, often, by the strangest and most +romantic incidents, which evinced, on the part of the actors in them, +that extraordinary combination of mental sagacity and acumen with +childish and senseless superstition so characteristic of the times.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Periander.<br />His message to a neighboring potentate.<br />Periander's intolerable tyranny.</div> + +<p>It is not surprising that the populace often rebelled against the +power of these royal despots, for they seem to have exercised their +power, when their interests or their passions excited them to do it, +in the most tyrannical and cruel manner. One of them, it was said, a +king of Corinth, whose name was Periander, sent a messenger, on one +occasion, to a neighboring potentate—with whom he had gradually come +to entertain very friendly relations—to inquire by what means he +could most certainly and permanently secure the continuance of his +power. The king thus applied to gave no direct reply, but took the +messenger out into his garden, talking with him by the way about the +incidents of his journey, and other indifferent topics. He came, at +length, to a field where grain was growing, and as he walked along, he +occupied himself in cutting off, with his sword, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_241" id="Page_241">[Pg 241]</a></span>every head of the +grain which raised itself above the level of the rest. After a short +time he returned to the house, and finally dismissed the messenger +without giving him any answer whatever to the application that he had +made. The messenger returned to Periander, and related what had +occurred. "I understand his meaning," said Periander. "I must contrive +some way to remove all those who, by their talents, their influence, +or their power, rise above the general level of the citizens." +Periander began immediately to act on this recommendation. Whoever, +among the people of Corinth, distinguished himself above the rest, was +marked for destruction. Some were banished, some were slain, and some +were deprived of their influence, and so reduced to the ordinary +level, by the confiscation of their property, the lives and fortunes +of all the citizens of the state being wholly in the despot's hands.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">His wife Melissa.<br />The ghost of Melissa.</div> + +<p>This same Periander had a wife whose name was Melissa. A very +extraordinary tale is related respecting her, which, though mainly +fictitious, had a foundation, doubtless, in fact, and illustrates very +remarkably the despotic tyranny and the dark superstition of the +times. Melissa died and was buried; but her garments, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_242" id="Page_242">[Pg 242]</a></span>for some reason +or other, were not burned, as was usual in such cases. Now, among the +other oracles of Greece, there was one where departed spirits could be +consulted. It was called the oracle of the dead. Periander, having +occasion to consult an oracle in order to find the means of recovering +a certain article of value which was lost, sent to this place to call +up and consult the ghost of Melissa. The ghost appeared, but refused +to answer the question put to her, saying, with frightful solemnity,</p> + +<p>"I am cold; I am cold; I am naked and cold. My clothes were not +burned; I am naked and cold."</p> + +<div class="sidenote">A great sacrifice.</div> + +<p>When this answer was reported to Periander, he determined to make a +great sacrifice and offering, such as should at once appease the +restless spirit. He invited, therefore, a general assembly of the +women of Corinth to witness some spectacle in a temple, and when they +were convened, he surrounded them with his guards, seized them, +stripped them of most of their clothing, and then let them go free. +The clothes thus taken were then all solemnly burned, as an expiatory +offering, with invocations to the shade of Melissa.</p> + +<p>The account adds, that when this was done, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_243" id="Page_243">[Pg 243]</a></span>a second messenger was +dispatched to the oracle of the dead, and the spirit, now clothed and +comfortable in its grave, answered the inquiry, informing Periander +where the lost article might be found.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The reason of Periander's rudeness to the assembly of +females.</div> + +<p>The rude violence which Periander resorted to in this case seems not +to have been dictated by any particular desire to insult or injure the +women of Corinth, but was resorted to simply as the easiest and most +convenient way of obtaining what he needed. He wanted a supply of +valuable and costly female apparel, and the readiest mode of obtaining +it was to bring together an assembly of females dressed for a public +occasion, and then disrobe them. The case only shows to what an +extreme and absolute supremacy the lofty and domineering spirit of +ancient despotism attained.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Labda the cripple.<br />Prediction in respect to her progeny.</div> + +<p>It ought, however, to be related, in justice to these abominable +tyrants, that they often evinced feelings of commiseration and +kindness; sometimes, in fact, in very singular ways. There was, for +example, in one of the cities, a certain family that had obtained the +ascendency over the rest of the people, and had held it for some time +as an established aristocracy, taking care to preserve their rank and +power <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_244" id="Page_244">[Pg 244]</a></span>from generation to generation, by intermarrying only with one +another. At length, in one branch of the family, there grew up a young +girl named Labda, who had been a cripple from her birth, and, on +account of her deformity, none of the nobles would marry her. A man of +obscure birth, however, one of the common people, at length took her +for his wife. His name was Eetion. One day, Eetion went to Delphi to +consult an oracle, and as he was entering the temple, the Pythian<a name="FNanchor_J_10" id="FNanchor_J_10"></a><a href="#Footnote_J_10" class="fnanchor">[J]</a> +called out to him, saying that a stone should proceed from Labda which +should overwhelm tyrants and usurpers, and free the state. The nobles, +when they heard of this, understood the prediction to mean that the +destruction of their power was, in some way or other, to be effected +by means of Labda's child, and they determined to prevent the +fulfillment of the prophecy by destroying the babe itself so soon as +it should be born.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Conspiracy to destroy Labda's child.</div> + +<p>They accordingly appointed ten of their number to go to the place +where Eetion lived and kill the child. The method which they were to +adopt was this: They were to ask to see the infant on their arrival at +the house, and then it <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_245" id="Page_245">[Pg 245]</a></span>was agreed that whichever of the ten it was to +whom the babe was handed, he should dash it down upon the stone floor +with all his force, by which means it would, as they supposed, +certainly be killed.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Its failure.</div> + +<p>This plan being arranged, the men went to the house, inquired, with +hypocritical civility, after the health of the mother, and desired to +see the child. It was accordingly brought to them. The mother put it +into the hands of one of the conspirators, and the babe looked up into +his face and smiled. This mute expression of defenseless and confiding +innocence touched the murderer's heart. He could not be such a monster +as to dash such an image of trusting and happy helplessness upon the +stones. He looked upon the child, and then gave it into the hands of +the one next to him, and he gave it to the next, and thus it passed +through the hands of all the ten. No one was found stern and +determined enough to murder it, and at last they gave the babe back to +its mother and went away.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The child secreted.<br />Fulfillment of the oracle.</div> + +<p>The sequel of this story was, that the conspirators, when they reached +the gate, stopped to consult together, and after many mutual +criminations and recriminations, each impugning <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_246" id="Page_246">[Pg 246]</a></span>the courage and +resolution of the rest, and all joining in special condemnation of the +man to whom the child had at first been given, they went back again, +determined, in some way or other, to accomplish their purpose. But +Labda had, in the mean time, been alarmed at their extraordinary +behavior, and had listened, when they stopped at the gate, to hear +their conversation. She hastily hid the babe in a corn measure; and +the conspirators, after looking in every part of the house in vain, +gave up the search, supposing that their intended victim had been +hastily sent away. They went home, and not being willing to +acknowledge that their resolution had failed at the time of trial, +they agreed to say that their undertaking had succeeded, and that the +child had been destroyed. The babe lived, however, and grew up to +manhood, and then, in fulfillment of the prediction announced by the +oracle, he headed a rebellion against the nobles, deposed them from +their power, and reigned in their stead.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Hippias of Athens.<br />His barbarous cruelty.<br />Hippias among the Persians.</div> + +<p>One of the worst and most reckless of the Greek tyrants of whom we +have been speaking was Hippias of Athens. His father, Pisistratus, had +been hated all his life for his cruelties and his crimes; and when he +died, leaving two <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_247" id="Page_247">[Pg 247]</a></span>sons, Hippias and Hipparchus, a conspiracy was +formed to kill the sons, and thus put an end to the dynasty. +Hipparchus was killed, but Hippias escaped the danger, and seized the +government himself alone. He began to exercise his power in the most +cruel and wanton manner, partly under the influence of resentment and +passion, and partly because he thought his proper policy was to strike +terror into the hearts of the people as a means of retaining his +dominion. One of the conspirators by whom his brother had been slain, +accused Hippias's warmest and best friends as his accomplices in that +deed, in order to revenge himself on Hippias by inducing him to +destroy his own adherents and supporters. Hippias fell into the snare; +he condemned to death all whom the conspirator accused, and his +reckless soldiers executed his friends and foes together. When any +protested their innocence, he put them to the torture to make them +confess their guilt. Such indiscriminate cruelty only had the effect +to league the whole population of Athens against the perpetrator of +it. There was at length a general insurrection against him, and he was +dethroned. He made his escape to Sardis, and there tendered his +services to Artaphernes, offering to <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_248" id="Page_248">[Pg 248]</a></span>conduct the Persian armies to +Greece, and aid them in getting possession of the country, on +condition that, if they succeeded, the Persians would make him the +governor of Athens. Artaphernes made known these offers to Darius, and +they were eagerly accepted. It was, however, very impolitic to accept +them. The aid which the invaders could derive from the services of +such a guide, were far more than counterbalanced by the influence +which his defection and the espousal of his cause by the Persians +would produce in Greece. It banded the Athenians and their allies +together in the most enthusiastic and determined spirit of resistance, +against a man who had now added the baseness of treason to the wanton +wickedness of tyranny.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Wars between the Grecian states.<br />Quarrel between Athens and Ægina.</div> + +<p>Besides these internal dissensions between the people of the several +Grecian states and their kings, there were contests between one state +and another, which Darius proposed to take advantage of in his +attempts to conquer the country. There was one such war in particular, +between Athens and the island of Ægina, on the effects of which, in +aiding him in his operations against the Athenians, Darius placed +great reliance. Ægina was a large and populous island not far from +Athens. In accounting <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_249" id="Page_249">[Pg 249]</a></span>for the origin of the quarrel between the two +states, the Greek historians relate the following marvelous story:</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The two wooden statues.</div> + +<p>Ægina, as will be seen from the map, was situated in the middle of a +bay, southwest from Athens. On the other side of the bay, opposite +from Athens, there was a city, near the shore, called Epidaurus. It +happened that the people of Epidaurus were at one time suffering from +famine, and they sent a messenger to the oracle at Delphi to inquire +what they should do to obtain relief. The Pythian answered that they +must erect two statues to certain goddesses, named Damia and Auxesia, +and that then the famine would abate. They asked whether they were to +make the statues of brass or of marble. The priestess replied, "Of +neither, but of wood." They were, she said, to use for the purpose the +wood of the garden olive.</p> + +<p>This species of olive was a sacred tree, and it happened that, at this +time, there were no trees of the kind that were of sufficient size for +the purpose intended except at Athens; and the Epidaurians, +accordingly, sent to Athens to obtain leave to supply themselves with +wood for the sculptor by cutting down one of the trees from the sacred +grove. The Athenians consented <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_250" id="Page_250">[Pg 250]</a></span>to this, on condition that the +Epidaurians would offer a certain yearly sacrifice at two temples in +Athens, which they named. This sacrifice, they seemed to imagine, +would make good to the city whatever of injury their religious +interests might suffer from the loss of the sacred tree. The +Epidaurians agreed to the condition; the tree was felled; blocks from +it, of proper size, were taken to Epidaurus, and the statues were +carved. They were set up in the city with the usual solemnities, and +the famine soon after disappeared.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Incursion of the Æginetans.<br />They carry off the statues.<br />Attempt to recover the statues.</div> + +<p>Not many years after this, a war, for some cause or other, broke out +between Epidaurus and Ægina. The people of Ægina crossed the water in +a fleet of galleys, landed at Epidaurus, and, after committing various +ravages, they seized these images, and bore them away in triumph as +trophies of their victory. They set them up in a public place in the +middle of their own island, and instituted games and spectacles around +them, which they celebrated with great festivity and parade. The +Epidaurians, having thus lost their statues, ceased to make the annual +offering at Athens which they had stipulated for, in return for +receiving the wood from which the statues were carved. The Athenians +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_251" id="Page_251">[Pg 251]</a></span>complained. The Epidaurians replied that they had continued to make +the offering as long as they had kept the statues; but that now, the +statues being in other hands, they were absolved from the obligation. +The Athenians next demanded the statues themselves of the people of +Ægina. They refused to surrender them. The Athenians then invaded the +island, and proceeded to the spot where the statues had been erected. +They had been set up on massive and heavy pedestals. The Athenians +attempted to get them down, but could not separate them from their +fastenings. They then changed their plan, and undertook to move the +pedestals too, by dragging them with ropes. They were arrested in this +undertaking by an earthquake, accompanied by a solemn and terrible +sound of thunder, which warned them that they were provoking the anger +of Heaven.</p> + +<div class="sidenote3">They fall upon their knees.</div> + +<p>The statues, too, miraculously fell on their knees, and remained fixed +in that posture!</p> + +<p>The Athenians, terrified at these portentous signs, abandoned their +undertaking and fled toward the shore. They were, however, intercepted +by the people of Ægina, and some allies whom they had hastily summoned +to their aid, and the whole party was destroyed except one single man. +He escaped.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_252" id="Page_252">[Pg 252]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">The Athenian fugitive.<br />He is murdered by the women.</div> + +<p>This single fugitive, however, met with a worse fate than that of his +comrades. He went to Athens, and there the wives and sisters of the +men who had been killed thronged around him to hear his story. They +were incensed that he alone had escaped, as if his flight had been a +sort of betrayal and desertion of his companions. They fell upon him, +therefore, with one accord, and pierced and wounded him on all sides +with a sort of pin, or clasp, which they used as a fastening for their +dress. They finally killed him.</p> + +<p>The Athenian magistrates were unable to bring any of the perpetrators +of this crime to conviction and punishment; but a law was made, in +consequence of the occurrence, forbidding the use of that sort of +fastening for the dress to all the Athenian women forever after. The +people of Ægina, on the other hand, rejoiced and gloried in the deed +of the Athenian women, and they made the clasps which were worn upon +their island of double size, in honor of it.</p> + +<p>The war, thus commenced between Athens and Ægina, went on for a long +time, increasing in bitterness and cruelty as the injuries increased +in number and magnitude which the belligerent parties inflicted on +each other.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_253" id="Page_253">[Pg 253]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">The Persian army.<br />Its commander, Datis.</div> + +<p>Such was the state of things in Greece when Darius organized his great +expedition for the invasion of the country. He assembled an immense +armament, though he did not go forth himself to command it. He placed +the whole force under the charge of a Persian general named Datis. A +considerable part of the army which Datis was to command was raised in +Persia; but orders had been sent on that large accessions to the army, +consisting of cavalry, foot soldiers, ships, and seamen, and every +other species of military force, should be raised in all the provinces +of Asia Minor, and be ready to join it at various places of +rendezvous.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Sailing of the fleet.<br />Various conquests.</div> + +<p>Darius commenced his march at Susa with the troops which had been +collected there, and proceeded westward till he reached the +Mediterranean at Cilicia, which is at the northeast corner of that +sea. Here large re-enforcements joined him; and there was also +assembled at this point an immense fleet of galleys, which had been +provided to convey the troops to the Grecian seas. The troops +embarked, and the fleet advanced along the southern shores of Asia +Minor to the Ægean Sea, where they turned to the northward toward the +island of Samos, which had been appointed as a rendezvous. At <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_254" id="Page_254">[Pg 254]</a></span>Samos +they were joined by still greater numbers coming from Ionia, and the +various provinces and islands on that coast that were already under +the Persian dominion. When they were ready for their final departure, +the immense fleet, probably one of the greatest and most powerful +which had then ever been assembled, set sail, and steered their course +to the northwest, among the islands of the Ægean Sea. As they moved +slowly on, they stopped to take possession of such islands as came in +their way. The islanders, in some cases, submitted to them without a +struggle. In others, they made vigorous but perfectly futile attempts +to resist. In others still, the terrified inhabitants abandoned their +homes, and fled in dismay to the fastnesses of the mountains. The +Persians destroyed the cities and towns whose inhabitants they could +not conquer, and took the children from the most influential families +of the islands which they did subdue, as hostages to hold their +parents to their promises when their conquerors should have gone.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_256" id="Page_256">[Pg 255-6]</a></span></p><div class="figcenter" style="width: 500px;"> +<img src="images/i254.jpg" class="ispace jpg3" width="500" height="296" alt="The Invasion of Greece." title="" /> +<span class="caption"><span class="smcap">The Invasion of Greece.</span></span></div> + +<p>The mighty fleet advanced thus, by slow degrees, from conquest to +conquest, toward the Athenian shores. The vast multitude of galleys +covered the whole surface of the water, and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_257" id="Page_257">[Pg 257]</a></span>as they advanced, propelled each by a triple row of oars, they +exhibited to the fugitives who had gained the summits of the mountains +the appearance of an immense swarm of insects, creeping, by an almost +imperceptible advance, over the smooth expanse of the sea.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Landing of the Persians.</div> + +<p>The fleet, guided all the time by Hippias, passed on, and finally +entered the strait between the island of Eubœa and the main land to +the northward of Athens. Here, after some operations on the island, +the Persians finally brought their ships into a port on the Athenian +side, and landed. Hippias made all the arrangements, and superintended +the disembarkation.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">State of Athens.<br />The Greek army.</div> + +<p>In the mean time, all was confusion and dismay in the city of Athens. +The government, as soon as they heard of the approach of this terrible +danger, had sent an express to the city of Sparta, asking for aid. The +aid had been promised, but it had not yet arrived. The Athenians +gathered together all the forces at their command on the northern side +of the city, and were debating the question, with great anxiety and +earnestness, whether they should shut themselves up within the walls, +and await the onset of their enemies there, or go forth to meet them +on the way. The whole force which the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_258" id="Page_258">[Pg 258]</a></span>Greeks could muster consisted +of but about ten thousand men, while the Persian host contained over a +hundred thousand. It seemed madness to engage in a contest on an open +field against such an overwhelming disparity of numbers. A majority of +voices were, accordingly, in favor of remaining within the +fortifications of the city, and awaiting an attack.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Miltiades and his colleagues.</div> + +<p>The command of the army had been intrusted, not to one man, but to a +commission of three generals, a sort of triumvirate, on whose joint +action the decision of such a question devolved. Two of the three were +in favor of taking a defensive position; but the third, the celebrated +Miltiades, was so earnest and so decided in favor of attacking the +enemy themselves, instead of waiting to be attacked, that his opinion +finally carried the day, and the other generals resigned their portion +of authority into his hands, consenting that he should lead the Greek +army into battle, if he dared to take the responsibility of doing so.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Position of the armies.<br />Miltiades's plan of attack.</div> + +<p>The two armies were at this time encamped in sight of each other on +the plain of Marathon, between the mountain and the sea. They were +nearly a mile apart. The countless multitude of the Persians extended +as far as the eye could <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_259" id="Page_259">[Pg 259]</a></span>reach, with long lines of tents in the +distance, and thousands of horsemen on the plain, all ready for the +charge. The Greeks, on the other hand, occupied a small and isolated +spot, in a compact form, without cavalry, without archers, without, in +fact, any weapons suitable either for attack or defense, except in a +close encounter hand to hand. Their only hope of success depended on +the desperate violence of the onset they were to make upon the vast +masses of men spread out before them. On the one side were immense +numbers, whose force, vast as it was, must necessarily be more or less +impeded in its operations, and slow. It was to be overpowered, +therefore, if overpowered at all, by the utmost fierceness and +rapidity of action—by sudden onsets, unexpected and furious assaults, +and heavy, vigorous, and rapid blows. Miltiades, therefore, made all +his arrangements with reference to that mode of warfare. Such soldiers +as the Greeks, too, were admirably adapted to execute such designs, +and the immense and heterogeneous mass of Asiatic nations which +covered the plain before them was exactly the body for such an +experiment to be made upon. Glorying in their numbers and confident of +victory, they were slowly advancing, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_260" id="Page_260">[Pg 260]</a></span>without the least idea that the +little band before them could possibly do them any serious harm. They +had actually brought with them, in the train of the army, some blocks +of marble, with which they were going to erect a monument of their +victory, on the field of battle, as soon as the conflict was over!</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Onset of the Greeks.<br />Rout of the Persians.</div> + +<p>At length the Greeks began to put themselves in motion. As they +advanced, they accelerated their march more and more, until just +before reaching the Persian lines, when they began to run. The +astonishment of the Persians at this unexpected and daring onset soon +gave place, first to the excitement of personal conflict, and then to +universal terror and dismay; for the headlong impetuosity of the +Greeks bore down all opposition, and the desperate swordsmen cut their +way through the vast masses of the enemy with a fierce and desperate +fury that nothing could withstand. Something like a contest continued +for some hours; but, at the end of that time, the Persians were flying +in all directions, every one endeavoring, by the track which he found +most practicable for himself, to make his way to the ships on the +shore. Vast multitudes were killed in this headlong flight; others +became entangled <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_261" id="Page_261">[Pg 261]</a></span>in the morasses and fens, and others still strayed +away, and sought, in their terror, a hopeless refuge in the defiles of +the mountains. Those who escaped crowded in confusion on board their +ships, and pushed off from the shore, leaving the whole plain covered +with their dead and dying companions.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Results of the battle.<br />Numbers slain.</div> + +<p>The Greeks captured an immense amount of stores and baggage, which +were of great cost and value. They took possession, too, of the marble +blocks which the Persians had brought to immortalize their victory, +and built with them a monument, instead, to commemorate their defeat. +They counted the dead. Six thousand Persians, and only two hundred +Greeks, were found. The bodies of the Greeks were collected together, +and buried on the field, and an immense mound was raised over the +grave. This mound has continued to stand at Marathon to the present +day.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The field of Marathon.<br />The mound.</div> + +<p>The battle of Marathon was one of those great events in the history of +the human race which continue to attract, from age to age, the +admiration of mankind. They who look upon war, in all its forms, as +only the perpetration of an unnatural and atrocious crime, which rises +to dignity and grandeur only by the very <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_262" id="Page_262">[Pg 262]</a></span>enormity of its guilt, can +not but respect the courage, the energy, and the cool and determined +resolution with which the little band of Greeks went forth to stop the +torrent of foes which all the nations of a whole continent had +combined to pour upon them. The field has been visited in every age by +thousands of travelers, who have upon the spot offered their tribute +of admiration to the ancient heroes that triumphed there. The plain is +found now, as of old, overlooking the sea, and the mountains inland, +towering above the plain. The mound, too, still remains, which was +reared to consecrate the memory of the Greeks who fell. They who visit +it stand and survey the now silent and solitary scene, and derive from +the influence and spirit of the spot new strength and energy to meet +the great difficulties and dangers of life which they themselves have +to encounter. The Greeks themselves, of the present day, +notwithstanding the many sources of discouragement and depression with +which they have to contend, must feel at Marathon some rising spirit +of emulation in contemplating the lofty mental powers and the +undaunted spirit of their sires. Byron makes one of them sing,</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_263" id="Page_263">[Pg 263]</a></span></p><div class="sidenote">Song of the Greek.</div> + +<div class="poem"><div class="stanza"> +</div><div class="stanza"> +<span class="i0">"The mountains look on Marathon,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">And Marathon looks on the sea;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">And musing there an hour alone,<br /></span> +<span class="i2">I dreamed that Greece might still be free;<br /></span> +<span class="i0">For, standing on the Persians' grave,<br /></span> +<span class="i0">I could not deem myself a slave."<br /></span> +</div></div> + +<hr class="large" /><p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_264" id="Page_264">[Pg 264]</a></span></p> +<h2><a name="Chapter_XII" id="Chapter_XII"></a><span class="smcap">Chapter XII.</span></h2> + +<h2><span class="smcap">The Death of Darius.</span></h2> + +<h3>B.C. 490-485</h3> + +<div class="sidenote">The Persian fleet sails southward.</div> + +<p class="n"><span style="float:left;font-size:50px;line-height:32px;padding-top:2px;padding-bottom:1px;">T</span><span style="margin-left:0%;">he</span> city of Athens and the plain of Marathon are situated upon a +peninsula. The principal port by which the city was ordinarily +approached was on the southern shore of the peninsula, though the +Persians had landed on the northern side. Of course, in their retreat +from the field of battle, they fled to the north. When they were +beyond the reach of their enemies and fairly at sea, they were at +first somewhat perplexed to determine what to do. Datis was extremely +unwilling to return to Darius with the news of such a defeat. On the +other hand, there seemed but little hope of any other result if he +were to attempt a second landing.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Fate of Hippias.</div> + +<p>Hippias, their Greek guide, was killed in the battle. He expected to +be killed, for his mind, on the morning of the battle, was in a state +of great despondency and dejection. Until that time he had felt a +strong and confident expectation of success, but his feelings had then +been very suddenly changed. His confidence had <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_265" id="Page_265">[Pg 265]</a></span>arisen from the +influence of a dream, his dejection from a cause more frivolous still; +so that he was equally irrational in his hope and in his despair.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Omens.<br />The dream and the sneeze.<br />Hippias falls in battle.</div> + +<p>The omen which seemed to him to portend success to the enterprise in +which he had undertaken to act as guide, was merely that he dreamed +one night that he saw, and spent some time in company with, his +mother. In attempting to interpret this dream in the morning, it +seemed to him that Athens, his native city, was represented by his +mother, and that the vision denoted that he was about to be restored +to Athens again. He was extremely elated at this supernatural +confirmation of his hopes, and would have gone into the battle certain +of victory, had it not been that another circumstance occurred at the +time of the landing to blast his hopes. He had, himself, the general +charge of the disembarkation. He stationed the ships at their proper +places near the shore, and formed the men upon the beach as they +landed. While he was thus engaged, standing on the sand, he suddenly +sneezed. He was an old man, and his teeth—those that remained—were +loose. One of them was thrown out in the act of sneezing, and it fell +into the sand. Hippias was <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_266" id="Page_266">[Pg 266]</a></span>alarmed at this occurrence, considering it +a bad omen. He looked a long time for the tooth in vain, and then +exclaimed that all was over. The joining of his tooth to his mother +earth was the event to which his dream referred, and there was now no +hope of any further fulfillment of it. He went on mechanically, after +this, in marshaling his men and preparing for battle, but his mind was +oppressed with gloomy forebodings. He acted, in consequence, feebly +and with indecision; and when the Greeks explored the field on the +morning after the battle, his body was found among the other mutilated +and ghastly remains which covered the ground.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Movements of the Persian fleet.<br />The Persian fleet returns to Asia.</div> + +<p>As the Persian fleet moved, therefore, along the coast of Attica, they +had no longer their former guide. They were still, however, very +reluctant to leave the country. They followed the shore of the +peninsula until they came to the promontory of Sunium, which forms the +southeastern extremity of it. They doubled this cape, and then +followed the southern shore of the peninsula until they arrived at the +point opposite to Athens on that side. In the mean time, however, the +Spartan troops which had been sent for to aid the Athenians in the +contest, but which had not arrived in time to take <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_267" id="Page_267">[Pg 267]</a></span>part in the +battle, reached the ground; and the indications which the Persians +observed, from the decks of their galleys, that the country was +thoroughly aroused, and was every where ready to receive them, +deterred them from making any further attempts to land. After +lingering, therefore, a short time near the shore, the fleet directed +its course again toward the coasts of Asia.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Anxiety of Datis.</div> + +<p>The mind of Datis was necessarily very ill at ease. He dreaded the +wrath of Darius; for despots are very prone to consider military +failures as the worst of crimes. The expedition had not, however, been +entirely a failure. Datis had conquered many of the Greek islands, and +he had with him, on board his galleys, great numbers of prisoners, and +a vast amount of plunder which he had obtained from them. Still, the +greatest and most important of the objects which Darius had +commissioned him to accomplish had been entirely defeated, and he +felt, accordingly, no little anxiety in respect to the reception which +he was to expect at Susa.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Datis finds a stolen statue.</div> + +<p>One night he had a dream which greatly disturbed him. He awoke in the +morning with an impression upon his mind, which he had derived from +the dream, that some temple had <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_268" id="Page_268">[Pg 268]</a></span>been robbed by his soldiers in the +course of his expedition, and that the sacrilegious booty which had +been obtained was concealed somewhere in the fleet. He immediately +ordered a careful search to be instituted, in which every ship was +examined. At length they found, concealed in one of the galleys, a +golden statue of Apollo. Datis inquired what city it had been taken +from. They answered from Delium. Delium was on the coast of Attica, +near the place where the Persians had landed, at the time of their +advance on Marathon. Datis could not safely or conveniently go back +there to restore it to its place. He determined, therefore, to deposit +it at Delos for safe keeping, until it could be returned to its proper +home.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Island of Delos.<br />Account of the sacred island.<br />Its present condition.</div> + +<p>Delos was a small but very celebrated island near the center of the +Ægean Sea, and but a short distance from the spot where the Persian +fleet was lying when Datis made this discovery. It was a sacred +island, devoted to religious rites, and all contention, and violence, +and, so far as was possible, all suffering and death, were excluded +from it. The sick were removed from it; the dead were not buried +there; armed ships and armed men laid aside their hostility to each +other when they approached it. Belligerent <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_269" id="Page_269">[Pg 269]</a></span>fleets rode at anchor, +side by side, in peace, upon the smooth waters of its little port, and +an enchanting picture of peace, tranquillity, and happiness was seen +upon its shores. A large natural fountain, or spring, thirty feet in +diameter, and inclosed partly by natural rocks and partly by an +artificial wall, issued from the ground in the center of the island, +and sent forth a beautiful and fertilizing rill into a rich and happy +valley, through which it meandered, deviously, for several miles, +seeking the sea. There was a large and populous city near the port, +and the whole island was adorned with temples, palaces, colonnades, +and other splendid architectural structures, which made it the +admiration of all mankind. All this magnificence and beauty have, +however, long since passed away. The island is now silent, deserted, +and desolate, a dreary pasture, where cattle browse and feed, with +stupid indifference, among the ancient ruins. Nothing living remains +of the ancient scene of grandeur and beauty but the fountain. That +still continues to pour up its clear and pellucid waters with a +ceaseless and eternal flow.</p> + +<p>It was to this Delos that Datis determined to restore the golden +statue. He took it on <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_270" id="Page_270">[Pg 270]</a></span>board his own galley, and proceeded with it, +himself, to the sacred island. He deposited it in the great temple of +Apollo, charging the priests to convey it, as soon as a convenient +opportunity should occur, to its proper destination at Delium.</p> + +<p>The Persian fleet, after this business was disposed of, set sail +again, and pursued its course toward the coasts of Asia, where at +length the expedition landed in safety.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Disposition of the army.<br />Darius's reception of Datis.</div> + +<p>The various divisions of the army were then distributed in the +different provinces where they respectively belonged, and Datis +commenced his march with the Persian portion of the troops, and with +his prisoners and plunder, for Susa, feeling, however, very uncertain +how he should be received on his arrival there. Despotic power is +always capricious; and the character of Darius, which seems to have +been naturally generous and kind, and was rendered cruel and +tyrannical only through the influence of the position in which he had +been placed, was continually presenting the most opposite and +contradictory phases. The generous elements of it, fortunately for +Datis, seemed to be in the ascendency when the remnant of the Persian +army arrived at Susa. Darius received the returning <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_271" id="Page_271">[Pg 271]</a></span>general without +anger, and even treated the prisoners with humanity.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Subsequent history of Miltiades.<br />His great popularity.</div> + +<p>Before finally leaving the subject of this celebrated invasion, which +was brought to an end in so remarkable a manner by the great battle of +Marathon, it may be well to relate the extraordinary circumstances +which attended the subsequent history of Miltiades, the great +commander in that battle on the Greek side. Before the conflict, he +seems to have had no official superiority over the other generals, +but, by the resolute decision with which he urged the plan of giving +the Persians battle, and the confidence and courage which he +manifested in expressing his readiness to take the responsibility of +the measure, he placed himself virtually at the head of the Greek +command. The rest of the officers acquiesced in his pre-eminence, and, +waiving their claims to an equal share of the authority, they allowed +him to go forward and direct the operations of the day. If the day had +been lost, Miltiades, even though he had escaped death upon the field, +would have been totally and irretrievably ruined; but as it was won, +the result of the transaction was that he was raised to the highest +pinnacle of glory and renown.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_272" id="Page_272">[Pg 272]</a></span></p><p>And yet in this, as in all similar cases, the question of success or +of failure depended upon causes wholly beyond the reach of human +foresight or control. The military commander who acts in such +contingencies is compelled to stake every thing dear to him on results +which are often as purely hazardous as the casting of a die.</p> + +<div class="sidenote3">Miltiades's influence at Athens.<br />His ambitious designs.</div> + +<p>The influence of Miltiades in Athens after the Persian troops were +withdrawn was paramount and supreme. Finding himself in possession of +this ascendency, he began to form plans for other military +undertakings. It proved, in the end, that it would have been far +better for him to have been satisfied with the fame which he had +already acquired.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Island and city of Paros.<br />Appearance of the modern town.</div> + +<p>Some of the islands in the Ægean Sea he considered as having taken +part with the Persians in the invasion, to such an extent, at least, +as to furnish him with a pretext for making war upon them. The one +which he had specially in view, in the first instance, was Paros. +Paros is a large and important island situated near the center of the +southern portion of the Ægean Sea. It is of an oval form, and is about +twelve miles long. The surface of the land is beautifully diversified +and very picturesque, while, at the same time, the soil is very +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_273" id="Page_273">[Pg 273]</a></span>fertile. In the days of Miltiades, it was very wealthy and populous, +and there was a large city, called also Paros, on the western coast of +the island, near the sea. There is a modern town built upon the site +of the former city, which presents a very extraordinary appearance, as +the dwellings are formed, in a great measure, of materials obtained +from the ancient ruins. Marble columns, sculptured capitals, and +fragments of what were once magnificent entablatures, have been used +to construct plain walls, or laid in obscure and neglected +pavements—all, however, still retaining, notwithstanding their +present degradation, unequivocal marks of the nobleness of their +origin. The quarries where the ancient Parian marble was obtained were +situated on this island, not very far from the town. They remain to +the present day in the same state in which the ancient workmen left +them.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Miltiades's proposition to the Athenians.</div> + +<p>In the time of Miltiades the island and the city of Paros were both +very wealthy and very powerful. Miltiades conceived the design of +making a descent upon the island, and levying an immense contribution +upon the people, in the form of a fine, for what he considered their +treason in taking part with the enemies of their <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_274" id="Page_274">[Pg 274]</a></span>countrymen. In order +to prevent the people of Paros from preparing for defense, Miltiades +intended to keep the object of his expedition secret for a time. He +therefore simply proposed to the Athenians that they should equip a +fleet and put it under his command. He had an enterprise in view, he +said, the nature of which he could not particularly explain, but he +was very confident of its success, and, if successful, he should +return, in a short time, laden with spoils which would enrich the +city, and amply reimburse the people for the expenses they would have +incurred. The force which he asked for was a fleet of seventy vessels.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">They accept it.</div> + +<p>So great was the popularity and influence which Miltiades had acquired +by his victory at Marathon, that this somewhat extraordinary +proposition was readily complied with. The fleet was equipped, and +crews were provided, and the whole armament was placed under +Miltiades's command. The men themselves who were embarked on board of +the galleys did not know whither they were going. Miltiades promised +them victory and an abundance of gold as their reward; for the rest, +they must trust, he said, to him, as he could not explain the actual +destination of the enterprise without endangering <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_275" id="Page_275">[Pg 275]</a></span>its success. The +men were all satisfied with these conditions, and the fleet set sail.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Miltiades marches against Paros.<br />Its resistance.</div> + +<p>When it arrived on the coast of Paros, the Parians were, of course, +taken by surprise, but they made immediate preparations for a very +vigorous resistance. Miltiades commenced a siege, and sent a herald to +the city, demanding of them, as the price of their ransom, an immense +sum of money, saying, at the same time, that, unless they delivered up +that sum, or, at least, gave security for the payment of it, he would +not leave the place until the city was captured, and, when captured, +it should be wholly destroyed. The Parians rejected the demand, and +engaged energetically in the work of completing and strengthening +their defenses. They organized companies of workmen to labor during +the night, when their operations would not be observed, in building +new walls, and re-enforcing every weak or unguarded point in the line +of the fortifications. It soon appeared that the Parians were making +far more rapid progress in securing their position than Miltiades was +in his assaults upon it. Miltiades found that an attack upon a +fortified island in the Ægean Sea was a different thing from +encountering the undisciplined hordes of Persians on <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_276" id="Page_276">[Pg 276]</a></span>the open plains +of Marathon. There it was a contest between concentrated courage and +discipline on the one hand, and a vast expansion of pomp and parade on +the other; whereas now he found that the courage and discipline on his +part were met by an equally indomitable resolution on the part of his +opponents, guided, too, by an equally well-trained experience and +skill. In a word, it was Greek against Greek at Paros, and Miltiades +began at length to perceive that his prospect of success was growing +very doubtful and dim.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Miltiades is discouraged.<br />The captive priestess.</div> + +<p>This state of things, of course, filled the mind of Miltiades with +great anxiety and distress; for, after the promises which he had made +to the Athenians, and the blind confidence which he had asked of them +in proposing that they should commit the fleet so unconditionally to +his command, he could not return discomfited to Athens without +involving himself in the most absolute disgrace. While he was in this +perplexity, it happened that some of his soldiers took captive a +Parian female, one day, among other prisoners. She proved to be a +priestess, from one of the Parian temples. Her name was Timo. The +thought occurred to Miltiades that, since all human means at his +command <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_277" id="Page_277">[Pg 277]</a></span>had proved inadequate to accomplish his end, he might, +perhaps, through this captive priestess, obtain some superhuman aid. +As she had been in the service of a Parian temple, she would naturally +have an influence with the divinities of the place, or, at least, she +would be acquainted with the proper means of propitiating their favor.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Miltiades's interview with the priestess.</div> + +<p>Miltiades, accordingly, held a private interview with Timo, and asked +her what he should do to propitiate the divinities of Paros so far as +to enable him to gain possession of the city. She replied that she +could easily point out the way, if he would but follow her +instructions. Miltiades, overjoyed, promised readily that he would do +so. She then gave him her instructions secretly. What they were is not +known, except so far as they were revealed by the occurrences that +followed.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Her instructions.<br />Miltiades attempts to enter the temple of Ceres.<br />He dislocates a limb.</div> + +<p>There was a temple consecrated to the goddess Ceres near to the city, +and so connected with it, it seems, as to be in some measure included +within the defenses. The approach to this temple was guarded by a +palisade. There were, however, gates which afforded access, except +when they were fastened from within. Miltiades, in obedience to Timo's +instructions, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_278" id="Page_278">[Pg 278]</a></span>went privately, in the night, perhaps, and with very +few attendants, to this temple. He attempted to enter by the gates, +which he had expected, it seems, to find open. They were, however, +fastened against him. He then undertook to scale the palisade. He +succeeded in doing this, not, however, without difficulty, and then +advanced toward the temple, in obedience to the instructions which he +had received from Timo. The account states that the act, whatever it +was, that Timo had directed him to perform, instead of being, as he +supposed, a means of propitiating the favor of the divinity, was +sacrilegious and impious; and Miltiades, as he approached the temple, +was struck suddenly with a mysterious and dreadful horror of mind, +which wholly overwhelmed him. Rendered almost insane by this +supernatural remorse and terror, he turned to fly. He reached the +palisade, and, in endeavoring to climb over it, his precipitation and +haste caused him to fall. His attendants ran to take him up. He was +helpless and in great pain. They found he had dislocated a joint in +one of his limbs. He received, of course, every possible attention; +but, instead of recovering from the injury, he found that the +consequences of it became more and <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_279" id="Page_279">[Pg 279]</a></span>more serious every day. In a word, +the great conqueror of the Persians was now wholly overthrown, and lay +moaning on his couch as helpless as a child.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Miltiades returns to Athens.<br />He is impeached.<br />Miltiades is condemned.<br />He dies of his wound.</div> + +<p>He soon determined to abandon the siege of Paros and return to Athens. +He had been about a month upon the island, and had laid waste the +rural districts, but, as the city had made good its defense against +him, he returned without any of the rich spoil which he had promised. +The disappointment which the people of Athens experienced on his +arrival, turned soon into a feeling of hostility against the author of +the calamity. Miltiades found that the fame and honor which he had +gained at Marathon were gone. They had been lost almost as suddenly as +they had been acquired. The rivals and enemies who had been silenced +by his former success were now brought out and made clamorous against +him by his present failure. They attributed the failure to his own +mismanagement of the expedition, and one orator, at length, advanced +articles of impeachment against him, on a charge of having been bribed +by the Persians to make his siege of Paros only a feint. Miltiades +could not defend himself from these criminations, for he was lying, at +<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_280" id="Page_280">[Pg 280]</a></span>the time, in utter helplessness, upon his couch of pain. The +dislocation of the limb had ended in an open wound, which at length, +having resisted all the attempts of the physicians to stop its +progress, had begun to mortify, and the life of the sufferer was fast +ebbing away. His son Cimon did all in his power to save his father +from both the dangers that threatened him. He defended his character +in the public tribunals, and he watched over his person in the cell in +the prison. These filial efforts were, however, in both cases +unavailing. Miltiades was condemned by the tribunal, and he died of +his wound.</p> + +<p>The penalty exacted of him by the sentence was a very heavy fine. The +sum demanded was the amount which the expedition to Paros had cost the +city, and which, as it had been lost through the agency of Miltiades, +it was adjudged that he should refund. This sentence, as well as the +treatment in general which Miltiades received from his countrymen, has +been since considered by mankind as very unjust and cruel. It was, +however, only following out, somewhat rigidly, it is true, the +essential terms and conditions of a military career. It results from +principles inherent in the very nature of war, <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_281" id="Page_281">[Pg 281]</a></span>that we are never to +look for the ascendency of justice and humanity in any thing +pertaining to it. It is always power, and not right, that determines +possession; it is success, not merit, that gains honors and rewards; +and they who assent to the genius and spirit of military rule thus +far, must not complain if they find that, on the same principle, it is +failure and not crime which brings condemnation and destruction.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">The fine paid.</div> + +<p>When Miltiades was dead, Cimon found that he could not receive his +father's body for honorable interment unless he paid the fine. He had +no means, himself, of doing this. He succeeded, however, at length, in +raising the amount, by soliciting contributions from the family +friends of his father. He paid the fine into the city treasury, and +then the body of the hero was deposited in its long home.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Proposed punishment of Timo.<br />Timo saved by the Delphic oracle.</div> + +<p>The Parians were at first greatly incensed against the priestess Timo, +as it seemed to them that she had intended to betray the city to +Miltiades. They wished to put her to death, but they did not dare to +do it. It might be considered an impious sacrilege to punish a +priestess. They accordingly sent to the oracle at Delphi to state the +circumstances of the case, and to inquire if they might lawfully put +the <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_282" id="Page_282">[Pg 282]</a></span>priestess to death. She had been guilty, they said, of pointing +out to an enemy the mode by which he might gain possession of their +city; and, what was worse, she had, in doing so, attempted to admit +him to those solemn scenes and mysteries in the temple which it was +not lawful for any man to behold. The oracle replied that the +priestess must not be punished, for she had done no wrong. It had been +decreed by the gods that Miltiades should be destroyed, and Timo had +been employed by them as the involuntary instrument of conducting him +to his fate. The people of Paros acquiesced in this decision, and Timo +was set free.</p> + +<hr class="medium" /> + +<div class="sidenote">Another expedition against Greece.<br />Preparations.</div> + +<p>But to return to Darius. His desire to subdue the Greeks and to add +their country to his dominions, and his determination to accomplish +his purpose, were increased and strengthened, not diminished, by the +repulse which his army had met with at the first invasion. He was +greatly incensed against the Athenians, as if he considered their +courage and energy in defending their country an audacious outrage +against himself, and a crime. He resolved to organize a new +expedition, still greater and more powerful than the other. Of this +armament <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_283" id="Page_283">[Pg 283]</a></span>he determined to take the command himself in person, and to +make the preparations for it on a scale of such magnitude as that the +expedition should be worthy to be led by the great sovereign of half +the world. He accordingly transmitted orders to all the peoples, +nations, languages, and realms, in all his dominions, to raise their +respective quotas of troops, horses, ships, and munitions of war, and +prepare to assemble at such place of rendezvous as he should designate +when all should be ready.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Necessity for settling the succession.</div> + +<p>Some years elapsed before these arrangements were matured, and when at +last the time seemed to have arrived for carrying his plans into +effect, he deemed it necessary, before he commenced his march, to +settle the succession of his kingdom; for he had several sons, who +might each claim the throne, and involve the empire in disastrous +civil wars in attempting to enforce their claims, in case he should +never return. The historians say that there was a law of Persia +forbidding the sovereign to leave the realm without previously fixing +upon a successor. It is difficult to see, however, by what power or +authority such a law could have been enacted, or to believe that +monarchs like Darius would recognize an abstract obligation to law of +any kind, in respect to their own political <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_284" id="Page_284">[Pg 284]</a></span>action. There is a +species of law regulating the ordinary dealings between man and man, +that springs up in all communities, whether savage or civilized, from +custom, and from the action of judicial tribunals, which the most +despotic and absolute sovereigns feel themselves bound, so far as +relates to the private affairs of their subjects, to respect and +uphold; but, in regard to their own personal and governmental acts and +measures, they very seldom know any other authority than the impulses +of their own sovereign will.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Darius's two sons.<br />Their claims to the throne.</div> + +<p>Darius had several sons, among whom there were two who claimed the +right to succeed their father on the throne. One was the oldest son of +a wife whom Darius had married before he became king. His name was +Artobazanes. The other was the son of Atossa, the daughter of Cyrus, +whom Darius had married <i>after</i> his accession to the throne. His name +was Xerxes. Artobazanes claimed that he was entitled to be his +father's heir, since he was his oldest son. Xerxes, on the other hand, +maintained that, at the period of the birth of Artobazanes, Darius was +not a king. He was then in a private station, and sons could properly +inherit only what their fathers possessed at the time when they were +born. He himself, on the other hand, was <span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_285" id="Page_285">[Pg 285]</a></span>the oldest son which his +father had had, <i>being a king</i>, and he was, consequently, the true +inheritor of the kingdom. Besides, being the son of Atossa, he was the +grandson of Cyrus, and the hereditary rights, therefore, of that great +founder of the empire had descended to him.</p> + +<div class="sidenote">Xerxes declared heir.<br />Death of Darius.</div> + +<p>Darius decided the question in favor of Xerxes, and then made +arrangements for commencing his march, with a mind full of the elation +and pride which were awakened by the grandeur of his position and the +magnificence of his schemes. These schemes, however, he did not live +to execute. He suddenly fell sick and died, just as he was ready to +set out upon his expedition, and Xerxes, his son, reigned in his +stead.</p> + +<p>Xerxes immediately took command of the vast preparations which his +father had made, and went on with the prosecution of the enterprise. +The expedition which followed deserves, probably, in respect to the +numbers engaged in it, the distance which it traversed, the +immenseness of the expenses involved, and the magnitude of its +results, to be considered the greatest military undertaking which +human ambition and power have ever attempted to effect. The narrative, +however, both of its splendid adventures and of its ultimate fate, +belongs to the history of Xerxes.</p> + +<p><span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_286" id="Page_286">[Pg 286]</a></span></p> +<div class="sidenote">Character of Darius.<br />Ground of his renown.</div> + +<p>The greatness of Darius was the greatness of position and not of +character. He was the absolute sovereign of nearly half the world, +and, as such, was held up very conspicuously to the attention of +mankind, who gaze with a strong feeling of admiration and awe upon +these vast elevations of power, as they do upon the summits of +mountains, simply because they are high. Darius performed no great +exploit, and he accomplished no great object while he lived; and he +did not even leave behind him any strong impressions of personal +character. There is in his history, and in the position which he +occupies in the minds of men, greatness without dignity, success +without merit, vast and long-continued power without effects +accomplished or objects gained, and universal and perpetual renown +without honor or applause. The world admire Cæsar, Hannibal, +Alexander, Alfred, and Napoleon for the deeds which they performed. +They admire Darius only on account of the elevation on which he stood. +In the same lofty position, they would have admired, probably, just as +much, the very horse whose neighing placed him there.</p> + +<h3><span class="smcap">The End.</span></h3> + +<hr class="large" /> +<h2><span class="smcap">Footnotes</span></h2> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_A_1" id="Footnote_A_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_A_1"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> For the places mentioned in this chapter, and the track +of Cambyses on his expedition, see the <a href="#Empire">map</a> at the commencement of this +volume.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_B_2" id="Footnote_B_2"></a><a href="#FNanchor_B_2"><span class="label">[B]</span></a> Literally, <i>fish-eaters</i>.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_C_3" id="Footnote_C_3"></a><a href="#FNanchor_C_3"><span class="label">[C]</span></a> An account of Herodotus, and of the circumstances under +which he wrote his history, which will aid the reader very much in +forming an opinion in respect to the kind and degree of confidence +which it is proper to place in his statements, will be found in the +first chapter of our history of Cyrus the Great.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_D_4" id="Footnote_D_4"></a><a href="#FNanchor_D_4"><span class="label">[D]</span></a> For the position of Sardis, and of other places mentioned +in this chapter, see the <a href="#Empire">map</a> at the commencement of the volume, and +also that at the commencement of <a href="#Page_232">chapter xi</a>.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_E_5" id="Footnote_E_5"></a><a href="#FNanchor_E_5"><span class="label">[E]</span></a> It was a tumor of the breast, which became, at length, an +open ulcer, and began to spread and enlarge in a very formidable +manner.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_F_6" id="Footnote_F_6"></a><a href="#FNanchor_F_6"><span class="label">[F]</span></a> For the situation of these places, see the <a href="#Page_232">map</a> at the +commencement of chapter xi.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_G_7" id="Footnote_G_7"></a><a href="#FNanchor_G_7"><span class="label">[G]</span></a> For the track of Darius on this expedition, see the <a href="#Empire">map</a> +at the commencement of this volume.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_H_8" id="Footnote_H_8"></a><a href="#FNanchor_H_8"><span class="label">[H]</span></a> See <a href="#Frontispiece">Frontispiece</a>.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_I_9" id="Footnote_I_9"></a><a href="#FNanchor_I_9"><span class="label">[I]</span></a> For these places, see the <a href="#Page_232">map</a> at the commencement of the +next chapter.</p></div> + +<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_J_10" id="Footnote_J_10"></a><a href="#FNanchor_J_10"><span class="label">[J]</span></a> For a full account of these oracles, see the history of +Cyrus the Great.</p></div> + +<hr class="large" /> +<h3><span class="smcap">Transcriber's Notes</span></h3> + +<p>1. Minor changes have been made to correct typesetters' errors, and to ensure consistent spelling and punctuation in this etext; otherwise, +every effort has been made to remain true to the original book.</p> + +<p>2. 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You may copy it, give it away or +re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included +with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org + + +Title: Darius the Great + Makers of History + +Author: Jacob Abbott + +Release Date: January 13, 2009 [EBook #27802] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DARIUS THE GREAT *** + + + + +Produced by D Alexander and the Online Distributed +Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was +produced from images generously made available by The +Internet Archive) + + + + + + + + + + Makers of History + + Darius the Great + + BY + + JACOB ABBOTT + + WITH ENGRAVINGS + + NEW YORK AND LONDON + + HARPER & BROTHERS PUBLISHERS + + 1904 + + + + + Entered, according to Act of Congress, in the year one thousand + eight hundred and fifty, by + + HARPER & BROTHERS, + + in the Clerk's Office of the District Court of the Southern District + of New York. + + Copyright, 1878, by JACOB ABBOTT. + + + + +[Illustration: DARIUS CROSSING THE BOSPORUS.] + + + + +PREFACE. + + +In describing the character and the action of the personages whose +histories form the subjects of this series, the writer makes no +attempt to darken the colors in which he depicts their deeds of +violence and wrong, or to increase, by indignant denunciations, the +obloquy which heroes and conquerors have so often brought upon +themselves, in the estimation of mankind, by their ambition, their +tyranny, or their desperate and reckless crimes. In fact, it seems +desirable to diminish, rather than to increase, the spirit of +censoriousness which often leads men so harshly to condemn the errors +and sins of others, committed in circumstances of temptation to which +they themselves were never exposed. Besides, to denounce or vituperate +guilt, in a narrative of the transactions in which it was displayed, +has little influence in awakening a healthy sensitiveness in the +conscience of the reader. We observe, accordingly, that in the +narratives of the sacred Scriptures, such denunciations are seldom +found. The story of Absalom's undutifulness and rebellion, of David's +adultery and murder, of Herod's tyranny, and all other narratives of +crime, are related in a calm, simple, impartial, and forbearing +spirit, which leads us to condemn the sins, but not to feel a +pharisaical resentment and wrath against the sinner. + +This example, so obviously proper and right, the writer of this series +has made it his endeavor in all respects to follow. + + + + +CONTENTS. + + + Chapter Page + + I. CAMBYSES 13 + + II. THE END OF CAMBYSES 38 + + III. SMERDIS THE MAGIAN 59 + + IV. THE ACCESSION OF DARIUS 82 + + V. THE PROVINCES 99 + + VI. THE RECONNOITERING OF GREECE 123 + + VII. THE REVOLT OF BABYLON 144 + + VIII. THE INVASION OF SCYTHIA 167 + + IX. THE RETREAT FROM SCYTHIA 189 + + X. THE STORY OF HISTIAEUS 210 + + XI. THE INVASION OF GREECE 233 + + XII. THE DEATH OF DARIUS 264 + + + + +ENGRAVINGS. + + + Page + + MAP OF THE PERSIAN EMPIRE. + + DARIUS CROSSING THE BOSPORUS _Frontispiece._ + + THE ARMY OF CAMBYSES OVERWHELMED IN THE DESERT 35 + + PHAEDYMA FEELING FOR SMERDIS'S EARS 69 + + THE INDIAN GOLD HUNTERS 121 + + THE BABYLONIANS DERIDING DARIUS FROM THE WALL 156 + + MAP OF GREECE 232 + + THE INVASION OF GREECE 256 + + + + +[Illustration: MAP OF THE PERSIAN EMPIRE.] + + + + +DARIUS THE GREAT + + + + +CHAPTER I. + +CAMBYSES. + +B.C. 530-524 + +Cyrus the Great.--His extended conquests.--Cambyses and +Smerdis.--Hystaspes and Darius.--Dream of Cyrus.--His anxiety and +fears.--Accession of Cambyses.--War with Egypt.--Origin of the war +with Egypt.--Ophthalmia.--The Egyptian physician.--His plan of +revenge.--Demand of Cyrus.--Stratagem of the King of Egypt.--Resentment +of Cassandane.--Threats of Cambyses.--Future conquests.--Temperament +and character of Cambyses.--Impetuosity of Cambyses.--Preparations for +the Egyptian war.--Desertion of Phanes.--His narrow escape.--Information +given by Phanes.--Treaty with the Arabian king.--Plan for providing +water.--Account of Herodotus.--A great battle.--Defeat of the +Egyptians.--Inhuman conduct of Cambyses.--His treatment of +Psammenitus.--The train of captive maidens.--The young men.--Scenes +of distress and suffering.--Composure of Psammenitus.--Feelings of the +father.--His explanation of them.--Cambyses relents.--His treatment of +the body of Amasis.--Cambyses's desecrations.--The sacred bull +Apis.--Cambyses stabs the sacred bull.--His mad expeditions.--The sand +storm.--Cambyses a wine-bibber.--Brutal act of Cambyses.--He is deemed +insane. + + +About five or six hundred years before Christ, almost the whole of the +interior of Asia was united in one vast empire. The founder of this +empire was Cyrus the Great. He was originally a Persian; and the whole +empire is often called the Persian monarchy, taking its name from its +founder's native land. + +Cyrus was not contented with having annexed to his dominion all the +civilized states of Asia. In the latter part of his life, he conceived +the idea that there might possibly be some additional glory and power +to be acquired in subduing certain half-savage regions in the north, +beyond the Araxes. He accordingly raised an army, and set off on an +expedition for this purpose, against a country which was governed by a +barbarian queen named Tomyris. He met with a variety of adventures on +this expedition, all of which are fully detailed in our history of +Cyrus. There is, however, only one occurrence that it is necessary to +allude to particularly here. That one relates to a remarkable dream +which he had one night, just after he had crossed the river. + +To explain properly the nature of this dream, it is necessary first to +state that Cyrus had two sons. Their names were Cambyses and Smerdis. +He had left them in Persia when he set out on his expedition across +the Araxes. There was also a young man, then about twenty years of +age, in one of his capitals, named Darius. He was the son of one of +the nobles of Cyrus's court. His father's name was Hystaspes. +Hystaspes, besides being a noble of the court, was also, as almost all +nobles were in those days, an officer of the army. He accompanied +Cyrus in his march into the territories of the barbarian queen, and +was with him there, in camp, at the time when this narrative +commences. + +Cyrus, it seems, felt some misgivings in respect to the result of his +enterprise; and, in order to insure the tranquillity of his empire +during his absence, and the secure transmission of his power to his +rightful successor in case he should never return, he established his +son Cambyses as regent of his realms before he crossed the Araxes, +and delivered the government of the empire, with great formality, into +his hands. This took place upon the frontier, just before the army +passed the river. The mind of a father, under such circumstances, +would naturally be occupied, in some degree, with thoughts relating to +the arrangements which his son would make, and to the difficulties he +would be likely to encounter in managing the momentous concerns which +had been committed to his charge. The mind of Cyrus was undoubtedly so +occupied, and this, probably, was the origin of the remarkable dream. + +His dream was, that Darius appeared to him in a vision, with vast +wings growing from his shoulders. Darius stood, in the vision, on the +confines of Europe and Asia, and his wings, expanded either way, +overshadowed the whole known world. When Cyrus awoke and reflected on +this ominous dream, it seemed to him to portend some great danger to +the future security of his empire. It appeared to denote that Darius +was one day to bear sway over all the world. Perhaps he might be even +then forming ambitious and treasonable designs. Cyrus immediately sent +for Hystaspes, the father of Darius; when he came to his tent, he +commanded him to go back to Persia, and keep a strict watch over the +conduct of his son until he himself should return. Hystaspes received +this commission, and departed to execute it; and Cyrus, somewhat +relieved, perhaps, of his anxiety by this measure of precaution, went +on with his army toward his place of destination. + +Cyrus never returned. He was killed in battle; and it would seem that, +though the import of his dream was ultimately fulfilled, Darius was +not, at that time, meditating any schemes of obtaining possession of +the throne, for he made no attempt to interfere with the regular +transmission of the imperial power from Cyrus to Cambyses his son. At +any rate, it was so transmitted. The tidings of Cyrus's death came to +the capital, and Cambyses, his son, reigned in his stead. + +The great event of the reign of Cambyses was a war with Egypt, which +originated in the following very singular manner: + +It has been found, in all ages of the world, that there is some +peculiar quality of the soil, or climate, or atmosphere of Egypt which +tends to produce an inflammation of the eyes. The inhabitants +themselves have at all times been very subject to this disease, and +foreign armies marching into the country are always very seriously +affected by it. Thousands of soldiers in such armies are sometimes +disabled from this cause, and many are made incurably blind. Now a +country which produces a disease in its worst form and degree, will +produce also, generally, the best physicians for that disease. At any +rate, this was supposed to be the case in ancient times; and +accordingly, when any powerful potentate in those days was afflicted +himself with ophthalmia, or had such a case in his family, Egypt was +the country to send to for a physician. + +Now it happened that Cyrus himself, at one time in the course of his +life, was attacked with this disease, and he dispatched an embassador +to Amasis, who was then king of Egypt, asking him to send him a +physician. Amasis, who, like all the other absolute sovereigns of +those days, regarded his subjects as slaves that were in all respects +entirely at his disposal, selected a physician of distinction from +among the attendants about his court, and ordered him to repair to +Persia. The physician was extremely reluctant to go. He had a wife and +family, from whom he was very unwilling to be separated; but the +orders were imperative, and he must obey. He set out on the journey, +therefore, but he secretly resolved to devise some mode of revenging +himself on the king for the cruelty of sending him. + +He was well received by Cyrus, and, either by his skill as a +physician, or from other causes, he acquired great influence at the +Persian court. At last he contrived a mode of revenging himself on the +Egyptian king for having exiled him from his native land. The king had +a daughter, who was a lady of great beauty. Her father was very +strongly attached to her. The physician recommended to Cyrus to send +to Amasis and demand this daughter in marriage. As, however, Cyrus was +already married, the Egyptian princess would, if she came, be his +concubine rather than his wife, or, if considered a wife, it could +only be a secondary and subordinate place that she could occupy. The +physician knew that, under these circumstances, the King of Egypt +would be extremely unwilling to send her to Cyrus, while he would yet +scarcely dare to refuse; and the hope of plunging him into extreme +embarrassment and distress, by means of such a demand from so powerful +a sovereign, was the motive which led the physician to recommend the +measure. + +Cyrus was pleased with the proposal, and sent, accordingly, to make +the demand. The king, as the physician had anticipated, could not +endure to part with his daughter in such a way, nor did he, on the +other hand, dare to incur the displeasure of so powerful a monarch by +a direct and open refusal. He finally resolved upon escaping from the +difficulty by a stratagem. + +There was a young and beautiful captive princess in his court named +Nitetis. Her father, whose name was Apries, had been formerly the King +of Egypt, but he had been dethroned and killed by Amasis. Since the +downfall of her family, Nitetis had been a captive; but, as she was +very beautiful and very accomplished, Amasis conceived the design of +sending her to Cyrus, under the pretense that she was the daughter +whom Cyrus had demanded. He accordingly brought her forth, provided +her with the most costly and splendid dresses, loaded her with +presents, ordered a large retinue to attend her, and sent her forth to +Persia. + +Cyrus was at first very much pleased with his new bride. Nitetis +became, in fact, his principal favorite; though, of course, his other +wife, whose name was Cassandane, and her children, Cambyses and +Smerdis, were jealous of her, and hated her. One day, a Persian lady +was visiting at the court, and as she was standing near Cassandane, +and saw her two sons, who were then tall and handsome young men, she +expressed her admiration of them, and said to Cassandane, "How proud +and happy you must be!" "No," said Cassandane; "on the contrary, I am +very miserable; for, though I am the mother of these children, the +king neglects and despises me. All his kindness is bestowed on this +Egyptian woman." Cambyses, who heard this conversation, sympathized +deeply with Cassandane in her resentment. "Mother," said he, "be +patient, and I will avenge you. As soon as I am king, I will go to +Egypt and turn the whole country upside down." + +In fact, the tendency which there was in the mind of Cambyses to look +upon Egypt as the first field of war and conquest for him, so soon as +he should succeed to the throne, was encouraged by the influence of +his father; for Cyrus, although he was much captivated by the charms +of the lady whom the King of Egypt had sent him, was greatly incensed +against the king for having practiced upon him such a deception. +Besides, all the important countries in Asia were already included +within the Persian dominions. It was plain that if any future progress +were to be made in extending the empire, the regions of Europe and +Africa must be the theatre of it. Egypt seemed the most accessible and +vulnerable point beyond the confines of Asia; and thus, though Cyrus +himself, being advanced somewhat in years, and interested, moreover, +in other projects, was not prepared to undertake an enterprise into +Africa himself, he was very willing that such plans should be +cherished by his son. + +Cambyses was an ardent, impetuous, and self-willed boy, such as the +sons of rich and powerful men are very apt to become. They imbibe, by +a sort of sympathy, the ambitious and aspiring spirit of their +fathers; and as all their childish caprices and passions are generally +indulged, they never learn to submit to control. They become vain, +self-conceited, reckless, and cruel. The conqueror who founds an +empire, although even his character generally deteriorates very +seriously toward the close of his career, still usually knows +something of moderation and generosity. His son, however, who inherits +his father's power, seldom inherits the virtues by which the power +was acquired. These truths, which we see continually exemplified all +around us, on a small scale, in the families of the wealthy and the +powerful, were illustrated most conspicuously, in the view of all +mankind, in the case of Cyrus and Cambyses. The father was prudent, +cautious, wise, and often generous and forbearing. The son grew up +headstrong, impetuous, uncontrolled, and uncontrollable. He had the +most lofty ideas of his own greatness and power, and he felt a supreme +contempt for the rights, and indifference to the happiness of all the +world besides. His history gives us an illustration of the worst which +the principle of hereditary sovereignty can do, as the best is +exemplified in the case of Alfred of England. + +Cambyses, immediately after his father's death, began to make +arrangements for the Egyptian invasion. The first thing to be +determined was the mode of transporting his armies thither. Egypt is a +long and narrow valley, with the rocks and deserts of Arabia on one +side, and those of Sahara on the other. There is no convenient mode of +access to it except by sea, and Cambyses had no naval force sufficient +for a maritime expedition. + +While he was revolving the subject in his mind, there arrived in his +capital of Susa, where he was then residing, a deserter from the army +of Amasis in Egypt. The name of this deserter was Phanes. He was a +Greek, having been the commander of a body of Greek troops who were +employed by Amasis as auxiliaries in his army. He had had a quarrel +with Amasis, and had fled to Persia, intending to join Cambyses in the +expedition which he was contemplating, in order to revenge himself on +the Egyptian king. Phanes said, in telling his story, that he had had +a very narrow escape from Egypt; for, as soon as Amasis had heard that +he had fled, he dispatched one of his swiftest vessels, a galley of +three banks of oars, in hot pursuit of the fugitive. The galley +overtook the vessel in which Phanes had taken passage just as it was +landing in Asia Minor. The Egyptian officers seized it and made Phanes +prisoner. They immediately began to make their preparations for the +return voyage, putting Phanes, in the mean time, under the charge of +guards, who were instructed to keep him very safely. Phanes, however, +cultivated a good understanding with his guards, and presently invited +them to drink wine with him. In the end, he got them intoxicated, and +while they were in that state he made his escape from them, and then, +traveling with great secrecy and caution until he was beyond their +reach, he succeeded in making his way to Cambyses in Susa. + +Phanes gave Cambyses a great deal of information in respect to the +geography of Egypt, the proper points of attack, the character and +resources of the king, and communicated, likewise, a great many other +particulars which it was very important that Cambyses should know. He +recommended that Cambyses should proceed to Egypt by land, through +Arabia; and that, in order to secure a safe passage, he should send +first to the King of the Arabs, by a formal embassy, asking permission +to cross his territories with an army, and engaging the Arabians to +aid him, if possible, in the transit. Cambyses did this. The Arabs +were very willing to join in any projected hostilities against the +Egyptians; they offered Cambyses a free passage, and agreed to aid his +army on their march. To the faithful fulfillment of these stipulations +the Arab chief bound himself by a treaty, executed with the most +solemn forms and ceremonies. + +The great difficulty to be encountered in traversing the deserts which +Cambyses would have to cross on his way to Egypt was the want of +water. To provide for this necessity, the king of the Arabs sent a +vast number of camels into the desert, laden with great sacks or bags +full of water. These camels were sent forward just before the army of +Cambyses came on, and they deposited their supplies along the route at +the points where they would be most needed. Herodotus, the Greek +traveler, who made a journey into Egypt not a great many years after +these transactions, and who wrote subsequently a full description of +what he saw and heard there, gives an account of another method by +which the Arab king was said to have conveyed water into the desert, +and that was by a canal or pipe, made of the skins of oxen, which he +laid along the ground, from a certain river of his dominions, to a +distance of twelve days' journey over the sands! This story Herodotus +says he did not believe, though elsewhere in the course of his history +he gravely relates, as true history, a thousand tales infinitely more +improbable than the idea of a leathern pipe or hose like this to serve +for a conduit of water. + +By some means or other, at all events, the Arab chief provided +supplies of water in the desert for Cambyses's army, and the troops +made the passage safely. They arrived, at length, on the frontiers of +Egypt.[A] Here they found that Amasis, the king, was dead, and +Psammenitus, his son, had succeeded him. Psammenitus came forward to +meet the invaders. A great battle was fought. The Egyptians were +routed. Psammenitus fled up the Nile to the city of Memphis, taking +with him such broken remnants of his army as he could get together +after the battle, and feeling extremely incensed and exasperated +against the invader. In fact, Cambyses had now no excuse or pretext +whatever for waging such a war against Egypt. The monarch who had +deceived his father was dead, and there had never been any cause of +complaint against his son or against the Egyptian people. Psammenitus, +therefore, regarded the invasion of Egypt by Cambyses as a wanton and +wholly unjustifiable aggression, and he determined, in his own mind, +that such invaders deserved no mercy, and that he would show them +none. Soon after this, a galley on the river, belonging to Cambyses, +containing a crew of two hundred men, fell into his hands. The +Egyptians, in their rage, tore these Persians all to pieces. This +exasperated Cambyses in his turn, and the war went on, attended by the +most atrocious cruelties on both sides. + +[Footnote A: For the places mentioned in this chapter, and the track +of Cambyses on his expedition, see the map at the commencement of this +volume.] + +In fact, Cambyses, in this Egyptian campaign, pursued such a career of +inhuman and reckless folly, that people at last considered him insane. +He began with some small semblance of moderation, but he proceeded, in +the end, to the perpetration of the most terrible excesses of violence +and wrong. + +As to his moderation, his treatment of Psammenitus personally is +almost the only instance that we can record. In the course of the war, +Psammenitus and all his family fell into Cambyses's hands as captives. +A few days afterward, Cambyses conducted the unhappy king without the +gates of the city to exhibit a spectacle to him. The spectacle was +that of his beloved daughter, clothed in the garments of a slave, and +attended by a company of other maidens, the daughters of the nobles +and other persons of distinction belonging to his court, all going +down to the river, with heavy jugs, to draw water. The fathers of all +these hapless maidens had been brought out with Psammenitus to +witness the degradation and misery of their children. The maidens +cried and sobbed aloud as they went along, overwhelmed with shame and +terror. Their fathers manifested the utmost agitation and distress. +Cambyses stood smiling by, highly enjoying the spectacle. Psammenitus +alone appeared unmoved. He gazed on the scene silent, motionless, and +with a countenance which indicated no active suffering; he seemed to +be in a state of stupefaction and despair. Cambyses was disappointed, +and his pleasure was marred at finding that his victim did not feel +more acutely the sting of the torment with which he was endeavoring to +goad him. + +When this train had gone by, another came. It was a company of young +men, with halters about their necks, going to execution. Cambyses had +ordered that for every one of the crew of his galley that the +Egyptians had killed, ten Egyptians should be executed. This +proportion would require two thousand victims, as there had been two +hundred in the crew. These victims were to be selected from among the +sons of the leading families; and their parents, after having seen +their delicate and gentle daughters go to their servile toil, were now +next to behold their sons march in a long and terrible array to +execution. The son of Psammenitus was at the head of the column. The +Egyptian parents who stood around Psammenitus wept and lamented aloud, +as one after another saw his own child in the train. Psammenitus +himself, however, remained as silent and motionless, and with a +countenance as vacant as before. Cambyses was again disappointed. The +pleasure which the exhibition afforded him was incomplete without +visible manifestations of suffering in the victim for whose torture it +was principally designed. + +After this train of captives had passed, there came a mixed collection +of wretched and miserable men, such as the siege and sacking of a city +always produces in countless numbers. Among these was a venerable man +whom Psammenitus recognized as one of his friends. He had been a man +of wealth and high station; he had often been at the court of the +king, and had been entertained at his table. He was now, however, +reduced to the last extremity of distress, and was begging of the +people something to keep him from starving. The sight of this man in +such a condition seemed to awaken the king from his blank and +death-like despair. He called his old friend by name in a tone of +astonishment and pity, and burst into tears. + +Cambyses, observing this, sent a messenger to Psammenitus to inquire +what it meant. "He wishes to know," said the messenger, "how it +happens that you could see your own daughter set at work as a slave, +and your son led away to execution unmoved, and yet feel so much +commiseration for the misfortunes of a stranger." We might suppose +that any one possessing the ordinary susceptibilities of the human +soul would have understood without an explanation the meaning of this, +though it is not surprising that such a heartless monster as Cambyses +did not comprehend it. Psammenitus sent him word that he could not +help weeping for his friend, but that his distress and anguish on +account of his children were too great for tears. + +The Persians who were around Cambyses began now to feel a strong +sentiment of compassion for the unhappy king, and to intercede with +Cambyses in his favor. They begged him, too, to spare Psammenitus's +son. It will interest those of our readers who have perused our +history of Cyrus to know that Croesus, the captive king of Lydia, +whom they will recollect to have been committed to Cambyses's charge +by his father, just before the close of his life, when he was setting +forth on his last fatal expedition, and who accompanied Cambyses on +this invasion of Egypt, was present on this occasion, and was one of +the most earnest interceders in Psammenitus's favor. Cambyses allowed +himself to be persuaded. They sent off a messenger to order the +execution of the king's son to be stayed; but he arrived too late. The +unhappy prince had already fallen. Cambyses was so far appeased by the +influence of these facts, that he abstained from doing Psammenitus or +his family any further injury. + +He, however, advanced up the Nile, ravaging and plundering the country +as he went on, and at length, in the course of his conquests, he +gained possession of the tomb in which the embalmed body of Amasis was +deposited. He ordered this body to be taken out of its sarcophagus, +and treated with every mark of ignominy. His soldiers, by his orders, +beat it with rods, as if it could still feel, and goaded it, and cut +it with swords. They pulled the hair out of the head by the roots, and +loaded the lifeless form with every conceivable mark of insult and +ignominy. Finally, Cambyses ordered the mutilated remains that were +left to be burned, which was a procedure as abhorrent to the ideas and +feelings of the Egyptians as could possibly be devised. + +Cambyses took every opportunity to insult the religious, or as, +perhaps, we ought to call them, the superstitious feelings of the +Egyptians. He broke into their temples, desecrated their altars, and +subjected every thing which they held most sacred to insult and +ignominy. Among their objects of religious veneration was the sacred +bull called Apis. This animal was selected from time to time, from the +country at large, by the priests, by means of certain marks which they +pretended to discover upon its body, and which indicated a divine and +sacred character. The sacred bull thus found was kept in a magnificent +temple, and attended and fed in a most sumptuous manner. In serving +him, the attendants used vessels of gold. + +Cambyses arrived at the city where Apis was kept at a time when the +priests were celebrating some sacred occasion with festivities and +rejoicings. He was himself then returning from an unsuccessful +expedition which he had made, and, as he entered the town, stung with +vexation and anger at his defeat, the gladness and joy which the +Egyptians manifested in their ceremonies served only to irritate him, +and to make him more angry than ever. He killed the priests who were +officiating. He then demanded to be taken into the edifice to see the +sacred animal, and there, after insulting the feelings of the +worshipers in every possible way by ridicule and scornful words, he +stabbed the innocent bull with his dagger. The animal died of the +wound, and the whole country was filled with horror and indignation. +The people believed that this deed would most assuredly bring down +upon the impious perpetrator of it the judgments of heaven. + +Cambyses organized, while he was in Egypt, several mad expeditions +into the surrounding countries. In a fit of passion, produced by an +unsatisfactory answer to an embassage, he set off suddenly, and +without any proper preparation, to march into Ethiopia. The provisions +of his army were exhausted before he had performed a fifth part of the +march. Still, in his infatuation, he determined to go on. The soldiers +subsisted for a time on such vegetables as they could find by the way; +when these failed, they slaughtered and ate their beasts of burden; +and finally, in the extremity of their famine, they began to kill and +devour one another; then, at length, Cambyses concluded to return. He +sent off, too, at one time, a large army across the desert toward the +Temple of Jupiter Ammon, without any of the necessary precautions for +such a march. This army never reached their destination, and they +never returned. The people of the Oasis said that they were overtaken +by a sand storm in the desert, and were all overwhelmed. + +[Illustration: THE ARMY OF CAMBYSES OVERWHELMED IN THE DESERT.] + +There was a certain officer in attendance on Cambyses named +Prexaspes. He was a sort of confidential friend and companion of the +king; and his son, who was a fair, and graceful, and accomplished +youth, was the king's cup-bearer, which was an office of great +consideration and honor. One day Cambyses asked Prexaspes what the +Persians generally thought of him. Prexaspes replied that they +thought and spoke well of him in all respects but one. The king +wished to know what the exception was. Prexaspes rejoined, that it +was the general opinion that he was too much addicted to wine. +Cambyses was offended at this reply; and, under the influence of the +feeling, so wholly unreasonable and absurd, which so often leads men +to be angry with the innocent medium through which there comes to +them any communication which they do not like, he determined to +punish Prexaspes for his freedom. He ordered his son, therefore, the +cup-bearer, to take his place against the wall on the other side of +the room. "Now," said he, "I will put what the Persians say to the +test." As he said this, he took up a bow and arrow which were at his +side, and began to fit the arrow to the string. "If," said he, "I do +not shoot him exactly through the heart, it shall prove that the +Persians are right. If I do, then they are wrong, as it will show +that I do not drink so much as to make my hand unsteady." So saying, +he drew the bow, the arrow flew through the air and pierced the poor +boy's breast. He fell, and Cambyses coolly ordered the attendants to +open the body, and let Prexaspes see whether the arrow had not gone +through the heart. + +These, and a constant succession of similar acts of atrocious and +reckless cruelty and folly, led the world to say that Cambyses was +insane. + + + + +CHAPTER II. + +THE END OF CAMBYSES. + +B.C. 523-522 + +Cambyses's profligate conduct.--He marries his own +sisters.--Consultation of the Persian judges.--Their +opinion.--Smerdis.--Jealousy of Cambyses.--The two magi.--Cambyses +suspicious.--He plans an invasion of Ethiopia.--Island of +Elephantine.--The Icthyophagi.--Classes of savage nations.--Embassadors +sent to Ethiopia.--The presents.--The Ethiopian king detects the +imposture.--The Ethiopian king's opinion of Cambyses's presents.--The +Ethiopian bow.--Return of the Icthyophagi.--Jealousy of Cambyses.--He +orders Smerdis to be murdered.--Cambyses grows more cruel.--Twelve +noblemen buried alive.--Cambyses's cruelty to his sister.--Her +death.--The venerable Croesus.--His advice to Cambyses.--Cambyses's +rage at Croesus.--He attempts to kill him.--The declaration of the +oracle.--Ecbatane, Susa, and Babylon.--Cambyses returns +northward.--He enters Syria.--A herald proclaims Smerdis.--The herald +seized.--Probable explanation.--Rage of Cambyses.--Cambyses mortally +wounded.--His remorse and despair.--Cambyses calls his nobles about +him.--His dying declaration.--Death of Cambyses.--His dying declaration +discredited. + + +Among the other acts of profligate wickedness which have blackened +indelibly and forever Cambyses's name, he married two of his own +sisters, and brought one of them with him to Egypt as his wife. The +natural instincts of all men, except those whose early life has been +given up to the most shameless and dissolute habits of vice, are +sufficient to preserve them from such crimes as these. Cambyses +himself felt, it seems, some misgivings when contemplating the first +of these marriages; and he sent to a certain council of judges, whose +province it was to interpret the laws, asking them their opinion of +the rightfulness of such a marriage. Kings ask the opinion of their +legal advisers in such cases, not because they really wish to know +whether the act in question is right or wrong, but because, having +themselves determined upon the performance of it, they wish their +counselors to give it a sort of legal sanction, in order to justify +the deed, and diminish the popular odium which it might otherwise +incur. + +The Persian judges whom Cambyses consulted on this occasion understood +very well what was expected of them. After a grave deliberation, they +returned answer to the king that, though they could find no law +allowing a man to marry his sister, they found many which authorized a +king of Persia to do whatever he thought best. Cambyses accordingly +carried his plan into execution. He married first the older sister, +whose name was Atossa. Atossa became subsequently a personage of great +historical distinction. The daughter of Cyrus, the wife of Darius, and +the mother of Xerxes, she was the link that bound together the three +most magnificent potentates of the whole Eastern world. How far these +sisters were willing participators in the guilt of their incestuous +marriages we can not now know. The one who went with Cambyses into +Egypt was of a humane, and gentle, and timid disposition, being in +these respects wholly unlike her brother; and it may be that she +merely yielded, in the transaction of her marriage, to her brother's +arbitrary and imperious will. + +Besides this sister, Cambyses had brought his brother Smerdis with +him into Egypt. Smerdis was younger than Cambyses, but he was superior +to him in strength and personal accomplishments. Cambyses was very +jealous of this superiority. He did not dare to leave his brother in +Persia, to manage the government in his stead during his absence, lest +he should take advantage of the temporary power thus committed to his +hands, and usurp the throne altogether. He decided, therefore, to +bring Smerdis with him into Egypt, and to leave the government of the +state in the hands of a regency composed of two _magi_. These magi +were public officers of distinction, but, having no hereditary claims +to the crown, Cambyses thought there would be little danger of their +attempting to usurp it. It happened, however, that the name of one of +these magi was Smerdis. This coincidence between the magian's name and +that of the prince led, in the end, as will presently be seen, to very +important consequences. + +The uneasiness and jealousy which Cambyses felt in respect to his +brother was not wholly allayed by the arrangement which he thus made +for keeping him in his army, and so under his own personal observation +and command. Smerdis evinced, on various occasions, so much strength +and skill, that Cambyses feared his influence among the officers and +soldiers, and was rendered continually watchful, suspicious, and +afraid. A circumstance at last occurred which excited his jealousy +more than ever, and he determined to send Smerdis home again to +Persia. The circumstance was this: + +After Cambyses had succeeded in obtaining full possession of Egypt, he +formed, among his other wild and desperate schemes, the design of +invading the territories of a nation of Ethiopians who lived in the +interior of Africa, around and beyond the sources of the Nile. The +Ethiopians were celebrated for their savage strength and bravery. +Cambyses wished to obtain information respecting them and their +country before setting out on his expedition against them, and he +determined to send spies into their country to obtain it. But, as +Ethiopia was a territory so remote, and as its institutions and +customs, and the language, the dress, and the manners of its +inhabitants were totally different from those of all the other nations +of the earth, and were almost wholly unknown to the Persian army, it +was impossible to send Persians in disguise, with any hope that they +could enter and explore the country without being discovered. It was +very doubtful, in fact, whether, if such spies were to be sent, they +could succeed in reaching Ethiopia at all. + +Now there was, far up the Nile, near the cataracts, at a place where +the river widens and forms a sort of bay, a large and fertile island +called Elephantine, which was inhabited by a half-savage tribe called +the Icthyophagi. They lived mainly by fishing on the river, and, +consequently, they had many boats, and were accustomed to make long +excursions up and down the stream. Their name was, in fact, derived +from their occupation. It was a Greek word, and might be translated +"Fishermen."[B] The manners and customs of half-civilized or savage +nations depend entirely, of course, upon the modes in which they +procure their subsistence. Some depend on hunting wild beasts, some on +rearing flocks and herds of tame animals, some on cultivating the +ground, and some on fishing in rivers or in the sea. These four +different modes of procuring food result in as many totally diverse +modes of life: it is a curious fact, however, that while a nation of +hunters differs very essentially from a nation of herdsmen or of +fishermen, though they may live, perhaps, in the same neighborhood +with them, still, all nations of hunters, however widely they may be +separated in geographical position, very strongly resemble one another +in character, in customs, in institutions, and in all the usages of +life. It is so, moreover, with all the other types of national +constitution mentioned above. The Greeks observed these +characteristics of the various savage tribes with which they became +acquainted, and whenever they met with a tribe that lived by fishing, +they called them Icthyophagi. + +[Footnote B: Literally, _fish-eaters_.] + +Cambyses sent to the Icthyophagi of the island of Elephantine, +requiring them to furnish him with a number of persons acquainted with +the route to Ethiopia and with the Ethiopian language, that he might +send them as an embassy. He also provided some presents to be sent as +a token of friendship to the Ethiopian king. The presents were, +however, only a pretext, to enable the embassadors, who were, in fact, +spies, to go to the capital and court of the Ethiopian monarch in +safety, and bring back to Cambyses all the information which they +should be able to obtain. + +The presents consisted of such toys and ornaments as they thought +would most please the fancy of a savage king. There were some purple +vestments of a very rich and splendid dye, and a golden chain for the +neck, golden bracelets for the wrists, an alabaster box of very +precious perfumes, and other similar trinkets and toys. There was also +a large vessel filled with wine. + +The Icthyophagi took these presents, and set out on their expedition. +After a long and toilsome voyage and journey, they came to the country +of the Ethiopians, and delivered their presents, together with the +message which Cambyses had intrusted to them. The presents, they said, +had been sent by Cambyses as a token of his desire to become the +friend and ally of the Ethiopian king. + +The king, instead of being deceived by this hypocrisy, detected the +imposture at once. He knew very well, he said, what was the motive of +Cambyses in sending such an embassage to him, and he should advise +Cambyses to be content with his own dominions, instead of planning +aggressions of violence, and schemes and stratagems of deceit against +his neighbors, in order to get possession of theirs. He then began to +look at the presents which the embassadors had brought, which, +however, he appeared very soon to despise. The purple vest first +attracted his attention. He asked whether that was the true, natural +color of the stuff, or a false one. The messengers told him that the +linen was dyed, and began to explain the process to him. The mind of +the savage potentate, however, instead of being impressed, as the +messengers supposed he would have been through their description, with +a high idea of the excellence and superiority of Persian art, only +despised the false show of what he considered an artificial and +fictitious beauty. "The beauty of Cambyses's dresses," said he, "is as +deceitful, it seems, as the fair show of his professions of +friendship." As to the golden bracelets and necklaces, the king looked +upon them with contempt. He thought that they were intended for +fetters and chains, and said that, however well they might answer +among the effeminate Persians, they were wholly insufficient to +confine such sinews as he had to deal with. The wine, however, he +liked. He drank it with great pleasure, and told the Icthyophagi that +it was the only article among all their presents that was worth +receiving. + +In return for the presents which Cambyses had sent him, the King of +the Ethiopians, who was a man of prodigious size and strength, took +down his bow and gave it to the Icthyophagi, telling them to carry it +to Cambyses as a token of his defiance, and to ask him to see if he +could find a man in all his army who could bend it. "Tell Cambyses," +he added, "that when his soldiers are able to bend such bows as that, +it will be time for him to think of invading the territories of the +Ethiopians; and that, in the mean time, he ought to consider himself +very fortunate that the Ethiopians were not grasping and ambitious +enough to attempt the invasion of his." + +When the Icthyophagi returned to Cambyses with this message, the +strongest men in the Persian camp were of course greatly interested in +examining and trying the bow. Smerdis was the only one that could be +found who was strong enough to bend it; and he, by the superiority to +the others which he thus evinced, gained great renown. Cambyses was +filled with jealousy and anger. He determined to send Smerdis back +again to Persia. "It will be better," thought he to himself, "to incur +whatever danger there may be of his exciting revolt at home, than to +have him present in my court, subjecting me to continual mortification +and chagrin by the perpetual parade of his superiority." + +His mind was, however, not at ease after his brother had gone. +Jealousy and suspicion in respect to Smerdis perplexed his waking +thoughts and troubled his dreams. At length, one night, he thought he +saw Smerdis seated on a royal throne in Persia, his form expanded +supernaturally to such a prodigious size that he touched the heavens +with his head. The next day, Cambyses, supposing that the dream +portended danger that Smerdis would be one day in possession of the +throne, determined to put a final and perpetual end to all these +troubles and fears, and he sent for an officer of his court, +Prexaspes--the same whose son he shot through the heart with an arrow, +as described in the last chapter--and commanded him to proceed +immediately to Persia, and there to find Smerdis, and kill him. The +murder of Prexaspes's son, though related in the last chapter as an +illustration of Cambyses's character, did not actually take place till +after Prexaspes returned from this expedition. + +Prexaspes went to Persia, and executed the orders of the king by the +assassination of Smerdis. There are different accounts of the mode +which he adopted for accomplishing his purpose. One is, that he +contrived some way to drown him in the sea; another, that he poisoned +him; and a third, that he killed him in the forests, when he was out +on a hunting excursion. At all events, the deed was done, and +Prexaspes went back to Cambyses, and reported to him that he had +nothing further to fear from his brother's ambition. + +In the mean time, Cambyses went on from bad to worse in his +government, growing every day more despotic and tyrannical, and +abandoning himself to fits of cruelty and passion which became more +and more excessive and insane. At one time, on some slight +provocation, he ordered twelve distinguished noblemen of his court to +be buried alive. It is astonishing that there can be institutions and +arrangements in the social state which will give one man such an +ascendency over others that such commands can be obeyed. On another +occasion, Cambyses's sister and wife, who had mourned the death of her +brother Smerdis, ventured a reproach to Cambyses for having destroyed +him. She was sitting at table, with some plant or flower in her hand, +which she slowly picked to pieces, putting the fragments on the table. +She asked Cambyses whether he thought the flower looked fairest and +best in fragments, or in its original and natural integrity. "It +looked best, certainly," Cambyses said, "when it was whole." "And +yet," said she, "you have begun to take to pieces and destroy our +family, as I have destroyed this flower." Cambyses sprang upon his +unhappy sister, on hearing this reproof, with the ferocity of a tiger. +He threw her down and leaped upon her. The attendants succeeded in +rescuing her and bearing her away; but she had received a fatal +injury. She fell immediately into a premature and unnatural sickness, +and died. + +These fits of sudden and terrible passion to which Cambyses was +subject, were often followed, when they had passed by, as is usual in +such cases, with remorse and misery; and sometimes the officers of +Cambyses, anticipating a change in their master's feelings, did not +execute his cruel orders, but concealed the object of his blind and +insensate vengeance until the paroxysm was over. They did this once in +the case of Croesus. Croesus, who was now a venerable man, +advanced in years, had been for a long time the friend and faithful +counselor of Cambyses's father. He had known Cambyses himself from +his boyhood, and had been charged by his father to watch over him and +counsel him, and aid him, on all occasions which might require it, +with his experience and wisdom. Cambyses, too, had been solemnly +charged by his father Cyrus, at the last interview that he had with +him before his death, to guard and protect Croesus, as his father's +ancient and faithful friend, and to treat him, as long as he lived, +with the highest consideration and honor. + +Under these circumstances, Croesus considered himself justified in +remonstrating one day with Cambyses against his excesses and his +cruelty. He told him that he ought not to give himself up to the +control of such violent and impetuous passions; that, though his +Persian soldiers and subjects had borne with him thus far, he might, +by excessive oppression and cruelty, exhaust their forbearance and +provoke them to revolt against him, and that thus he might suddenly +lose his power, through his intemperate and inconsiderate use of it. +Croesus apologized for offering these counsels, saying that he felt +bound to warn Cambyses of his danger, in obedience to the injunctions +of Cyrus, his father. + +Cambyses fell into a violent passion at hearing these words. He told +Croesus that he was amazed at his presumption in daring to offer him +advice, and then began to load his venerable counselor with the +bitterest invectives and reproaches. He taunted him with his own +misfortunes, in losing, as he had done, years before, his own kingdom +of Lydia, and then accused him of having been the means, through his +foolish counsels, of leading his father, Cyrus, into the worst of the +difficulties which befell him toward the close of his life. At last, +becoming more and more enraged by the reaction upon himself of his own +angry utterance, he told Croesus that he had hated him for a long +time, and for a long time had wished to punish him; "and now," said +he, "you have given me an opportunity." So saying, he seized his bow, +and began to fit an arrow to the string. Croesus fled. Cambyses +ordered his attendants to pursue him, and when they had taken him, to +kill him. The officers knew that Cambyses would regret his rash and +reckless command as soon as his anger should have subsided, and so, +instead of slaying Croesus, they concealed him. A few days after, +when the tyrant began to express his remorse and sorrow at having +destroyed his venerable friend in the heat of passion, and to mourn +his death, they told him that Croesus was still alive. They had +ventured, they said, to save him, till they could ascertain whether it +was the king's real and deliberate determination that he must die. The +king was overjoyed to find Croesus still alive, but he would not +forgive those who had been instrumental in saving him. He ordered +every one of them to be executed. + +Cambyses was the more reckless and desperate in these tyrannical +cruelties because he believed that he possessed a sort of charmed +life. He had consulted an oracle, it seems, in Media, in respect to +his prospects of life, and the oracle had informed him that he would +die at Ecbatane. Now Ecbatane was one of the three great capitals of +his empire, Susa and Babylon being the others. Ecbatane was the most +northerly of these cities, and the most remote from danger. Babylon +and Susa were the points where the great transactions of government +chiefly centered, while Ecbatane was more particularly the private +residence of the kings. It was their refuge in danger, their retreat +in sickness and age. In a word, Susa was their seat of government, +Babylon their great commercial emporium, but Ecbatane was their home. + +And thus as the oracle, when Cambyses inquired in respect to the +circumstances of his death, had said that it was decreed by the fates +that he should die at Ecbatane, it meant, as he supposed, that he +should die in peace, in his bed, at the close of the usual period +allotted to the life of man. Considering thus that the fates had +removed all danger of a sudden and violent death from his path, he +abandoned himself to his career of vice and folly, remembering only +the substance of the oracle, while the particular form of words in +which it was expressed passed from his mind. + +At length Cambyses, after completing his conquests in Egypt, returned +to the northward along the shores of the Mediterranean Sea, until he +came into Syria. The province of Galilee, so often mentioned in the +sacred Scriptures, was a part of Syria. In traversing Galilee at the +head of the detachment of troops that was accompanying him, Cambyses +came, one day, to a small town, and encamped there. The town itself +was of so little importance that Cambyses did not, at the time of his +arriving at it, even know its name. His encampment at the place, +however, was marked by a very memorable event, namely, he met with a +herald here, who was traveling through Syria, saying that he had been +sent from Susa to proclaim to the people of Syria that Smerdis, the +son of Cyrus, had assumed the throne, and to enjoin upon them all to +obey no orders except such as should come from him! + +Cambyses had supposed that Smerdis was dead. Prexaspes, when he had +returned from Susa, had reported that he had killed him. He now, +however, sent for Prexaspes, and demanded of him what this +proclamation could mean. Prexaspes renewed, and insisted upon, his +declaration that Smerdis was dead. He had destroyed him with his own +hands, and had seen him buried. "If the dead can rise from the grave," +added Prexaspes, "then Smerdis may perhaps, raise a revolt and appear +against you; but not otherwise." + +Prexaspes then recommended that the king should send and seize the +herald, and inquire particularly of him in respect to the government +in whose name he was acting. Cambyses did so. The herald was taken and +brought before the king. On being questioned whether it was true that +Smerdis had really assumed the government and commissioned him to make +proclamation of the fact, he replied that it was so. He had not seen +Smerdis himself, he said, for he kept himself shut up very closely in +his palace; but he was informed of his accession by one of the magians +whom Cambyses had left in command. It was by him, he said, that he had +been commissioned to proclaim Smerdis as king. + +Prexaspes then said that he had no doubt that the two magians whom +Cambyses had left in charge of the government had contrived to seize +the throne. He reminded Cambyses that the name of one of them was +Smerdis, and that probably that was the Smerdis who was usurping the +supreme command. Cambyses said that he was convinced that this +supposition was true. His dream, in which he had seen a vision of +Smerdis, with his head reaching to the heavens, referred, he had no +doubt, to the magian Smerdis, and not to his brother. He began +bitterly to reproach himself for having caused his innocent brother to +be put to death; but the remorse which he thus felt for his crime, in +assassinating an imaginary rival, soon gave way to rage and resentment +against the real usurper. He called for his horse, and began to mount +him in hot haste, to give immediate orders, and make immediate +preparations for marching to Susa. + +As he bounded into the saddle, with his mind in this state of +reckless desperation, the sheath, by some accident or by some +carelessness caused by his headlong haste, fell from his sword, and +the naked point of the weapon pierced his thigh. The attendants took +him from his horse, and conveyed him again to his tent. The wound, on +examination, proved to be a very dangerous one, and the strong +passions, the vexation, the disappointment, the impotent rage, which +were agitating the mind of the patient, exerted an influence extremely +unfavorable to recovery. Cambyses, terrified at the prospect of death, +asked what was the name of the town where he was lying. They told him +it was Ecbatane. + +He had never thought before of the possibility that there might be +some other Ecbatane besides his splendid royal retreat in Media; but +now, when he learned that was the name of the place where he was then +encamped, he felt sure that his hour was come, and he was overwhelmed +with remorse and despair. + +He suffered, too, inconceivable pain and anguish from his wound. The +sword had pierced to the bone, and the inflammation which had +supervened was of the worst character. After some days, the acuteness +of the agony which he at first endured passed gradually away, though +the extent of the injury resulting from the wound was growing every +day greater and more hopeless. The sufferer lay, pale, emaciated, and +wretched, on his couch, his mind, in every interval of bodily agony, +filling up the void with the more dreadful sufferings of horror and +despair. + +At length, on the twentieth day after his wound had been received, he +called the leading nobles of his court and officers of his army about +his bedside, and said to them that he was about to die, and that he +was compelled, by the calamity which had befallen him, to declare to +them what he would otherwise have continued to keep concealed. The +person who had usurped the throne under the name of Smerdis, he now +said, was not, and could not be, his brother Smerdis, the son of +Cyrus. He then proceeded to give them an account of the manner in +which his fears in respect to his brother had been excited by his +dream, and of the desperate remedy that he had resorted to in ordering +him to be killed. He believed, he said, that the usurper was Smerdis +the magian, whom he had left as one of the regents when he set out on +his Egyptian campaign. He urged them, therefore, not to submit to his +sway, but to go back to Media, and if they could not conquer him and +put him down by open war, to destroy him by deceit and stratagem, or +in any way whatever by which the end could be accomplished. Cambyses +urged this with so much of the spirit of hatred and revenge beaming in +his hollow and glassy eye as to show that sickness, pain, and the +approach of death, which had made so total a change in the wretched +sufferer's outward condition, had altered nothing within. + +Very soon after making this communication to his nobles, Cambyses +expired. + +It will well illustrate the estimate which those who knew him best, +formed of this great hero's character, to state, that those who heard +this solemn declaration did not believe one word of it from beginning +to end. They supposed that the whole story which the dying tyrant had +told them, although he had scarcely breath enough left to tell it, was +a fabrication, dictated by his fraternal jealousy and hate. They +believed that it was really the true Smerdis who had been proclaimed +king, and that Cambyses had invented, in his dying moments, the story +of his having killed him, in order to prevent the Persians from +submitting peaceably to his reign. + + + + +CHAPTER III. + +SMERDIS THE MAGIAN. + +B.C. 520 + +Usurpation of the magians.--Circumstances favoring it.--Murder of +Smerdis not known.--He is supposed to be alive.--Precautions taken +by Smerdis.--Effect of Cambyses's measures.--Opinion in regard to +Smerdis.--Acquiescence of the people.--Dangerous situation of +Smerdis.--Arrangement with Patizithes.--Smerdis lives in +retirement.--Special grounds of apprehension.--Cambyses's +wives.--Smerdis appropriates them.--Phaedyma.--Measures of +Otanes.--Otanes's communications with his daughter.--Her +replies.--Phaedyma discovers the deception.--Otanes and the six +nobles.--Arrival of Darius.--Secret consultations.--Various +opinions.--Views of Darius.--Apology for a falsehood.--Opinion of +Gobryas.--Uneasiness of the magi.--Situation of Prexaspes.--Measures +of the magi.--An assembly of the people.--Decision of Prexaspes.--His +speech from the tower.--Death of Prexaspes.--The conspirators.--The +omen.--The conspirators enter the palace.--Combat with the +magi.--Flight of Smerdis.--Smerdis is killed.--Exultation of the +conspirators.--General massacre of the magians. + + +Cambyses and his friends had been right in their conjectures that it +was Smerdis the magian who had usurped the Persian throne. This +Smerdis resembled, it was said, the son of Cyrus in his personal +appearance as well as in name. The other magian who had been +associated with him in the regency when Cambyses set out from Persia +on his Egyptian campaign was his brother. His name was Patizithes. +When Cyrus had been some time absent, these magians, having in the +mean time, perhaps, heard unfavorable accounts of his conduct and +character, and knowing the effect which such wanton tyranny must have +in alienating from him the allegiance of his subjects, conceived the +design of taking possession of the empire in their own name. The great +distance of Cambyses and his army from home, and his long-continued +absence, favored this plan. Their own position, too, as they were +already in possession of the capitals and the fortresses of the +country, aided them; and then the name of Smerdis, being the same +with that of the brother of Cambyses, was a circumstance that greatly +promoted the success of the undertaking. In addition to all these +general advantages, the cruelty of Cambyses was the means of +furnishing them with a most opportune occasion for putting their plans +into execution. + +The reader will recollect that, as was related in the last chapter, +Cambyses first sent his brother Smerdis home, and afterward, when +alarmed by his dream, he sent Prexaspes to murder him. Now the return +of Smerdis was publicly and generally known, while his assassination +by Prexaspes was kept a profound secret. Even the Persians connected +with Cambyses's court in Egypt had not heard of the perpetration of +this crime, until Cambyses confessed it on his dying bed, and even +then, as was stated in the last chapter, they did not believe it. It +is not probable that it was known in Media and Persia; so that, after +Prexaspes accomplished his work, and returned to Cambyses with the +report of it, it was probably generally supposed that his brother was +still alive, and was residing somewhere in one or another of the royal +palaces. + +Such royal personages were often accustomed to live thus, in a state +of great seclusion, spending their time in effeminate pleasures within +the walls of their palaces, parks, and gardens. When the royal +Smerdis, therefore, secretly and suddenly disappeared, it would be +very easy for the magian Smerdis, with the collusion of a moderate +number of courtiers and attendants, to take his place, especially if +he continued to live in retirement, and exhibited himself as little as +possible to public view. Thus it was that Cambyses himself, by the +very crimes which he committed to shield himself from all danger of a +revolt, opened the way which specially invited it, and almost insured +its success. Every particular step that he took, too, helped to +promote the end. His sending Smerdis home; his waiting an interval, +and then sending Prexaspes to destroy him; his ordering his +assassination to be secret--these, and all the other attendant +circumstances, were only so many preliminary steps, preparing the way +for the success of the revolution which was to accomplish his ruin. He +was, in a word, his own destroyer. Like other wicked men, he found, in +the end, that the schemes of wickedness which he had malignantly aimed +at the destruction of others, had been all the time slowly and surely +working out his own. + +The people of Persia, therefore, were prepared by Cambyses's own acts +to believe that the usurper Smerdis was really Cyrus's son, and, next +to Cambyses, the heir to the throne. The army of Cambyses, too, in +Egypt, believed the same. It was natural that they should do so for +they placed no confidence whatever in Cambyses's dying declarations; +and since intelligence, which seemed to be official, came from Susa +declaring that Smerdis was still alive, and that he had actually taken +possession of the throne, there was no apparent reason for doubting +the fact. Besides, Prexaspes, as soon as Cambyses was dead, considered +it safer for him to deny than to confess having murdered the prince. +He therefore declared that Cambyses's story was false, and that he had +no doubt that Smerdis, the monarch in whose name the government was +administered at Susa, was the son of Cyrus, the true and rightful heir +to the throne. Thus all parties throughout the empire acquiesced +peaceably in what they supposed to be the legitimate succession. + +In the mean time, the usurper had placed himself in an exceedingly +dizzy and precarious situation, and one which it would require a +great deal of address and skillful management to sustain. The plan +arranged between himself and his brother for a division of the +advantages which they had secured by their joint and common cunning +was, that Smerdis was to enjoy the ease and pleasure, and Patizithes +the substantial power of the royalty which they had so stealthily +seized. This was the safest plan. Smerdis, by living secluded, and +devoting himself to retired and private pleasures, was the more likely +to escape public observation; while Patizithes, acting as his prime +minister of state, could attend councils, issue orders, review troops, +dispatch embassies, and perform all the other outward functions of +supreme command, with safety as well as pleasure. Patizithes seems to +have been, in fact, the soul of the whole plan. He was ambitious and +aspiring in character, and if he could only himself enjoy the actual +exercise of royal power, he was willing that his brother should enjoy +the honor of possessing it. Patizithes, therefore, governed the realm, +acting, however, in all that he did, in Smerdis's name. + +Smerdis, on his part, was content to take possession of the palaces, +the parks, and the gardens of Media and Persia, and to live in them +in retired and quiet luxury and splendor. He appeared seldom in +public, and then only under such circumstances as should not expose +him to any close observation on the part of the spectators. His +figure, air, and manner, and the general cast of his countenance, were +very much like those of the prince whom he was attempting to +personate. There was one mark, however, by which he thought that there +was danger that he might be betrayed, and that was, his ears had been +cut off. This had been done many years before, by command of Cyrus, on +account of some offense of which he had been guilty. The marks of the +mutilation could, indeed, on public occasions, be concealed by the +turban, or helmet, or other head-dress which he wore; but in private +there was great danger either that the loss of the ears, or the +studied effort to conceal it, should be observed. Smerdis was, +therefore, very careful to avoid being seen in private, by keeping +himself closely secluded. He shut himself up in the apartments of his +palace at Susa, within the citadel, and never invited the Persian +nobles to visit him there. + +Among the other means of luxury and pleasure which Smerdis found in +the royal palaces, and which he appropriated to his own enjoyment, +were Cambyses's wives. In those times, Oriental princes and +potentates--as is, in fact, the case at the present day, in many +Oriental countries--possessed a great number of wives, who were bound +to them by different sorts of matrimonial ties, more or less +permanent, and bringing them into relations more or less intimate with +their husband and sovereign. These wives were in many respects in the +condition of slaves: in one particular they were especially so, +namely, that on the death of a sovereign they descended, like any +other property, to the heir, who added as many of them as he pleased +to his own seraglio. Until this was done, the unfortunate women were +shut up in close seclusion on the death of their lord, like mourners +who retire from the world when suffering any great and severe +bereavement. + +The wives of Cambyses were appropriated by Smerdis to himself on his +taking possession of the throne and hearing of Cambyses's death. Among +them was Atossa, who has already been mentioned as the daughter of +Cyrus, and, of course, the sister of Cambyses as well as his wife. In +order to prevent these court ladies from being the means, in any way, +of discovering the imposture which he was practicing, the magian +continued to keep them all closely shut up in their several separate +apartments, only allowing a favored few to visit him, one by one, in +turn, while he prevented their having any communication with one +another. + +The name of one of these ladies was Phaedyma. She was the daughter of a +Persian noble of the highest rank and influence, named Otanes. Otanes, +as well as some other nobles of the court, had observed and reflected +upon the extraordinary circumstances connected with the accession of +Smerdis to the throne, and the singular mode of life that he led in +secluding himself, in a manner so extraordinary for a Persian monarch, +from all intercourse with his nobles and his people. The suspicions of +Otanes and his associates were excited, but no one dared to +communicate his thoughts to the others. At length, however, Otanes, +who was a man of great energy as well as sagacity and discretion, +resolved that he would take some measures to ascertain the truth. + +He first sent a messenger to Phaedyma, his daughter, asking of her +whether it was really Smerdis, the son of Cyrus, who received her when +she went to visit the king. Phaedyma, in return, sent her father word +that she did not know, for she had never seen Smerdis, the son of +Cyrus, before the death of Cambyses. She therefore could not say, of +her own personal knowledge, whether the king was the genuine Smerdis +or not. Otanes then sent to Phaedyma a second time, requesting her to +ask the queen Atossa. Atossa was the sister of Smerdis the prince, and +had known him from his childhood. Phaedyma sent back word to her father +that she could not speak to Atossa, for she was kept closely shut up +in her own apartments, without the opportunity to communicate with any +one. Otanes then sent a third time to his daughter, telling her that +there was one remaining mode by which she might ascertain the truth, +and that was, the next time that she visited the king, to feel for his +ears when he was asleep. If it was Smerdis the magian, she would find +that he had none. He urged his daughter to do this by saying that, if +the pretended king was really an impostor, the imposture ought to be +made known, and that she, being of noble birth, ought to have the +courage and energy to assist in discovering it. To this Phaedyma +replied that she would do as her father desired, though she knew that +she hazarded her life in the attempt. "If he has no ears," said she, +"and if I awaken him in attempting to feel for them, he will kill me; +I am sure that he will kill me on the spot." + +The next time that it came to Phaedyma's turn to visit the king, she +did as her father had requested. She passed her hand very cautiously +beneath the king's turban, and found that his ears had been cut off +close to his head. Early in the morning she communicated the knowledge +of the fact to her father. + +[Illustration: PHAEDYMA FEELING FOR SMERDIS'S EARS.] + +Otanes immediately made the case known to two of his friends, Persian +nobles, who had, with him, suspected the imposture, and had consulted +together before in respect to the means of detecting it. The question +was, what was now to be done. After some deliberation, it was agreed +that each of them should communicate the discovery which they had +made to one other person, such as each should select from among the +circle of his friends as the one on whose resolution, prudence, and +fidelity he could most implicitly rely. This was done, and the number +admitted to the secret was thus increased to six. At this juncture it +happened that Darius, the son of Hystaspes, the young man who has +already been mentioned as the subject of Cyrus's dream, came to +Susa. Darius was a man of great prominence and popularity. His +father, Hystaspes, was at that time the governor of the province of +Persia, and Darius had been residing with him in that country. As +soon as the six conspirators heard of his arrival, they admitted him +to their councils, and thus their number was increased to seven. + +They immediately began to hold secret consultations for the purpose of +determining how it was best to proceed, first binding themselves by +the most solemn oaths never to betray one another, however their +undertaking might end. Darius told them that he had himself discovered +the imposture and usurpation of Smerdis, and that he had come from +Persia for the purpose of slaying him; and that now, since it appeared +that the secret was known to so many, he was of opinion that they +ought to act at once with the utmost decision. He thought there would +be great danger in delay. + +Otanes, on the other hand, thought that they were not yet ready for +action. They must first increase their numbers. Seven persons were too +few to attempt to revolutionize an empire. He commended the courage +and resolution which Darius displayed, but he thought that a more +cautious and deliberate policy would be far more likely to conduct +them to a safe result. + +Darius replied that the course which Otanes recommended would +certainly ruin them. "If we make many other persons acquainted with +our plans," said he, "there will be some, notwithstanding all our +precautions, who will betray us, for the sake of the immense rewards +which they well know they would receive in that case from the king. +No," he added, "we must act ourselves, and alone. We must do nothing +to excite suspicion, but must go at once into the palace, penetrate +boldly into Smerdis's presence, and slay him before he has time to +suspect our designs." + +"But we can not get into his presence," replied Otanes. "There are +guards stationed at every gate and door, who will not allow us to +pass. If we attempt to kill them, a tumult will be immediately raised, +and the alarm given, and all our designs will thus be baffled." + +"There will be little difficulty about the guards," said Darius. "They +know us all, and, from deference to our rank and station, they will +let us pass without suspicion, especially if we act boldly and +promptly, and do not give them time to stop and consider what to do. +Besides, I can say that I have just arrived from Persia with +important dispatches for the king, and that I must be admitted +immediately into his presence. If a falsehood must be told, so let it +be. The urgency of the crisis demands and sanctions it." + +It may seem strange to the reader, considering the ideas and habits of +the times, that Darius should have even thought it necessary to +apologize to his confederates for his proposal of employing falsehood +in the accomplishment of their plans; and it is, in fact, altogether +probable that the apology which he is made to utter is his +historian's, and not his own. + +The other conspirators had remained silent during this discussion +between Darius and Otanes; but now a third, whose name was Gobryas, +expressed his opinion in favor of the course which Darius recommended. +He was aware, he said, that, in attempting to force their way into the +king's presence and kill him by a sudden assault, they exposed +themselves to the most imminent danger; but it was better for them to +die in the manly attempt to bring back the imperial power again into +Persian hands, where it properly belonged, than to acquiesce any +further in its continuance in the possession of the ignoble Median +priests who had so treacherously usurped it. + +To this counsel they all finally agreed, and began to make +arrangements for carrying their desperate enterprise into execution. + +In the mean time, very extraordinary events were transpiring in +another part of the city. The two magi, Smerdis the king and +Patizithes his brother, had some cause, it seems, to fear that the +nobles about the court, and the officers of the Persian army, were not +without suspicions that the reigning monarch was not the real son of +Cyrus. Rumors that Smerdis had been killed by Prexaspes, at the +command of Cambyses, were in circulation. These rumors were +contradicted, it is true, in private, by Prexaspes, whenever he was +forced to speak of the subject; but he generally avoided it; and he +spoke, when he spoke at all, in that timid and undecided tone which +men usually assume when they are persisting in a lie. In the mean +time, the gloomy recollections of his past life, the memory of his +murdered son, remorse for his own crime in the assassination of +Smerdis, and anxiety on account of the extremely dangerous position in +which he had placed himself by his false denial of it, all conspired +to harass his mind with perpetual restlessness and misery, and to +make life a burden. + +In order to do something to quiet the suspicions which the magi feared +were prevailing, they did not know how extensively, they conceived the +plan of inducing Prexaspes to declare in a more public and formal +manner what he had been asserting timidly in private, namely, that +Smerdis had not been killed. They accordingly convened an assembly of +the people in a court-yard of the palace, or perhaps took advantage of +some gathering casually convened, and proposed that Prexaspes should +address them from a neighboring tower. Prexaspes was a man of high +rank and of great influence, and the magi thought that his public +espousal of their cause, and his open and decided contradiction of the +rumor that he had killed Cambyses's brother, would fully convince the +Persians that it was really the rightful monarch that had taken +possession of the throne. + +But the strength even of a strong man, when he has a lie to carry, +soon becomes very small. That of Prexaspes was already almost +exhausted and gone. He had been wavering and hesitating before, and +this proposal, that he should commit himself so formally and solemnly, +and in so public a manner, to statements wholly and absolutely +untrue, brought him to a stand. He decided, desperately, in his own +mind, that he would go on in his course of falsehood, remorse, and +wretchedness no longer. He, however, pretended to accede to the +propositions of the magi. He ascended the tower, and began to address +the people. Instead, however, of denying that he had murdered Smerdis, +he fully confessed to the astonished audience that he had really +committed that crime; he openly denounced the reigning Smerdis as an +impostor, and called upon all who heard him to rise at once, destroy +the treacherous usurper, and vindicate the rights of the true Persian +line. As he went on, with vehement voice and gestures, in this speech, +the utterance of which he knew sealed his own destruction, he became +more and more excited and reckless. He denounced his hearers in the +severest language if they failed to obey his injunctions, and +imprecated upon them, in that event, all the curses of Heaven. The +people listened to this strange and sudden phrensy of eloquence in +utter amazement, motionless and silent; and before they or the +officers of the king's household who were present had time even to +consider what to do, Prexaspes, coming abruptly to the conclusion of +his harangue, threw himself headlong from the parapet of the tower, +and came down among them, lifeless and mangled, on the pavement below. + +Of course, all was now tumult and commotion in the court-yard, and it +happened to be just at this juncture that the seven conspirators came +from the place of their consultation to the palace, with a view of +executing their plans. They were soon informed of what had taken +place. Otanes was now again disposed to postpone their attempt upon +the life of the king. The event which had occurred changed, he said, +the aspect of the subject, and they must wait until the tumult and +excitement should have somewhat subsided. But Darius was more eager +than ever in favor of instantaneous action. He said that there was not +a moment to be lost; for the magi, so soon as they should be informed +of the declarations and of the death of Prexaspes, would be alarmed, +and would take at once the most effectual precautions to guard against +any sudden assault or surprise. + +These arguments, at the very time in which Darius was offering them +with so much vehemence and earnestness, were strengthened by a very +singular sort of confirmation; for while the conspirators stood +undetermined, they saw a flock of birds moving across the sky, which, +on their more attentively regarding them, proved to be seven hawks +pursuing two vultures. This they regarded an omen, intended to signify +to them, by a divine intimation, that they ought to proceed. They +hesitated, therefore, no longer. + +They went together to the outer gates of the palace. The action of the +guards who were stationed there was just what Darius had predicted +that it would be. Awed by the imposing spectacle of the approach of +seven nobles of the highest distinction, who were advancing, too, with +an earnest and confident air, as if expecting no obstacle to their +admission, they gave way at once, and allowed them to enter. The +conspirators went on until they came to the inner apartments, where +they found eunuchs in attendance at the doors. The eunuchs resisted, +and demanded angrily why the guards had let the strangers in. "Kill +them," said the conspirators, and immediately began to cut them down. +The magi were within, already in consternation at the disclosures of +Prexaspes, of which they had just been informed. They heard the tumult +and the outcries of the eunuchs at the doors, and seized their arms, +the one a bow and the other a spear. The conspirators rushed in. The +bow was useless in the close combat which ensued, and the magian who +had taken it turned and fled. The other defended himself with his +spear for a moment, and wounded severely two of his assailants. The +wounded conspirators fell. Three others of the number continued the +unequal combat with the armed magian, while Darius and Gobryas rushed +in pursuit of the other. + +The flying magian ran from one apartment to another until he reached a +dark room, into which the blind instinct of fear prompted him to rush, +in the vain hope of concealment. Gobryas was foremost; he seized the +wretched fugitive by the waist, and struggled to hold him, while the +magian struggled to get free. Gobryas called upon Darius, who was +close behind him, to strike. Darius, brandishing his sword, looked +earnestly into the obscure retreat, that he might see where to strike. + +"Strike!" exclaimed Gobryas. "Why do you not strike?" + +"I can not see," said Darius, "and I am afraid of wounding you." + +"No matter," said Gobryas, struggling desperately all the time with +his frantic victim. "Strike quick, if you kill us both." + +Darius struck. Gobryas loosened his hold, and the magian fell upon the +floor, and there, stabbed again through the heart by Darius's sword, +almost immediately ceased to breathe. + +They dragged the body to the light, and cut off the head. They did the +same with the other magian, whom they found that their confederates +had killed when they returned to the apartments where they had left +them contending. The whole body of the conspirators then, except the +two who were wounded, exulting in their success, and wild with the +excitement which such deeds always awaken, went forth into the streets +of the city, bearing the heads upon pikes as the trophies of their +victory. They summoned the Persian soldiers to arms, and announced +every where that they had ascertained that the king was a priest and +an impostor, and not their legitimate sovereign, and that they had +consequently killed him. They called upon the people to kill the +magians wherever they could find them, as if the whole class were +implicated in the guilt of the usurping brothers. + +The populace in all countries are easily excited by such denunciations +and appeals as these. The Persians armed themselves, and ran to and +fro every where in pursuit of the unhappy magians, and before night +vast numbers of them were slain. + + + + +CHAPTER IV. + +THE ACCESSION OF DARIUS. + +B.C. 520 + +Confusion at Susa.--No heir to the throne.--Five days' +interregnum.--Provisional government.--Consultation of the +confederates.--Otanes in favor of a republic.--Otanes's +republic.--Principles of representation.--Large assemblies.--Nature +of ancient republics.--Nature of a representative +republic.--Megabyzus.--He opposes the plan of Otanes.--Speech of +Megabyzus.--He proposes an oligarchy.--Speech of Darius.--He advocates +a monarchy.--Four of the seven confederates concur with Darius.--Otanes +withdraws.--Agreement made by the rest.--Singular mode of deciding +which should be the king.--The groom Oebases.--His method of making +Darius's horse neigh.--Probable truth or falsehood of this +account.--Ancient statesmen.--Their character and position.--The +conspirators governed, in their decision, by superstitious +feelings.--The conspirators do homage to Darius.--The equestrian +statue. + + +For several days after the assassination of the magi the city was +filled with excitement, tumults, and confusion. There was no heir, of +the family of Cyrus, entitled to succeed to the vacant throne, for +neither Cambyses, nor Smerdis his brother, had left any sons. There +was, indeed, a daughter of Smerdis, named Parmys, and there were also +still living two daughters of Cyrus. One was Atossa, whom we have +already mentioned as having been married to Cambyses, her brother, and +as having been afterward taken by Smerdis the magian as one of his +wives. These princesses, though of royal lineage, seem neither of them +to have been disposed to assert any claims to the throne at such a +crisis. The mass of the community were stupefied with astonishment at +the sudden revolution which had occurred. No movement was made toward +determining the succession. For five days nothing was done. + +During this period, all the subordinate functions of government in +the provinces, cities, and towns, and among the various garrisons and +encampments of the army, went on, of course, as usual, but the general +administration of the government had no head. The seven confederates +had been regarded, for the time being, as a sort of provisional +government, the army and the country in general, so far as appears, +looking to them for the means of extrication from the political +difficulties in which this sudden revolution had involved them, and +submitting, in the mean time, to their direction and control. Such a +state of things, it was obvious, could not long last; and after five +days, when the commotion had somewhat subsided, they began to consider +it necessary to make some arrangements of a more permanent character, +the power to make such arrangements as they thought best resting with +them alone. They accordingly met for consultation. + +Herodotus the historian,[C] on whose narrative of these events we have +mainly to rely for all the information respecting them which is now +to be attained, gives a very minute and dramatic account of the +deliberations of the conspirators on this occasion. The account is, in +fact, too dramatic to be probably true. + +[Footnote C: An account of Herodotus, and of the circumstances under +which he wrote his history, which will aid the reader very much in +forming an opinion in respect to the kind and degree of confidence +which it is proper to place in his statements, will be found in the +first chapter of our history of Cyrus the Great.] + +Otanes, in this discussion, was in favor of establishing a republic. +He did not think it safe or wise to intrust the supreme power again to +any single individual. It was proved, he said, by universal +experience, that when any one person was raised to such an elevation +above his fellow-men, he became suspicious, jealous, insolent, and +cruel. He lost all regard for the welfare and happiness of others, and +became supremely devoted to the preservation of his own greatness and +power by any means, however tyrannical, and to the accomplishment of +the purposes of his own despotic will. The best and most valuable +citizens were as likely to become the victims of his oppression as the +worst. In fact, tyrants generally chose their favorites, he said, from +among the most abandoned men and women in their realms, such +characters being the readiest instruments of their guilty pleasures +and their crimes. Otanes referred very particularly to the case of +Cambyses as an example of the extreme lengths to which the despotic +insolence and cruelty of a tyrant could go. He reminded his colleagues +of the sufferings and terrors which they had endured while under his +sway, and urged them very strongly not to expose themselves to such +terrible evils and dangers again. He proposed, therefore, that they +should establish a republic, under which the officers of government +should be elected, and questions of public policy be determined, in +assemblies of the people. + +It must be understood, however, by the reader, that a republic, as +contemplated and intended by Otanes in this speech, was entirely +different from the mode of government which that word denotes at the +present day. They had little idea, in those times, of the principle of +representation, by which the thousand separate and detached +communities of a great empire can choose _delegates_, who are to +deliberate, speak, and act for them in the assemblies where the great +governmental decisions are ultimately made. By this principle of +representation, the people can really all share in the exercise of +power. Without it they can not, for it is impossible that the people +of a great state can ever be brought together in one assembly; nor, +even if it were practicable to bring them thus together, would it be +possible for such a concourse to deliberate or act. The action of any +assembly which goes beyond a very few hundred in numbers, is always, +in fact, the action exclusively of the small knot of leaders who call +and manage it. Otanes, therefore, as well as all other advocates of +republican government in ancient times, meant that the supreme power +should be exercised, not by the great mass of the people included +within the jurisdiction in question, but by such a portion of certain +privileged classes as could be brought together in the capital. It was +such a sort of republic as would be formed in this country if the +affairs of the country at large, and the municipal and domestic +institutions of all the states, were regulated and controlled by laws +enacted, and by governors appointed, at great municipal meetings held +in the city of New York. + +This was, in fact, the nature of all the republics of ancient times. +They were generally small, and the city in whose free citizens the +supreme power resided, constituted by far the most important portion +of the body politic. The Roman republic, however, became at one period +very large. It overspread almost the whole of Europe; but, widely +extended as it was in territory, and comprising innumerable states +and kingdoms within its jurisdiction, the vast concentration of power +by which the whole was governed, vested entirely and exclusively in +noisy and tumultuous assemblies convened in the Roman forum. + +Even if the idea of a representative system of government, such as is +adopted in modern times, and by means of which the people of a great +and extended empire can exercise, conveniently and efficiently, a +general sovereignty held in common by them all, had been understood in +ancient times, it is very doubtful whether it could, in those times, +have been carried into effect, for want of certain facilities which +are enjoyed in the present age, and which seem essential for the safe +and easy action of so vast and complicated a system as a great +representative government must necessarily be. The regular transaction +of business at public meetings, and the orderly and successful +management of any extended system of elections, requires a great deal +of writing; and the general circulation of newspapers, or something +exercising the great function which it is the object of newspapers to +fulfill, that of keeping the people at large in some degree informed +in respect to the progress of public affairs, seems essential to the +successful working of a system of representative government comprising +any considerable extent of territory. + +However this may be, whether a great representative system would or +would not have been practicable in ancient times if it had been tried, +it is certain that it was never tried. In all ancient republics, the +sovereignty resided, essentially, in a privileged class of the people +of the capital. The territories governed were provinces, held in +subjection as dependencies, and compelled to pay tribute; and this was +the plan which Otanes meant to advocate when recommending a republic, +in the Persian council. + +The name of the second speaker in this celebrated consultation was +Megabyzus. He opposed the plan of Otanes. He concurred fully, he said, +in all that Otanes had advanced in respect to the evils of a monarchy, +and to the oppression and tyranny to which a people were exposed whose +liberties and lives were subject to the despotic control of a single +human will. But in order to avoid one extreme, it was not necessary to +run into the evils of the other. The disadvantages and dangers of +popular control in the management of the affairs of state were +scarcely less than those of a despotism. Popular assemblies were +always, he said, turbulent, passionate, capricious. Their decisions +were controlled by artful and designing demagogues. It was not +possible that masses of the common people could have either the +sagacity to form wise counsels, or the energy and steadiness to +execute them. There could be no deliberation, no calmness, no secrecy +in their consultations. A populace was always governed by excitements, +which spread among them by a common sympathy; and they would give way +impetuously to the most senseless impulses, as they were urged by +their fear, their resentment, their exultation, their hate, or by any +other passing emotion of the hour. + +Megabyzus therefore disapproved of both a monarchy and a republic. He +recommended an oligarchy. "We are now," said he, "already seven. Let +us select from the leading nobles in the court and officers of the +army a small number of men, eminent for talents and virtue, and thus +form a select and competent body of men, which shall be the depository +of the supreme power. Such a plan avoids the evils and inconveniences +of both the other systems. There can be no tyranny or oppression +under such a system; for, if any one of so large a number should be +inclined to abuse his power, he will be restrained by the rest. On the +other hand, the number will not be so large as to preclude prudence +and deliberation in counsel, and the highest efficiency and energy in +carrying counsels into effect." + +When Megabyzus had completed his speech, Darius expressed his opinion. +He said that the arguments of those who had already spoken appeared +plausible, but that the speakers had not dealt quite fairly by the +different systems whose merits they had discussed, since they had +compared a good administration of one form of government with a bad +administration of another. Every thing human was, he admitted, subject +to imperfection and liable to abuse; but on the supposition that each +of the three forms which had been proposed were equally well +administered, the advantage, he thought, would be strongly on the side +of monarchy. Control exercised by a single mind and will was far more +concentrated and efficient than that proceeding from any conceivable +combination. The forming of plans could be, in that case, more secret +and wary, and the execution of them more immediate and prompt. Where +power was lodged in many hands, all energetic exercise of it was +paralyzed by the dissensions, the animosities and the contending +struggles of envious and jealous rivals. These struggles, in fact, +usually resulted in the predominance of some one, more energetic or +more successful than the rest, the aristocracy or the democracy +running thus, of its own accord, to a despotism in the end, showing +that there were natural causes always tending to the subjection of +nations of men to the control of one single will. + +Besides all this, Darius added, in conclusion, that the Persians had +always been accustomed to a monarchy, and it would be a very dangerous +experiment to attempt to introduce a new system, which would require +so great a change in all the habits and usages of the people. + +Thus the consultation went on. At the end of it, it appeared that four +out of the seven agreed with Darius in preferring a monarchy. This was +a majority, and thus the question seemed to be settled. Otanes said +that he would make no opposition to any measures which they might +adopt to carry their decision into effect, but that he would not +himself be subject to the monarchy which they might establish. "I do +not wish," he added, "either to govern others or to have others +govern me. You may establish a kingdom, therefore, if you choose, and +designate the monarch in any mode that you see fit to adopt, but he +must not consider me as one of his subjects. I myself, and all my +family and dependents, must be wholly free from his control." + +This was a very unreasonable proposition, unless, indeed, Otanes was +willing to withdraw altogether from the community to which he thus +refused to be subject; for, by residing within it, he necessarily +enjoyed its protection, and ought, therefore, to bear his portion of +its burdens, and to be amenable to its laws. Notwithstanding this, +however, the conspirators acceded to the proposal, and Otanes +withdrew. + +The remaining six of the confederates then proceeded with their +arrangements for the establishment of a monarchy. They first agreed +that one of their own number should be the king, and that on +whomsoever the choice should fall, the other five, while they +submitted to his dominion, should always enjoy peculiar privileges and +honors at his court. They were at all times to have free access to the +palaces and to the presence of the king, and it was from among their +daughters alone that the king was to choose his wives. These and some +other similar points having been arranged, the manner of deciding +which of the six should be the king remained to be determined. The +plan which they adopted, and the circumstances connected with the +execution of it, constitute, certainly, one of the most extraordinary +of all the strange transactions recorded in ancient times. It is +gravely related by Herodotus as sober truth. How far it is to be +considered as by any possibility credible, the reader must judge, +after knowing what the story is. + +They agreed, then, that on the following morning they would all meet +on horseback at a place agreed upon beyond the walls of the city, and +that the one whose horse should neigh first should be the king! The +time when this ridiculous ceremony was to be performed was sunrise. + +As soon as this arrangement was made the parties separated, and each +went to his own home. Darius called his groom, whose name was +OEbases, and ordered him to have his horse ready at sunrise on the +next morning, explaining to him, at the same time, the plan which had +been formed for electing the king. "If that is the mode which is to be +adopted," said Oebases, "you need have no concern, for I can +arrange it very easily so as to have the lot fall upon you." Darius +expressed a strong desire to have this accomplished, if it were +possible, and Oebases went away. + +The method which Oebases adopted was to lead Darius's horse out to +the ground that evening, in company with another, the favorite +companion, it seems, of the animal. Now the attachment of the horse to +his companion is very strong, and his recollection of localities very +vivid, and Oebases expected that when the horse should approach the +ground on the following morning, he would be reminded of the company +which he enjoyed there the night before, and neigh. The result was as +he anticipated. As the horsemen rode up to the appointed place, the +horse of Darius neighed the first, and Darius was unanimously +acknowledged king. + +In respect to the credibility of this famous story, the first thought +which arises in the mind is, that it is utterly impossible that sane +men, acting in so momentous a crisis, and where interests so vast and +extended were at stake, could have resorted to a plan so childish and +ridiculous as this. Such a mode of designating a leader, seriously +adopted, would have done discredit to a troop of boys making +arrangements for a holiday; and yet here was an empire extending for +thousands of miles through the heart of a vast continent, comprising, +probably, fifty nations and many millions of people, with capitals, +palaces, armies, fleets, and all the other appointments and machinery +of an immense dominion, to be appropriated and disposed of absolutely, +and, so far as they could see, forever. It seems incredible that men +possessing such intelligence, and information, and extent of view as +we should suppose that officers of their rank and station would +necessarily acquire, could have attempted to decide such a momentous +question in so ridiculous and trivial a manner. And yet the account is +seriously recorded by Herodotus as sober history, and the story has +been related again and again, from that day to this, by every +successive generation of historians, without any particular question +of its truth. + +And it may possibly be that it is true. It is a case in which the +apparent improbability is far greater than the real. In the first +place, it would seem that, in all ages of the world, the acts and +decisions of men occupying positions of the most absolute and exalted +power have been controlled, to a much greater degree, by caprice and +by momentary impulse, than mankind have generally supposed. Looking up +as we do to these vast elevations from below, they seem invested with +a certain sublimity and grandeur which we imagine must continually +impress the minds of those who occupy them, and expand and strengthen +their powers, and lead them to act, in all respects, with the +circumspection, the deliberation, and the far-reaching sagacity which +the emergencies continually arising seem to require. And this is, in +fact, in some degree the case with the statesmen and political leaders +raised to power under the constitutional governments of modern times. +Such statesmen are clothed with their high authority, in one way or +another, by the combined and deliberate action of vast masses of men, +and every step which they take is watched, in reference to its +influence on the condition and welfare of these masses, by many +millions; so that such men live and act under a continual sense of +responsibility, and they appreciate, in some degree, the momentous +importance of their doings. But the absolute and independent +sovereigns of the Old World, who held their power by conquest or by +inheritance, though raised sometimes to very vast and giddy +elevations, seem to have been unconscious, in many instances, of the +dignity and grandeur of their standing, and to have considered their +acts only as they affected their own personal and temporary interests. +Thus, though placed on a great elevation, they took only very narrow +and circumscribed views; they saw nothing but the objects immediately +around them; and they often acted, accordingly, in the most frivolous +and capricious manner. + +It was so, undoubtedly, with these six conspirators. In deciding which +of their number should be king, they thought nothing of the interests +of the vast realms, and of the countless millions of people whose +government was to be provided for. The question, as they considered +it, was doubtless merely which of them should have possession of the +royal palaces, and be the center and the object of royal pomp and +parade in the festivities and celebrations of the capital. + +And in the mode of decision which they adopted, it may be that some +degree of superstitious feeling mingled. The action and the voices of +animals were considered, in those days, as supernatural omens, +indicating the will of heaven. These conspirators may have expected, +accordingly, in the neighing of the horse, a sort of divine +intimation in respect to the disposition of the crown. This idea is +confirmed by the statement which the account of this transaction +contains, that immediately after the neighing of Darius's horse, it +thundered, although there were no clouds in the sky from which the +thunder could be supposed naturally to come. The conspirators, at all +events, considered it solemnly decided that Darius was to be king. +They all dismounted from their horses and knelt around him, in +acknowledgment of their allegiance and subjection. + +It seems that Darius, after he became established on his throne, +considered the contrivance by which, through the assistance of his +groom, he had obtained the prize, not as an act of fraud which it was +incumbent on him to conceal, but as one of brilliant sagacity which he +was to avow and glory in. He caused a magnificent equestrian statue to +be sculptured, representing himself mounted on his neighing horse. +This statue he set up in a public place with this inscription: + + DARIUS, SON OF HYSTASPES, OBTAINED THE SOVEREIGNTY OF PERSIA + BY THE SAGACITY OF HIS HORSE AND THE INGENIOUS CONTRIVANCE + OF OEBASES HIS GROOM. + + + + +CHAPTER V. + +THE PROVINCES. + +B.C. 520 + +Intaphernes.--He is denied admittance to Darius.--Intaphernes's cruelty +to the two guards.--Darius's apprehensions.--Intaphernes and family +arrested.--They are condemned to die.--Alternative offered to +Intaphernes's wife.--Her strange decision.--Death of Intaphernes.--The +provinces.--The governors.--Their independence.--Power of the +governors.--Oretes, governor of Sardis.--Conversation between Oretes +and Mitrobates.--Polycrates.--Dominion of Polycrates.--Letter of +Amasis.--Suggestion of Amasis.--Adopted by Polycrates.--Polycrates +throws away his ring.--Its singular recovery.--Predictions of +Amasis.--Their fulfillment.--Letter of Oretes.--His hypocrisy.--The +pretended treasure.--Fears of Polycrates's daughter.--Oretes murders +Polycrates.--He commits other murders.--Oretes destroys Darius's +messenger.--Darius is incensed.--Plan of Darius for punishing +Oretes.--His proposal.--Commission of Bagaeus.--His plan.--Oretes +beheaded.--Divisions of Darius's empire.--Tribute of the satrapies.--The +white horses.--The gold of India.--Mode of gathering it.--The wonderful +ants.--Their prodigious size. + + +Several of the events and incidents which occurred immediately after +the accession of Darius to the throne, illustrate in a striking manner +the degree in which the princes and potentates of ancient days were +governed by caprice and passionate impulse even in their public acts. +One of the most remarkable of these was the case of Intaphernes. + +Intaphernes was one of the seven conspirators who combined to depose +the magian and place Darius on the throne. By the agreement which they +made with each other before it was decided which should be the king, +each of them was to have free access to the king's presence at all +times. One evening, soon after Darius became established on his +throne, Intaphernes went to the palace, and was proceeding to enter +the apartment of the king without ceremony, when he was stopped by two +officers, who told him that the king had retired. Intaphernes was +incensed at the officers' insolence, as he called it. He drew his +sword, and cut off their noses and their ears. Then he took the bridle +off from his horse at the palace gate, and tied the officers together; +and then, leaving them in this helpless and miserable condition, he +went away. + +The officers immediately repaired to the king, and presented +themselves to him, a frightful spectacle, wounded and bleeding, and +complaining bitterly of Intaphernes as the author of the injuries +which they had received. The king was at first alarmed for his own +safety. He feared that the conspirators had all combined together to +rebel against his authority, and that this daring insult offered to +his personal attendants, in his very palace, was the first outbreak of +it. He accordingly sent for the conspirators one by one, to ask of +them whether they approved of what Intaphernes had done. They promptly +disavowed all connection with Intaphernes in the act, and all approval +of it, and declared their determination to adhere to the decision that +they had made, by which Darius had been placed on the throne. + +Darius then, after taking proper precautions to guard against any +possible attempts at resistance, sent soldiers to seize Intaphernes, +and also his son, and all of his family, relatives, and friends who +were capable of bearing arms; for he suspected that Intaphernes had +meditated a rebellion, and he thought that, if so, these men would +most probably be his accomplices. The prisoners were brought before +him. There was, indeed, no proof that they were engaged in any plan of +rebellion, nor even that any plan of rebellion whatever had been +formed; but this circumstance afforded them no protection. The +liberties and the lives of all subjects were at the supreme and +absolute disposal of these ancient kings. Darius thought it possible +that the prisoners had entertained, or might entertain, some +treasonable designs, and he conceived that he should, accordingly, +feel safer if they were removed out of the way. He decreed, therefore, +that they must all die. + +While the preparations were making for the execution, the wife of +Intaphernes came continually to the palace of Darius, begging for an +audience, that she might intercede for the lives of her friends. +Darius was informed of this, and at last, pretending to be moved with +compassion for her distress, he sent her word that he would pardon one +of the criminals for her sake, and that she might decide which one it +should be. His real motive in making this proposal seems to have been +to enjoy the perplexity and anguish which the heart of a woman must +suffer in being compelled thus to decide, in a question of life and +death, between a husband and a son. + +The wife of Intaphernes did not decide in favor of either of these. +She gave the preference, on the other hand, to a brother. Darius was +very much surprised at this result, and sent a messenger to her to +inquire how it happened that she could pass over and abandon to their +fate her husband and her son, in order to save the life of her +brother, who was certainly to be presumed less near and dear to her. +To which she gave this extraordinary reply, that the loss of her +husband and her son might perhaps be repaired, since it was not +impossible that she might be married again, and that she might have +another son; but that, inasmuch as both her father and mother were +dead, she could never have another brother. The death of her present +brother would, therefore, be an irreparable loss. + +The king was so much pleased with the novelty and unexpectedness of +this turn of thought, that he gave her the life of her son in addition +to that of her brother. All the rest of the family circle of +relatives and friends, together with Intaphernes himself, he ordered +to be slain. + +Darius had occasion to be so much displeased, too, shortly after his +accession to the throne, with the governor of one of his provinces, +that he was induced to order him to be put to death. The circumstances +connected with this governor's crime, and the manner of his execution, +illustrate very forcibly the kind of government which was administered +by these military despots in ancient times. It must be premised that +great empires, like that over which Darius had been called to rule, +were generally divided into provinces. The inhabitants of these +provinces, each community within its own borders, went on, from year +to year, in their various pursuits of peaceful industry, governed +mainly, in their relations to each other, by the natural sense of +justice instinctive in man, and by those thousand local institutions +and usages which are always springing up in all human communities +under the influence of this principle. There were governors stationed +over these provinces, whose main duty it was to collect and remit to +the king the tribute which the province was required to furnish him. +These governors were, of course, also to suppress any domestic +outbreak of violence, and to repel any foreign invasion which might +occur. A sufficient military force was placed at their disposal to +enable them to fulfill these functions. They paid these troops, of +course, from sums which they collected in their provinces under the +same system by which they collected the tribute. This made them, in a +great measure, independent of the king in the maintenance of their +armies. They thus intrenched themselves in their various capitals at +the head of these troops, and reigned over their respective dominions +almost as if they were kings themselves. They had, in fact, very +little connection with the supreme monarch, except to send him the +annual tribute which they had collected from their people, and to +furnish, also, their quota of troops in case of a national war. In the +time of our Savior, Pilate was such a governor, intrusted by the +Romans with the charge of Judea, and Matthew was one of the tax +gatherers employed to collect the tribute. + +Of course, the governors of such provinces, as we have already said, +were, in a great measure, independent of the king. He had, ordinarily, +no officers of justice whose jurisdiction could control, peacefully, +such powerful vassals. The only remedy in most cases, when they were +disobedient and rebellious, was to raise an army and go forth to make +war upon them, as in the case of any foreign state. This was attended +with great expense, and trouble, and hazard. The governors, when +ambitious and aspiring, sometimes managed their resources with so much +energy and military skill as to get the victory over their sovereign +in the contests in which they engaged with them, and then they would +gain vast accessions to the privileges and powers which they exercised +in their own departments; and they would sometimes overthrow their +discomfited sovereign entirely, and take possession of his throne +themselves in his stead. + +Oretes was the name of one of these governors in the time of Darius. +He had been placed by Cyrus, some years before, in charge of one of +the provinces into which the kingdom of Lydia had been divided. The +seat of government was Sardis.[D] He was a capricious and cruel +tyrant, as, in fact, almost all such governors were. We will relate +an account of one of the deeds which he performed some time before +Darius ascended the throne, and which sufficiently illustrates his +character. + +[Footnote D: For the position of Sardis, and of other places mentioned +in this chapter, see the map at the commencement of the volume, and +also that at the commencement of chapter xi.] + +He was one day sitting at the gates of his palace in Sardis, in +conversation with the governor of a neighboring territory who had come +to visit him. The name of this guest was Mitrobates. As the two +friends were boasting to one another, as such warriors are accustomed +to do, of the deeds of valor and prowess which they had respectively +performed, Mitrobates said that Oretes could not make any great +pretensions to enterprise and bravery so long as he allowed the Greek +island of Samos, which was situate at a short distance from the Lydian +coast, to remain independent, when it would be so easy to annex it to +the Persian empire. "You are afraid of Polycrates, I suppose," said +he. Polycrates was the king of Samos. + +Oretes was stung by this taunt, but, instead of revenging himself on +Mitrobates, the author of it, he resolved on destroying Polycrates, +though he had no reason other than this for any feeling of enmity +toward him. + +Polycrates, although the seat of his dominion was a small island in +the AEgean Sea, was a very wealthy, and powerful, and prosperous +prince. All his plans and enterprises had been remarkably successful. +He had built and equipped a powerful fleet, and had conquered many +islands in the neighborhood of his own. He was projecting still wider +schemes of conquests, and hoped, in fact, to make himself the master +of all the seas. + +A very curious incident is related of Polycrates, which illustrates +very strikingly the childish superstition which governed the minds of +men in those ancient days. It seems that in the midst of his +prosperity, his friend and ally, the King of Egypt--for these events, +though narrated here, occurred before the invasion of Egypt by +Cambyses--sent to him a letter, of which the following is the purport. + + "_Amasis, king of Egypt, to Polycrates._ + + "It always gives me great satisfaction and pleasure to hear + of the prosperity of a friend and ally, unless it is too + absolutely continuous and uninterrupted. Something like an + alternation of good and ill fortune is best for man; I have + never known an instance of a very long-continued course of + unmingled and uninterrupted success that did not end, at + last, in overwhelming and terrible calamity. I am anxious, + therefore, for you, and my anxiety will greatly increase if + this extraordinary and unbroken prosperity should continue + much longer. I counsel you, therefore, to break the current + yourself, if fortune will not break it. Bring upon yourself + some calamity, or loss, or suffering, as a means of averting + the heavier evils which will otherwise inevitably befall + you. It is a general and substantial welfare only that can + be permanent and final." + +Polycrates seemed to think there was good sense in this suggestion. He +began to look around him to see in what way he could bring upon +himself some moderate calamity or loss, and at length decided on the +destruction of a very valuable signet ring which he kept among his +treasures. The ring was made with very costly jewels set in gold, and +was much celebrated both for its exquisite workmanship and also for +its intrinsic value. The loss of this ring would be, he thought, a +sufficient calamity to break the evil charm of an excessive and +unvaried current of good fortune. Polycrates, therefore, ordered one +of the largest vessels in his navy, a fifty-oared galley, to be +equipped and manned, and, embarking in it with a large company of +attendants, he put to sea. When he was at some distance from the +island, he took the ring, and in the presence of all his attendants, +he threw it forth into the water, and saw it sink, to rise, as he +supposed, no more. + +But Fortune, it seems, was not to be thus outgeneraled. A few days +after Polycrates had returned, a certain fisherman on the coast took, +in his nets, a fish of very extraordinary size and beauty; so +extraordinary, in fact, that he felt it incumbent on him to make a +present of it to the king. The servants of Polycrates, on opening the +fish for the purpose of preparing it for the table, to their great +astonishment and gratification, found the ring within. The king was +overjoyed at thus recovering his lost treasure; he had, in fact, +repented of his rashness in throwing it away, and had been bitterly +lamenting its loss. His satisfaction and pleasure were, therefore, +very great in regaining it; and he immediately sent to Amasis an +account of the whole transaction, expecting that Amasis would share in +his joy. + +Amasis, however, sent word back to him in reply, that he considered +the return of the ring in that almost miraculous manner as an +extremely unfavorable omen. "I fear," said he, "that it is decreed by +the Fates that you must be overwhelmed, at last, by some dreadful +calamity, and that no measures of precaution which you can adopt will +avail to avert it. It seems to me, too," he added, "that it is +incumbent on me to withdraw from all alliance and connection with you, +lest I should also, at last, be involved in your destined +destruction." + +Whether this extraordinary story was true, or whether it was all +fabricated after the fall of Polycrates, as a dramatic embellishment +of his history, we can not now know. The result, however, corresponded +with these predictions of Amasis, if they were really made; for it was +soon after these events that the conversation took place at Sardis +between Oretes and Mitrobates, at the gates of the palace, which led +Oretes to determine on effecting Polycrates's destruction. + +In executing the plans which he thus formed, Oretes had not the +courage and energy necessary for an open attack on Polycrates, and he +consequently resolved on attempting to accomplish his end by treachery +and stratagem. + +The plan which he devised was this: He sent a messenger to Polycrates +with a letter of the following purport: + + "_Oretes, governor of Sardis, to Polycrates of Samos._ + + "I am aware, sire, of the plans which you have long been + entertaining for extending your power among the islands and + over the waters of the Mediterranean, until you shall have + acquired the supreme and absolute dominion of the seas. I + should like to join you in this enterprise. You have ships + and men, and I have money. Let us enter into an alliance + with each other. I have accumulated in my treasuries a large + supply of gold and silver, which I will furnish for the + expenses of the undertaking. If you have any doubt of my + sincerity in making these offers, and of my ability to + fulfill them, send some messenger in whom you have + confidence, and I will lay the evidence before him." + +Polycrates was much pleased at the prospect of a large accession to +his funds, and he sent the messenger, as Oretes had proposed. Oretes +prepared to receive him by filling a large number of boxes nearly full +with heavy stones, and then placing a shallow layer of gold or silver +coin at the top. These boxes were then suitably covered and secured, +with the fastenings usually adopted in those days, and placed away in +the royal treasuries. When the messenger arrived, the boxes were +brought out and opened, and were seen by the messenger to be full, as +he supposed, of gold and silver treasure. The messenger went back to +Polycrates, and reported that all which Oretes had said was true; and +Polycrates then determined to go to the main land himself to pay +Oretes a visit, that they might mature together their plans for the +intended campaigns. He ordered a fifty-oared galley to be prepared to +convey him. + +His daughter felt a presentiment, it seems, that some calamity was +impending. She earnestly entreated her father not to go. She had had a +dream, she said, about him, which had frightened her excessively, and +which she was convinced portended some terrible danger. Polycrates +paid no attention to his daughter's warnings. She urged them more and +more earnestly, until, at last, she made her father angry, and then +she desisted. Polycrates then embarked on board his splendid galley, +and sailed away. As soon as he landed in the dominions of Oretes, the +monster seized him and put him to death, and then ordered his body to +be nailed to a cross, for exhibition to all passers by, as a public +spectacle. The train of attendants and servants that accompanied +Polycrates on this expedition were all made slaves, except a few +persons of distinction, who were sent home in a shameful and +disgraceful manner. Among the attendants who were detained in +captivity by Oretes was a celebrated family physician, named +Democedes, whose remarkable and romantic adventures will be the +subject of the next chapter. + +Oretes committed several other murders and assassinations in this +treacherous manner, without any just ground for provocation. In these +deeds of violence and cruelty, he seems to have acted purely under the +influence of that wanton and capricious malignity which the possession +of absolute and irresponsible power so often engenders in the minds of +bad men. It is doubtful, however, whether these cruelties and crimes +would have particularly attracted the attention of Darius, so long as +he was not himself directly affected by them. The central government, +in these ancient empires, generally interested itself very little in +the contentions and quarrels of the governors of the provinces, +provided that the tribute was efficiently collected and regularly +paid. + +A case, however, soon occurred, in Oretes's treacherous and bloody +career, which arrested the attention of Darius and aroused his ire. +Darius had sent a messenger to Oretes, with certain orders, which, it +seems, Oretes did not like to obey. After delivering his dispatches +the bearer set out on his return, and was never afterward heard of. +Darius ascertained, to his own satisfaction at least, that Oretes had +caused his messenger to be waylaid and killed, and that the bodies +both of horse and rider had been buried, secretly, in the solitudes of +the mountains, in order to conceal the evidences of the deed. + +Darius determined on punishing this crime. Some consideration was, +however, required, in order to determine in what way his object could +best be effected. The province of Oretes was at a great distance from +Susa, and Oretes was strongly established there, at the head of a +great force. His guards were bound, it is true, to obey the orders of +Darius, but it was questionable whether they would do so. To raise an +army and march against the rebellious governor would be an expensive +and hazardous undertaking, and perhaps, too, it would prove that such +a measure was not necessary. All things considered, Darius determined +to try the experiment of acting, by his own direct orders, upon the +troops and guards in Oretes's capital, with the intention of resorting +subsequently to an armed force of his own, if that should be at last +required. + +He accordingly called together a number of his officers and nobles, +selecting those on whose resolution and fidelity he could most +confidently rely, and made the following address to them: + +"I have an enterprise which I wish to commit to the charge of some one +of your number who is willing to undertake it, which requires no +military force, and no violent measures of any kind, but only wisdom, +sagacity, and courage. I wish to have Oretes, the governor of Sardis, +brought to me, dead or alive. He has perpetrated innumerable crimes, +and now, in addition to all his other deeds of treacherous violence, +he has had the intolerable insolence to put to death one of my +messengers. Which of you will volunteer to bring him, dead or alive, +to me?" + +This proposal awakened a great enthusiasm among the nobles to whom it +was addressed. Nearly thirty of them volunteered their services to +execute the order. Darius concluded to decide between these +competitors by lot. The lot fell upon a certain man named Bagaeus, and +he immediately began to form his plans and make his arrangements for +the expedition. + +He caused a number of different orders to be prepared, beginning with +directions of little moment, and proceeding to commands of more and +more weighty importance, all addressed to the officers of Oretes's +army and to his guards. These orders were all drawn up in writing with +great formality, and were signed by the name of Darius, and sealed +with his seal; they, moreover, named Bagaeus as the officer selected by +the king to superintend the execution of them. Provided with these +documents, Bagaeus proceeded to Sardis, and presented himself at the +court of Oretes. He presented his own personal credentials, and with +them some of his most insignificant orders. Neither Oretes nor his +guards felt any disposition to disobey them. Bagaeus, being thus +received and recognized as the envoy of the king, continued to present +new decrees and edicts, from time to time, as occasions occurred in +which he thought the guards would be ready to obey them, until he +found the habit, on their part, of looking to him as the +representative of the supreme power sufficiently established; for +their disposition to obey him was not merely tested, it was +strengthened by every new act of obedience. When he found, at length, +that his hold upon the guards was sufficiently strong, he produced his +two final decrees, one ordering the guards to depose Oretes from his +power, and the other to behead him. Both the commands were obeyed. + +The events and incidents which have been described in this chapter +were of no great importance in themselves, but they illustrate, more +forcibly than any general description would do the nature and the +operation of the government exercised by Darius throughout the vast +empire over which he found himself presiding. + +Such personal and individual contests and transactions were not all +that occupied his attention. He devoted a great deal of thought and of +time to the work of arranging, in a distinct and systematic manner, +the division of his dominions into provinces, and to regulating +precisely the amount of tribute to be required of each, and the modes +of collecting it. He divided his empire into twenty great districts, +each of which was governed by a ruler called a _satrap_. He fixed the +amount of tribute which each of these districts was to pay, making it +greater or less as the soil and the productions of the country varied +in fertility and abundance. In some cases this tribute was to be paid +in gold, in others in silver, and in others in peculiar commodities, +natural to the country of which they were required. For example, one +satrapy, which comprised a country famous for its horses, was obliged +to furnish one white horse for every day in the year. This made three +hundred and sixty annually, that being the number of days in the +Persian year. Such a supply, furnished yearly, enabled the king soon +to have a very large troop of white horses; and as the horses were +beautifully caparisoned, and the riders magnificently armed, the body +of cavalry thus formed was one of the most splendid in the world. + +The satrapies were numbered from the west toward the east. The western +portion of Asia Minor constituted the first, and the East Indian +nations the twelfth and last. The East Indians had to pay their +tribute in ingots of gold. Their country produced gold. + +As it is now forever too late to separate the facts from the fiction +of ancient history, and determine what is to be rejected as false and +what received as true, our only resource is to tell the whole story +just as it comes down to us, leaving it to each reader to decide for +himself what he will believe. In this view of the subject, we will +conclude this chapter by relating the manner in which it was said in +ancient times that these Indian nations obtained their gold. + +The gold country was situated in remote and dreary deserts, inhabited +only by wild beasts and vermin, among which last there was, it seems, +a species of ants, which were of enormous size, and wonderful +fierceness and voracity, and which could run faster than the fleetest +horse or camel. These ants, in making their excavations, would bring +up from beneath the surface of the ground all the particles of gold +which came in their way, and throw them out around their hills. The +Indians then would penetrate into these deserts, mounted on the +fleetest camels that they could procure, and leading other camels, not +so fleet, by their sides. They were provided, also, with bags for +containing the golden sands. When they arrived at the ant hills, they +would dismount, and, gathering up the gold which the ants had +discarded, would fill their bags with the utmost possible dispatch, +and then mount their camels and ride away. The ants, in the mean time, +would take the alarm, and begin to assemble to attack them; but as +their instinct prompted them to wait until considerable numbers were +collected before they commenced their attack, the Indians had time to +fill their bags and begin their flight before their enemies were +ready. Then commenced the chase, the camels running at their full +speed, and the swarms of ants following, and gradually drawing nearer +and nearer. At length, when nearly overtaken, the Indians would +abandon the camels that they were leading, and fly on, more swiftly, +upon those which they rode. While the ants were busy in devouring the +victims thus given up to them, the authors of all the mischief would +make good their escape, and thus carry off their gold to a place of +safety. These famous ants were bigger than foxes! + +[Illustration: THE INDIAN GOLD HUNTER.] + + + + +CHAPTER VI. + +THE RECONNOITERING OF GREECE. + +B.C. 519 + +The reconnoitering party.--The physician Democedes.--Story of +Democedes.--His boyhood.--Democedes at AEgina.--At Athens.--At the court +of Polycrates.--Democedes a captive.--He is sent to Darius.--Democedes +is cast into prison.--His wretched condition.--Darius sprains his +ankle.--The Egyptian physicians baffled.--Sufferings of Darius.--He +sends for Democedes.--Democedes's denial.--He treats the sprain +successfully.--Darius's recovery.--The golden fetters.--Democedes +released.--Honors conferred on him.--Atossa cured by Democedes.--His +conditions.--Atossa with Darius.--She suggests the invasion of +Greece.--The exploring party.--Democedes appointed guide.--Designs of +Democedes.--Darius baffled.--The expedition sets out.--City of +Sidon.--The sea voyage.--The Grecian coasts examined.--Arrival at +Tarentum.--Suspicions of the authorities.--The Persians seized.--Escape +of Democedes.--Release of the Persians.--Tumult at Crotona.--Conduct +of Democedes.--The expedition returns.--Misfortunes.--Cillus.--Arrival +at Susa.--Reception by Darius. + + +The great event in the history of Darius--the one, in fact, on account +of which it was, mainly, that his name and his career have been so +widely celebrated among mankind, was an attempt which he made, on a +very magnificent scale, for the invasion and conquest of Greece. +Before commencing active operations in this grand undertaking, he sent +a reconnoitering party to examine and explore the ground. This +reconnoitering party met with a variety of extraordinary adventures in +the course of its progress, and the history of it will accordingly +form the subject of this chapter. + +The guide to this celebrated reconnoitering party was a certain Greek +physician named Democedes. Though Democedes was called a Greek, he +was, really, an Italian by birth. His native town was Crotona, which +may be found exactly at the ball of the foot on the map of Italy. It +was by a very singular series of adventures that he passed from this +remote village in the west, over thousands of miles by land and sea, +to Susa, Darius's capital. He began by running away from his father +while he was still a boy. He said that he was driven to this step by +the intolerable strictness and cruelty of his father's government. +This, however, is always the pretext of turbulent and ungovernable +young men, who abandon their parents and their homes when the favors +and the protection necessary during their long and helpless infancy +have been all received, and the time is beginning to arrive for making +some return. + +Democedes was ingenious and cunning, and fond of roving adventure. In +running away from home, he embarked on board a ship, as such +characters generally do at the present day, and went to sea. After +meeting with various adventures, he established himself in the island +of AEgina, in the AEgean sea, where he began to practice as a physician, +though he had had no regular education in that art. In his practice he +evinced so much medical skill, or, at least, exercised so much +adroitness in leading people to believe that he possessed it, as to +give him very soon a wide and exalted reputation. The people of AEgina +appointed him their physician, and assigned him a large salary for +his services in attending upon the sick throughout the island. This +was the usual practice in those days. A town, or an island, or any +circumscribed district of country, would appoint a physician as a +public officer, who was to devote his attention, at a fixed annual +salary, to any cases of sickness which might arise in the community, +wherever his services were needed, precisely as physicians serve in +hospitals and public institutions in modern times. + +Democedes remained at AEgina two years, during which time his celebrity +increased and extended more and more, until, at length, he received an +appointment from the city of Athens, with the offer of a greatly +increased salary. He accepted the appointment, and remained in Athens +one year, when he received still more advantageous offers from +Polycrates, the king of Samos, whose history was given so fully in the +last chapter. + +Democedes remained for some time in the court of Polycrates, where he +was raised to the highest distinction, and loaded with many honors. He +was a member of the household of the king, enjoyed his confidence in a +high degree, and attended him, personally, on all his expeditions. At +last, when Polycrates went to Sardis, as is related in the last +chapter, to receive the treasures of Oretes, and concert with him the +plans for their proposed campaigns, Democedes accompanied him as +usual; and when Polycrates was slain, and his attendants and followers +were made captive by Oretes, the unfortunate physician was among the +number. By this reverse, he found that he had suddenly fallen from +affluence, ease, and honor, to the condition of a neglected and +wretched captive in the hands of a malignant and merciless tyrant. + +Democedes pined in this confinement for a long time; when, at length, +Oretes himself was killed by the order of Darius, it might have been +expected that the hour of his deliverance had arrived. But it was not +so; his condition was, in fact, made worse, and not better by it; for +Bagaeus, the commissioner of Darius, instead of inquiring into the +circumstances relating to the various members of Oretes's family, and +redressing the wrongs which any of them might be suffering, simply +seized the whole company, and brought them all to Darius in Susa, as +trophies of his triumph, and tokens of the faithfulness and efficiency +with which he had executed the work that Darius had committed to his +charge. Thus Democedes was borne away, in hopeless bondage, thousands +of miles farther from his native land than before, and with very +little prospect of being ever able to return. He arrived at Susa, +destitute, squalid, and miserable. His language was foreign, his rank +and his professional skill unknown, and all the marks which might +indicate the refinement and delicacy of the modes of life to which he +had been accustomed were wholly disguised by his present destitution +and wretchedness. He was sent with the other captives to the prisons, +where he was secured, like them, with fetters and chains, and was soon +almost entirely forgotten. + +He might have taken some measures for making his character, and his +past celebrity and fame as a physician known; but he did not dare to +do this, for fear that Darius might learn to value his medical skill, +and so detain him as a slave for the sake of his services. He thought +that the chance was greater that some turn of fortune, or some +accidental change in the arrangements of government might take place, +by which he might be set at liberty, as an insignificant and worthless +captive, whom there was no particular motive for detaining, than if +he were transferred to the king's household as a slave, and his value +as an artisan--for medical practice was, in those days, simply an +art--were once known. He made no effort, therefore, to bring his true +character to light, but pined silently in his dungeon, in rags and +wretchedness, and in a mental despondency which was gradually sinking +into despair. + +About this time, it happened that Darius was one day riding furiously +in a chase, and coming upon some sudden danger, he attempted to leap +from his horse. He fell and sprained his ankle. He was taken up by the +attendants, and carried home. His physicians were immediately called +to attend to the case. They were Egyptians. Egypt was, in fact, +considered the great seat and centre of learning and of the arts in +those days, and no royal household was complete without Egyptian +physicians. + +The learning and skill, however, of the Egyptians in Darius's court +were entirely baffled by the sprain. They thought that the joint was +dislocated, and they turned and twisted the foot with so much +violence, in their attempts to restore the bones to their proper +position, as greatly to increase the pain and the inflammation. +Darius spent a week in extreme and excruciating suffering. He could +not sleep day nor night, but tossed in continual restlessness and +anguish on his couch, made constantly worse instead of better by every +effort of his physicians to relieve him. + +At length somebody informed him that there was a Greek physician among +the captives that came from Sardis, and recommended that Darius should +send for him. The king, in his impatience and pain, was ready for any +experiment which promised the least hope of relief, and he ordered +that Democedes should be immediately summoned. The officers +accordingly went to the prison and brought out the astonished captive, +without any notice or preparation, and conducted him, just as he was, +ragged and wretched, and shackled with iron fetters upon his feet, +into the presence of the king. The fetters which such captives wore +were intended to allow them to walk, slowly and with difficulty, while +they impeded the movements of the feet so as effectually to prevent +any long or rapid flight, or any escape at all from free pursuers. + +Democedes, when questioned by Darius, denied at first that he +possessed any medical knowledge or skill. Darius was, however, not +deceived by these protestations. It was very customary, in those days +of royal tyranny, for those who possessed any thing valuable to +conceal the possession of it: concealment was often their only +protection. Darius, who was well aware of this tendency, did not +believe the assurances of Democedes, and in the irritation and +impatience caused by his pain, he ordered the captive to be taken out +and put to the torture, in order to make him confess that he was +really a physician. + +Democedes yielded without waiting to be actually put to the test. He +acknowledged at once, for fear of the torture, that he had had some +experience in medical practice, and the sprained ankle was immediately +committed to his charge. On examining the case, he thought that the +harsh and violent operations which the Egyptian physicians had +attempted were not required. He treated the inflamed and swollen joint +in the gentlest manner. He made fomenting and emollient applications, +which soothed the pain, subdued the inflammation, and allayed the +restlessness and the fever. The royal sufferer became quiet and calm, +and in a short time fell asleep. + +In a word, the king rapidly recovered; and, overwhelmed with gratitude +toward the benefactor whose skill had saved him from such suffering, +he ordered that, in place of his single pair of iron fetters, he +should have two pairs of fetters of gold! + +It might at first be imagined that such a strange token of regard as +this could be intended only as a jest and an insult; but there is no +doubt that Darius meant it seriously as a compliment and an honor. He +supposed that Democedes, of course, considered his condition of +captivity as a fixed and permanent one; and that his fetters were not, +in themselves, an injustice or disgrace, but the necessary and +unavoidable concomitant of his lot, so that the sending of golden +fetters to a slave was very naturally, in his view, like presenting a +golden crutch to a cripple. Democedes received the equivocal donation +with great good nature. He even ventured upon a joke on the subject to +the convalescent king. "It seems, sire," said he "that in return for +my saving your limb and your life, you double my servitude. You have +given me two chains instead of one." + +The king, who was now in a much better humor to be pleased than when, +writhing in anguish, he had ordered Democedes to be put to the +torture, laughed at this reply, and released the captive from the +bonds entirely. He ordered him to be conducted by the attendants to +the apartments of the palace, where the wives of Darius and the other +ladies of the court resided, that they might see him and express their +gratitude. "This is the physician," said the eunuchs, who introduced +him, "that cured the king." The ladies welcomed him with the utmost +cordiality, and loaded him with presents of gold and silver as he +passed through their apartments. The king made arrangements, too, +immediately, for providing him with a magnificent house in Susa, and +established him there in great luxury and splendor, with costly +furniture and many attendants, and all other marks of distinction and +honor. In a word, Democedes found himself, by means of another +unexpected change of fortune, suddenly elevated to a height as lofty +as his misery and degradation had been low. He was, however, a captive +still. + +The Queen Atossa, the daughter of Cyrus, who has already been +mentioned as the wife of Cambyses and of Smerdis the magian, was one +of the wives of Darius. Her sister Antystone was another. A third was +Phaedyma, the daughter of Otanes, the lady who had been so +instrumental, in connection with Atossa, in the discovery of the +magian imposture. It happened that, some time after the curing of +Darius's sprain, Atossa herself was sick. Her malady was of such a +nature, that for some time she kept it concealed, from a feeling of +delicacy.[E] At length, terrified by the danger which threatened her, +she sent for Democedes, and made her case known to him. He said that +he could cure her, but she must first promise to grant him, if he did +so, a certain favor which he should ask. She must promise beforehand +to grant it, whatever it might be. It was nothing, he said, that +should in any way compromise her honor. + +[Footnote E: It was a tumor of the breast, which became, at length, an +open ulcer, and began to spread and enlarge in a very formidable +manner.] + +Atossa agreed to these conditions, and Democedes undertook her case. +Her malady was soon cured; and when she asked him what was the favor +which he wished to demand, he replied, + +"Persuade Darius to form a plan for the invasion of Greece, and to +send me, with a small company of attendants, to explore the country, +and obtain for him all the necessary preliminary information. In this +way I shall see my native land once more." + +Atossa was faithful in her promise. She availed herself of the first +favorable opportunity, when it became her turn to visit the king, to +direct his mind, by a dexterous conversation, toward the subject of +the enlargement of his empire. He had vast forces and resources, she +said, at his command, and might easily enter upon a career of conquest +which would attract the admiration of the world. Darius replied that +he had been entertaining some views of that nature. He had thought, he +said, of attacking the Scythians: these Scythians were a group of +semi-savage nations on the north of his dominions. Atossa represented +to him that subduing the Scythians would be too easy a conquest, and +that it would be a far nobler enterprise, and more worthy of his +talents and his vast resources, to undertake an expedition into +Europe, and attempt the conquest of Greece. "You have all the means at +your command essential for the success of such an undertaking, and you +have in your court a man who can give you, or can obtain for you, all +the necessary information in respect to the country, to enable you to +form the plan of your campaigns." + +The ambition of Darius was fired by these suggestions. He began +immediately to form projects and schemes. In a day or two he organized +a small party of Persian officers of distinction, in whom he had great +confidence, to go on an exploring tour into Greece. They were provided +with a suitable company of attendants, and with every thing necessary +for their journey, and Democedes was directed to prepare to go with +them as their guide. They were to travel simply as a party of Persian +noblemen, on an excursion of curiosity and pleasure, concealing their +true design; and as Democedes their guide, though born in Italy, was +in all important points a Greek, and was well acquainted with the +countries through which they were to pass, they supposed that they +could travel every where without suspicion. Darius charged the +Persians to keep a diligent watch over Democedes, and not to allow +him, on any account to leave them, but to bring him back to Susa +safely with them on their return. + +As for Democedes, he had no intention whatever of returning to Persia, +though he kept his designs of making his escape entirely concealed. +Darius, with seeming generosity, said to him, while he was making his +preparations, "I recommend to you to take with you all your private +wealth and treasures, to distribute, for presents, among your friends +in Greece and Italy. I will bestow more upon you here on your return." +Democedes regarded this counsel with great suspicion. He imagined that +the king, in giving him this permission, wished to ascertain, by +observing whether he would really take with him all his possessions, +the existence of any secret determination in his mind not to come back +to Susa. If this were Darius's plan, it was defeated by the sagacious +vigilance and cunning of the physician. He told the king, in reply, +that he preferred to leave his effects in Persia, that they might be +ready for his use on his return. The king then ordered a variety of +costly articles to be provided and given to Democedes, to be taken +with him and presented to his friends in Greece and Italy. They +consisted of vessels of gold and silver, pieces of Persian armor of +beautiful workmanship, and articles of dress, expensive and splendid. +These were all carefully packed, and the various other necessary +preparations were made for the long journey. + +At length the expedition set out. They traveled by land westward, +across the continent, till they reached the eastern shores of the +Mediterranean Sea. The port at which they arrived was Sidon, the city +so often mentioned in the Scriptures as a great pagan emporium of +commerce. The city of Sidon was in the height of its glory at this +time, being one of the most important ports of the Mediterranean for +all the western part of Asia. Caravans of travelers came to it by +land, bringing on the backs of camels the productions of Arabia, +Persia, and all the East; and fleets of ships by sea, loaded with the +corn, and wine, and oil of the Western nations. + +At Sidon the land journey of the expedition was ended. Here they +bought two large and splendid ships, galleys of three banks of oars, +to convey them to Greece. These galleys were for their own personal +accommodation. There was a third vessel, called a transport, for the +conveyance of their baggage, which consisted mainly of the packages of +rich and costly presents which Darius had prepared. Some of these +presents were for the friends of Democedes, as has been already +explained, and others had been provided as gifts and offerings from +the king himself to such distinguished personages as the travelers +might visit on their route. When the vessels were ready, and the +costly cargo was on board, the company of travelers embarked, and the +little fleet put to sea. + +The Grecian territories are endlessly divided and indented by the +seas, whose irregular and winding shores form promontories, +peninsulas, and islands without number, which are accessible in every +part by water. The Persian explorers cruised about among these coasts +under Democedes's guidance, examining every thing, and noting +carefully all the information which they could obtain, either by +personal observation or by inquiring of others, which might be of +service to Darius in his intended invasion. Democedes allowed them to +take their own time, directing their course, however, steadily, though +slowly, toward his own native town of Crotona. The expedition landed +in various places, and were every where well received. It was not for +the interest of Democedes that they should yet be intercepted. In +fact, the name and power of Darius were very much feared, or, at +least, very highly respected in all the Grecian territory, and the +people were little inclined to molest a peaceful party of Persians +traveling like ordinary tourists, and under the guidance, too, of a +distinguished countryman of their own, whose name was, in some degree, +a guarantee for the honesty and innocence of their intentions. At +length, however, after spending some time in the Grecian seas, the +little squadron moved still farther west, toward the coast of Italy, +and arrived finally at Tarentum. Tarentum was the great port on the +Grecian side of Italy. It was at the head of the spacious bay which +sets up between the heel and the ball of the foot of the boot-shaped +peninsula. Crotona, Democedes's native town, to which he was now +desirous to return, was southwest of Tarentum, about two hundred miles +along the shore.[F] + +[Footnote F: For the situation of these places, see the map at the +commencement of chapter xi.] + +It was a very curious and extraordinary circumstance that, though the +expedition had been thus far allowed to go and come as its leaders +pleased, without any hinderance or suspicion, yet now, the moment that +they touched a point from which Democedes could easily reach his home, +the authorities on shore, in some way or other, obtained some +intimation of the true character of their enterprise. The Prince of +Tarentum seized the ships. He made the Persians themselves prisoners +also, and shut them up; and, in order effectually to confine the +ships, he took away the helms from them, so that they could not be +steered, and were thus entirely disabled. The expedition being thus, +for the time at least, broken up, Democedes said, coolly, that he +would take the opportunity to make a little excursion along the coast, +and visit his friends at Crotona! + +It was another equally suspicious circumstance in respect to the +probability that this seizure was the result of Democedes's +management, that, as soon as he was safely away, the Prince of +Tarentum set his prisoners at liberty, releasing, at the same time, +the ships from the seizure, and sending the helms on board. The +Persians were indignant at the treatment which they had received, and +set sail immediately along the coast toward Crotona in pursuit of +Democedes. They found him in the market-place in Crotona, haranguing +the people, and exciting, by his appearance and his discourse, a great +and general curiosity. They attempted to seize him as a fugitive, and +called upon the people of Crotona to aid them, threatening them with +the vengeance of Darius if they refused. A part of the people were +disposed to comply with this demand, while others rallied to defend +their townsman. A great tumult ensued; but, in the end, the party of +Democedes was victorious. He was not only thus personally rescued, +but, as he informed the people that the transport vessel which +accompanied the expedition contained property that belonged to him, +they seized that too, and gave it up to Democedes, saying to the +Persians that, though they must give up the transport, the galleys +remained at their service to convey them back to their own country +whenever they wished to go. + +The Persians had now no other alternative but to return home. They +had, it is true, pretty nearly accomplished the object of their +undertaking; but, if any thing remained to be done, they could not now +attempt it with any advantage, as they had lost their guide, and a +great portion of the effects which had been provided by Darius to +enable them to propitiate the favor of the princes and potentates into +whose power they might fall. They accordingly began to make +preparations for sailing back again to Sidon, while Democedes +established himself in great magnificence and splendor in Crotona. +When, at length, the Persians were ready to sail, Democedes wished +them a very pleasant voyage, and desired them to give his best +respects to Darius, and inform him that he could not return at present +to Persia, as he was making arrangements to be married! + +The disasters which had befallen these Persian reconnoiterers thus far +were only the beginning of their troubles. Their ships were driven by +contrary winds out of their course, and they were thrown at last upon +the coast of Iapygia, a country occupying the heel of Italy. Here they +were seized by the inhabitants and made slaves. It happened that there +was living in this wild country at that time a man of wealth and of +cultivation, who had been exiled from Tarentum on account of some +political offenses. His name was Cillus. He heard the story of these +unhappy foreigners, and interested himself in their fate. He thought +that, by rescuing them from their captivity and sending them home, he +should make Darius his friend, and secure, perhaps, his aid in +effecting his own restoration to his native land. He accordingly paid +the ransom which was demanded for the captives, and set them free. He +then aided them in making arrangements for their return to Persia, and +the unfortunate messengers found their way back at last to the court +of Darius, without their guide, without any of the splendid +appointments with which they had gone forth, but stripped of every +thing, and glad to escape with their lives. + +They had some cause to fear, too, the anger of Darius, for the +insensate wrath of a tyrant is awakened as often by calamity as by +crime. Darius, however, was in this instance graciously disposed. He +received the unfortunate commissioners in a favorable manner. He took +immediate measures for rewarding Cillus for having ransomed them. He +treasured up, too, the information which they had obtained respecting +Greece, though he was prevented by circumstances, which we will +proceed to describe, from immediately putting into execution his plans +of invasion and conquest there. + + + + +CHAPTER VII. + +THE REVOLT OF BABYLON. + +B.C. 516-514 + +City of Babylon.--The captive Jews.--Wickedness of the +Babylonians.--Causes of discontent.--Preparations of the Babylonians +for revolt.--Their secrecy.--Time chosen for revolt.--Story of +Syloson.--Syloson's red cloak.--He gives it to Darius.--Syloson goes +to Susa.--Interview with Darius.--Request of Syloson.--Darius grants +it.--Citadel of Samos.--Measures of Maeandrius.--Hypocrisy +of Maeandrius.--His brother Charilaus.--Reproaches of +Charilaus.--Character of Maeandrius.--Attack of Charilaus.--Slaughter +of the Samians.--Revolt of Babylon.--Insults and jeers of the +Babylonians.--Ancient mode of warfare.--Modern warfare.--Taunt of the +Babylonians.--Fabricating prodigies.--The mule of Zopyrus.--Interview +with Darius.--Desperate plan of Zopyrus.--He mutilates +himself.--Darius's astonishment.--Final arrangements.--Zopyrus +leaves the Persian camp.--Success of Zopyrus's stratagem.--His +piteous story.--The three victories.--Zopyrus intrusted with power +in Babylon.--Zopyrus admits the Persians.--Fall of Babylon. + + +The city of Babylon, originally the capital of the Assyrian empire, +was conquered by Cyrus, the founder of the Persian monarchy, when he +annexed the Assyrian empire to his dominions. It was a vast and a very +magnificent and wealthy city; and Cyrus made it, for a time, one of +his capitals. + +When Cyrus made this conquest of Babylon, he found the Jews in +captivity there. They had been made captive by Nebuchadnezzar, a +previous king of Babylon, as is related in the Scriptures. The holy +prophets of Judea had predicted that after seventy years the captives +should return, and that Babylon itself should afterward be destroyed. +The first prediction was fulfilled by the victory of Cyrus. It +devolved on Darius to execute the second of these solemn and +retributive decrees of heaven. + +Although Darius was thus the instrument of divine Providence in the +destruction of Babylon, he was unintentionally and unconsciously so. +In the terrible scenes connected with the siege and the storming of +the ill-fated city, it was the impulse of his own hatred and revenge +that he was directly obeying; he was not at all aware that he was, at +the same time, the messenger of the divine displeasure. The wretched +Babylonians, in the storming and destruction of their city, were +expiating a double criminality. Their pride, their wickedness, their +wanton cruelty toward the Jews, had brought upon them the condemnation +of God, while their political treason and rebellion, or, at least, +what was considered treason and rebellion aroused the implacable +resentment of their king. + +The Babylonians had been disposed to revolt even in the days of Cyrus. +They had been accustomed to consider their city as the most noble and +magnificent capital in the world, and they were displeased that Cyrus +did not make it the seat and center of his empire. Cyrus preferred +Susa; and Babylon, accordingly, though he called it one of his +capitals, soon fell to the rank of a provincial city. The nobles and +provincial leaders that remained there began accordingly to form plans +for revolting from the Persian dominion, with a view of restoring +their city to its ancient position and renown. + +They had a very favorable opportunity for maturing their plans, and +making their preparations for the execution of them during the time of +the magian usurpation; for while the false Smerdis was on the throne, +being shut up and concealed in his palace at Susa, the affairs of the +provinces were neglected; and when Darius and his accomplices +discovered the imposture and put Smerdis to death, there was +necessarily required, after so violent a revolution, a considerable +time before the affairs of the empire demanding attention at the +capital could be settled, so as to allow the government to turn their +thoughts at all toward the distant dependencies. The Babylonians +availed themselves of all these opportunities to put their city in the +best condition for resisting the Persian power. They strengthened +their defenses, and accumulated great stores of provisions, and took +measures for diminishing that part of the population which would be +useless in war. These measures were all concerted and carried into +effect in the most covert and secret manner; and the tidings came at +last to Susa that Babylon had openly revolted, before the government +of Darius was aware even of the existence of any disaffection. + +The time which the Babylonians chose for their rebellion at last was +one when the movable forces which Darius had at command were at the +west, engaged in a campaign on the shores of Asia Minor. Darius had +sent them there for the purpose of restoring a certain exile and +wanderer named Syloson to Samos, and making him the monarch of it. +Darius had been induced thus to interpose in Syloson's behalf by the +following very extraordinary circumstances. + +Syloson was the brother of Polycrates, whose unhappy history has +already been given. He was exiled from Samos some time before Darius +ascended the throne, and he became, consequently, a sort of soldier of +fortune, serving, like other such adventurers, wherever there was the +greatest prospect of glory and pay. In this capacity he followed the +army of Cambyses into Egypt in the memorable campaign described in the +first chapter of this volume. It happened, also, that Darius himself, +who was then a young noble in the Persian court, and yet of no +particular distinction, as there was then no reason to imagine that he +would ever be elevated to the throne, was also in Cambyses's army, and +the two young men became acquainted with one another there. + +While the army was at Memphis, an incident occurred in which these two +personages were actors, which, though it seemed unimportant at the +time, led, in the end, to vast and momentous results. The incident was +this: + +Syloson had a very handsome red cloak, which, as he appeared in it one +day, walking in the great square at Memphis, strongly attracted the +admiration of Darius. Darius asked Syloson if he would sell him the +cloak. Syloson said that he would not sell it, but would give it to +him. He thought, probably, that Darius would decline receiving it as a +present. If he did entertain that idea, it seems he was mistaken. +Darius praised him for his generosity, and accepted the gift. + +Syloson was then sorry that he had made so inconsiderate an offer, and +regretted very much the loss of his cloak. In process of time, the +campaign of Cambyses in Egypt was ended, and Darius returned to +Persia, leaving Syloson in the west. At length the conspiracy was +formed for dethroning Smerdis the magian, as has already been +described, and Darius was designated to reign in his stead. As the +news of the young noble's elevation spread into the western world, it +reached Syloson. He was much pleased at receiving the intelligence, +and he saw immediately that there was a prospect of his being able to +derive some advantage, himself, from the accession of his old +fellow-soldier to the throne. + +He immediately proceeded to Susa. He applied at the gates of the +palace for admission to the presence of the king. The porter asked him +who he was. He replied that he was a Greek who had formerly done +Darius a service, and he wished to see him. The porter carried the +message to the king. The king could not imagine who the stranger +should be. He endeavored in vain to recall to mind any instance in +which he had received a favor from a Greek. At length he ordered the +attendant to call the visitor in. + +Syloson was accordingly conducted into the king's presence. Darius +looked upon him, but did not know him. He directed the interpreters to +inquire what the service was which he had rendered the king, and when +he had rendered it. The Greek replied by relating the circumstance of +the cloak. Darius recollected the cloak, though he had forgotten the +giver. "Are you, indeed," said he, "the man who made me that present? +I thought then that you were very generous to me, and you shall see +that I do not undervalue the obligation now. I am at length, +fortunately, in a situation to requite the favor, and I will give you +such an abundance of gold and silver as shall effectually prevent your +being sorry for having shown a kindness to Darius Hystaspes." + +Syloson thanked the king in reply, but said that he did not wish for +gold and silver. Darius asked him what reward he did desire. He +replied that he wished Samos to be restored to him: "Samos," said he, +"was the possession of my brother. When he went away from the island, +he left it temporarily in the hands of Maeandrius, an officer of his +household. It still remains in the possession of this family, while I, +the rightful heir, am a homeless wanderer and exile, excluded from my +brother's dominions by one of his slaves." + +Darius immediately determined to accede to Syloson's request. He +raised an army and put it under the command of Otanes, who, it will be +recollected, was one of the seven conspirators that combined to +dethrone Smerdis the magian. He directed Otanes to accompany Syloson +to Samos, and to put him in possession of the island. Syloson was +particularly earnest in his request that no unnecessary violence +should be used, and no blood shed, or vindictive measures of any kind +adopted. Darius promised to comply with these desires, and gave his +orders to Otanes accordingly. + +Notwithstanding this, however, the expedition resulted in the almost +total destruction of the Samian population, in the following manner. +There was a citadel at Samos, to which the inhabitants retired when +they learned that Otanes had embarked his troops in ships on the +coast, and was advancing toward the island. Maeandrius was vexed and +angry at the prospect of being deprived of his possessions and his +power; and, as the people hated him on account of his extortion and +tyranny, he hated them in return, and cared not how much suffering his +measures might be the means of bringing upon them. He had a +subterranean and secret passage from the citadel to the shore of the +sea, where, in a secluded cove, were boats or vessels ready to take +him away. Having made these arrangements to secure his own safety, he +proceeded to take such a course and adopt such measures as should tend +most effectually to exasperate and offend the Persians, intending to +escape, himself, at the last moment, by this subterranean retreat, +and to leave the inhabitants of the island at the mercy of their +infuriated enemies. + +He had a brother whom he had shut up in a dungeon, and whose mind, +naturally depraved, and irritated by his injuries, was in a state of +malignant and furious despair. Maeandrius had pretended to be willing +to give up the island to the Persians. He had entered into +negotiations with them for this purpose, and the Persians considered +the treaty as in fact concluded. The leaders and officers of the army +had assembled, accordingly, before the citadel in a peaceful attitude, +waiting merely for the completion of the forms of surrender, when +Charilaus, Maeandrius's captive brother, saw them, by looking out +between the bars of his window, in the tower in which he was confined. +He sent an urgent message to Maeandrius, requesting to speak to him. +Maeandrius ordered the prisoner to be brought before him. The haggard +and wretched-looking captive, rendered half insane by the combined +influence of the confinement he had endured, and of the wild +excitement produced by the universal panic and confusion which reigned +around him, broke forth against his brother in the boldest and most +violent invectives. He reproached him in the most bitter terms for +being willing to yield so ingloriously, and without a struggle, to an +invading foe, whom he might easily repel. "You have courage and energy +enough, it seems," said he, "to make war upon an innocent and +defenseless brother, and to keep him for years in chains and in a +dungeon, but when an actual enemy appears, though he comes to despoil +you of all your possessions, and to send you into hopeless exile, and +though, if you had the ordinary courage and spirit of a man, you could +easily drive him away, yet you dare not face him. If you are too +cowardly and mean to do your duty yourself, give me your soldiers, and +I will do it for you. I will drive these Persians back into the sea +with as much pleasure as it would give me to drive you there!" + +Such a nature as that of Maeandrius can not be stung into a proper +sense of duty by reproaches like these. There seem to have been in his +heart no moral sensibilities of any kind, and there could be, of +course, no compunctions for the past, and no awakening of new and +better desires for the future. All the effect which was produced upon +his mind by these bitter denunciations was to convince him that to +comply with his brother's request would be to do the best thing now in +his power for widening, and extending, and making sure the misery and +mischief which were impending. He placed his troops, therefore, under +his brother's orders; and while the infuriated madman sallied forth at +the head of them to attack the astonished Persians on one side of the +citadel, Maeandrius made his escape through the under-ground passage on +the other. The Persians were so exasperated at what appeared to them +the basest treachery, that, as soon as they could recover their arms +and get once more into battle array, they commenced a universal +slaughter of the Samians. They spared neither age, sex, nor condition; +and when, at last, their vengeance was satisfied, and they put the +island into Syloson's hands, and withdrew, he found himself in +possession of an almost absolute solitude. + +[Illustration: THE BABYLONIANS DERIDING DARIUS.] + +It was while Otanes was absent on this enterprise, having with him a +large part of the disposable forces of the king, that the Babylonians +revolted. Darius was greatly incensed at hearing the tidings. +Sovereigns are always greatly incensed at a revolt on the part of +their subjects. The circumstances of the case, whatever they may be, +always seem to them to constitute a peculiar aggravation of the +offense. Darius was indignant that the Babylonians had attempted to +take advantage of his weakness by rebelling when his armies were +away. If they had risen when his armies were around him, he would +have been equally indignant with them for having dared to brave his +power. + +He assembled all the forces at his disposal, and advanced to Babylon. +The people of the city shut their gates against him, and derided him. +They danced and capered on the walls, making all sorts of gestures +expressive of contempt and defiance, accompanied with shouts and +outcries of ridicule and scorn. They had great confidence in the +strength of their defenses, and then, besides this, they probably +regarded Darius as a sort of usurper, who had no legitimate title to +the throne, and who would never be able to subdue any serious +resistance which might be offered to the establishment of his power. +It was from these considerations that they were emboldened to be +guilty of the folly of taunting and insulting their foes from the city +walls. + +Such incidents as this, of personal communications between masses of +enemies on the eve of a battle, were very common in ancient warfare, +though impossible in modern times. In those days, when the missiles +employed were thrown chiefly by the strength of the human arm alone, +the combatants could safely draw near enough together for each side to +hear the voices and to see the gesticulations of the other. Besiegers +could advance sufficiently close to a castle or citadel to parley +insultingly with the garrison upon the walls, and yet be safe from the +showers of darts and arrows which were projected toward them in +return. But all this is now changed. The reach of cannon, and even of +musketry, is so long, that combatants, approaching a conflict, are +kept at a very respectful distance apart, until the time arrives in +which the actual engagement is to begin. They reconnoiter each other +with spy-glasses from watch-towers on the walls, or from eminences in +the field, but they can hold no communication except by a formal +embassy, protected by a flag of truce, which, with its white and +distant fluttering, as it slowly advances over the green fields, warns +the gunners at the battery or on the bastion to point their artillery +another way. + +The Babylonians, on the walls of their city, reproached and taunted +their foes incessantly. "Take our advice," said they, "and go back +where you came from. You will only lose your time in besieging +Babylon. When mules have foals, you will take the city, and not till +then." + +The expression "when mules have foals" was equivalent in those days to +our proverbial phrase, "when the sky falls," being used to denote any +thing impossible or absurd, inasmuch as mules, like other hybrid +animals, do not produce young. It was thought in those times +absolutely impossible that they should do so; but it is now well known +that the case is not impossible, though very rare. + +It seems to have added very much to the interest of an historical +narrative in the minds of the ancient Greeks, to have some prodigy +connected with every great event; and, in order to gratify this +feeling, the writers appear in some instances to have fabricated a +prodigy for the occasion, and in others to have elevated some unusual, +though by no means supernatural circumstance, to the rank and +importance of one. The prodigy connected with this siege of Babylon +was the foaling of a mule. The mule belonged to a general in the army +of Darius, named Zopyrus. It was after Darius had been prosecuting the +siege of the city for a year and a half, without any progress +whatever toward the accomplishment of his end. The army began to +despair of success. Zopyrus, with the rest, was expecting that the +siege would be indefinitely prolonged, or, perhaps, absolutely +abandoned, when his attention was strongly attracted to the phenomenon +which had happened in respect to the mule. He remembered the taunt of +the Babylonian on the wall, and it seemed to him that the whole +occurrence portended that the time had now arrived when some way might +be devised for the capture of the city. + +Portents and prophecies are often the causes of their own fulfillment, +and this portent led Zopyrus to endeavor to devise some means to +accomplish the end in view. He went first, however, to Darius, to +converse with him upon the subject, with a view of ascertaining how +far he was really desirous of bringing the siege to a termination. He +wished to know whether the object was of sufficient importance in +Darius's mind to warrant any great sacrifice on his own part to effect +it. + +He found that it was so. Darius was extremely impatient to end the +siege and to capture the city; and Zopyrus saw at once that, if he +could in any way be the means of accomplishing the work, he should +entitle himself, in the highest possible degree, to the gratitude of +the king. + +He determined to go himself into Babylon as a pretended deserter from +Darius, with a view to obtaining an influence and a command within the +city, which should enable him afterward to deliver it up to the +besiegers; and, in order to convince the Babylonians that his +desertion was real, he resolved to mutilate himself in a manner so +dreadful as would effectually prevent their imagining that the +injuries which he suffered were inflicted by any contrivance of his +own. He accordingly cut off his hair and his ears, and mutilated his +face in a manner too shocking to be here detailed, inflicting injuries +which could never be repaired. He caused himself to be scourged, also, +until his whole body was covered with cuts and contusions. He then +went, wounded and bleeding as he was, into the presence of Darius, to +make known his plans. + +Darius expressed amazement and consternation at the terrible +spectacle. He leaped from his throne and rushed toward Zopyrus, +demanding who had dared to maltreat one of his generals in such a +manner. When Zopyrus replied that he had himself done the deed, the +king's astonishment was greater than before. He told Zopyrus that he +was insane. Some sudden paroxysm of madness had come over him. Zopyrus +replied that he was not insane; and he explained his design. His plan, +he said, was deliberately and calmly formed, and it should be steadily +and faithfully executed. "I did not make known my design to you," said +he, "before I had taken the preliminary steps, for I knew that you +would prevent my taking them. It is now too late for that, and nothing +remains but to reap, if possible, the advantage which may be derived +from what I have done." + +He then arranged with Darius the plans which he had formed, so far as +he needed the co-operation of the king in the execution of them. If he +could gain a partial command in the Babylonian army, he was to make a +sally from the city gates on a certain day, and attack a portion of +the Persian army, which Darius was to leave purposely exposed, in +order that he might gain credit with the Babylonians by destroying +them. From this he supposed that the confidence which the Babylonians +would repose in him would increase, and he might consequently receive +a greater command. Thus he might, by acting in concert with Darius +without, gradually gain such an ascendency within the city as finally +to have power to open the gates and let the besiegers in. Darius was +to station a detachment of a thousand men near a certain gate, leaving +them imperfectly armed, on the tenth day after Zopyrus entered the +city. These Zopyrus was to destroy. Seven days afterward, two thousand +more were to be stationed in a similar manner at another point; and +these were also to be destroyed by a second sally. Twenty days after +this, four thousand more were to be similarly exposed. Thus seven +thousand innocent and defenseless men would be slaughtered, but that, +as Zopyrus said, would be "of no consequence." The lives of men were +estimated by heroes and conquerors in those days only at their +numerical value in swelling the army roll. + +These things being all arranged, Zopyrus took leave of the King to go +to Babylon. As he left the Persian camp, he began to run, looking +round behind him continually, as if in flight. Some men, too, +pretended to pursue him. He fled toward one of the gates of the city. +The sentinels on the walls saw him coming. When he reached the gate, +the porter inside of it talked with him through a small opening, and +heard his story. The porter then reported the case to the superior +officers, and they commanded that the fugitive should be admitted. +When conducted into the presence of the magistrates, he related a +piteous story of the cruel treatment which he had received from +Darius, and of the difficulty which he had experienced in making his +escape from the tyrant's hands. He uttered, too, dreadful imprecations +against Darius, and expressed the most eager determination to be +revenged. He informed the Babylonians, moreover, that he was well +acquainted with all Darius's plans and designs, and with the +disposition which he had made of his army; and that, if they would, in +a few days, when his wounds should have in some measure healed, give +him a small command, he would show them, by actual trial, what he +could do to aid their cause. + +They acceded to this proposition, and furnished Zopyrus, at the end of +ten days, with a moderate force. Zopyrus, at the head of this force, +sallied forth from the gate which had been previously agreed upon +between him and Darius, and fell upon the unfortunate thousand that +had been stationed there for the purpose of being destroyed. They were +nearly defenseless, and Zopyrus, though his force was inferior, cut +them all to pieces before they could be re-enforced or protected, and +then retreated safely into the city again. He was received by the +Babylonians with the utmost exultation and joy. He had no difficulty +in obtaining, seven days afterward, the command of a larger force, +when, sallying forth from another gate, as had been agreed upon by +Darius, he gained another victory, destroying, on this occasion, twice +as many Persians as before. These exploits gained the pretended +deserter unbounded fame and honor within the city. The populace +applauded him with continual acclamations; and the magistrates invited +him to their councils, offered him high command, and governed their +own plans and measures by his advice. At length, on the twentieth day, +he made his third sally, at which time he destroyed and captured a +still greater number than before. This gave him such an influence and +position within the city, in respect to its defense, that he had no +difficulty in getting intrusted with the keys of certain gates--those, +namely, by which he had agreed that the army of Darius should be +admitted. + +When the time arrived, the Persians advanced to the attack of the city +in that quarter, and the Babylonians rallied as usual on the walls to +repel them. The contest had scarcely begun before they found that the +gates were open, and that the columns of the enemy were pouring in. +The city was thus soon wholly at the mercy of the conqueror. Darius +dismantled the walls, carried off the brazen gates, and crucified +three thousand of the most distinguished inhabitants; then +establishing over the rest a government of his own, he withdrew his +troops and returned to Susa. He bestowed upon Zopyrus, at Susa, all +possible rewards and honors. The marks of his wounds and mutilations +could never be effaced, but Darius often said that he would gladly +give up twenty Babylons to be able to efface them. + + + + +CHAPTER VIII. + +THE INVASION OF SCYTHIA. + +B.C. 513 + +Darius's authority fully established throughout his +dominions.--The Scythians.--Ancient account of them.--Pictures of +savage life.--Their diversity.--Social instincts of man.--Their +universality.--Moral sentiments of mankind.--Religious +depravity.--Advice of Artabanus.--Emissaries sent forward.--The +petition of Oebazus.--Darius's wanton cruelty.--Place of +rendezvous.--The fleet of galleys.--Darius's march through Asia +Minor.--Monuments.--Arrival at the Bosporus.--The bridge of +boats.--Reward of Mandrocles.--The group of statuary.--The Cyanean +Islands.--Darius makes an excursion to them.--The two +monuments.--Inscriptions on them.--The troops cross the +bridge.--Movements of the fleet.--The River Tearus.--Its wonderful +sources.--The cairn.--Primitive mode of census-taking.--Instinctive +feeling of dependence on a supernatural power.--Strange religious +observance.--Arrival at the Danube.--Orders to destroy the +bridge.--Counsel of the Grecian general.--The bridge is +preserved.--Guard left to protect it.--Singular mode of +reckoning.--Probable reason for employing it.--Darius's determination +to return before the knots should be all untied. + + +In the reigns of ancient monarchs and conquerors, it often happened +that the first great transaction which called forth their energies was +the suppression of a rebellion within their dominions, and the second, +an expedition against some ferocious and half-savage nations beyond +their frontiers. Darius followed this general example. The suppression +of the Babylonian revolt established his authority throughout the +whole interior of his empire. If that vast, and populous, and wealthy +city was found unable to resist his power, no other smaller province +or capital could hope to succeed in the attempt. The whole empire of +Asia, therefore, from the capital at Susa, out to the extreme limits +and bounds to which Cyrus had extended it, yielded without any further +opposition to his sway. He felt strong in his position, and being +young and ardent in temperament, he experienced a desire to exercise +his strength. For some reason or other, he seems to have been not +quite prepared yet to grapple with the Greeks, and he concluded, +accordingly, first to test his powers in respect to foreign invasion +by a war upon the Scythians. This was an undertaking which required +some courage and resolution; for it was while making an incursion into +the country of the Scythians that Cyrus, his renowned predecessor, and +the founder of the Persian empire, had fallen. + +The term Scythians seems to have been a generic designation, applied +indiscriminately to vast hordes of half-savage tribes occupying those +wild and inhospitable regions of the north, that extended along the +shores of the Black and Caspian Seas, and the banks of the Danube. The +accounts which are given by the ancient historians of the manners and +customs of these people, are very inconsistent and contradictory; as, +in fact, the accounts of the characters of savages, and of the habits +and usages of savage life, have always been in every age. It is very +little that any one cultivated observer can really know, in respect to +the phases of character, the thoughts and feelings, the sentiments, +the principles and the faith, and even the modes of life, that prevail +among uncivilized aborigines living in forests, or roaming wildly over +uninclosed and trackless plains. Of those who have the opportunity to +observe them, accordingly, some extol, in the highest degree, their +rude but charming simplicity, their truth and faithfulness, the +strength of their filial and conjugal affection, and their superiority +of spirit in rising above the sordid sentiments and gross vices of +civilization. They are not the slaves, these writers say, of appetite +and passion. They have no inordinate love of gain; they are patient in +enduring suffering, grateful for kindness received, and inflexibly +firm in their adherence to the principles of honor and duty. Others, +on the other hand, see in savage life nothing but treachery, cruelty, +brutality, and crime. Man in his native state, as they imagine, is but +a beast, with just intelligence enough to give effect to his +depravity. Without natural affection, without truth, without a sense +of justice, or the means of making law a substitute for it, he lives +in a scene of continual conflict, in which the rights of the weak and +the defenseless are always overborne by brutal and tyrannical power. + +The explanation of this diversity is doubtless this, that in savage +life, as well as in every other state of human society, all the +varieties of human conduct and character are exhibited; and the +attention of each observer is attracted to the one or to the other +class of phenomena, according to the circumstances in which he is +placed when he makes his observations, or the mood of mind which +prevails within him when he records them. There must be the usual +virtues of social life, existing in a greater or less degree, in all +human communities; for such principles as a knowledge of the +distinction of right and wrong, the idea of property and of individual +rights, the obligation resting on every one to respect them, the sense +of justice, and of the ill desert of violence and cruelty, are all +_universal instincts of the human soul_, as universal and as essential +to humanity as maternal or filial affection, or the principle of +conjugal love. They were established by the great Author of nature as +constituent elements in the formation of man. Man could not continue +to exist, as a gregarious animal, without them. It would accordingly +be as impossible to find a community of men without these moral +sentiments generally prevalent among them, as to find vultures or +tigers that did not like to pursue and take their prey, or deer +without a propensity to fly from danger. The laws and usages of +civilized society are the expression and the result of these +sentiments, not the origin and foundation of them; and violence, +cruelty, and crime are the exceptions to their operation, very few, in +all communities, savage or civilized, in comparison with the vast +preponderance of cases in which they are obeyed. + +This view of the native constitution of the human character, which it +is obvious, on very slight reflection, must be true, is not at all +opposed, as it might at first appear to be, by the doctrine of the +theological writers in the Christian Church in respect to the native +depravity of man; for the depravity here referred to is a religious +depravity, an alienation of the heart from God, and a rebellious and +insubmissive spirit in respect to his law. Neither the Scriptures nor +the theological writers who interpret them ever call in question the +universal existence and prevalence of those instincts that are +essential to the social welfare of man. + +But we must return to the Scythians. + +The tribes which Darius proposed to attack occupied the countries +north of the Danube. His route, therefore, for the invasion of their +territories would lead him through Asia Minor, thence across the +Hellespont or the Bosporus into Thrace, and from Thrace across the +Danube. It was a distant and dangerous expedition. + +Darius had a brother named Artabanus. Artabanus was of opinion that +the enterprise which the king was contemplating was not only distant +and dangerous, but that the country of the Scythians was of so little +value that the end to be obtained by success would be wholly +inadequate to compensate for the exertions, the costs, and the hazards +which he must necessarily incur in the prosecution of it. But Darius +was not to be dissuaded. He thanked his brother for his advice, but +ordered the preparations for the expedition to go on. + +He sent emissaries forward, in advance, over the route that his army +was destined to take, transmitting orders to the several provinces +which were situated on the line of his march to prepare the way for +the passage of his troops. Among other preparations, they were to +construct a bridge of boats across the Bosporus at Chalcedon. This +work was intrusted to the charge and superintendence of an engineer of +Samos named Mandrocles. The people of the provinces were also to +furnish bodies of troops, both infantry and cavalry, to join the army +on its march. + +The soldiers that were enlisted to go on this remote and dangerous +expedition joined the army, as is usual in such cases, some willingly, +from love of adventure, or the hope of opportunities for plunder, and +for that unbridled indulgence of appetite and passion which soldiers +so often look forward to as a part of their reward; others from hard +compulsion, being required to leave friends and home, and all that +they held dear, under the terror of a stern and despotic edict which +they dared not disobey. It was even dangerous to ask for exemption. + +As an instance of this, it is said that there was a Persian named +Oebazus, who had three sons that had been drafted into the army. +Oebazus, desirous of not being left wholly alone in his old age, +made a request to the king that he would allow one of the sons to +remain at home with his father. Darius appeared to receive this +petition favorably. He told Oebazus that the request was so very +modest and considerate that he would grant more than he asked. He +would allow all three of his sons to remain with him. Oebazus +retired from the king's presence overjoyed at the thought that his +family was not to be separated at all. Darius ordered his guards to +kill the three young men, and to send the dead bodies home, with a +message to their father that his sons were restored to him, released +forever from all obligation to serve the king. + +The place of general rendezvous for the various forces which were to +join in the expedition, consisting of the army which marched with +Darius from Susa, and also of the troops and ships which the maritime +provinces of Asia Minor were to supply on the way, was on the shores +of the Bosporus, at the point where Mandrocles had constructed the +bridge.[G] The people of Ionia, a region situated in Asia Minor, on +the shores of the AEgean Sea, had been ordered to furnish a fleet of +galleys, which they were to build and equip, and then send to the +bridge. The destination of this fleet was to the Danube. It was to +pass up the Bosporus into the Euxine Sea, now called the Black Sea, +and thence into the mouth of the river. After ascending the Danube to +a certain point, the men were to land and build a bridge across that +river, using, very probably, their galleys for this purpose. In the +mean time, the army was to cross the Bosporus by the bridge which had +been erected there by Mandrocles, and pursue their way toward the +Danube by land, through the kingdom of Thrace. By this arrangement, it +was supposed that the bridge across the Danube would be ready by the +time that the main body of the army arrived on the banks of the river. +The idea of thus building in Asia Minor a bridge for the Danube, in +the form of a vast fleet of galleys, to be sent round through the +Black Sea to the mouths of the river, and thence up the river to its +place of destination, was original and grand. It strikingly marks the +military genius and skill which gave the Greeks so extended a fame, +for it was by the Greeks that the exploit was to be performed. + +[Footnote G: For the track of Darius on this expedition, see the map +at the commencement of this volume.] + +Darius marched magnificently through Asia Minor, on his way to the +Bosporus, at the head of an army of seventy thousand men. He moved +slowly, and the engineers and architects that accompanied him built +columns and monuments here and there, as he advanced, to commemorate +his progress. These structures were covered with inscriptions, which +ascribed to Darius, as the leader of the enterprise, the most +extravagant praise. At length the splendid array arrived at the place +of rendezvous on the Bosporus, where there was soon presented to view +a very grand and imposing scene. + +The bridge of boats was completed, and the Ionian fleet, consisting of +six hundred galleys, was at anchor near it in the stream. Long lines +of tents were pitched upon the shore, and thousands of horsemen and of +foot soldiers were drawn up in array, their banners flying, and their +armor glittering in the sun, and all eager to see and to welcome the +illustrious sovereign who had come, with so much pomp and splendor, to +take them under his command. The banks of the Bosporus were +picturesque and high, and all the eminences were crowded with +spectators, to witness the imposing magnificence of the spectacle. + +Darius encamped his army on the shore, and began to make the +preparations necessary for the final departure of the expedition. He +had been thus far within his own dominions. He was now, however, to +pass into another quarter of the globe, to plunge into new and unknown +dangers, among hostile, savage, and ferocious tribes. It was right +that he should pause until he had considered well his plans, and +secured attention to every point which could influence success. + +He first examined the bridge of boats. He was very much pleased with +the construction of it. He commended Mandrocles for his skill and +fidelity in the highest terms, and loaded him with rewards and honors. +Mandrocles used the money which Darius thus gave him in employing an +artist to form a piece of statuary which should at once commemorate +the building of the bridge and give to Darius the glory of it. The +group represented the Bosporus with the bridge thrown over it, and the +king on his throne reviewing his troops as they passed over the +structure. This statuary was placed, when finished, in a temple in +Greece, where it was universally admired. Darius was very much pleased +both with the idea of this sculpture on the part of Mandrocles, and +with the execution of it by the artist. He gave the bridge builder new +rewards; he recompensed the artist, also, with similar munificence. He +was pleased that they had contrived so happy a way of at the same time +commemorating the bridging of the Bosporus and rendering exalted honor +to him. + +The bridge was situated about the middle of the Bosporus; and as the +strait itself is about eighteen miles long, it was nine miles from the +bridge to the Euxine Sea. There is a small group of islands near the +mouth of this strait, where it opens into the sea, which were called +in those days the Cyanean Islands. They were famed in the time of +Darius for having once been floating islands, and enchanted. Their +supernatural properties had disappeared, but there was one attraction +which still pertained to them. They were situated beyond the limits of +the strait, and the visitor who landed upon them could take his +station on some picturesque cliff or smiling hill, and extend his view +far and wide over the blue waters of the Euxine Sea. + +Darius determined to make an excursion to these islands while the +fleet and the army were completing their preparations at the bridge. +He embarked, accordingly, on board a splendid galley, and, sailing +along the Bosporus till he reached the sea, he landed on one of the +islands. There was a temple there, consecrated to one of the Grecian +deities. Darius, accompanied by his attendants and followers, ascended +to this temple, and, taking a seat which had been provided for him +there, he surveyed the broad expanse of water which extended like an +ocean before him, and contemplated the grandeur of the scene with the +greatest admiration and delight. + +At length he returned to the bridge, where he found the preparations +for the movement of the fleet and of the army nearly completed. He +determined, before leaving the Asiatic shores, to erect a monument to +commemorate his expedition, on the spot from which he was to take his +final departure. He accordingly directed two columns of white marble +to be reared, and inscriptions to be cut upon them, giving such +particulars in respect to the expedition as it was desirable thus to +preserve. These inscriptions contained his own name in very +conspicuous characters as the leader of the enterprise; also an +enumeration of the various nations that had contributed to form his +army, with the numbers which each had furnished. There was a record of +corresponding particulars, too, in respect to the fleet. The +inscriptions were the same upon the two columns, except that upon the +one it was written in the Assyrian tongue, which was the general +language of the Persian empire, and upon the other in the Greek. Thus +the two monuments were intended, the one for the Asiatic, and the +other for the European world. + +At length the day of departure arrived. The fleet set sail, and the +immense train of the army put itself in motion to cross the +bridge.[H] The fleet went on through the Bosporus to the Euxine, and +thence along the western coast of that sea till it reached the mouths +of the Danube. The ships entered the river by one of the branches +which form the delta of the stream, and ascended for two days. This +carried them above the ramifications into which the river divides +itself at its mouth, to a spot where the current was confined to a +single channel, and where the banks were firm. Here they landed, and +while one part of the force which they had brought were occupied in +organizing guards and providing defenses to protect the ground, the +remainder commenced the work of arranging the vessels of the fleet, +side by side, across the stream, to form the bridge. + +[Footnote H: See Frontispiece.] + +In the mean time, Darius, leading the great body of the army, advanced +from the Bosporus by land. The country which the troops thus traversed +was Thrace. They met with various adventures as they proceeded, and +saw, as the accounts of the expedition state, many strange and +marvelous phenomena. They came, for example, to the sources of a very +wonderful river, which flows west and south toward the AEgean Sea. The +name of the river was the Tearus. It came from thirty-eight springs, +all issuing from the same rock, some hot and some cold. The waters of +the stream which was produced by the mingling of these fountains were +pure, limpid, and delicious, and were possessed of remarkable +medicinal properties, being efficacious for the cure of various +diseases. Darius was so much pleased with this river, that his army +halted to refresh themselves with its waters, and he caused one of his +monuments to be erected on the spot, the inscription of which +contained not only the usual memorials of the march, but also a +tribute to the salubrity of the waters of this magical stream. + +At one point in the course of the march through Thrace, Darius +conceived the idea of varying the construction of his line of +monuments by building a cairn. A cairn is a heap of stones, such as is +reared in the mountains of Scotland and of Switzerland by the +voluntary additions of every passer by, to commemorate a spot marked +as the scene of some accident or disaster. As each guide finishes the +story of the incident in the hearing of the party which he conducts, +each tourist who has listened to it adds his stone to the heap, until +the rude structure attains sometimes to a very considerable size. +Darius, fixing upon a suitable spot near one of his encampments, +commanded every soldier in the army to bring a stone and place it on +the pile. A vast mound rose rapidly from these contributions, which, +when completed, not only commemorated the march of the army, but +denoted, also, by the immense number of the stones entering into the +composition of the pile, the countless multitude of soldiers that +formed the expedition. + +There was a story told to Darius, as he was traversing these regions, +of a certain king, reigning over some one of the nations that occupied +them, who wished to make an enumeration of the inhabitants of his +realm. The mode which he adopted was to require every man in his +dominions to send him an arrow head. When all the arrow heads were in, +the vast collection was counted by the official arithmeticians, and +the total of the population was thus attained. The arrow heads were +then laid together in a sort of monumental pile. It was, perhaps, this +primitive mode of census-taking which suggested to Darius the idea of +his cairn. + +There was a tribe of barbarians through whose dominions Darius passed +on his way from the Bosporus to the Danube, that observed a custom in +their religious worship, which, though in itself of a shocking +character, suggests reflections of salutary influence for our own +minds. There is a universal instinct in the human heart, leading it +strongly to feel the need of help from an unseen and supernatural +world in its sorrows and trials; and it is almost always the case that +rude and savage nations, in their attempts to obtain this spiritual +aid, connect the idea of personal privation and suffering on their +part, self inflicted if necessary, as a means of seeking it. It seems +as if the instinctive conviction of personal guilt, which associates +itself so naturally and so strongly in the minds of men with all +conceptions of the unseen world and of divine power, demands something +like an expiation as an essential prerequisite to obtaining audience +and acceptance with the King of Heaven. The tribe of savages above +referred to manifested this feeling by a dreadful observance. Once in +every five years they were accustomed to choose by lot, with solemn +ceremonies, one of their number, to be sent as a legate or embassador +to their god. The victim, when chosen, was laid down upon the ground +in the midst of the vast assembly convened to witness the rite, while +officers designated for the purpose stood by, armed with javelins. +Other men, selected for their great personal strength, then took the +man from the ground by the hands and feet, and swinging him to and fro +three times to gain momentum, they threw him with all their force into +the air, and the armed men, when he came down, caught him on the +points of their javelins. If he was killed by this dreadful +impalement, all was right. He would bear the message of the wants and +necessities of the tribe to their god, and they might reasonably +expect a favorable reception. If, on the other hand, he did not die, +he was thought to be rejected by the god as a wicked man and an +unsuitable messenger. The unfortunate convalescent was, in such cases, +dismissed in disgrace, and another messenger chosen. + +The army of Darius reached the banks of the Danube at last, and they +found that the fleet of the Ionians had attained the point agreed upon +before them, and were awaiting their arrival. The vessels were soon +arranged in the form of a bridge across the stream, and as there was +no enemy at hand to embarrass them, the army soon accomplished the +passage. They were now fairly in the Scythian country, and +immediately began their preparations to advance and meet the foe. +Darius gave orders to have the bridge broken up, and the galleys +abandoned and destroyed, as he chose rather to take with him the whole +of his force, than to leave a guard behind sufficient to protect this +shipping. These orders were about to be executed, when a Grecian +general, who was attached to one of the bodies of troops which were +furnished from the provinces of Asia Minor, asked leave to speak to +the king. The king granted him an audience, when he expressed his +opinion as follows: + +"It seems to me to be more prudent, sire, to leave the bridge as it +is, under the care of those who have constructed it, as it may be that +we shall have occasion to use it on our return. I do not recommend the +preservation of it as a means of securing a retreat, for, in case we +meet the Scythians at all, I am confident of victory; but our enemy +consists of wandering hordes who have no fixed habitation, and their +country is entirely without cities or posts of any kind which they +will feel any strong interest in defending, and thus it is possible +that we may not be able to find any enemy to combat. Besides, if we +succeed in our enterprise as completely as we can desire, it will be +important, on many accounts, to preserve an open and free +communication with the countries behind us." + +The king approved of this counsel, and countermanded his orders for +the destruction of the bridge. He directed that the Ionian forces that +had accompanied the fleet should remain at the river to guard the +bridge. They were to remain thus on guard for two months, and then, if +Darius did not return, and if they heard no tidings of him, they were +at liberty to leave their post, and to go back, with their galleys, to +their own land again. + +Two months would seem to be a very short time to await the return of +an army going on such an expedition into boundless and trackless +wilds. There can, however, scarcely be any accidental error in the +statement of the time, as the mode which Darius adopted to enable the +guard thus left at the bridge to keep their reckoning was a very +singular one, and it is very particularly described. He took a cord, +it is said, and tied sixty knots in it. This cord he delivered to the +Ionian chiefs who were to be left in charge of the bridge, directing +them to untie one of the knots every day. When the cord should +become, by this process, wholly free, the detachment were also at +liberty. They might thereafter, at any time, abandon the post +intrusted to them, and return to their homes. + +We can not suppose that military men, capable of organizing a force of +seventy thousand troops for so distant an expedition, and possessed of +sufficient science and skill to bridge the Bosporus and the Danube, +could have been under any necessity of adopting so childish a method +as this as a real reliance in regulating their operations. It must be +recollected, however, that, though the commanders in these ancient +days were intelligent and strong-minded men, the common soldiers were +but children both in intellect and in ideas; and it was the custom of +all great commanders to employ outward and visible symbols to +influence and govern them. The sense of loneliness and desertion which +such soldiers would naturally feel in being left in solitude on the +banks of the river, would be much diminished by seeing before them a +marked and definite termination to the period of their stay, and to +have, in the cord hanging up in their camp, a visible token that the +remnant of time that remained was steadily diminishing day by day; +while, in the mean time, Darius was fully determined that, long before +the knots should be all untied, he would return to the river. + + + + +CHAPTER IX. + +THE RETREAT FROM SCYTHIA. + +B.C. 513 + +Motive for Darius's invasion.--The foundation of government.--Darius +without justification in invading Scythia.--Alarm of the +Scythians.--Condition of the tribes.--Men metamorphosed into +wolves.--Story of the Amazons.--Adventures of the Amazons.--Two of +them captured.--The corps of cavaliers.--Their maneuvers.--Success +of the cavaliers.--Matrimonial alliances.--The Amazons rule their +husbands.--They establish a separate tribe.--The Scythians send an +embassy to the neighboring tribes.--Habits of the Scythians.--Their +mode of warfare.--Message to Indathyrsus.--His reply.--The Scythian +cavalry.--Their attacks on the Persians.--Braying of the Persian +asses.--Scythians sent to the bridge.--Agreement with the +Ionians.--The Scythians change their policy.--The Scythians' strange +presents.--Various interpretations.--Opinions of the Persian +officers.--The Scythians draw up their forces.--The armies prepare +for battle.--Hunting the hare.--The Persians resolve to +retreat.--Stratagem and secret flight.--Surrender of the +camp.--Difficulties of the retreat.--The bridge partially +destroyed.--Darius arrives at the Danube.--The bridge repaired.--The +army returns to Asia. + + +The motive which dictated Darius's invasion of Scythia seems to have +been purely a selfish and domineering love of power. The attempts of a +stronger and more highly civilized state to extend its dominion over a +weaker and more lawless one, are not, however, necessarily and always +of this character. Divine Providence, in making men gregarious in +nature, has given them an instinct of organization, which is as +intrinsic and as essential a characteristic of the human soul as +maternal love or the principle of self-preservation. The right, +therefore, of organizations of men to establish law and order among +themselves, and to extend these principles to other communities around +them, so far as such interpositions are really promotive of the +interests and welfare of those affected by them, rests on precisely +the same foundation as the right of the father to govern the child. +This foundation is the existence and universality of an instinctive +principle implanted by the Creator in the human heart; a principle +which we are bound to submit to, both because it is a fundamental and +constituent element in the very structure of man, and because its +recognition and the acknowledgment of its authority are absolutely +essential to his continued existence. Wherever law and order, +therefore, among men do not exist, it may be properly established and +enforced by any neighboring organization that has power to do it, just +as wherever there is a group of children they may be justly controlled +and governed by their father. It seems equally unnecessary to invent a +fictitious and wholly imaginary _compact_ to justify the jurisdiction +in the one case as in the other. + +If the Scythians, therefore, had been in a state of confusion and +anarchy, Darius might justly have extended his own well-regulated and +settled government over them, and, in so doing, would have promoted +the general good of mankind. But he had no such design. It was a +desire for personal aggrandizement, and a love of fame and power, +which prompted him. He offered it as a pretext to justify his +invasion, that the Scythians, in former years, had made incursions +into the Persian dominions; but this was only a pretext. The +expedition was a wanton attack upon neighbors whom he supposed unable +to resist him, simply for the purpose of adding to his own already +gigantic power. + +When Darius commenced his march from the river, the Scythians had +heard rumors of his approach. They sent, as soon as they were aware of +the impending danger, to all the nations and tribes around them, in +order to secure their alliance and aid. These people were all +wandering and half-savage tribes, like the Scythians themselves, +though each seems to have possessed its own special and distinctive +mark of barbarity. One tribe were accustomed to carry home the heads +of the enemies which they had slain in battle, and each one, impaling +his own dreadful trophy upon a stake, would set it up upon his +house-top, over the chimney, where they imagined that it would have +the effect of a charm, and serve as a protection for the family. +Another tribe lived in habits of promiscuous intercourse, like the +lower orders of animals; and so, as the historian absurdly states, +being, in consequence of this mode of life, all connected together by +the ties of consanguinity, they lived in perpetual peace and good +will, without any envy, or jealousy, or other evil passion. A third +occupied a region so infested with serpents that they were once driven +wholly out of the country by them. It was said of these people that, +once in every year, they were all metamorphosed into wolves, and, +after remaining for a few days in this form, they were transformed +again into men. A fourth tribe painted their bodies blue and red, and +a fifth were cannibals. + +The most remarkable, however, of all the tales related about these +northern savages was the story of the Sauromateans and their Amazonian +wives. The Amazons were a nation of masculine and ferocious women, who +often figure in ancient histories and legends. They rode on horseback +astride like men, and their courage and strength in battle were such +that scarcely any troops could subdue them. It happened, however, upon +one time, that some Greeks conquered a body of them somewhere upon the +shores of the Euxine Sea, and took a large number of them prisoners. +They placed these prisoners on board of three ships, and put to sea. +The Amazons rose upon their captors and threw them overboard, and thus +obtained possession of the ships. They immediately proceeded toward +the shore, and landed, not knowing where they were. It happened to be +on the northwestern coast of the sea that they landed. Here they +roamed up and down the country, until presently they fell in with a +troop of horses. These they seized and mounted, arming themselves, at +the same time, either with the weapons which they had procured on +board the ships, or fabricated, themselves, on the shore. Thus +organized and equipped, they began to make excursions for plunder, and +soon became a most formidable band of marauders. The Scythians of the +country supposed that they were men, but they could learn nothing +certain respecting them. Their language, their appearance, their +manners, and their dress were totally new, and the inhabitants were +utterly unable to conceive who they were, and from what place they +could so suddenly and mysteriously have come. + +At last, in one of the encounters which took place, the Scythians took +two of these strange invaders prisoners. To their utter amazement, +they found that they were women. On making this discovery, they +changed their mode of dealing with them, and resolved upon a plan +based on the supposed universality of the instincts of their sex. +They enlisted a corps of the most handsome and vigorous young men that +could be obtained, and after giving them instructions, the nature of +which will be learned by the result, they sent them forth to meet the +Amazons. + +The corps of Scythian cavaliers went out to seek their female +antagonists with designs any thing but belligerent. They advanced to +the encampment of the Amazons, and hovered about for some time in +their vicinity, without, however, making any warlike demonstrations. +They had been instructed to show themselves as much as possible to the +enemy, but by no means to fight them. They would, accordingly, draw as +near to the Amazons as was safe, and linger there, gazing upon them, +as if under the influence of some sort of fascination. If the Amazons +advanced toward them, they would fall back, and if the advance +continued, they would retreat fast enough to keep effectually out of +the way. Then, when the Amazons turned, they would turn too, follow +them back, and linger near them, around their encampment, as before. + +The Amazonians were for a time puzzled with this strange demeanor, and +they gradually learned to look upon the handsome horsemen at first +without fear, and finally even without hostility. At length, one day, +one of the young horsemen, observing an Amazon who had strayed away +from the rest, followed and joined her. She did not repel him. They +were not able to converse together, as neither knew the language of +the other. They established a friendly intercourse, however, by looks +and signs, and after a time they separated, each agreeing to bring one +of their companions to the place of rendezvous on the following day. + +A friendly intercommunication being thus commenced, the example spread +very rapidly; matrimonial alliances began to be formed, and, in a +word, a short time only elapsed before the two camps were united and +intermingled, the Scythians and the Amazons being all paired together +in the most intimate relations of domestic life. Thus, true to the +instincts of their sex, the rude and terrible maidens decided, when +the alternative was fairly presented to them, in favor of husbands and +homes, rather than continuing the life they had led, of independence, +conflict, and plunder. It is curious to observe that the means by +which they were won, namely, a persevering display of admiration and +attentions, steadily continued, but not too eagerly and impatiently +pressed, and varied with an adroit and artful alternation of advances +and retreats, were precisely the same as those by which, in every age, +the attempt is usually made to win the heart of woman from hatred and +hostility to love. + +We speak of the Amazonians as having been won; but they were, in fact, +themselves the conquerors of their captors, after all; for it +appeared, in the end, that in the future plans and arrangements of the +united body, they ruled their Scythian husbands, and not the Scythians +them. The husbands wished to return home with their wives, whom, they +said, they would protect and maintain in the midst of their countrymen +in honor and in peace. The Amazons, however, were in favor of another +plan. Their habits and manners were such, they said, that they should +not be respected and beloved among any other people. They wished that +their husbands, therefore, would go home and settle their affairs, and +afterward return and join their wives again, and then that all +together should move to the eastward, until they should find a +suitable place to settle in by themselves. This plan was acceded to by +the husbands, and was carried into execution; and the result was the +planting of a new nation, called the Sauromateans, who thenceforth +took their place among the other barbarous tribes that dwelt upon the +northern shores of the Euxine Sea. + +Such was the character of the tribes and nations that dwelt in the +neighborhood of the Scythian country. As soon as Darius had passed the +river, the Scythians sent embassadors to all their people, proposing +to them to form a general alliance against the invader. "We ought to +make common cause against him," said they; "for if he subdues one +nation, it will only open the way for an attack upon the rest. Some of +us are, it is true, more remote than others from the immediate danger, +but it threatens us all equally in the end." + +The embassadors delivered their message, and some of the tribes +acceded to the Scythian proposals. Others, however, refused. The +quarrel, they said, was a quarrel between Darius and the Scythians +alone, and they were not inclined to bring upon themselves the +hostility of so powerful a sovereign by interfering. The Scythians +were very indignant at this refusal; but there was no remedy, and they +accordingly began to prepare to defend themselves as well as they +could, with the help of those nations that had expressed a willingness +to join them. + +The habits of the Scythians were nomadic and wandering, and their +country was one vast region of verdant and beautiful, and yet, in a +great measure, of uncultivated and trackless wilds. They had few towns +and villages, and those few were of little value. They adopted, +therefore, the mode of warfare which, in such a country and for such a +people, is always the wisest to be pursued. They retreated slowly +before Darius's advancing army, carrying off or destroying all such +property as might aid the king in respect to his supplies. They +organized and equipped a body of swift horsemen, who were ordered to +hover around Darius's camp, and bring intelligence to the Scythian +generals of every movement. These horsemen, too, were to harass the +flanks and the rear of the army, and to capture or destroy every man +whom they should find straying away from the camp. By this means they +kept the invading army continually on the alert, allowing them no +peace and no repose, while yet they thwarted and counteracted all the +plans and efforts which the enemy made to bring on a general battle. + +As the Persians advanced in pursuit of the enemy, the Scythians +retreated, and in this retreat they directed their course toward the +countries occupied by those nations that had refused to join in the +alliance. By this artful management they transferred the calamity and +the burden of the war to the territories of their neighbors. Darius +soon found that he was making no progress toward gaining his end. At +length he concluded to try the effect of a direct and open challenge. + +He accordingly sent embassadors to the Scythian chief, whose name was +Indathyrsus, with a message somewhat as follows: + +"Foolish man! how long will you continue to act in this absurd and +preposterous manner? It is incumbent on you to make a decision in +favor of one thing or the other. If you think that you are able to +contend with me, stop, and let us engage. If not, then acknowledge me +as your superior, and submit to my authority." + +The Scythian chief sent back the following reply: + +"We have no inducement to contend with you in open battle on the +field, because you are not doing us any injury, nor is it at present +in your power to do us any. We have no cities and no cultivated fields +that you can seize or plunder. Your roaming about our country, +therefore, does us no harm, and you are at liberty to continue it as +long as it gives you any pleasure. There is nothing on our soil that +you can injure, except one spot, and that is the place where the +sepulchres of our fathers lie. If you were to attack that spot--which +you may perhaps do, if you can find it--you may rely upon a battle. In +the mean time, you may go elsewhere, wherever you please. As to +acknowledging your superiority, we shall do nothing of the kind. We +defy you." + +Notwithstanding the refusal of the Scythians to give the Persians +battle, they yet made, from time to time, partial and unexpected +onsets upon their camp, seizing occasions when they hoped to find +their enemies off their guard. The Scythians had troops of cavalry +which were very efficient and successful in these attacks. These +horsemen were, however, sometimes thrown into confusion and driven +back by a very singular means of defense. It seems that the Persians +had brought with them from Europe, in their train, a great number of +asses, as beasts of burden, to transport the tents and the baggage of +the army. These asses were accustomed, in times of excitement and +danger, to set up a very terrific braying. It was, in fact, all that +they could do. Braying at a danger seems to be a very ridiculous mode +of attempting to avert it, but it was a tolerably effectual mode, +nevertheless, in this case at least; for the Scythian horses, who +would have faced spears and javelins, and the loudest shouts and +vociferations of human adversaries without any fear, were appalled and +put to flight at hearing the unearthly noises which issued from the +Persian camp whenever they approached it. Thus the mighty monarch of +the whole Asiatic world seemed to depend for protection against the +onsets of these rude and savage troops on the braying of his asses! + + * * * * * + +While these things were going on in the interior of the country, the +Scythians sent down a detachment of their forces to the banks of the +Danube, to see if they could not, in some way or other, obtain +possession of the bridge. They learned here what the orders were which +Darius had given to the Ionians who had been left in charge, in +respect to the time of their remaining at their post. The Scythians +told them that if they would govern themselves strictly by those +orders, and so break up the bridge and go down the river with their +boats as soon as the two months should have expired, they should not +be molested in the mean time. The Ionians agreed to this. The time was +then already nearly gone, and they promised that, so soon as it should +be fully expired, they would withdraw. + +The Scythian detachment sent back word to the main army acquainting +them with these facts, and the army accordingly resolved on a change +in their policy. Instead of harassing and distressing the Persians as +they had done, to hasten their departure, they now determined to +improve the situation of their enemies, and encourage them in their +hopes, so as to protract their stay. They accordingly allowed the +Persians to gain the advantage over them in small skirmishes, and they +managed, also, to have droves of cattle fall into their hands, from +time to time, so as to supply them with food. The Persians were quite +elated with these indications that the tide of fortune was about to +turn in their favor. + +While things were in this state, there appeared one day at the Persian +camp a messenger from the Scythians, who said that he had some +presents from the Scythian chief for Darius. The messenger was +admitted, and allowed to deliver his gifts. The gifts proved to be a +bird, a mouse, a frog, and five arrows. The Persians asked the bearer +of these strange offerings what the Scythians meant by them. He +replied that he had no explanations to give. His orders were, he said, +to deliver the presents and then return; and that they must, +accordingly, find out the meaning intended by the exercise of their +own ingenuity. + +When the messenger had retired, Darius and the Persians consulted +together, to determine what so strange a communication could mean. +They could not, however, come to any satisfactory decision. Darius +said that he thought the three animals might probably be intended to +denote the three kingdoms of nature to which the said animals +respectively belonged, viz., the earth, the air, and the water; and as +the giving up of weapons was a token of submission, the whole might +mean that the Scythians were now ready to give up the contest, and +acknowledge the right of the Persians to supreme and universal +dominion. + +The officers, however, did not generally concur in this opinion. They +saw no indications, they said, of any disposition on the part of the +Scythians to surrender. They thought it quite as probable that the +communication was meant to announce to those who received it threats +and defiance, as to express conciliation and submission. "It may +mean," said one of them, "that, unless you can fly like a bird into +the air, or hide like a mouse in the ground, or bury yourselves, like +the frog, in morasses and fens, you can not escape our arrows." + +There was no means of deciding positively between these contradictory +interpretations, but it soon became evident that the former of the two +was very far from being correct; for, soon after the present was +received, the Scythians were seen to be drawing up their forces in +array, as if preparing for battle. The two months had expired, and +they had reason to suppose that the party at the bridge had withdrawn, +as they had promised to do. Darius had been so far weakened by his +harassing marches, and the manifold privations and sufferings of his +men, that he felt some solicitude in respect to the result of a +battle, now that it seemed to be drawing near, although such a trial +of strength had been the object which he had been, from the beginning, +most eager to secure. + +The two armies were encamped at a moderate distance from each other, +with a plain, partly wooded, between them. While in this position, and +before any hostile action was commenced by either party, it was +observed from the camp of Darius that suddenly a great tumult arose +from the Scythian lines. Men were seen rushing in dense crowds this +way and that over the plain, with shouts and outcries, which, however, +had in them no expression of anger or fear, but rather one of gayety +and pleasure. Darius demanded what the strange tumult meant. Some +messengers were sent out to ascertain the cause, and on their return +they reported that the Scythians were hunting a hare, which had +suddenly made its appearance. The hare had issued from a thicket, and +a considerable portion of the army, officers and soldiers, had +abandoned their ranks to enjoy the sport of pursuing it, and were +running impetuously, here and there, across the plain, filling the air +with shouts of hilarity. + +"They do indeed despise us," said Darius, "since, on the eve of a +battle, they can lose all thoughts of us and of their danger, and +abandon their posts to hunt a hare!" + +That evening a council of war was held. It was concluded that the +Scythians must be very confident and strong in their position, and +that, if a general battle were to be hazarded, it would be very +doubtful what would be the result. The Persians concluded unanimously, +therefore, that the wisest plan would be for them to give up the +intended conquest, and retire from the country. Darius accordingly +proceeded to make his preparations for a secret retreat. + +He separated all the infirm and feeble portion of the army from the +rest, and informed them that he was going that night on a short +expedition with the main body of the troops, and that, while he was +gone, they were to remain and defend the camp. He ordered the men to +build the camp fires, and to make them larger and more numerous than +common, and then had the asses tied together in an unusual situation, +so that they should keep up a continual braying. These sounds, heard +all the night, and the light of the camp fires, were to lead the +Scythians to believe that the whole body of the Persians remained, as +usual, at the encampment, and thus to prevent all suspicion of their +flight. + +Toward midnight, Darius marched forth in silence and secrecy, with all +the vigorous and able-bodied forces under his command, leaving the +weary, the sick, and the infirm to the mercy of their enemies. The +long column succeeded in making good their retreat, without exciting +the suspicions of the Scythians. They took the route which they +supposed would conduct them most directly to the river. + +When the troops which remained in the camp found, on the following +morning, that they had been deceived and abandoned, they made signals +to the Scythians to come to them, and, when they came, the invalids +surrendered themselves and the camp to their possession. The Scythians +then, immediately, leaving a proper guard to defend the camp, set out +to follow the Persian army. Instead, however, of keeping directly upon +their track, they took a shorter course, which would lead them more +speedily to the river. The Persians, being unacquainted with the +country, got involved in fens and morasses, and other difficulties of +the way, and their progress was thus so much impeded that the +Scythians reached the river before them. + +They found the Ionians still there, although the two months had fully +expired. It is possible that the chiefs had received secret orders +from Darius not to hasten their departure, even after the knots had +all been untied; or perhaps they chose, of their own accord, to await +their sovereign's return. The Scythians immediately urged them to be +gone. "The time has expired," they said, "and you are no longer under +any obligation to wait. Return to your own country, and assert your +own independence and freedom, which you can safely do if you leave +Darius and his armies here." + +The Ionians consulted together on the subject, doubtful, at first, +what to do. They concluded that they would not comply with the +Scythian proposals, while yet they determined to pretend to comply +with them, in order to avoid the danger of being attacked. They +accordingly began to take the bridge to pieces, commencing on the +Scythian side of the stream. The Scythians, seeing the work thus going +on, left the ground, and marched back to meet the Persians. The +armies, however, fortunately for Darius, missed each other, and the +Persians arrived safely at the river, after the Scythians had left it. +They arrived in the night, and the advanced guard, seeing no +appearance of the bridge on the Scythian side, supposed that the +Ionians had gone. They shouted long and loud on the shore, and at +length an Egyptian, who was celebrated for the power of his voice, +succeeded in making the Ionians hear. The boats were immediately +brought back to their positions, the bridge was reconstructed, and +Darius's army recrossed the stream. + +The Danube being thus safely crossed, the army made the best of its +way back through Thrace, and across the Bosporus into Asia, and thus +ended Darius's great expedition against the Scythians. + + + + +CHAPTER X. + +THE STORY OF HISTIAEUS. + +B.C. 504 + +Histiaeus at the bridge on the Danube.--Darius's anxiety.--Darius's +gratitude.--Scythia abandoned.--Darius sends for Histiaeus.--Petition +of Histiaeus.--Histiaeus organizes a colony.--The Paeonians.--Baseness +of the Paeonian chiefs.--Their stratagem.--The Paeonian +maiden.--Multiplicity of her avocations.--Darius and the maiden.--He +determines to make the Paeonians slaves.--Capture of the +Paeonians.--Megabyzus discovers Histiaeus's city.--Histiaeus +sent for.--Darius revokes his gift.--Histiaeus goes to +Susa.--Artaphernes.--Island of Naxos.--Civil war there.--Action of +Aristagoras.--Co-operation of Artaphernes.--Darius consulted.--His +approval.--Preparations.--Sailing of the expedition.--Plan of the +commander.--Difficulty in the fleet.--Cruel discipline.--Dissension +between the commanders.--The expedition fails.--Chagrin of +Aristagoras.--He resolves to revolt.--Position of Histiaeus.--His +uneasiness.--Singular mode of communication.--Its success.--Revolt +of Aristagoras.--Feigned indignation of Histiaeus.--The Ionian +rebellion.--Its failure.--Death of Histiaeus. + + +The nature of the government which was exercised in ancient times by a +royal despot like Darius, and the character of the measures and +management to which he was accustomed to resort to gain his political +ends, are, in many points, very strikingly illustrated by the story of +Histiaeus. + +Histiaeus was the Ionian chieftain who had been left in charge of the +bridge of boats across the Danube when Darius made his incursion into +Scythia. When, on the failure of the expedition, Darius returned to +the river, knowing, as he did, that the two months had expired, he +naturally felt a considerable degree of solicitude lest he should find +the bridge broken up and the vessels gone, in which case his situation +would be very desperate, hemmed in, as he would have been, between the +Scythians and the river. His anxiety was changed into terror when his +advanced guard arrived at the bank and found that no signs of the +bridge were to be seen. It is easy to imagine what, under these +circumstances, must have been the relief and joy of all the army, when +they heard friendly answers to their shouts, coming, through the +darkness of the night, over the waters of the river, assuring them +that their faithful allies were still at their posts, and that they +themselves would soon be in safety. + +Darius, though he was governed by no firm and steady principles of +justice, was still a man of many generous impulses. He was grateful +for favors, though somewhat capricious in his modes of requiting them. +He declared to Histiaeus that he felt under infinite obligations to him +for his persevering fidelity, and that, as soon as the army should +have safely arrived in Asia, he would confer upon him such rewards as +would evince the reality of his gratitude. + +On his return from Scythia, Darius brought back the whole of his army +over the Danube, thus abandoning entirely the country of the +Scythians; but he did not transport the whole body across the +Bosporus. He left a considerable detachment of troops, under the +command of one of his generals, named Megabyzus, in Thrace, on the +European side, ordering Megabyzus to establish himself there, and to +reduce all the countries in that neighborhood to his sway. Darius +then proceeded to Sardis, which was the most powerful and wealthy of +his capitals in that quarter of the world. At Sardis, he was, as it +were, at home again, and he accordingly took an early opportunity to +send for Histiaeus, as well as some others who had rendered him special +services in his late campaign, in order that he might agree with them +in respect to their reward. He asked Histiaeus what favor he wished to +receive. + +Histiaeus replied that he was satisfied, on the whole, with the +position which he already enjoyed, which was that of king or governor +of Miletus, an Ionian city, south of Sardis, and on the shores of the +AEgean Sea.[I] He should be pleased, however, he said, if the king +would assign him a certain small territory in Thrace, or, rather, on +the borders between Thrace and Macedonia, near the mouth of the River +Strymon. He wished to build a city there. The king immediately granted +this request, which was obviously very moderate and reasonable. He did +not, perhaps, consider that this territory, being in Thrace, or in its +immediate vicinity, came within the jurisdiction of Megabyzus, whom +he had left in command there, and that the grant might lead to some +conflict between the two generals. There was special danger of +jealousy and disagreement between them, for Megabyzus was a Persian, +and Histiaeus was a Greek. + +[Footnote I: For these places, see the map at the commencement of the +next chapter.] + +Histiaeus organized a colony, and, leaving a temporary and provisional +government at Miletus, he proceeded along the shores of the AEgean Sea +to the spot assigned him, and began to build his city. As the locality +was beyond the Thracian frontier, and at a considerable distance from +the head-quarters of Megabyzus, it is very probable that the +operations of Histiaeus would not have attracted the Persian general's +attention for a considerable time, had it not been for a very +extraordinary and peculiar train of circumstances, which led him to +discover them. The circumstances were these: + +There was a nation or tribe called the Paeonians, who inhabited the +valley of the Strymon, which river came down from the interior of the +country, and fell into the sea near the place where Histiaeus was +building his city. Among the Paeonian chieftains there were two who +wished to obtain the government of the country, but they were not +quite strong enough to effect their object. In order to weaken the +force which was opposed to them, they conceived the base design of +betraying their tribe to Darius, and inducing him to make them +captives. If their plan should succeed, a considerable portion of the +population would be taken away, and they could easily, they supposed, +obtain ascendency over the rest. In order to call the attention of +Darius to the subject, and induce him to act as they desired, they +resorted to the following stratagem. Their object seems to have been +to lead Darius to undertake a campaign against their countrymen, by +showing him what excellent and valuable slaves they would make. + +These two chieftains were brothers, and they had a very beautiful +sister; her form was graceful and elegant, and her countenance lovely. +They brought this sister with them to Sardis when Darius was there. +They dressed and decorated her in a very careful manner, but yet in a +style appropriate to the condition of a servant; and then, one day, +when the king was sitting in some public place in the city, as was +customary with Oriental sovereigns, they sent her to pass along the +street before him, equipped in such a manner as to show that she was +engaged in servile occupations. She had a jar, such as was then used +for carrying water, poised upon her head, and she was leading a horse +by means of a bridle hung over her arm. Her hands, being thus not +required either for the horse or for the vessel, were employed in +spinning, as she walked along, by means of a distaff and spindle. + +The attention of Darius was strongly attracted to the spectacle. The +beauty of the maiden, the novelty and strangeness of her costume, the +multiplicity of her avocations, and the ease and grace with which she +performed them, all conspired to awaken the monarch's curiosity. He +directed one of his attendants to follow her and see where she should +go. The attendant did so. The girl went to the river. She watered her +horse, filled her jar and placed it on her head, and then, hanging the +bridle on her arm again, she returned through the same streets, and +passed the king's palace as before, spinning as she walked along. + +The interest and curiosity of the king was excited more than ever by +the reappearance of the girl and by the report of his messenger. He +directed that she should be stopped and brought into his presence. She +came; and her brothers, who had been watching the whole scene from a +convenient spot near at hand, joined her and came too. The king asked +them who they were. They replied that they were Paeonians. He wished to +know where they lived. "On the banks of the River Strymon," they +replied, "near the confines of Thrace." He next asked whether all the +women of their country were accustomed to labor, and were as +ingenious, and dexterous, and beautiful as their sister. The brothers +replied that they were. + +Darius immediately determined to make the whole people slaves. He +accordingly dispatched a courier with the orders. The courier crossed +the Hellespont, and proceeded to the encampment of Megabyzus in +Thrace. He delivered his dispatches to the Persian general, commanding +him to proceed immediately to Paeonia, and there to take the whole +community prisoners, and bring them to Darius in Sardis. Megabyzus, +until this time, had known nothing of the people whom he was thus +commanded to seize. He, however, found some Thracian guides who +undertook to conduct him to their territory; and then, taking with him +a sufficient force, he set out on the expedition. The Paeonians heard +of his approach. Some prepared to defend themselves; others fled to +the mountains. The fugitives escaped, but those who attempted to +resist were taken. Megabyzus collected the unfortunate captives, +together with their wives and children, and brought them down to the +coast to embark them for Sardis. In doing this, he had occasion to +pass by the spot where Histiaeus was building his city, and it was +then, for the first time, that Megabyzus became acquainted with the +plan. Histiaeus was building a wall to defend his little territory on +the side of the land. Ships and galleys were going and coming on the +side of the sea. Every thing indicated that the work was rapidly and +prosperously advancing. + +Megabyzus did not interfere with the work; but, as soon as he arrived +at Sardis with his captives, and had delivered them to the king, he +introduced the subject of Histiaeus's city, and represented to Darius +that it would be dangerous to the Persian interests to allow such an +enterprise to go on. "He will establish a strong post there," said +Megabyzus, "by means of which he will exercise a great ascendency over +all the neighboring seas. The place is admirably situated for a naval +station, as the country in the vicinity abounds with all the materials +for building and equipping ships. There are also mines of silver in +the mountains near, from which he will obtain a great supply of +treasure. By these means he will become so strong in a short period of +time, that, after you have returned to Asia, he will revolt from your +authority, carrying with him, perhaps, in his rebellion, all the +Greeks of Asia Minor." + +The king said that he was sorry that he had made the grant, and that +he would revoke it without delay. + +Megabyzus recommended that the king should not do this in an open or +violent manner, but that he should contrive some way to arrest the +progress of the undertaking without any appearance of suspicion or +displeasure. + +Darius accordingly sent for Histiaeus to come to him at Sardis, saying +that there was a service of great importance on which he wished to +employ him. Histiaeus, of course, obeyed such a summons with eager +alacrity. When he arrived, Darius expressed great pleasure at seeing +him once more, and said that he had constant need of his presence and +his counsels. He valued, above all price, the services of so faithful +a friend, and so sagacious and trusty an adviser. He was now, he said, +going to Susa, and he wished Histiaeus to accompany him as his privy +counselor and confidential friend. It would be necessary, Darius +added, that he should give up his government of Miletus, and also the +city in Thrace which he had begun to build; but he should be exalted +to higher honors and dignities at Susa in their stead. He should have +apartments in the king's palace, and live in great luxury and +splendor. + +Histiaeus was extremely disappointed and chagrined at this +announcement. He was obliged, however, to conceal his vexation and +submit to his fate. In a few days after this, he set out, with the +rest of Darius's court, for the Persian capital, leaving a nephew, +whose name was Aristagoras, as governor of Miletus in his stead. +Darius, on the other hand, committed the general charge of the whole +coast of Asia Minor to Artaphernes, one of his generals. Artaphernes +was to make Sardis his capital. He had not only the general command of +all the provinces extending along the shore, but also of all the +ships, and galleys, and other naval armaments which belonged to Darius +on the neighboring seas. Aristagoras, as governor of Miletus, was +under his general jurisdiction. The two officers were, moreover, +excellent friends. Aristagoras was, of course, a Greek, and +Artaphernes a Persian. + +Among the Greek islands situated in the AEgean Sea, one of the most +wealthy, important, and powerful at that time, was Naxos. It was +situated in the southern part of the sea, and about midway between the +shores of Asia Minor and Greece. It happened that, soon after Darius +had returned from Asia Minor to Persia, a civil war broke out in that +island, in which the common people were on one side and the nobles on +the other. The nobles were overcome in the contest, and fled from the +island. A party of them landed at Miletus, and called upon Aristagoras +to aid them in regaining possession of the island. + +Aristagoras replied that he would very gladly do it if he had the +power, but that the Persian forces on the whole coast, both naval and +military, were under the command of Artaphernes at Sardis. He said, +however, that he was on very friendly terms with Artaphernes, and that +he would, if the Naxians desired it, apply to him for his aid. The +Naxians seemed very grateful for the interest which Aristagoras took +in their cause, and said that they would commit the whole affair to +his charge. + +There was, however, much less occasion for gratitude than there +seemed, for Aristagoras was very far from being honest and sincere in +his offers of aid. He perceived, immediately on hearing the fugitives' +story, that a very favorable opportunity was opening for him to add +Naxos, and perhaps even the neighboring islands, to his own +government. It is always a favorable opportunity to subjugate a people +when their power of defense and of resistance is neutralized by +dissensions with one another. It is a device as old as the history of +mankind, and one resorted to now as often as ever, for ambitious +neighbors to interpose in behalf of the weaker party, in a civil war +waged in a country which they wish to make their own, and, beginning +with a war against a part, to end by subjugating the whole. This was +Aristagoras's plan. He proposed it to Artaphernes, representing to him +that a very favorable occasion had occurred for bringing the Greek +islands of the AEgean Sea under the Persian dominion. Naxos once +possessed, all the other islands around it would follow, he said, and +a hundred ships would make the conquest sure. + +Artaphernes entered very readily and very warmly into the plan. He +said that he would furnish two hundred instead of one hundred +galleys. He thought it was necessary, however, first to consult +Darius, since the affair was one of such importance; and besides, it +was not best to commence the undertaking until the spring. He would +immediately send a messenger to Darius to ascertain his pleasure, and, +in the mean time, as he did not doubt that Darius would fully approve +of the plan, he would have all necessary preparations made, so that +every thing should be in readiness as soon as the proper season for +active operations should arrive. + +Artaphernes was right in anticipating his brother's approval of the +design. The messenger returned from Susa with full authority from the +king for the execution of the project. The ships were built and +equipped, and every thing was made ready for the expedition. The +intended destination of the armament was, however, kept a profound +secret, as the invaders wished to surprise the people of Naxos when +off their guard. Aristagoras was to accompany the expedition as its +general leader, while an officer named Megabates, appointed by +Artaphernes for this purpose, was to take command of the fleet as a +sort of admiral. Thus there were two commanders--an arrangement which +almost always, in such cases, leads to a quarrel. It is a maxim in war +that _one_ bad general is better than two good ones. + +The expedition sailed from Miletus; and, in order to prevent the +people of Naxos from being apprised of their danger, the report had +been circulated that its destination was to be the Hellespont. +Accordingly, when the fleet sailed, it turned its course to the +northward, as if it were really going to the Hellespont. The plan of +the commander was to stop after proceeding a short distance, and then +to seize the first opportunity afforded by a wind from the north to +come down suddenly upon Naxos, before the population should have time +to prepare for defense. Accordingly, when they arrived opposite the +island of Chios, the whole fleet came to anchor near the land. The +ships were all ordered to be ready, at a moment's warning, for setting +sail; and, thus situated, the commanders were waiting for the wind to +change. + +Megabates, in going his rounds among the fleet while things were in +this condition, found one vessel entirely abandoned. The captain and +crew had all left it, and had gone ashore. They were not aware, +probably, how urgent was the necessity that they should be every +moment at their posts. The captain of this galley was a native of a +small town called Cnydus, and, as it happened, was a particular friend +of Aristagoras. His name was Syclax. Megabates, as the commander of +the fleet, was very much incensed at finding one of his subordinate +officers so derelict in duty. He sent his guards in pursuit of him; +and when Syclax was brought to his ship, Megabates ordered his head to +be thrust out through one of the small port-holes intended for the +oars, in the side of the ship, and then bound him in that +position--his head appearing thus to view, in the sight of all the +fleet, while his body remained within the vessel. "I am going to keep +him at his post," said Megabates, "and in such a way that every one +can _see_ that he is there." + +Aristagoras was much distressed at seeing his friend suffering so +severe and disgraceful a punishment. He went to Megabates and +requested the release of the prisoner, giving, at the same time, what +he considered satisfactory reasons for his having been absent from his +vessel. Megabates, however, was not satisfied, and refused to set +Syclax at liberty. Aristagoras then told Megabates that he mistook his +position in supposing that he was master of the expedition, and could +tyrannize over the men in that manner, as he pleased. "I will have you +understand," said he, "that I am the commander in this campaign, and +that Artaphernes, in making you the sailing-master of the fleet, had +no intention that you should set up your authority over mine." So +saying, he went away in a rage, and released Syclax from his durance +with his own hands. + +It was now the turn of Megabates to be enraged. He determined to +defeat the expedition. He sent immediately a secret messenger to warn +the Naxians of their enemies' approach. The Naxians immediately made +effectual preparations to defend themselves. The end of it was, that +when the fleet arrived, the island was prepared to receive it, and +nothing could be done. Aristagoras continued the siege four months; +but inasmuch as, during all this time, Megabates did every thing in +his power to circumvent and thwart every plan that Aristagoras formed, +nothing was accomplished. Finally, the expedition was broken up, and +Aristagoras returned home, disappointed and chagrined, all his hopes +blasted, and his own private finances thrown into confusion by the +great pecuniary losses which he himself had sustained. He had +contributed very largely, from his own private funds, in fitting out +the expedition, fully confident of success, and of ample reimbursement +for his expenses as the consequence of it. + +He was angry with himself, and angry with Megabates, and angry with +Artaphernes. He presumed, too, that Megabates would denounce him to +Artaphernes, and, through him, to Darius, as the cause of the failure +of the expedition. A sudden order might come at any moment, directing +that he should be beheaded. He began to consider the expediency of +revolting from the Persian power, and making common cause with the +Greeks against Darius. The danger of such a step was scarcely less +than that of remaining as he was. While he was pondering these +momentous questions in his mind, he was led suddenly to a decision by +a very singular circumstance, the proper explaining of which requires +the story to return, for a time, to Histiaeus at Susa. + +Histiaeus was very ill at ease in the possession of his forced +elevation and grandeur at Susa. He enjoyed great distinction there, it +is true, and a life of ease and luxury, but he wished for independence +and authority. He was, accordingly, very desirous to get back to his +former sphere of activity and power in Asia Minor. After revolving in +his mind the various plans which occurred to him for accomplishing +this purpose, he at last decided on inducing Aristagoras to revolt in +Ionia, and then attempting to persuade Darius to send him on to quell +the revolt. When once in Asia Minor, he would join the rebellion, and +bid Darius defiance. + +The first thing to be done was to contrive some safe and secret way to +communicate with Aristagoras. This he effected in the following +manner: There was a man in his court who was afflicted with some +malady of the eyes. Histiaeus told him that if he would put himself +under _his_ charge he could effect a cure. It would be necessary, he +said, that the man should have his head shaved and scarified; that is, +punctured with a sharp instrument, previously dipped in some medicinal +compound. Then, after some further applications should have been made, +it would be necessary for the patient to go to Ionia, in Asia Minor, +where there was a physician who would complete the cure. + +The patient consented to this proposal. The head was shaved, and +Histiaeus, while pretending to scarify it, pricked into the skin--as +sailors tattoo anchors on their arms--by means of a needle and a +species of ink which had probably no great medicinal virtue, the words +of a letter to Aristagoras, in which he communicated to him fully, +though very concisely, the particulars of his plan. He urged +Aristagoras to revolt, and promised that, if he would do so, he would +come on, himself, as soon as possible, and, under pretense of marching +to suppress the rebellion, he would really join and aid it. + +As soon as he had finished pricking this treasonable communication +into the patient's skin, he carefully enveloped the head in bandages, +which, he said, must on no account be disturbed. He kept the man shut +up, besides, in the palace, until the hair had grown, so as +effectually to conceal the writing, and then sent him to Ionia to have +the cure perfected. On his arrival at Ionia he was to find +Aristagoras, who would do what further was necessary. Histiaeus +contrived, in the mean time, to send word to Aristagoras by another +messenger, that, as soon as such a patient should present himself, +Aristagoras was to shave his head. He did so, and the communication +appeared. We must suppose that the operations on the part of +Aristagoras for the purpose of completing the cure consisted, +probably, in pricking in more ink, so as to confuse and obliterate the +writing. + +Aristagoras was on the eve of throwing off the Persian authority when +he received this communication. It at once decided him to proceed. He +organized his forces and commenced his revolt. As soon as the news of +this rebellion reached Susa, Histiaeus feigned great indignation, and +earnestly entreated Darius to commission him to go and suppress it. He +was confident, he said, that he could do it in a very prompt and +effectual manner. Darius was at first inclined to suspect that +Histiaeus was in some way or other implicated in the movement; but +these suspicions were removed by the protestations which Histiaeus +made, and at length he gave him leave to proceed to Miletus, +commanding him, however, to return to Susa again as soon as he should +have suppressed the revolt. + +When Histiaeus arrived in Ionia he joined Aristagoras, and the two +generals, leaguing with them various princes and states of Greece, +organized a very extended and dangerous rebellion, which it gave the +troops of Darius infinite trouble to subdue. We can not here give an +account of the incidents and particulars of this war. For a time the +rebels prospered, and their cause seemed likely to succeed; but at +length the tide turned against them. Their towns were captured, their +ships were taken and destroyed, their armies cut to pieces. Histiaeus +retreated from place to place, a wretched fugitive, growing more and +more distressed and destitute every day. At length, as he was flying +from a battle field, he arrested the arm of a Persian, who was +pursuing him with his weapon upraised, by crying out that he was +Histiaeus the Milesian. The Persian, hearing this, spared his life, but +took him prisoner, and delivered him to Artaphernes. Histiaeus begged +very earnestly that Artaphernes would send him to Darius alive, in +hopes that Darius would pardon him in consideration of his former +services at the bridge of the Danube. This was, however, exactly what +Artaphernes wished to prevent; so he crucified the wretched Histiaeus +at Sardis, and then packed his head in salt and sent it to Darius. + +[Illustration: GRECIAN EMPIRE.] + + + + +CHAPTER XI. + +THE INVASION OF GREECE AND THE BATTLE OF MARATHON. + +B.C. 512-490 + +Great battles.--Progress of the Persian empire.--Condition of +the Persian empire.--Plans of Darius.--Persian power in +Thrace.--Attempted negotiation with Macedon.--The seven +commissioners.--Their rudeness at the feast.--Stratagem of +Amyntas's son.--The commissioners killed.--Artifice of the +prince.--Darius's anger against the Athenians.--Civil dissensions +in Greece.--The tyrants.--Periander.--His message to a neighboring +potentate.--Periander's intolerable tyranny.--His wife +Melissa.--The ghost of Melissa.--A great sacrifice.--The reason +of Periander's rudeness to the assembly of females.--Labda the +cripple.--Prediction in respect to her progeny.--Conspiracy +to destroy Labda's child.--Its failure.--The child +secreted.--Fulfillment of the oracle.--Hippias of Athens.--His +barbarous cruelty.--Hippias among the Persians.--Wars between the +Grecian states.--Quarrel between Athens and AEgina.--The two wooden +statues.--Incursion of the AEginetans.--They carry off the +statues.--Attempt to recover the statues.--They fall upon their +knees.--The Athenian fugitive.--He is murdered by the women.--The +Persian army.--Its commander, Datis.--Sailing of the +fleet.--Various conquests.--Landing of the Persians.--State of +Athens.--The Greek army.--Miltiades and his colleagues.--Position +of the armies.--Miltiades's plan of attack.--Onset of the +Greeks.--Rout of the Persians.--Results of the battle.--Numbers +slain.--The field of Marathon.--The mound.--Song of the Greek. + + +In the history of a great military conqueror, there seems to be often +some one great battle which in importance and renown eclipses all the +rest. In the case of Hannibal it was the battle of Cannae, in that of +Alexander the battle of Arbela. Caesar's great conflict was at +Pharsalia, Napoleon's at Waterloo. Marathon was, in some respects, +Darius's Waterloo. The place is a beautiful plain, about twelve miles +north of the great city of Athens. The battle was the great final +contest between Darius and the Greeks, which, both on account of the +awful magnitude of the conflict, and the very extraordinary +circumstances which attended it, has always been greatly celebrated +among mankind. + +The whole progress of the Persian empire, from the time of the first +accession of Cyrus to the throne, was toward the westward, till it +reached the confines of Asia on the shores of the AEgean Sea. All the +shores and islands of this sea were occupied by the states and the +cities of Greece. The population of the whole region, both on the +European and Asiatic shores, spoke the same language, and possessed +the same vigorous, intellectual, and elevated character. Those on the +Asiatic side had been conquered by Cyrus, and their countries had been +annexed to the Persian empire. Darius had wished very strongly, at the +commencement of his reign, to go on in this work of annexation, and +had sent his party of commissioners to explore the ground, as is +related in a preceding chapter. He had, however, postponed the +execution of his plans, in order first to conquer the Scythian +countries north of Greece, thinking, probably, that this would make +the subsequent conquest of Greece itself more easy. By getting a firm +foothold in Scythia, he would, as it were, turn the flank of the +Grecian territories, which would tend to make his final descent upon +them more effectual and sure. + +This plan, however, failed; and yet, on his retreat from Scythia, +Darius did not withdraw his armies wholly from the European side of +the water. He kept a large force in Thrace, and his generals there +were gradually extending and strengthening their power, and preparing +for still greater conquests. They attempted to extend their dominion, +sometimes by negotiations, and sometimes by force, and they were +successful and unsuccessful by turns, whichever mode they employed. + +One very extraordinary story is told of an attempted negotiation with +Macedon, made with a view of bringing that kingdom, if possible, under +the Persian dominion, without the necessity of a resort to force. The +commanding general of Darius's armies in Thrace, whose name, as was +stated in the last chapter, was Megabyzus, sent seven Persian officers +into Macedon, not exactly to summon the Macedonians, in a peremptory +manner, to surrender to the Persians, nor, on the other hand, to +propose a voluntary alliance, but for something between the two. The +communication was to be in the form of a proposal, and yet it was to +be made in the domineering and overbearing manner with which the +tyrannical and the strong often make proposals to the weak and +defenseless. + +The seven Persians went to Macedon, which, as will be seen from the +map, was west of Thrace, and to the northward of the other Grecian +countries. Amyntas, the king of Macedon, gave them a very honorable +reception. At length, one day, at a feast to which they were invited +in the palace of Amyntas, they became somewhat excited with wine, and +asked to have the ladies of the court brought into the apartment. They +wished "to see them," they said. Amyntas replied that such a procedure +was entirely contrary to the usages and customs of their court; but +still, as he stood somewhat in awe of his visitors, or, rather, of the +terrible power which the delegation represented, and wished by every +possible means to avoid provoking a quarrel with them, he consented to +comply with their request. The ladies were sent for. They came in, +reluctant and blushing, their minds excited by mingled feelings of +indignation and shame. + +The Persians, becoming more and more excited and imperious under the +increasing influence of the wine, soon began to praise the beauty of +these new guests in a coarse and free manner, which overwhelmed the +ladies with confusion, and then to accost them familiarly and rudely, +and to behave toward them, in other respects, with so much impropriety +as to produce great alarm and indignation among all the king's +household. The king himself was much distressed, but he was afraid to +act decidedly. His son, a young man of great energy and spirit, +approached his father with a countenance and manner expressive of high +excitement, and begged him to retire from the feast, and leave him, +the son, to manage the affair. Amyntas reluctantly allowed himself to +be persuaded to go, giving his son many charges, as he went away, to +do nothing rashly or violently. As soon as the king was gone, the +prince made an excuse for having the ladies retire for a short time, +saying that they should soon return. The prince conducted them to +their apartment, and then selecting an equal number of tall and +smooth-faced boys, he disguised them to represent the ladies, and gave +each one a dagger, directing him to conceal it beneath his robe. These +counterfeit females were then introduced to the assembly in the place +of those who had retired. The Persians did not detect the deception. +It was evening, and, besides, their faculties were confused with the +effects of the wine. They approached the supposed ladies as they had +done before, with rude familiarity; and the boys, at a signal made by +the prince when the Persians were wholly off their guard, stabbed and +killed every one of them on the spot. + +Megabyzus sent an embassador to inquire what became of his seven +messengers; but the Macedonian prince contrived to buy this messenger +off by large rewards, and to induce him to send back some false but +plausible story to satisfy Megabyzus. Perhaps Megabyzus would not have +been so easily satisfied had it not been that the great Ionian +rebellion, under Aristagoras and Histiaeus, as described in the last +chapter, broke out soon after, and demanded his attention in another +quarter of the realm. + +The Ionian rebellion postponed, for a time, Darius's designs on +Greece, but the effect of it was to make the invasion more certain and +more terrible in the end; for Athens, which was at that time one of +the most important and powerful of the Grecian cities, took a part in +that rebellion against the Persians. The Athenians sent forces to aid +those of Aristagoras and Histiaeus, and, in the course of the war, the +combined army took and burned the city of Sardis. When this news +reached Darius, he was excited to a perfect phrensy of resentment and +indignation against the Athenians for coming thus into his own +dominions to assist rebels, and there destroying one of his most +important capitals. He uttered the most violent and terrible threats +against them, and, to prevent his anger from getting cool before the +preparations should be completed for vindicating it, he made an +arrangement, it was said, for having a slave call out to him every day +at table, "Remember the Athenians!" + +It was a circumstance favorable to Darius's designs against the states +of Greece that they were not united among themselves. There was no +general government under which the whole naval and military force of +that country could be efficiently combined, so as to be directed, in a +concentrated and energetic form, against a common enemy. On the other +hand, the several cities formed, with the territories adjoining them, +so many separate states, more or less connected, it is true, by +confederations and alliances, but still virtually independent, and +often hostile to each other. Then, besides these external and +international quarrels, there was a great deal of internal dissension. +The monarchical and the democratic principle were all the time +struggling for the mastery. Military despots were continually rising +to power in the various cities, and after they had ruled, for a time, +over their subjects with a rod of iron, the people would rise in +rebellion and expel them from their thrones. These revolutions were +continually taking place, attended, often, by the strangest and most +romantic incidents, which evinced, on the part of the actors in them, +that extraordinary combination of mental sagacity and acumen with +childish and senseless superstition so characteristic of the times. + +It is not surprising that the populace often rebelled against the +power of these royal despots, for they seem to have exercised their +power, when their interests or their passions excited them to do it, +in the most tyrannical and cruel manner. One of them, it was said, a +king of Corinth, whose name was Periander, sent a messenger, on one +occasion, to a neighboring potentate--with whom he had gradually come +to entertain very friendly relations--to inquire by what means he +could most certainly and permanently secure the continuance of his +power. The king thus applied to gave no direct reply, but took the +messenger out into his garden, talking with him by the way about the +incidents of his journey, and other indifferent topics. He came, at +length, to a field where grain was growing, and as he walked along, he +occupied himself in cutting off, with his sword, every head of the +grain which raised itself above the level of the rest. After a short +time he returned to the house, and finally dismissed the messenger +without giving him any answer whatever to the application that he had +made. The messenger returned to Periander, and related what had +occurred. "I understand his meaning," said Periander. "I must contrive +some way to remove all those who, by their talents, their influence, +or their power, rise above the general level of the citizens." +Periander began immediately to act on this recommendation. Whoever, +among the people of Corinth, distinguished himself above the rest, was +marked for destruction. Some were banished, some were slain, and some +were deprived of their influence, and so reduced to the ordinary +level, by the confiscation of their property, the lives and fortunes +of all the citizens of the state being wholly in the despot's hands. + +This same Periander had a wife whose name was Melissa. A very +extraordinary tale is related respecting her, which, though mainly +fictitious, had a foundation, doubtless, in fact, and illustrates very +remarkably the despotic tyranny and the dark superstition of the +times. Melissa died and was buried; but her garments, for some reason +or other, were not burned, as was usual in such cases. Now, among the +other oracles of Greece, there was one where departed spirits could be +consulted. It was called the oracle of the dead. Periander, having +occasion to consult an oracle in order to find the means of recovering +a certain article of value which was lost, sent to this place to call +up and consult the ghost of Melissa. The ghost appeared, but refused +to answer the question put to her, saying, with frightful solemnity, + +"I am cold; I am cold; I am naked and cold. My clothes were not +burned; I am naked and cold." + +When this answer was reported to Periander, he determined to make a +great sacrifice and offering, such as should at once appease the +restless spirit. He invited, therefore, a general assembly of the +women of Corinth to witness some spectacle in a temple, and when they +were convened, he surrounded them with his guards, seized them, +stripped them of most of their clothing, and then let them go free. +The clothes thus taken were then all solemnly burned, as an expiatory +offering, with invocations to the shade of Melissa. + +The account adds, that when this was done, a second messenger was +dispatched to the oracle of the dead, and the spirit, now clothed and +comfortable in its grave, answered the inquiry, informing Periander +where the lost article might be found. + +The rude violence which Periander resorted to in this case seems not +to have been dictated by any particular desire to insult or injure the +women of Corinth, but was resorted to simply as the easiest and most +convenient way of obtaining what he needed. He wanted a supply of +valuable and costly female apparel, and the readiest mode of obtaining +it was to bring together an assembly of females dressed for a public +occasion, and then disrobe them. The case only shows to what an +extreme and absolute supremacy the lofty and domineering spirit of +ancient despotism attained. + +It ought, however, to be related, in justice to these abominable +tyrants, that they often evinced feelings of commiseration and +kindness; sometimes, in fact, in very singular ways. There was, for +example, in one of the cities, a certain family that had obtained the +ascendency over the rest of the people, and had held it for some time +as an established aristocracy, taking care to preserve their rank and +power from generation to generation, by intermarrying only with one +another. At length, in one branch of the family, there grew up a young +girl named Labda, who had been a cripple from her birth, and, on +account of her deformity, none of the nobles would marry her. A man of +obscure birth, however, one of the common people, at length took her +for his wife. His name was Eetion. One day, Eetion went to Delphi to +consult an oracle, and as he was entering the temple, the Pythian[J] +called out to him, saying that a stone should proceed from Labda which +should overwhelm tyrants and usurpers, and free the state. The nobles, +when they heard of this, understood the prediction to mean that the +destruction of their power was, in some way or other, to be effected +by means of Labda's child, and they determined to prevent the +fulfillment of the prophecy by destroying the babe itself so soon as +it should be born. + +[Footnote J: For a full account of these oracles, see the history of +Cyrus the Great.] + +They accordingly appointed ten of their number to go to the place +where Eetion lived and kill the child. The method which they were to +adopt was this: They were to ask to see the infant on their arrival at +the house, and then it was agreed that whichever of the ten it was to +whom the babe was handed, he should dash it down upon the stone floor +with all his force, by which means it would, as they supposed, +certainly be killed. + +This plan being arranged, the men went to the house, inquired, with +hypocritical civility, after the health of the mother, and desired to +see the child. It was accordingly brought to them. The mother put it +into the hands of one of the conspirators, and the babe looked up into +his face and smiled. This mute expression of defenseless and confiding +innocence touched the murderer's heart. He could not be such a monster +as to dash such an image of trusting and happy helplessness upon the +stones. He looked upon the child, and then gave it into the hands of +the one next to him, and he gave it to the next, and thus it passed +through the hands of all the ten. No one was found stern and +determined enough to murder it, and at last they gave the babe back to +its mother and went away. + +The sequel of this story was, that the conspirators, when they reached +the gate, stopped to consult together, and after many mutual +criminations and recriminations, each impugning the courage and +resolution of the rest, and all joining in special condemnation of the +man to whom the child had at first been given, they went back again, +determined, in some way or other, to accomplish their purpose. But +Labda had, in the mean time, been alarmed at their extraordinary +behavior, and had listened, when they stopped at the gate, to hear +their conversation. She hastily hid the babe in a corn measure; and +the conspirators, after looking in every part of the house in vain, +gave up the search, supposing that their intended victim had been +hastily sent away. They went home, and not being willing to +acknowledge that their resolution had failed at the time of trial, +they agreed to say that their undertaking had succeeded, and that the +child had been destroyed. The babe lived, however, and grew up to +manhood, and then, in fulfillment of the prediction announced by the +oracle, he headed a rebellion against the nobles, deposed them from +their power, and reigned in their stead. + +One of the worst and most reckless of the Greek tyrants of whom we +have been speaking was Hippias of Athens. His father, Pisistratus, had +been hated all his life for his cruelties and his crimes; and when he +died, leaving two sons, Hippias and Hipparchus, a conspiracy was +formed to kill the sons, and thus put an end to the dynasty. +Hipparchus was killed, but Hippias escaped the danger, and seized the +government himself alone. He began to exercise his power in the most +cruel and wanton manner, partly under the influence of resentment and +passion, and partly because he thought his proper policy was to strike +terror into the hearts of the people as a means of retaining his +dominion. One of the conspirators by whom his brother had been slain, +accused Hippias's warmest and best friends as his accomplices in that +deed, in order to revenge himself on Hippias by inducing him to +destroy his own adherents and supporters. Hippias fell into the snare; +he condemned to death all whom the conspirator accused, and his +reckless soldiers executed his friends and foes together. When any +protested their innocence, he put them to the torture to make them +confess their guilt. Such indiscriminate cruelty only had the effect +to league the whole population of Athens against the perpetrator of +it. There was at length a general insurrection against him, and he was +dethroned. He made his escape to Sardis, and there tendered his +services to Artaphernes, offering to conduct the Persian armies to +Greece, and aid them in getting possession of the country, on +condition that, if they succeeded, the Persians would make him the +governor of Athens. Artaphernes made known these offers to Darius, and +they were eagerly accepted. It was, however, very impolitic to accept +them. The aid which the invaders could derive from the services of +such a guide, were far more than counterbalanced by the influence +which his defection and the espousal of his cause by the Persians +would produce in Greece. It banded the Athenians and their allies +together in the most enthusiastic and determined spirit of resistance, +against a man who had now added the baseness of treason to the wanton +wickedness of tyranny. + +Besides these internal dissensions between the people of the several +Grecian states and their kings, there were contests between one state +and another, which Darius proposed to take advantage of in his +attempts to conquer the country. There was one such war in particular, +between Athens and the island of AEgina, on the effects of which, in +aiding him in his operations against the Athenians, Darius placed +great reliance. AEgina was a large and populous island not far from +Athens. In accounting for the origin of the quarrel between the two +states, the Greek historians relate the following marvelous story: + +AEgina, as will be seen from the map, was situated in the middle of a +bay, southwest from Athens. On the other side of the bay, opposite +from Athens, there was a city, near the shore, called Epidaurus. It +happened that the people of Epidaurus were at one time suffering from +famine, and they sent a messenger to the oracle at Delphi to inquire +what they should do to obtain relief. The Pythian answered that they +must erect two statues to certain goddesses, named Damia and Auxesia, +and that then the famine would abate. They asked whether they were to +make the statues of brass or of marble. The priestess replied, "Of +neither, but of wood." They were, she said, to use for the purpose the +wood of the garden olive. + +This species of olive was a sacred tree, and it happened that, at this +time, there were no trees of the kind that were of sufficient size for +the purpose intended except at Athens; and the Epidaurians, +accordingly, sent to Athens to obtain leave to supply themselves with +wood for the sculptor by cutting down one of the trees from the sacred +grove. The Athenians consented to this, on condition that the +Epidaurians would offer a certain yearly sacrifice at two temples in +Athens, which they named. This sacrifice, they seemed to imagine, +would make good to the city whatever of injury their religious +interests might suffer from the loss of the sacred tree. The +Epidaurians agreed to the condition; the tree was felled; blocks from +it, of proper size, were taken to Epidaurus, and the statues were +carved. They were set up in the city with the usual solemnities, and +the famine soon after disappeared. + +Not many years after this, a war, for some cause or other, broke out +between Epidaurus and AEgina. The people of AEgina crossed the water in +a fleet of galleys, landed at Epidaurus, and, after committing various +ravages, they seized these images, and bore them away in triumph as +trophies of their victory. They set them up in a public place in the +middle of their own island, and instituted games and spectacles around +them, which they celebrated with great festivity and parade. The +Epidaurians, having thus lost their statues, ceased to make the annual +offering at Athens which they had stipulated for, in return for +receiving the wood from which the statues were carved. The Athenians +complained. The Epidaurians replied that they had continued to make +the offering as long as they had kept the statues; but that now, the +statues being in other hands, they were absolved from the obligation. +The Athenians next demanded the statues themselves of the people of +AEgina. They refused to surrender them. The Athenians then invaded the +island, and proceeded to the spot where the statues had been erected. +They had been set up on massive and heavy pedestals. The Athenians +attempted to get them down, but could not separate them from their +fastenings. They then changed their plan, and undertook to move the +pedestals too, by dragging them with ropes. They were arrested in this +undertaking by an earthquake, accompanied by a solemn and terrible +sound of thunder, which warned them that they were provoking the anger +of Heaven. + +The statues, too, miraculously fell on their knees, and remained fixed +in that posture! + +The Athenians, terrified at these portentous signs, abandoned their +undertaking and fled toward the shore. They were, however, intercepted +by the people of AEgina, and some allies whom they had hastily summoned +to their aid, and the whole party was destroyed except one single man. +He escaped. + +This single fugitive, however, met with a worse fate than that of his +comrades. He went to Athens, and there the wives and sisters of the +men who had been killed thronged around him to hear his story. They +were incensed that he alone had escaped, as if his flight had been a +sort of betrayal and desertion of his companions. They fell upon him, +therefore, with one accord, and pierced and wounded him on all sides +with a sort of pin, or clasp, which they used as a fastening for their +dress. They finally killed him. + +The Athenian magistrates were unable to bring any of the perpetrators +of this crime to conviction and punishment; but a law was made, in +consequence of the occurrence, forbidding the use of that sort of +fastening for the dress to all the Athenian women forever after. The +people of AEgina, on the other hand, rejoiced and gloried in the deed +of the Athenian women, and they made the clasps which were worn upon +their island of double size, in honor of it. + +The war, thus commenced between Athens and AEgina, went on for a long +time, increasing in bitterness and cruelty as the injuries increased +in number and magnitude which the belligerent parties inflicted on +each other. + +Such was the state of things in Greece when Darius organized his great +expedition for the invasion of the country. He assembled an immense +armament, though he did not go forth himself to command it. He placed +the whole force under the charge of a Persian general named Datis. A +considerable part of the army which Datis was to command was raised in +Persia; but orders had been sent on that large accessions to the army, +consisting of cavalry, foot soldiers, ships, and seamen, and every +other species of military force, should be raised in all the provinces +of Asia Minor, and be ready to join it at various places of +rendezvous. + +Darius commenced his march at Susa with the troops which had been +collected there, and proceeded westward till he reached the +Mediterranean at Cilicia, which is at the northeast corner of that +sea. Here large re-enforcements joined him; and there was also +assembled at this point an immense fleet of galleys, which had been +provided to convey the troops to the Grecian seas. The troops +embarked, and the fleet advanced along the southern shores of Asia +Minor to the AEgean Sea, where they turned to the northward toward the +island of Samos, which had been appointed as a rendezvous. At Samos +they were joined by still greater numbers coming from Ionia, and the +various provinces and islands on that coast that were already under +the Persian dominion. When they were ready for their final departure, +the immense fleet, probably one of the greatest and most powerful +which had then ever been assembled, set sail, and steered their course +to the northwest, among the islands of the AEgean Sea. As they moved +slowly on, they stopped to take possession of such islands as came in +their way. The islanders, in some cases, submitted to them without a +struggle. In others, they made vigorous but perfectly futile attempts +to resist. In others still, the terrified inhabitants abandoned their +homes, and fled in dismay to the fastnesses of the mountains. The +Persians destroyed the cities and towns whose inhabitants they could +not conquer, and took the children from the most influential families +of the islands which they did subdue, as hostages to hold their +parents to their promises when their conquerors should have gone. + +[Illustration: THE INVASION OF GREECE.] + +The mighty fleet advanced thus, by slow degrees, from conquest to +conquest, toward the Athenian shores. The vast multitude of galleys +covered the whole surface of the water, and as they advanced, +propelled each by a triple row of oars, they exhibited to the +fugitives who had gained the summits of the mountains the appearance +of an immense swarm of insects, creeping, by an almost imperceptible +advance, over the smooth expanse of the sea. + +The fleet, guided all the time by Hippias, passed on, and finally +entered the strait between the island of Euboea and the main land to +the northward of Athens. Here, after some operations on the island, +the Persians finally brought their ships into a port on the Athenian +side, and landed. Hippias made all the arrangements, and superintended +the disembarkation. + +In the mean time, all was confusion and dismay in the city of Athens. +The government, as soon as they heard of the approach of this terrible +danger, had sent an express to the city of Sparta, asking for aid. The +aid had been promised, but it had not yet arrived. The Athenians +gathered together all the forces at their command on the northern side +of the city, and were debating the question, with great anxiety and +earnestness, whether they should shut themselves up within the walls, +and await the onset of their enemies there, or go forth to meet them +on the way. The whole force which the Greeks could muster consisted +of but about ten thousand men, while the Persian host contained over a +hundred thousand. It seemed madness to engage in a contest on an open +field against such an overwhelming disparity of numbers. A majority of +voices were, accordingly, in favor of remaining within the +fortifications of the city, and awaiting an attack. + +The command of the army had been intrusted, not to one man, but to a +commission of three generals, a sort of triumvirate, on whose joint +action the decision of such a question devolved. Two of the three were +in favor of taking a defensive position; but the third, the celebrated +Miltiades, was so earnest and so decided in favor of attacking the +enemy themselves, instead of waiting to be attacked, that his opinion +finally carried the day, and the other generals resigned their portion +of authority into his hands, consenting that he should lead the Greek +army into battle, if he dared to take the responsibility of doing so. + +The two armies were at this time encamped in sight of each other on +the plain of Marathon, between the mountain and the sea. They were +nearly a mile apart. The countless multitude of the Persians extended +as far as the eye could reach, with long lines of tents in the +distance, and thousands of horsemen on the plain, all ready for the +charge. The Greeks, on the other hand, occupied a small and isolated +spot, in a compact form, without cavalry, without archers, without, in +fact, any weapons suitable either for attack or defense, except in a +close encounter hand to hand. Their only hope of success depended on +the desperate violence of the onset they were to make upon the vast +masses of men spread out before them. On the one side were immense +numbers, whose force, vast as it was, must necessarily be more or less +impeded in its operations, and slow. It was to be overpowered, +therefore, if overpowered at all, by the utmost fierceness and +rapidity of action--by sudden onsets, unexpected and furious assaults, +and heavy, vigorous, and rapid blows. Miltiades, therefore, made all +his arrangements with reference to that mode of warfare. Such soldiers +as the Greeks, too, were admirably adapted to execute such designs, +and the immense and heterogeneous mass of Asiatic nations which +covered the plain before them was exactly the body for such an +experiment to be made upon. Glorying in their numbers and confident of +victory, they were slowly advancing, without the least idea that the +little band before them could possibly do them any serious harm. They +had actually brought with them, in the train of the army, some blocks +of marble, with which they were going to erect a monument of their +victory, on the field of battle, as soon as the conflict was over! + +At length the Greeks began to put themselves in motion. As they +advanced, they accelerated their march more and more, until just +before reaching the Persian lines, when they began to run. The +astonishment of the Persians at this unexpected and daring onset soon +gave place, first to the excitement of personal conflict, and then to +universal terror and dismay; for the headlong impetuosity of the +Greeks bore down all opposition, and the desperate swordsmen cut their +way through the vast masses of the enemy with a fierce and desperate +fury that nothing could withstand. Something like a contest continued +for some hours; but, at the end of that time, the Persians were flying +in all directions, every one endeavoring, by the track which he found +most practicable for himself, to make his way to the ships on the +shore. Vast multitudes were killed in this headlong flight; others +became entangled in the morasses and fens, and others still strayed +away, and sought, in their terror, a hopeless refuge in the defiles of +the mountains. Those who escaped crowded in confusion on board their +ships, and pushed off from the shore, leaving the whole plain covered +with their dead and dying companions. + +The Greeks captured an immense amount of stores and baggage, which +were of great cost and value. They took possession, too, of the marble +blocks which the Persians had brought to immortalize their victory, +and built with them a monument, instead, to commemorate their defeat. +They counted the dead. Six thousand Persians, and only two hundred +Greeks, were found. The bodies of the Greeks were collected together, +and buried on the field, and an immense mound was raised over the +grave. This mound has continued to stand at Marathon to the present +day. + +The battle of Marathon was one of those great events in the history of +the human race which continue to attract, from age to age, the +admiration of mankind. They who look upon war, in all its forms, as +only the perpetration of an unnatural and atrocious crime, which rises +to dignity and grandeur only by the very enormity of its guilt, can +not but respect the courage, the energy, and the cool and determined +resolution with which the little band of Greeks went forth to stop the +torrent of foes which all the nations of a whole continent had +combined to pour upon them. The field has been visited in every age by +thousands of travelers, who have upon the spot offered their tribute +of admiration to the ancient heroes that triumphed there. The plain is +found now, as of old, overlooking the sea, and the mountains inland, +towering above the plain. The mound, too, still remains, which was +reared to consecrate the memory of the Greeks who fell. They who visit +it stand and survey the now silent and solitary scene, and derive from +the influence and spirit of the spot new strength and energy to meet +the great difficulties and dangers of life which they themselves have +to encounter. The Greeks themselves, of the present day, +notwithstanding the many sources of discouragement and depression with +which they have to contend, must feel at Marathon some rising spirit +of emulation in contemplating the lofty mental powers and the +undaunted spirit of their sires. Byron makes one of them sing, + + "The mountains look on Marathon, + And Marathon looks on the sea; + And musing there an hour alone, + I dreamed that Greece might still be free; + For, standing on the Persians' grave, + I could not deem myself a slave." + + + + +CHAPTER XII. + +THE DEATH OF DARIUS. + +B.C. 490-485 + +The Persian fleet sails southward.--Fate of Hippias.--Omens.--The +dream and the sneeze.--Hippias falls in battle.--Movements of the +Persian fleet.--The Persian fleet returns to Asia.--Anxiety of +Datis.--Datis finds a stolen statue.--Island of Delos.--Account of +the sacred island.--Its present condition.--Disposition of the +army.--Darius's reception of Datis.--Subsequent history of +Miltiades.--His great popularity.--Miltiades's influence +at Athens.--His ambitious designs.--Island and city of +Paros.--Appearance of the modern town.--Miltiades's proposition to +the Athenians.--They accept it.--Miltiades marches against +Paros.--Its resistance.--Miltiades is discouraged.--The captive +priestess.--Miltiades's interview with the priestess.--Her +instructions.--Miltiades attempts to enter the temple of Ceres.--He +dislocates a limb.--Miltiades returns to Athens.--He is +impeached.--Miltiades is condemned.--He dies of his wound.--The fine +paid.--Proposed punishment of Timo.--Timo saved by the Delphic +oracle.--Another expedition against Greece.--Preparations.--Necessity +for settling the succession.--Darius's two sons.--Their claims to the +throne.--Xerxes declared heir.--Death of Darius.--Character of +Darius.--Ground of his renown. + + +The city of Athens and the plain of Marathon are situated upon a +peninsula. The principal port by which the city was ordinarily +approached was on the southern shore of the peninsula, though the +Persians had landed on the northern side. Of course, in their retreat +from the field of battle, they fled to the north. When they were +beyond the reach of their enemies and fairly at sea, they were at +first somewhat perplexed to determine what to do. Datis was extremely +unwilling to return to Darius with the news of such a defeat. On the +other hand, there seemed but little hope of any other result if he +were to attempt a second landing. + +Hippias, their Greek guide, was killed in the battle. He expected to +be killed, for his mind, on the morning of the battle, was in a state +of great despondency and dejection. Until that time he had felt a +strong and confident expectation of success, but his feelings had then +been very suddenly changed. His confidence had arisen from the +influence of a dream, his dejection from a cause more frivolous still; +so that he was equally irrational in his hope and in his despair. + +The omen which seemed to him to portend success to the enterprise in +which he had undertaken to act as guide, was merely that he dreamed +one night that he saw, and spent some time in company with, his +mother. In attempting to interpret this dream in the morning, it +seemed to him that Athens, his native city, was represented by his +mother, and that the vision denoted that he was about to be restored +to Athens again. He was extremely elated at this supernatural +confirmation of his hopes, and would have gone into the battle certain +of victory, had it not been that another circumstance occurred at the +time of the landing to blast his hopes. He had, himself, the general +charge of the disembarkation. He stationed the ships at their proper +places near the shore, and formed the men upon the beach as they +landed. While he was thus engaged, standing on the sand, he suddenly +sneezed. He was an old man, and his teeth--those that remained--were +loose. One of them was thrown out in the act of sneezing, and it fell +into the sand. Hippias was alarmed at this occurrence, considering it +a bad omen. He looked a long time for the tooth in vain, and then +exclaimed that all was over. The joining of his tooth to his mother +earth was the event to which his dream referred, and there was now no +hope of any further fulfillment of it. He went on mechanically, after +this, in marshaling his men and preparing for battle, but his mind was +oppressed with gloomy forebodings. He acted, in consequence, feebly +and with indecision; and when the Greeks explored the field on the +morning after the battle, his body was found among the other mutilated +and ghastly remains which covered the ground. + +As the Persian fleet moved, therefore, along the coast of Attica, they +had no longer their former guide. They were still, however, very +reluctant to leave the country. They followed the shore of the +peninsula until they came to the promontory of Sunium, which forms the +southeastern extremity of it. They doubled this cape, and then +followed the southern shore of the peninsula until they arrived at the +point opposite to Athens on that side. In the mean time, however, the +Spartan troops which had been sent for to aid the Athenians in the +contest, but which had not arrived in time to take part in the +battle, reached the ground; and the indications which the Persians +observed, from the decks of their galleys, that the country was +thoroughly aroused, and was every where ready to receive them, +deterred them from making any further attempts to land. After +lingering, therefore, a short time near the shore, the fleet directed +its course again toward the coasts of Asia. + +The mind of Datis was necessarily very ill at ease. He dreaded the +wrath of Darius; for despots are very prone to consider military +failures as the worst of crimes. The expedition had not, however, been +entirely a failure. Datis had conquered many of the Greek islands, and +he had with him, on board his galleys, great numbers of prisoners, and +a vast amount of plunder which he had obtained from them. Still, the +greatest and most important of the objects which Darius had +commissioned him to accomplish had been entirely defeated, and he +felt, accordingly, no little anxiety in respect to the reception which +he was to expect at Susa. + +One night he had a dream which greatly disturbed him. He awoke in the +morning with an impression upon his mind, which he had derived from +the dream, that some temple had been robbed by his soldiers in the +course of his expedition, and that the sacrilegious booty which had +been obtained was concealed somewhere in the fleet. He immediately +ordered a careful search to be instituted, in which every ship was +examined. At length they found, concealed in one of the galleys, a +golden statue of Apollo. Datis inquired what city it had been taken +from. They answered from Delium. Delium was on the coast of Attica, +near the place where the Persians had landed, at the time of their +advance on Marathon. Datis could not safely or conveniently go back +there to restore it to its place. He determined, therefore, to deposit +it at Delos for safe keeping, until it could be returned to its proper +home. + +Delos was a small but very celebrated island near the center of the +AEgean Sea, and but a short distance from the spot where the Persian +fleet was lying when Datis made this discovery. It was a sacred +island, devoted to religious rites, and all contention, and violence, +and, so far as was possible, all suffering and death, were excluded +from it. The sick were removed from it; the dead were not buried +there; armed ships and armed men laid aside their hostility to each +other when they approached it. Belligerent fleets rode at anchor, +side by side, in peace, upon the smooth waters of its little port, and +an enchanting picture of peace, tranquillity, and happiness was seen +upon its shores. A large natural fountain, or spring, thirty feet in +diameter, and inclosed partly by natural rocks and partly by an +artificial wall, issued from the ground in the center of the island, +and sent forth a beautiful and fertilizing rill into a rich and happy +valley, through which it meandered, deviously, for several miles, +seeking the sea. There was a large and populous city near the port, +and the whole island was adorned with temples, palaces, colonnades, +and other splendid architectural structures, which made it the +admiration of all mankind. All this magnificence and beauty have, +however, long since passed away. The island is now silent, deserted, +and desolate, a dreary pasture, where cattle browse and feed, with +stupid indifference, among the ancient ruins. Nothing living remains +of the ancient scene of grandeur and beauty but the fountain. That +still continues to pour up its clear and pellucid waters with a +ceaseless and eternal flow. + +It was to this Delos that Datis determined to restore the golden +statue. He took it on board his own galley, and proceeded with it, +himself, to the sacred island. He deposited it in the great temple of +Apollo, charging the priests to convey it, as soon as a convenient +opportunity should occur, to its proper destination at Delium. + +The Persian fleet, after this business was disposed of, set sail +again, and pursued its course toward the coasts of Asia, where at +length the expedition landed in safety. + +The various divisions of the army were then distributed in the +different provinces where they respectively belonged, and Datis +commenced his march with the Persian portion of the troops, and with +his prisoners and plunder, for Susa, feeling, however, very uncertain +how he should be received on his arrival there. Despotic power is +always capricious; and the character of Darius, which seems to have +been naturally generous and kind, and was rendered cruel and +tyrannical only through the influence of the position in which he had +been placed, was continually presenting the most opposite and +contradictory phases. The generous elements of it, fortunately for +Datis, seemed to be in the ascendency when the remnant of the Persian +army arrived at Susa. Darius received the returning general without +anger, and even treated the prisoners with humanity. + +Before finally leaving the subject of this celebrated invasion, which +was brought to an end in so remarkable a manner by the great battle of +Marathon, it may be well to relate the extraordinary circumstances +which attended the subsequent history of Miltiades, the great +commander in that battle on the Greek side. Before the conflict, he +seems to have had no official superiority over the other generals, +but, by the resolute decision with which he urged the plan of giving +the Persians battle, and the confidence and courage which he +manifested in expressing his readiness to take the responsibility of +the measure, he placed himself virtually at the head of the Greek +command. The rest of the officers acquiesced in his pre-eminence, and, +waiving their claims to an equal share of the authority, they allowed +him to go forward and direct the operations of the day. If the day had +been lost, Miltiades, even though he had escaped death upon the field, +would have been totally and irretrievably ruined; but as it was won, +the result of the transaction was that he was raised to the highest +pinnacle of glory and renown. + +And yet in this, as in all similar cases, the question of success or +of failure depended upon causes wholly beyond the reach of human +foresight or control. The military commander who acts in such +contingencies is compelled to stake every thing dear to him on results +which are often as purely hazardous as the casting of a die. + +The influence of Miltiades in Athens after the Persian troops were +withdrawn was paramount and supreme. Finding himself in possession of +this ascendency, he began to form plans for other military +undertakings. It proved, in the end, that it would have been far +better for him to have been satisfied with the fame which he had +already acquired. + +Some of the islands in the AEgean Sea he considered as having taken +part with the Persians in the invasion, to such an extent, at least, +as to furnish him with a pretext for making war upon them. The one +which he had specially in view, in the first instance, was Paros. +Paros is a large and important island situated near the center of the +southern portion of the AEgean Sea. It is of an oval form, and is about +twelve miles long. The surface of the land is beautifully diversified +and very picturesque, while, at the same time, the soil is very +fertile. In the days of Miltiades, it was very wealthy and populous, +and there was a large city, called also Paros, on the western coast of +the island, near the sea. There is a modern town built upon the site +of the former city, which presents a very extraordinary appearance, as +the dwellings are formed, in a great measure, of materials obtained +from the ancient ruins. Marble columns, sculptured capitals, and +fragments of what were once magnificent entablatures, have been used +to construct plain walls, or laid in obscure and neglected +pavements--all, however, still retaining, notwithstanding their +present degradation, unequivocal marks of the nobleness of their +origin. The quarries where the ancient Parian marble was obtained were +situated on this island, not very far from the town. They remain to +the present day in the same state in which the ancient workmen left +them. + +In the time of Miltiades the island and the city of Paros were both +very wealthy and very powerful. Miltiades conceived the design of +making a descent upon the island, and levying an immense contribution +upon the people, in the form of a fine, for what he considered their +treason in taking part with the enemies of their countrymen. In order +to prevent the people of Paros from preparing for defense, Miltiades +intended to keep the object of his expedition secret for a time. He +therefore simply proposed to the Athenians that they should equip a +fleet and put it under his command. He had an enterprise in view, he +said, the nature of which he could not particularly explain, but he +was very confident of its success, and, if successful, he should +return, in a short time, laden with spoils which would enrich the +city, and amply reimburse the people for the expenses they would have +incurred. The force which he asked for was a fleet of seventy vessels. + +So great was the popularity and influence which Miltiades had acquired +by his victory at Marathon, that this somewhat extraordinary +proposition was readily complied with. The fleet was equipped, and +crews were provided, and the whole armament was placed under +Miltiades's command. The men themselves who were embarked on board of +the galleys did not know whither they were going. Miltiades promised +them victory and an abundance of gold as their reward; for the rest, +they must trust, he said, to him, as he could not explain the actual +destination of the enterprise without endangering its success. The +men were all satisfied with these conditions, and the fleet set sail. + +When it arrived on the coast of Paros, the Parians were, of course, +taken by surprise, but they made immediate preparations for a very +vigorous resistance. Miltiades commenced a siege, and sent a herald to +the city, demanding of them, as the price of their ransom, an immense +sum of money, saying, at the same time, that, unless they delivered up +that sum, or, at least, gave security for the payment of it, he would +not leave the place until the city was captured, and, when captured, +it should be wholly destroyed. The Parians rejected the demand, and +engaged energetically in the work of completing and strengthening +their defenses. They organized companies of workmen to labor during +the night, when their operations would not be observed, in building +new walls, and re-enforcing every weak or unguarded point in the line +of the fortifications. It soon appeared that the Parians were making +far more rapid progress in securing their position than Miltiades was +in his assaults upon it. Miltiades found that an attack upon a +fortified island in the AEgean Sea was a different thing from +encountering the undisciplined hordes of Persians on the open plains +of Marathon. There it was a contest between concentrated courage and +discipline on the one hand, and a vast expansion of pomp and parade on +the other; whereas now he found that the courage and discipline on his +part were met by an equally indomitable resolution on the part of his +opponents, guided, too, by an equally well-trained experience and +skill. In a word, it was Greek against Greek at Paros, and Miltiades +began at length to perceive that his prospect of success was growing +very doubtful and dim. + +This state of things, of course, filled the mind of Miltiades with +great anxiety and distress; for, after the promises which he had made +to the Athenians, and the blind confidence which he had asked of them +in proposing that they should commit the fleet so unconditionally to +his command, he could not return discomfited to Athens without +involving himself in the most absolute disgrace. While he was in this +perplexity, it happened that some of his soldiers took captive a +Parian female, one day, among other prisoners. She proved to be a +priestess, from one of the Parian temples. Her name was Timo. The +thought occurred to Miltiades that, since all human means at his +command had proved inadequate to accomplish his end, he might, +perhaps, through this captive priestess, obtain some superhuman aid. +As she had been in the service of a Parian temple, she would naturally +have an influence with the divinities of the place, or, at least, she +would be acquainted with the proper means of propitiating their favor. + +Miltiades, accordingly, held a private interview with Timo, and asked +her what he should do to propitiate the divinities of Paros so far as +to enable him to gain possession of the city. She replied that she +could easily point out the way, if he would but follow her +instructions. Miltiades, overjoyed, promised readily that he would do +so. She then gave him her instructions secretly. What they were is not +known, except so far as they were revealed by the occurrences that +followed. + +There was a temple consecrated to the goddess Ceres near to the city, +and so connected with it, it seems, as to be in some measure included +within the defenses. The approach to this temple was guarded by a +palisade. There were, however, gates which afforded access, except +when they were fastened from within. Miltiades, in obedience to Timo's +instructions, went privately, in the night, perhaps, and with very +few attendants, to this temple. He attempted to enter by the gates, +which he had expected, it seems, to find open. They were, however, +fastened against him. He then undertook to scale the palisade. He +succeeded in doing this, not, however, without difficulty, and then +advanced toward the temple, in obedience to the instructions which he +had received from Timo. The account states that the act, whatever it +was, that Timo had directed him to perform, instead of being, as he +supposed, a means of propitiating the favor of the divinity, was +sacrilegious and impious; and Miltiades, as he approached the temple, +was struck suddenly with a mysterious and dreadful horror of mind, +which wholly overwhelmed him. Rendered almost insane by this +supernatural remorse and terror, he turned to fly. He reached the +palisade, and, in endeavoring to climb over it, his precipitation and +haste caused him to fall. His attendants ran to take him up. He was +helpless and in great pain. They found he had dislocated a joint in +one of his limbs. He received, of course, every possible attention; +but, instead of recovering from the injury, he found that the +consequences of it became more and more serious every day. In a word, +the great conqueror of the Persians was now wholly overthrown, and lay +moaning on his couch as helpless as a child. + +He soon determined to abandon the siege of Paros and return to Athens. +He had been about a month upon the island, and had laid waste the +rural districts, but, as the city had made good its defense against +him, he returned without any of the rich spoil which he had promised. +The disappointment which the people of Athens experienced on his +arrival, turned soon into a feeling of hostility against the author of +the calamity. Miltiades found that the fame and honor which he had +gained at Marathon were gone. They had been lost almost as suddenly as +they had been acquired. The rivals and enemies who had been silenced +by his former success were now brought out and made clamorous against +him by his present failure. They attributed the failure to his own +mismanagement of the expedition, and one orator, at length, advanced +articles of impeachment against him, on a charge of having been bribed +by the Persians to make his siege of Paros only a feint. Miltiades +could not defend himself from these criminations, for he was lying, at +the time, in utter helplessness, upon his couch of pain. The +dislocation of the limb had ended in an open wound, which at length, +having resisted all the attempts of the physicians to stop its +progress, had begun to mortify, and the life of the sufferer was fast +ebbing away. His son Cimon did all in his power to save his father +from both the dangers that threatened him. He defended his character +in the public tribunals, and he watched over his person in the cell in +the prison. These filial efforts were, however, in both cases +unavailing. Miltiades was condemned by the tribunal, and he died of +his wound. + +The penalty exacted of him by the sentence was a very heavy fine. The +sum demanded was the amount which the expedition to Paros had cost the +city, and which, as it had been lost through the agency of Miltiades, +it was adjudged that he should refund. This sentence, as well as the +treatment in general which Miltiades received from his countrymen, has +been since considered by mankind as very unjust and cruel. It was, +however, only following out, somewhat rigidly, it is true, the +essential terms and conditions of a military career. It results from +principles inherent in the very nature of war, that we are never to +look for the ascendency of justice and humanity in any thing +pertaining to it. It is always power, and not right, that determines +possession; it is success, not merit, that gains honors and rewards; +and they who assent to the genius and spirit of military rule thus +far, must not complain if they find that, on the same principle, it is +failure and not crime which brings condemnation and destruction. + +When Miltiades was dead, Cimon found that he could not receive his +father's body for honorable interment unless he paid the fine. He had +no means, himself, of doing this. He succeeded, however, at length, in +raising the amount, by soliciting contributions from the family +friends of his father. He paid the fine into the city treasury, and +then the body of the hero was deposited in its long home. + +The Parians were at first greatly incensed against the priestess Timo, +as it seemed to them that she had intended to betray the city to +Miltiades. They wished to put her to death, but they did not dare to +do it. It might be considered an impious sacrilege to punish a +priestess. They accordingly sent to the oracle at Delphi to state the +circumstances of the case, and to inquire if they might lawfully put +the priestess to death. She had been guilty, they said, of pointing +out to an enemy the mode by which he might gain possession of their +city; and, what was worse, she had, in doing so, attempted to admit +him to those solemn scenes and mysteries in the temple which it was +not lawful for any man to behold. The oracle replied that the +priestess must not be punished, for she had done no wrong. It had been +decreed by the gods that Miltiades should be destroyed, and Timo had +been employed by them as the involuntary instrument of conducting him +to his fate. The people of Paros acquiesced in this decision, and Timo +was set free. + + * * * * * + +But to return to Darius. His desire to subdue the Greeks and to add +their country to his dominions, and his determination to accomplish +his purpose, were increased and strengthened, not diminished, by the +repulse which his army had met with at the first invasion. He was +greatly incensed against the Athenians, as if he considered their +courage and energy in defending their country an audacious outrage +against himself, and a crime. He resolved to organize a new +expedition, still greater and more powerful than the other. Of this +armament he determined to take the command himself in person, and to +make the preparations for it on a scale of such magnitude as that the +expedition should be worthy to be led by the great sovereign of half +the world. He accordingly transmitted orders to all the peoples, +nations, languages, and realms, in all his dominions, to raise their +respective quotas of troops, horses, ships, and munitions of war, and +prepare to assemble at such place of rendezvous as he should designate +when all should be ready. + +Some years elapsed before these arrangements were matured, and when at +last the time seemed to have arrived for carrying his plans into +effect, he deemed it necessary, before he commenced his march, to +settle the succession of his kingdom; for he had several sons, who +might each claim the throne, and involve the empire in disastrous +civil wars in attempting to enforce their claims, in case he should +never return. The historians say that there was a law of Persia +forbidding the sovereign to leave the realm without previously fixing +upon a successor. It is difficult to see, however, by what power or +authority such a law could have been enacted, or to believe that +monarchs like Darius would recognize an abstract obligation to law of +any kind, in respect to their own political action. There is a +species of law regulating the ordinary dealings between man and man, +that springs up in all communities, whether savage or civilized, from +custom, and from the action of judicial tribunals, which the most +despotic and absolute sovereigns feel themselves bound, so far as +relates to the private affairs of their subjects, to respect and +uphold; but, in regard to their own personal and governmental acts and +measures, they very seldom know any other authority than the impulses +of their own sovereign will. + +Darius had several sons, among whom there were two who claimed the +right to succeed their father on the throne. One was the oldest son of +a wife whom Darius had married before he became king. His name was +Artobazanes. The other was the son of Atossa, the daughter of Cyrus, +whom Darius had married _after_ his accession to the throne. His name +was Xerxes. Artobazanes claimed that he was entitled to be his +father's heir, since he was his oldest son. Xerxes, on the other hand, +maintained that, at the period of the birth of Artobazanes, Darius was +not a king. He was then in a private station, and sons could properly +inherit only what their fathers possessed at the time when they were +born. He himself, on the other hand, was the oldest son which his +father had had, _being a king_, and he was, consequently, the true +inheritor of the kingdom. Besides, being the son of Atossa, he was the +grandson of Cyrus, and the hereditary rights, therefore, of that great +founder of the empire had descended to him. + +Darius decided the question in favor of Xerxes, and then made +arrangements for commencing his march, with a mind full of the elation +and pride which were awakened by the grandeur of his position and the +magnificence of his schemes. These schemes, however, he did not live +to execute. He suddenly fell sick and died, just as he was ready to +set out upon his expedition, and Xerxes, his son, reigned in his +stead. + +Xerxes immediately took command of the vast preparations which his +father had made, and went on with the prosecution of the enterprise. +The expedition which followed deserves, probably, in respect to the +numbers engaged in it, the distance which it traversed, the +immenseness of the expenses involved, and the magnitude of its +results, to be considered the greatest military undertaking which +human ambition and power have ever attempted to effect. The narrative, +however, both of its splendid adventures and of its ultimate fate, +belongs to the history of Xerxes. + +The greatness of Darius was the greatness of position and not of +character. He was the absolute sovereign of nearly half the world, +and, as such, was held up very conspicuously to the attention of +mankind, who gaze with a strong feeling of admiration and awe upon +these vast elevations of power, as they do upon the summits of +mountains, simply because they are high. Darius performed no great +exploit, and he accomplished no great object while he lived; and he +did not even leave behind him any strong impressions of personal +character. There is in his history, and in the position which he +occupies in the minds of men, greatness without dignity, success +without merit, vast and long-continued power without effects +accomplished or objects gained, and universal and perpetual renown +without honor or applause. The world admire Caesar, Hannibal, +Alexander, Alfred, and Napoleon for the deeds which they performed. +They admire Darius only on account of the elevation on which he stood. +In the same lofty position, they would have admired, probably, just as +much, the very horse whose neighing placed him there. + + THE END. + + + + +TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES + +1. Minor changes have been made to correct typesetters' errors, and to +ensure consistent spelling and punctuation in this etext; otherwise, +every effort has been made to remain true to the original book. + +2. 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