READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
BIOGRAPHYCAL UNIVERSAL LIBRARY |
Xerxes 518 – 465 BCI.
The Mother of Xerxes.
B.C. 522–484
The name of Xerxes is associated in the minds of men with the idea of the
highest attainable elevation of human magnificence and grandeur. This monarch
was the sovereign of the ancient Persian empire when it was at the height of
its prosperity and power. It is probable, however, that his greatness and fame
lose nothing by the manner in which his story comes down to us through the
Greek historians. The Greeks conquered Xerxes, and, in relating his history,
they magnify the wealth, the power, and the resources of his empire, by way of
exalting the greatness and renown of their own exploits in subduing him.
The mother of Xerxes was Atossa, a daughter of
Cyrus the Great, who was the founder of the Persian empire. Cyrus was killed in
Scythia, a wild and barbarous region lying north of the Black and Caspian Seas.
His son Cambyses succeeded him.
A kingdom, or an empire, was regarded, in ancient days, much in the light
of an estate, which the sovereign held as a species of property, and which he
was to manage mainly with a view to the promotion of his own personal
aggrandizement and pleasure. A king or an emperor could have more palaces, more
money, and more wives than other men; and if he was of an overbearing or
ambitious spirit, he could march into his neighbors' territories, and after
gratifying his love of adventure with various romantic exploits, and gaining
great renown by his ferocious impetuosity in battle, he could end his
expedition, perhaps, by adding his neighbors' palaces, and treasures, and wives
to his own.
Divine Providence, however, the mysterious power that overrules all the
passions and impulses of men, and brings extended and general good out of local
and particular evil, has made the ambition and the selfishness of princes the
great means of preserving order and government among men. These great ancient
despots, for example, would not have been able to collect their revenues, or
enlist their armies, or procure supplies for their campaigns, unless their
dominions were under a regular and complete system of social organization, such
as should allow all the industrial pursuits of commerce and of agriculture,
throughout the mass of the community, to go regularly on. Thus absolute
monarchs, however ambitious, and selfish, and domineering in their characters,
have a strong personal interest in the establishment of order and of justice
between man and man throughout all the regions which are under their sway. In
fact, the greater their ambition, their selfishness, and their pride, the
stronger will this interest be; for, just in proportion as order, industry, and
internal tranquility prevail in a country, just in that proportion can revenues
be collected from it, and armies raised and maintained.
It is a mistake, therefore, to suppose of the great heroes, and sovereigns,
and conquerors that have appeared from time to time among mankind, that the
usual and ordinary result of their influence and action has been that of
disturbance and disorganization. It is true that a vast amount of disturbance
and disorganization has often followed from the march of their armies, their
sieges, their invasions, and the other local and temporary acts of violence
which they commit; but these are the exceptions, not the rule. It must be that
such things are exceptions, since, in any extended and general view of the
subject, a much greater amount of social organization, industry, and peace is
necessary to raise and maintain an army, than that army can itself destroy. The
deeds of destruction which great conquerors perform attract more attention and
make a greater impression upon mankind than the quiet, patient, and
long-continued labors by which they perfect and extend the general organization
of the social state. But these labors, though less noticed by men, have really
employed the energies of great sovereigns in a far greater degree than mankind
have generally imagined. Thus we should describe the work of Cesar’s life in a
single word more truly by saying that he organized Europe, than that he
conquered it. His bridges, his roads, his systems of jurisprudence, his
coinage, his calendar, and other similar means and instruments of social
arrangement, and facilities for promoting the pursuits of industry and peace,
mark, far more properly, the real work which that great conqueror performed
among mankind, than his battles and his victories. Darius was, in the same way,
the organizer of Asia. William the Conqueror completed, or, rather, advanced
very far toward completing, the social organization of England; and even in
respect to Napoleon, the true and proper memorial of his career is the
successful working of the institutions, the systems, and the codes which he
perfected and introduced into the social state, and not the brazen column,
formed from captured cannon, which stands in the Place Vendôme.
These considerations, obviously true, though not always borne in mind, are,
however, to be considered as making the characters of the great sovereigns, in
a moral point of view, neither the worse nor the better. In all that they did,
whether in arranging and systematizing the functions of social life, or in
ruthless deeds of conquest and destruction, they were actuated, in a great
measure, by selfish ambition. They arranged and organized the social state in
order to form a more compact and solid pedestal for the foundation of their
power. They maintained peace and order among their people, just as a master
would suppress quarrels among his slaves, because peace among laborers is
essential to productive results. They fixed and defined legal rights, and
established courts to determine and enforce them; they protected property; they
counted and classified men; they opened roads; they built bridges; they
encouraged commerce; they hung robbers, and exterminated pirates—all, that the
collection of their revenues and the enlistment of their armies might go on
without hindrance or restriction. Many of them, indeed, may have been animated,
in some degree, by a higher and nobler sentiment than this. Some may have felt
a sort of pride in the contemplation of a great, and prosperous, and wealthy
empire, analogous to that which a proprietor feels in surveying a
well-conditioned, successful, and productive estate. Others, like Alfred, may
have felt a sincere and honest interest in the welfare of their fellow-men, and
the promotion of human happiness may have been, in a greater or less degree,
the direct object of their aim. Still, it cannot be denied that a selfish and
reckless ambition has been, in general, the main spring of action with heroes
and conquerors, which, while it aimed only at personal aggrandizement, has been
made to operate, through the peculiar mechanism of the social state which the
Divine wisdom has contrived, as a means, in the main of preserving and
extending peace and order among mankind, and not of destroying them.
But to return to Atossa. Her father Cyrus, who
laid the foundation of the great Persian empire, was, for a hero and conqueror,
tolerably considerate and just, and he desired, probably, to promote the
welfare and happiness of his millions of subjects; but his son Cambyses, Atossa's brother, having been brought up in expectation of
succeeding to vast wealth and power, and having been, as the sons of the
wealthy and the powerful often are in all ages of the world, wholly neglected
by his father during the early part of his life, and entirely unaccustomed to
control, became a wild, reckless, proud, selfish, and ungovernable young man.
His father was killed suddenly in battle, as has already been stated, and
Cambyses succeeded him. Cambyses's career was short, desperate, and most tragical in
its end. In fact, he was one of the most savage, reckless, and abominable
monsters that have ever lived.
It was the custom in those days for the Persian monarchs to have many
wives, and, what is still more remarkable, whenever any monarch died, his successor
inherited his predecessor's family as well as his throne. Cyrus had several
children by his various wives. Cambyses and Smerdis were the only sons, but
there were daughters, among whom Atossa was the most
distinguished. The ladies of the court were accustomed to reside in different
palaces, or in different suites of apartments in the same palace, so that they
lived in a great measure isolated from each other. When Cambyses came to the
throne, and thus entered into possession of his father's palaces, he saw and
fell in love with one of his father's daughters. He wished to make her one of
his wives. He was accustomed to the unrestricted indulgence of every appetite
and passion, but he seems to have had some slight misgivings in regard to such
a step as this. He consulted the Persian judges. They conferred upon the
subject, and then replied that they had searched among the laws of the realm,
and though they found no law allowing a man to marry his sister, they found
many which authorized a Persian king to do whatever he pleased.
Cambyses therefore added the princess to the number of his wives, and not
long afterward he married another of his father's daughters in the same way.
One of these princesses was Atossa.
Cambyses invaded Egypt, and in the course of his mad career in that country
he killed his brother Smerdis and one of his sisters, and at length was killed
himself. Atossa escaped the dangers of this stormy
and terrible reign, and returned safely to Susa after Cambyses's death.
Smerdis, the brother of Cambyses, would have been Cambyses's successor if
he had survived him; but he had been privately assassinated by Cambyses's
orders, though his death had been kept profoundly secret by those who had
perpetrated the deed. There was another Smerdis in Susa, the Persian capital,
who was a magian—that is, a sort of priest—in whose hands, as regent,
Cambyses had left the government while he was absent on his campaigns.
This magian Smerdis accordingly conceived the plan of usurping the
throne, as if he were Smerdis the prince, resorting to a great many ingenious
and cunning schemes to conceal his deception. Among his other plans, one was to
keep himself wholly sequestered from public view, with a few favorites, such,
especially, as had not personally known Smerdis the prince. In the same manner
he secluded from each other and from himself all who had known Smerdis, in
order to prevent their conferring with one another, or communicating to each
other any suspicions which they might chance to entertain. Such seclusion, so
far as related to the ladies of the royal family, was not unusual after the
death of a king, and Smerdis did not deviate from the ordinary custom, except
to make the isolation and confinement of the princesses and queens more rigorous
and strict than common. By means of this policy he was enabled to go on for
some months without detection, living all the while in the greatest luxury and
splendor, but at the same time in absolute seclusion, and in unceasing anxiety
and fear.
One chief source of his solicitude was lest he should be detected by means
of his ears! Some years before, when he was in a comparatively obscure
position, he had in some way or other offended his sovereign, and was punished
by having his ears cut off. It was necessary, therefore, to keep the marks of
this mutilation carefully concealed by means of his hair and his head-dress,
and even with these precautions he could never feel perfectly secure.
At last one of the nobles of the court, a sagacious and observing man,
suspected the imposture. He had no access to Smerdis himself, but his daughter,
whose name was Phædyma, was one of Smerdis's wives. The nobleman was excluded from all
direct intercourse with Smerdis, and even with his daughter; but he contrived
to send word to his daughter, inquiring whether her husband was the true
Smerdis or not. She replied that she did not know, inasmuch as she had never
seen any other Smerdis, if, indeed, there had been another. The nobleman then
attempted to communicate with Atossa, but he found it
impossible to do so. Atossa had, of course, known her
brother well, and was on that very account very closely secluded by the magian.
As a last resort, the nobleman sent to his daughter a request that she would
watch for an opportunity to feel for her husband's ears while he was asleep. He
admitted that this would be a dangerous attempt, but his daughter, he said,
ought to be willing to make it, since, if her pretended husband were really an
impostor, she ought to take even a stronger interest than others in his
detection. Phædyma was at first afraid to
undertake so dangerous a commission; but she at length ventured to do so, and,
by passing her hand under his turban one night, while he was sleeping on his
couch, she found that the ears were gone.
The consequence of this discovery was, that a conspiracy was formed to
dethrone and destroy the usurper. The plot was successful. Smerdis was killed;
his imprisoned queens were set free, and Darius was raised to the throne in his
stead.
Atossa now, by that strange principle of succession which has been already
alluded to, became the wife of Darius, and she figures frequently and
conspicuously in history during his long and splendid reign.
Her name is brought into notice in one case in a remarkable manner, in
connection with an expedition which Darius sent on an exploring tour into
Greece and Italy. She was herself the means, in fact, of sending the
expedition. She was sick; and after suffering secretly and in silence as long
as possible—the nature of her complaint being such as to make her unwilling to
speak of it to others—she at length determined to consult a Greek physician who
had been brought to Persia as a captive, and had acquired great celebrity at
Susa by his medical science and skill. The physician said that he would
undertake her case on condition that she would promise to grant him a certain
request that he would make. She wished to know what it was beforehand, but the
physician would not tell her. He said, however, that it was nothing that it
would be in any way derogatory to her honor to grant him.
On these conditions Atossa concluded to agree to
the physician's proposals. He made her take a solemn oath that, if he cured her
of her malady, she would do whatever he required of her, provided that it was
consistent with honor and propriety. He then took her case under his charge,
prescribed for her and attended her, and in due time she was cured. The
physician then told her that what he wished her to do for him was to find some
means to persuade Darius to send him home to his native land.
Atossa was faithful in fulfilling her promise. She took a private opportunity,
when she was alone with Darius, to propose that he should engage in some plans
of foreign conquest. She reminded him of the vastness of the military power
which was at his disposal, and of the facility with which, by means of it, he
might extend his dominions. She extolled, too, his genius and energy, and
endeavored to inspire in his mind some ambitious desires to distinguish himself
in the estimation of mankind by bringing his capacities for the performance of
great deeds into action.
Darius listened to these suggestions of Atossa with interest and with evident pleasure. He said that he had been forming some
such plans himself. He was going to build a bridge across the Hellespont or the
Bosporus, to unite Europe and Asia; and he was also going to make an incursion
into the country of the Scythians, the people by whom Cyrus, his great
predecessor, had been defeated and slain. It would be a great glory for him, he
said, to succeed in a conquest in which Cyrus had so totally failed.
But these plans would not answer the purpose which Atossa had in view. She urged her husband, therefore, to postpone his invasion of the
Scythians till some future time, and first conquer the Greeks, and annex their
territory to his dominions. The Scythians, she said, were savages, and their
country not worth the cost of conquering it, while Greece would constitute a
noble prize. She urged the invasion of Greece, too, rather than Scythia, as a
personal favor to herself, for she had been wanting, she said, some slaves from
Greece for a long time—some of the women of Sparta, of Corinth, and of Athens,
of whose graces and accomplishments she had heard so much.
There was something gratifying to the military vanity of Darius in being
thus requested to make an incursion to another continent, and undertake the
conquest of the mightiest nation of the earth, for the purpose of procuring
accomplished waiting-maids to offer as a present to his queen. He became
restless and excited while listening to Atossa's proposals, and to the arguments with which she enforced them, and it was
obvious that he was very strongly inclined to accede to her views. He finally
concluded to send a commission into Greece to explore the country, and to bring
back a report on their return; and as he decided to make the Greek physician
the guide of the expedition, Atossa gained her end.
A full account of this expedition, and of the various adventures which the
party met with on their voyage, is given in our history of Darius. It may be
proper to say here, however, that the physician fully succeeded in his plans of
making his escape. He pretended, at first, to be unwilling to go, and he made
only the most temporary arrangements in respect to the conduct of his affairs
while he should be gone, in order to deceive the king in regard to his
intentions of not returning. The king, on his part, resorted to some stratagems
to ascertain whether the physician was sincere in his professions, but he did
not succeed in detecting the artifice, and so the party went away. The
physician never returned.
Atossa had four sons. Xerxes was the eldest of them. He was not, however, the
eldest of the sons of Darius, as there were other sons, the children of another
wife, whom Darius had married before he ascended the throne. The oldest of
these children was named Artobazanes. Artobazanes seems to have been a prince of an amiable and
virtuous character, and not particularly ambitious and aspiring in his
disposition, although, as he was the eldest son of his father, he claimed to be
his heir. Atossa did not admit the validity of this
claim, but maintained that the oldest of her children was entitled to the
inheritance.
It became necessary to decide this question before Darius's death; for
Darius, in the prosecution of a war in which he was engaged, formed the design
of accompanying his army on an expedition into Greece, and, before doing this,
he was bound, according to the laws and usages of the Persian realm, to
regulate the succession.
There immediately arose an earnest dispute between the friends and
partisans of Artobazanes and Xerxes, each side urging
very eagerly the claims of its own candidate. The mother and the friends of Artobazanes maintained that he was the oldest son, and,
consequently, the heir. Atossa, on the other hand,
contended that Xerxes was the grandson of Cyrus, and that he derived from that
circumstance the highest possible hereditary rights to the Persian throne.
This was in some respects true, for Cyrus had been the founder of the
empire and the legitimate monarch, while Darius had no hereditary claims. He
was originally a noble, of high rank, indeed, but not of the royal line; and he
had been designated as Cyrus's successor in a time of revolution, because there
was, at that time, no prince of the royal family who could take the
inheritance. Those, therefore, who were disposed to insist on the claims of a
legitimate hereditary succession, might very plausibly claim that Darius's
government had been a regency rather than a reign; that Xerxes, being the
oldest son of Atossa, Cyrus's daughter, was the true
representative of the royal line; and that, although it might not be expedient
to disturb the possession of Darius during his lifetime, yet that, at his
death, Xerxes was unquestionably entitled to the throne.
There was obviously a great deal of truth and justice in this reasoning,
and yet it was a view of the subject not likely to be very agreeable to Darius,
since it seemed to deny the existence of any real and valid title to the
sovereignty in him. It assigned the crown, at his death, not to his son as
such, but to his predecessor's grandson; for though Xerxes was both the son of
Darius and the grandson of Cyrus, it was in the latter capacity that he was
regarded as entitled to the crown in the argument referred to above. The
doctrine was very gratifying to the pride of Atossa,
for it made Xerxes the successor to the crown as her son and heir, and not as
the son and heir of her husband. For this very reason it was likely to be not
very gratifying to Darius. He hesitated very much in respect to adopting it. Atossa's ascendency over his mind, and her influence
generally in the Persian court, was almost overwhelming, and yet Darius was
very unwilling to seem, by giving to the oldest grandson of Cyrus the
precedence over his own eldest son, to admit that he himself had no legitimate
and proper title to the throne.
While things were in this state, a Greek, named Demaratus, arrived at Susa.
He was a dethroned prince from Sparta, and had fled from the political storms
of his own country to seek refuge in Darius's capital. Demaratus found a way to
reconcile Darius's pride as a sovereign with his personal preferences as a
husband and a father. He told the king that, according to the principles of
hereditary succession which were adopted in Greece, Xerxes was his heir as well
as Cyrus's, for he was the oldest son who was born after his accession. A son,
he said, according to the Greek ideas on the subject, was entitled to inherit
only such rank as his father held when the son was born; and that,
consequently, none of his children who had been born before his accession could
have any claims to the Persian throne. Artobazanes,
in a word, was to be regarded, he said, only as the son of Darius the noble,
while Xerxes was the son of Darius the king.
In the end Darius adopted this view, and designated Xerxes as his successor
in case he should not return from his distant expedition. He did not return. He
did not even live to set out upon it. Perhaps the question of the succession
had not been absolutely and finally settled, for it arose again and was
discussed anew when the death of Darius occurred. The manner in which it was
finally disposed of will be described in the next chapter.
II
Egypt and Greece.
B.C. 484
The arrangements which Darius had made to fix and
determine the succession, before his death, did not entirely prevent the
question from arising again when his death occurred. Xerxes was on the spot at
the time, and at once assumed the royal functions. His brother was absent.
Xerxes sent a messenger to Artobazanes informing him
of their father's death, and of his intention of assuming the crown. He said,
however, that if he did so, he should give his brother the second rank, making
him, in all respects, next to himself in office and honor. He sent, moreover, a
great many splendid presents to Artobazanes, to
evince the friendly regard which he felt for him, and to propitiate his favor.
Artobazanes sent back word to Xerxes that he
thanked him for his presents, and that he accepted them with pleasure. He said
that he considered himself, nevertheless, as justly entitled to the crown,
though he should, in the event of his accession, treat all his brothers, and
especially Xerxes, with the utmost consideration and respect.
Soon after these occurrences, Artobazanes came to Media, where Xerxes was, and the question which of them should be the
king was agitated anew among the nobles of the court. In the end, a public
hearing of the cause was had before Artabanus, a brother of Darius, and, of
course, an uncle of the contending princes. The question seems to have been
referred to him, either because he held some public office which made it his
duty to consider and decide such a question, or else because he had been specially
commissioned to act as judge in this particular case. Xerxes was at first quite
unwilling to submit his claims to the decision of such a tribunal. The crown
was, as he maintained, rightfully his. He thought that the public voice was
generally in his favor. Then, besides, he was already in possession of the
throne, and by consenting to plead his cause before
his uncle, he seemed to be virtually abandoning all this vantage ground, and
trusting instead to the mere chance of Artabanus's decision.
Atossa, however, recommended to him to
accede to the plan of referring the question to Artabanus. He would consider
the subject, she said, with fairness and impartiality, and decide it right. She
had no doubt that he would decide it in Xerxes's favor;
"and if he does not," she added, "and you lose your cause, you
only become the second man in the kingdom instead of the first, and the
difference is not so very great, after all."
Atossa may have had some secret
intimation how Artabanus would decide.
However this may be, Xerxes at length concluded to
submit the question. A solemn court was held, and the case was argued in the
presence of all the nobles and great officers of state. A throne was at hand to
which the successful competitor was to be conducted as soon as the decision
should be made. Artabanus heard the arguments, and decided in favor of Xerxes. Artobazanes, his brother, acquiesced in the decision with
the utmost readiness and good humor. He was the first to bow before the king in
token of homage, and conducted him, himself, to the throne.
Xerxes kept his promise faithfully of making his
brother the second in his kingdom. He appointed him to a very high command in
the army, and Artobazanes, on his part, served the
king with great zeal and fidelity, until he was at last killed in battle, in
the manner hereafter to be described.
As soon as Xerxes found himself established on his
throne, he was called upon to decide immediately a great question, namely,
which of two important wars in which his father had been engaged he should
first undertake to prosecute, the war in Egypt or the war in Greece.
By referring to the map, the reader will see that, as
the Persian empire extended westward to Asia Minor and to the coasts of the
Mediterranean Sea, the great countries which bordered upon it in this direction
were, on the north Greece, and on the south, Egypt; the one in Europe, and the
other in Africa. The Greeks and the Egyptians were both wealthy and powerful,
and the countries which they respectively inhabited were fertile and beautiful
beyond expression, and yet in all their essential features and characteristics
they were extremely dissimilar. Egypt was a long and narrow inland valley.
Greece reposed, as it were, in the bosom of the sea, consisting, as it did, of
an endless number of islands, promontories, peninsulas, and winding coasts,
laved on every side by the blue waters of the Mediterranean. Egypt was a plain,
diversified only by the varieties of vegetation, and by the towns and villages,
and the enormous monumental structures which had been erected by man. Greece
was a picturesque and ever-changing scene of mountains and valleys; of
precipitous cliffs, winding beaches, rocky capes, and lofty headlands. The
character and genius of the inhabitants of these two countries took their cast,
in each case, from the physical conformations of the soil. The Egyptians were a
quiet, gentle, and harmless race of tillers of the ground. They spent their
lives in pumping water from the river, in the patient, persevering toil of
sowing smooth and mellow fields, or in reaping the waving grain. The Greeks
drove flocks and herds up and down the declivities of the mountains, or hunted
wild beasts in forests and fastnesses. They constructed galleys for navigating
the seas; they worked the mines and manufactured metals. They built bridges,
citadels, temples, and towns, and sculptured statuary from marble blocks which
they chiseled from the strata of the mountains. It is surprising what a
difference is made in the genius and character of man by elevations, here and
there, of a few thousand feet in the country where his genius and character are
formed.
The architectural wonders of Egypt and of Greece were
as diverse from each other as the natural features of the soil, and in each
case the structures were in keeping and in harmony with the character of the
landscape which they respectively adorned. The harmony was, however, that of
contrast, and not of correspondence. In Greece, where the landscape itself was
grand and sublime, the architect aimed only at beauty. To have aimed at
magnitude and grandeur in human structures among the mountains, the cliffs, the
cataracts, and the resounding ocean shores of Greece, would have been absurd.
The Grecian artists were deterred by their unerring instincts from the attempt.
They accordingly built beautiful temples, whose white and symmetrical
colonnades adorned the declivities, or crowned the summits of the hills. They
sculptured statues, to be placed on pedestals in groves and gardens; they
constructed fountains; they raised bridges and aqueducts on long ranges of
arches and piers; and the summits of ragged rocks crystallized, as it were,
under their hands into towers, battlements, and walls. In Egypt, on the other
hand, where the country itself was a level and unvarying plain, the
architecture took forms of prodigious magnitude, of lofty elevation, and of
vast extent. There were ranges of enormous columns, colossal statues, towering
obelisks, and pyramids rising like mountains from the verdure of the plain. Thus,
while nature gave to the country its elements of beauty, man completed the
landscape by adding to it the grand and the sublime.
The shape and proportions of Egypt would be
represented by a green ribbon an inch wide and a yard long, lying upon the
ground in a serpentine form; and to complete the model, we might imagine a
silver filament passing along the center of the green to denote the Nile. The
real valley of verdure, however, is not of uniform breadth, like the ribbon so
representing it, but widens as it approaches the sea, as if there had been
originally a gulf or estuary there, which the sediment from the river had
filled.
In fact, the rich and fertile plain which the alluvial
deposits of the Nile have formed, has been protruded for some distance into the
sea, and the stream divides itself into three great branches about a hundred
miles from its mouth, two outermost of which, with the sea-coast in
front, inclose a
vast triangle, which was called the Delta, from the Greek letter delta, Δ, which is of a triangular form.
In ascending the river beyond the Delta, the fertile plain, at first
twenty-five or thirty miles wide, grows gradually narrower, as the ranges of
barren hills and tracts of sandy deserts on either hand draw nearer and nearer
to the river. Thus the country consists of two long lines of rich and fertile
intervals, one on each side of the stream. In the time of Xerxes the whole
extent was densely populated, every little elevation of the land being covered
with a village or a town. The inhabitants tilled the land, raising upon it vast
stores of corn, much of which was floated down the river to its mouth, and
taken thence to various countries of Europe and Asia, in merchant ships, over
the Mediterranean Sea. Caravans, too, sometimes came across the neighboring
deserts to obtain supplies of Egyptian corn. This was done by the sons of Jacob
when the crops failed them in the land of Canaan, as related in the sacred
Scriptures.
There were two great natural wonders in Egypt in
ancient times as now: first, it never rained there, or, at least, so seldom,
that rain was regarded as a marvelous phenomenon, interrupting the ordinary
course of nature, like an earthquake in England or America. The falling of
drops of water out of clouds in the sky was an occurrence so strange, so
unaccountable, that the whole population regarded it with astonishment and awe.
With the exception of these rare and wonder-exciting instances, there was no
rain, no snow, no hail, no clouds in the sky. The sun was always shining, and the
heavens were always serene. These meteorological characteristics of the
country, resulting, as they do, from permanent natural causes, continue, of
course, unchanged to the present day; and the Arabs who live now along the
banks of the river, keep their crops, when harvested, in heaps in the open air,
and require no roofs to their huts except a light covering of sheaves to
protect the inmates from the sun.
The other natural wonder of Egypt was the annual
rising of the Nile. About midsummer, the peasantry who lived along the banks
would find the river gradually beginning to rise. The stream became more
turbid, too, as the bosom of the waters swelled. No cause for this mysterious
increase appeared, as the sky remained as blue and serene as before, and the sun,
then nearly vertical, continued to shine with even more than its wonted
splendor. The inhabitants however, felt no surprise, and asked for no
explanation of the phenomenon. It was the common course of nature at that
season. They had all witnessed it, year after year, from childhood. They, of
course, looked for it when the proper month came round, and, though they would
have been amazed if the annual flood had failed, they thought nothing
extraordinary of its coming.
When the swelling of the waters and the gradual
filling of the channels and low grounds in the neighborhood of the river warned
the people that the flood was at hand, they all engaged busily in the work of
completing their preparations. The harvests were all gathered from the fields,
and the vast stores of fruit and corn which they yielded were piled in roofless
granaries, built on every elevated spot of ground, where they would be safe
from the approaching inundation. The rise of the water was very gradual and
slow. Streams began to flow in all directions over the land. Ponds and lakes,
growing every day more and more extended, spread mysteriously over the surface
of the meadows; and all the time while this deluge of water was rising to
submerge the land, the air continued dry, the sun was sultry, and the sky was
without a cloud.
As the flood continued to rise, the proportion of land
and water, and the conformation of the irregular and temporary shores which
separated them, were changed continually, from day to day. The inhabitants
assembled in their villages, which were built on rising grounds, some natural,
others artificially formed. The waters rose more and more, until only these
crowded islands appeared above its surface—when, at length, the valley
presented to the view the spectacle of a vast expanse of water, calm as a
summer's sea, brilliant with the reflected rays of a tropical sun, and canopied
by a sky, which, displaying its spotless blue by day and its countless stars at
night, was always cloudless and serene.
The inundation was at its height in October. After
that period the waters gradually subsided, leaving a slimy and very fertilizing
deposit all over the lands which they had covered. Though the inhabitants
themselves, who had been accustomed to this overflow from infancy, felt no wonder
or curiosity about its cause, the philosophers of the day, and travelers from
other countries who visited Egypt, made many attempts to seek an explanation of
the phenomenon. They had three theories on the subject, which Herodotus
mentions and discusses.
The first explanation was, that the rising of the
river was occasioned by the prevalence of northerly winds on the Mediterranean
at that time of the year, which drove back the waters at the mouth of the
river, and so caused the accumulation of the water in the upper parts of the
valley. Herodotus thought that this was not a satisfactory explanation; for
sometimes, as he said, these northerly winds did not blow, and yet the rising
of the river took place none the less when the appointed season came. Besides,
there were other rivers similarly situated in respect to the influence of
prevailing winds at sea in driving in the waters at their mouths, which were,
nevertheless, not subject to inundations like the Nile.
The second theory was, that the Nile took its rise,
not, like other rivers, in inland lakes, or among inland mountains, but in some
remote and unknown ocean on the other side of the continent, which ocean the
advocates of this theory supposed might be subject to some great annual ebb and
flow; and from this it mightresult that
at stated periods an unusual tide of waters might be poured into the channel of
the river. This, however, could not be true, for the waters of the inundation
were fresh, not salt, which proved that they were not furnished by any ocean.
A third hypothesis was, that the rising of the water
was occasioned by the melting of the snows in summer on the mountains from
which the sources of the river came. Against this supposition Herodotus found
more numerous and more satisfactory reasons even than he had advanced against
the others. In the first place the river came from the south—a direction in
which the heat increased in intensity with every league, as far as travelers
had explored it; and beyond those limits, they supposed that the burning sun
made the country uninhabitable. It was preposterous to suppose that there could
be snow and ice there. Then, besides, the Nile had been ascended to a great
distance, and reports from the natives had been brought down from regions still
more remote, and no tidings had ever been brought of ice and snow. It was
unreasonable, therefore, to suppose that the inundations could arise from such
a cause.
These scientific theories, however, were discussed
only among philosophers and learned men. The common people had a much more
simple and satisfactory mode of disposing of the subject. They, in their
imaginations, invested the beneficent river with a sort of life and
personality, and when they saw its waters rising so gently but yet surely, to
overflow their whole land, leaving it, as they withdrew again, endued with a
new and exuberant fertility, they imagined it a living and acting intelligence,
that in the exercise of some mysterious and inscrutable powers, the nature of
which was to them unknown, and impelled by a kind and friendly regard for the
country and its inhabitants, came annually, of its own accord, to spread over
the land the blessings of fertility and abundance. The mysterious stream being
viewed in this light, its wonderful powers
awakened their veneration and awe, and its boundless beneficence their
gratitude.
Among the ancient Egyptian legends, there is one
relating to a certain King Pheron which strikingly
illustrates this feeling. It seems that during one of the inundations, while he
was standing with his courtiers and watching the flow of the water, the
commotion in the stream was much greater than usual on account of a strong wind
which was blowing at that time, and which greatly increased the violence of the
whirlpools, and the force and swell of the boiling eddies. There was given, in
fact, to the appearance of the river an expression of anger, and Pheron, who was of a proud and haughty character, like most
of the Egyptian kings, threw his javelin into one of the wildest of the
whirlpools, as a token of his defiance of its rage. He was instantly struck
blind!
The sequel of the story is curious, though it has no
connection with the personality of the Nile. Pheron remained blind for ten years. At the end of that time it was announced to him,
by some supernatural communication, that the period of his punishment had
expired, and that his sight might be brought back to him by the employment of a
certain designated means of restoration, which was the bathing of his eyes by a
strictly virtuous woman. Pheron undertook compliance
with the requisition, without any idea that the finding of a virtuous woman
would be a difficult task. He first tried his own wife, but her bathing
produced no effect. He then tried, one after another, various ladies of his
court, and afterward others of different rank and station, selecting those who
were most distinguished for the excellence of their characters. He was disappointed,
however, in them all. The blindness continued unchanged. At last, however, he
found the wife of a peasant, whose bathing produced the effect. The monarch's
sight was suddenly restored. The king rewarded the peasant woman, whose
virtuous character was established by this indisputable test, with the highest
honors. The others he collected together, and then shut them up in one of his
towns. When they were all thus safely imprisoned, he set the town on fire, and
burned them all up together.
To return to the Nile. Certain columns were erected in
different parts of the valley, on which cubits and the subdivisions of cubits
were marked and numbered, for the purpose of ascertaining precisely the rise of
the water. Such a column was called a Nilometer. There
was one near Memphis, which was at the upper point of the Delta, and others
further up the river. Such pillars continue to be used to mark the height of
the inundations to the present day.
The object of thus accurately ascertaining the rise of
the water was not mere curiosity, for there were certain important business
operations which depended upon the results. The fertility and productiveness of
the soil each year were determined almost wholly by the extent of the
inundation; and as the ability of the people to pay tribute depended upon their
crops, the Nilometer furnished the government with a
criterion by which they regulated the annual assessments of the taxes. There
were certain canals, too, made to convey the water to distant tracts of land,
which were opened or kept closed according as the water rose to a higher or
lower point. All these things were regulated by the indications of the Nilometer.
Egypt was famed in the days of Xerxes for those
enormous structures and ruins of structures whose origin was then, as now, lost
in a remote antiquity. Herodotus found the Pyramids standing in his day, and
presenting the same spectacle of mysterious and solitary grandeur which they
exhibited to Napoleon. He speculated on their origin and their history, just as
the philosophers and travelers of our day do. In fact, he knew less and could
learn less about them than is known now. It helps to impress our minds with an
idea of the extreme antiquity of these and the other architectural wonders of
Egypt, to compare them with things which are considered old in the Western
world. The ancient and venerable colleges and halls of Oxford and Cambridge
are, many of them, two or three hundred years old. There are remains of the old
wall of the city of London which has been standing seven hundred years. This is
considered a great antiquity. There are, however, Roman ruins in Britain, and
in various parts of Europe, more ancient still. They have been standing
eighteen hundred years! People look upon these with a species of wonder and awe
that they have withstood the destructive influences of time so long. But as to
the Pyramids, if we go back twenty-five hundred years, we find travelers
visiting and describing them then—monuments as ancient, as venerable, as
mysterious and unknown in their eyes, as they appear now in ours. We judge that
a mountain is very distant when, after traveling many miles toward it, it seems
still as distant as ever. Now, in tracing the history of the pyramids, the
obelisks, the gigantic statues, and the vast columnar ruins of the Nile, we may
go back twenty-five hundred years, without, apparently, making any progress
whatever toward reaching their origin.
Such was Egypt. Isolated as it was from the rest of
the world, and full of fertility and riches, it offered a marked and definite
object to the ambition of a conqueror. In fact, on account of the peculiar
interest which this long and narrow valley of verdure, with its wonderful
structures, the strange and anomalous course of nature which prevails in it, and
the extraordinary phases which human life, in consequence, exhibits there, has
always excited among mankind, heroes and conquerors have generally considered
it a peculiarly glorious field for their exploits. Cyrus, the founder of the
Persian monarchy, contemplated the subjugation of it. He did not carry his
designs into effect, but left them for Cambyses his son. Darius held the
country as a dependency during his reign, though, near the close of his life,
it revolted. This revolt took place while he was preparing for his grand
expedition against Greece, and he was perplexed with the question which of the
two undertakings, the subjugation of the Egyptians or the invasion of Greece,
he should first engage in. In the midst of this uncertainty he suddenly died, leaving
both the wars themselves and the perplexity of deciding between them as a part
of the royal inheritance falling to his son.
Xerxes decided to prosecute the Egyptian campaign
first, intending to postpone the conquest of Greece till he had brought the
valley of the Nile once more under Persian sway. He deemed it dangerous to
leave a province of his father's empire in a state of successful rebellion,
while leading his armies off to new undertakings. Mardonius,
who was the commander-in-chief of the army, and the great general on whom
Xerxes mainly relied for the execution of his schemes, was very reluctant to
consent to this plan. He was impatient for the conquest of Greece. There was
little glory for him to acquire in merely suppressing a revolt, and reconquering
what had been already once subdued. He was eager to enter upon a new field.
Xerxes, however, overruled his wishes, and the armies commenced their march for
Egypt. They passed the land of Judea on their way, where the captives who had
returned from Babylon, and their successors, were rebuilding the cities and
reoccupying the country. Xerxes confirmed them in the privileges which Cyrus
and Darius had granted them, and aided them in their work. He then went on
toward the Nile. The rebellion was easily put down. In less than a year from
the time of leaving Susa, he had reconquered the whole land of Egypt, punished
the leaders of the revolt, established his brother as viceroy of the country,
and returned in safety to Susa.
All this took place in the second year of his reign.
III
Debate on the Proposed Invasion Of
Greece.
B.C. 481
The two great counselors on whose judgment Xerxes
mainly relied, so far as he looked to any other judgment than his own in the
formation of his plans, were Artabanus, the uncle by whose decision the throne
had been awarded to him, and Mardonius, the
commander-in-chief of his armies. Xerxes himself was quite a young man, of a
proud and lofty, yet generous character, and full of self-confidence and hope. Mardonius was much older, but he was a soldier by
profession, and was eager to distinguish himself in some great military
campaign. It has always been unfortunate for the peace and happiness of
mankind, under all monarchical and despotic governments, in every age of the
world, that, through some depraved and unaccountable perversion of public
sentiment, those who are not born to greatness have had no means of attaining
to it except as heroes in war. Many men have, indeed, by their mental powers or
their moral excellences, acquired an extended and lasting posthumous fame; but
in respect to all immediate and exalted distinction and honor, it will be
found, on reviewing the history of the human race, that there have generally
been but two possible avenues to them: on the one hand, high birth, and on the
other, the performance of great deeds of carnage and destruction. There must
be, it seems, as the only valid claim to renown, either blood inherited or
bloodshed. The glory of the latter is second, indeed, to that of the former,
but it is only second. He who has sacked a city stands very high in the
estimation of his fellows. He yields precedence only to him whose grandfather
sacked one.
This state of things is now, it is true, rapidly
undergoing a change. The age of chivalry, of military murder and robbery, and
of the glory of great deeds of carnage and blood, is passing away, and that of
peace, of industry, and of achievements for promoting the comfort and happiness
of mankind is coming. The men who are now advancing to the notice of the world
are those who, through their commerce or their manufactures, feed and clothe
their fellow-men by millions, or, by opening new channels or new means for
international intercourse, civilize savages, and people deserts; while the
glory of killing and destroying is less and less regarded, and more and more
readily forgotten.
In the days of Xerxes, however, there was no road to
honor but by war, and Mardonius found that his only
hope of rising to distinction was by conducting a vast torrent of military devastation
over some portion of the globe; and the fairer, the richer, the happier the
scene which he was thus to inundate and overwhelm, the greater would be the
glory. He was very much disposed, therefore, to urge on the invasion of Greece
by every means in his power.
Artabanus, on the other hand, the uncle of Xerxes, was
a man advanced in years, and of a calm and cautious disposition. He was better
aware than younger men of the vicissitudes and hazards of war, and was much
more inclined to restrain than to urge on the youthful ambition of his nephew.
Xerxes had been able to present some show of reason for his campaign in Egypt,
by calling the resistance which that country offered to his power a rebellion.
There was, however, no such reason in the case of Greece. There had been two
wars between Persia and the Athenians already, it is true. In the first, the
Athenians had aided their countrymen in Asia Minor in a fruitless attempt to
recover their independence. This the Persian government considered as aiding
and abetting a rebellion. In the second, the Persians under Datis, one of Darius's generals,
had undertaken a grand invasion of Greece, and, after landing in the
neighborhood of Athens, were beaten, with immense slaughter, at the great
battle of Marathon, near that city. The former of these wars is known in
history as the Ionian rebellion; the latter as the first Persian invasion of
Greece. They had both occurred during the reign of Darius, and the invasion
under Datis had
taken place not many years before the accession of Xerxes, so that a great
number of the officers who had served in that campaign were still remaining in
the court and army of Xerxes at Susa. These wars had, however, both been
terminated, and Artabanus was very little inclined to have the contests renewed.
Xerxes, however, was bent upon making one more attempt
to conquer Greece, and when the time arrived for commencing his preparations,
he called a grand council of the generals, the nobles, and the potentates of
the realm, to lay his plans before them. The historian who narrated these
proceedings recorded the debate that ensued in the following manner.
Xerxes himself first addressed the assembly, to
announce and explain his designs.
"The enterprise, my friends," said he,
"in which I propose now to engage, and in which I am about to ask your
co-operation, is no new scheme of my own devising. What I design to do is, on
the other hand, only the carrying forward of the grand course of measures
marked out by my predecessors, and pursued by them with steadiness and energy,
so long as the power remained in their hands. That power has now descended to
me, and with it has devolved the responsibility of finishing the work which
they so successfully began.
"It is the manifest destiny of Persia to rule the
world. From the time that Cyrus first commenced the work of conquest by
subduing Media, to the present day, the extent of our empire has been
continually widening, until now it covers all of Asia and Africa, with the
exception of the remote and barbarous tribes, that, like the wild beasts which
share their forests with them, are not worth the trouble of subduing. These
vast conquests have been made by the courage, the energy, and the military
power of Cyrus, Darius, and Cambyses, my renowned predecessors. They, on their
part, have subdued Asia and Africa; Europe remains. It devolves on me to finish
what they have begun. Had my father lived, he would, himself, have completed
the work. He had already made great preparations for the undertaking; but he
died, leaving the task to me, and it is plain that I can not hesitate to
undertake it without a manifest dereliction of duty.
"You all remember the unprovoked and wanton
aggressions which the Athenians committed against us in the time of the Ionian
rebellion, taking part against us with rebels and enemies. They crossed
the Ægean Sea on
that occasion, invaded our territories, and at last captured and burned the
city of Sardis, the principal capital of our Western empire. I will never rest
until I have had my revenge by burning Athens. Many of you, too, who are here
present, remember the fate of the expedition under Datis. Those of you who were attached to that
expedition will have no need that I should urge you to seek revenge for your
own wrongs. I am sure that you will all second my undertaking with the utmost
fidelity and zeal.
"My plan for gaining access to the Grecian
territories is not, as before, to convey the troops by a fleet of galleys over
the Ægean Sea,
but to build a bridge across the Hellespont, and march the army to Greece by
land. This course, which I am well convinced is practicable, will be more safe
than the other, and the bridging of the Hellespont will be of itself a glorious
deed. The Greeks will be utterly unable to resist the enormous force which we
shall be able to pour upon them. We cannot but conquer; and inasmuch as beyond
the Greek territories there is, as I am informed, no other power at all able to
cope with us, we shall easily extend our empire on every side to the sea, and
thus the Persian dominion will cover the whole habitable world.
"I am sure that I can rely on your cordial and
faithful co-operation in these plans, and that each one of you will bring me,
from his own province or territories, as large a quota of men, and of supplies
for the war, as is in his power. They who contribute thus most liberally I
shall consider as entitled to the highest honors and rewards."
Such was, in substance, the address of Xerxes to his
council. He concluded by saying that it was not his wish to act in the affair
in an arbitrary or absolute manner, and he invited all present to express, with
perfect freedom, any opinions or views which they entertained in respect to the
enterprise.
While Xerxes had been speaking, the soul of Mardonius had been on fire with excitement and enthusiasm,
and every word which the king had uttered only fanned the flame. He rose immediately
when the king gave permission to the counselors to speak, and earnestly
seconded the monarch's proposals in the following words:
"For my part, sire, I cannot refrain from
expressing my high admiration of the lofty spirit and purpose on your part, which
leads you to propose to us an enterprise so worthy of your illustrious station
and exalted personal renown. Your position and power at the present time are
higher than those ever attained by any human sovereign that has ever lived; and
it is easy to foresee that there is a career of glory before you which no
future monarch can ever surpass. You are about to complete the conquest of the
world! That exploit can, of course, never be exceeded. We all admire the proud
spirit on your part which will not submit tamely to the aggressions and insults
which we have received from the Greeks. We have conquered the people of India,
of Egypt, of Ethiopia, and of Assyria, and that, too, without having previously
suffered any injury from them, but solely from a noble love of dominion; and
shall we tamely stop in our career when we see nations opposed to us from whom
we have received so many insults, and endured so many wrongs? Every
consideration of honor and manliness forbids it.
"We have nothing to fear in respect to the
success of the enterprise in which you invite us to engage. I know the Greeks,
and I know that they cannot stand against our arms. I have encountered them
many times and in various ways. I met them in the provinces of Asia Minor, and
you all know the result. I met them during the reign of Darius your father, in
Macedon and Thrace—or, rather, sought to meet them; for, though I marched
through the country, the enemy always avoided me. They could not be found. They
have a great name, it is true; but, in fact, all their plans and arrangements
are governed by imbecility and folly. They are not ever united among
themselves. As they speak one common language, any ordinary prudence and
sagacity would lead them to combine together, and make common cause against the
nations that surround them. Instead of this, they are divided into a multitude
of petty states and kingdoms, and all their resources and power are exhausted
in fruitless contentions with each other. I am convinced that, once across the
Hellespont, we can march to Athens without finding any enemy to oppose our
progress; or, if we should encounter any resisting force, it will be so small
and insignificant as to be instantly overwhelmed."
In one point Mardonius was
nearly right in his predictions, since it proved subsequently, as will
hereafter be seen, that when the Persian army reached the pass of Thermopile,
which was the great avenue of entrance, on the north, into the territories of
the Greeks, they found only three hundred men ready there to oppose their
passage!
When Mardonius had concluded
his speech, he sat down, and quite a solemn pause ensued. The nobles and
chieftains generally were less ready than he to encounter the hazards and
uncertainties of so distant a campaign. Xerxes would acquire, by the success of
the enterprise, a great accession to his wealth and to his dominion, and Mardonius, too, might expect to reap very rich rewards; but
what were they themselves to gain? They did not dare, however, to seem to
oppose the wishes of the king, and, notwithstanding the invitation which he had
given them to speak, they remained silent, not knowing, in fact, exactly what
to say.
All this time Artabanus, the venerable uncle of
Xerxes, sat silent like the rest, hesitating whether his years, his rank, and the
relation which he sustained to the young monarch would justify his interposing,
and make it prudent and safe for him to attempt to warn his nephew of the
consequences which he would hazard by indulging his dangerous ambition. At
length he determined to speak.
"I hope," said he, addressing the king,
"that it will not displease you to have other views presented in addition
to those which have already been expressed. It is better that all opinions
should be heard; the just and the true will then appear the more just and true
by comparison with others. It seems to me that the enterprise which you
contemplate is full of danger, and should be well considered before it is
undertaken. When Darius, your father, conceived of the plan of his invasion of
the country of the Scythians beyond the Danube, I counseled him against the
attempt. The benefits to be secured by such an undertaking seemed to me wholly
insufficient to compensate for the expense, the difficulties, and the dangers
of it. My counsels were, however, overruled. Your father proceeded on the
enterprise. He crossed the Bosporus, traversed Thrace, and then crossed the
Danube; but, after a long and weary contest with the hordes of savages which he
found in those trackless wilds, he was forced to abandon the undertaking, and
return, with the loss of half his army. The plan which you propose seems to me
to be liable to the same dangers, and I fear very much that it will lead to the
same results.
"The Greeks have the name of being a valiant and
formidable foe. It may prove in the end that they are so. They certainly
repulsed Datis and
all his forces, vast as they were, and compelled them to retire with an
enormous loss. Your invasion, I grant, will be more formidable than his. You
will throw a bridge across the Hellespont, so as to take your troops round
through the northern parts of Europe into Greece, and you will also, at the
same time, have a powerful fleet in the Ægean Sea. But it must be remembered that the
naval armaments of the Greeks in all those waters are very formidable. They may
attack and destroy your fleet. Suppose that they should do so, and that then,
proceeding to the northward in triumph, they should enter the Hellespont and
destroy your bridge? Your retreat would be cut off, and, in case of a reverse
of fortune, your army would be exposed to total ruin.
"Your father, in fact, very narrowly escaped
precisely this fate. The Scythians came to destroy his bridge across the Danube
while his forces were still beyond the river, and, had it not been for the very
extraordinary fidelity and zeal of Histiæus,
who had been left to guard the post, they would have succeeded in doing it. It
is frightful to think that the whole Persian army, with the sovereign of the
empire at their head, were placed in a position where their being saved from
overwhelming and total destruction depended solely on the fidelity and firmness
of a single man! Should you place your forces and your own person in the same
danger, can you safely calculate upon the same fortunate escape?
"Even the very vastness of your force may be the
means of insuring and accelerating its destruction, since whatever rises to
extraordinary elevation and greatness is always exposed to dangers
correspondingly extraordinary and great. Thus tall trees and lofty towers seem
always specially to invite the thunderbolts of Heaven.
"Mardonius charges the
Greeks with a want of sagacity, efficiency, and valor, and speaks
contemptuously of them, as soldiers, in every respect. I do not think that such
imputations are just to the people against whom they are directed, or honorable
to him who makes them. To disparage the absent, especially an absent enemy, is
not magnanimous or wise; and I very much fear that it will be found in the end
that the conduct of the Greeks will evince very different military qualities
from those which Mardonius has assigned them. They
are represented by common fame as sagacious, hardy, efficient, and brave, and
it may prove that these representations are true.
"My counsel therefore is, that you dismiss this
assembly, and take further time to consider this subject before coming to a
final decision. Perhaps, on more mature reflection, you will conclude to
abandon the project altogether. If you should not conclude to abandon it, but
should decide, on the other hand, that it must be prosecuted, let me entreat
you not to go yourself in company with the expedition. Let Mardonius take the charge and the responsibility. If he does so, I predict that he will
leave the dead bodies of the soldiers that you intrust to him, to be devoured by dogs on the
plains of Athens or Lacedæmon."
Xerxes was exceedingly displeased at hearing such a
speech as this from his uncle, and he made a very angry reply. He accused
Artabanus of meanness of spirit, and of a cowardice disgraceful to his rank and
station, in thus advocating a tame submission to the arrogant pretensions of
the Greeks. Were it not, he said, for the respect which he felt for Artabanus,
as his father's brother, he would punish him severely for his presumption in
thus basely opposing his sovereign's plans. "As it is," continued he,
"I will carry my plans into effect, but you shall not have the honor of
accompanying me. You shall remain at Susa with the women and children of the
palace, and spend your time in the effeminate and ignoble pleasures suited to a
spirit so mean. As for myself, I must and will carry my designs into execution.
I could not, in fact, long avoid a contest with the Greeks, even if I were to
adopt the cowardly and degrading policy which you recommend; for I am confident
that they will very soon invade my dominions, if I do not anticipate them by
invading theirs."
So saying, Xerxes dismissed the assembly.
His mind, however, was not at ease. Though he had so
indignantly rejected the counsel which Artabanus had offered him, yet the
impressive words in which it had been uttered, and the arguments with which it
had been enforced, weighed upon his spirit, and oppressed and dejected him. The
longer he considered the subject, the more serious his doubts and fears became,
until at length, as the night approached, he became convinced that Artabanus
was right, and that he himself was wrong. His mind found no rest until he came
to the determination to abandon the project after all. He resolved to make this
change in his resolution known to Artabanus and his nobles in the morning, and
to countermand the orders which he had given for the assembling of the troops.
Having by this decision restored something like repose to his agitated mind, he
laid himself down upon his couch and went to sleep.
In the night he saw a vision. It seemed to him that a
resplendent and beautiful form appeared before him, and after regarding him a
moment with an earnest look, addressed him as follows:
"And do you really intend to abandon your
deliberate design of leading an array into Greece, after having formally
announced it to the realm and issued your orders? Such fickleness is absurd,
and will greatly dishonor you. Resume your plan, and go on boldly and
perseveringly to the execution of it."
So saying, the vision disappeared.
When Xerxes awoke in the morning, and the remembrance
of the events of the preceding day returned, mingling itself with the new
impressions which had been made by the dream, he was again agitated and
perplexed. As, however, the various influences which pressed upon him settled
to their final equilibrium, the fears produced by Artabanus's substantial arguments and warnings
on the preceding day proved to be of greater weight than the empty appeal to
his pride which had been made by the phantom of the night. He resolved to
persist in the abandonment of his scheme. He called his council, accordingly,
together again, and told them that, on more mature reflection, he had become
convinced that his uncle was right and that he himself had been wrong. The
project, therefore, was for the present suspended, and the orders for the
assembling of the forces were revoked. The announcement was received by the
members of the council with the most tumultuous joy.
That night Xerxes had another dream. The same spirit
appeared to him again, his countenance, however, bearing now, instead of the
friendly look of the preceding night, a new and stern expression of
displeasure. Pointing menacingly at the frightened monarch with his finger, he
exclaimed, "You have rejected my advice; you have abandoned your plan; and
now I declare to you that, unless you immediately resume your enterprise and
carry it forward to the end, short as has been the time since you were raised
to your present elevation, a still shorter period shall elapse before your
downfall and destruction."
The spirit then disappeared as suddenly as it came,
leaving Xerxes to awake in an agony of terror.
As soon as it was day, Xerxes sent for Artabanus, and
related to him his dreams. "I was willing," said he, "after
hearing what you said, and maturely considering the subject, to give up my
plan; but these dreams, I cannot but think, are intimations from Heaven that I
ought to proceed."
Artabanus attempted to combat this idea by
representing to Xerxes that dreams were not to be regarded as indications of
the will of Heaven, but only as a vague and disordered reproduction of the
waking thoughts, while the regular action of the reason and the judgment by
which they were ordinarily controlled was suspended or disturbed by the influence
of slumber. Xerxes maintained, on the other hand, that, though this view of the
case might explain his first vision, the solemn repetition of the warning
proved that it was supernatural and divine. He proposed that, to put the
reality of the apparition still further to the test, Artabanus should take his
place on the royal couch the next night, to see if the specter would not appear
to him. "You shall clothe yourself," said he, "in my robes, put
the crown upon your head, and take your seat upon the throne. After that, you
shall retire to my apartment, lie down upon the couch, and go to sleep. If the
vision is supernatural, it will undoubtedly appear to you. If it does not so
appear, I will admit that it was nothing but a dream.
Artabanus made some objection, at first, to the
details of the arrangement which Xerxes proposed, as he did not see, he said,
of what advantage it could be for him to assume the guise and habiliments of
the king. If the vision was divine, it could not be deceived by such artifices
as those. Xerxes, however, insisted on his proposition, and Artabanus yielded.
He assumed for an hour the dress and the station of the king, and then retired
to the king's apartment, and laid himself down upon the couch under the royal
pavilion. As he had no faith in the reality of the vision, his mind was quiet
and composed, and he soon fell asleep.
At midnight, Xerxes, who was lying in an adjoining
apartment, was suddenly aroused by a loud and piercing cry from the room where
Artabanus was sleeping, and in a moment afterward Artabanus himself rushed in,
perfectly wild with terror. He had seen the vision. It had appeared before him
with a countenance and gestures expressive of great displeasure, and after
loading him with reproaches for having attempted to keep Xerxes back from his
proposed expedition into Greece, it attempted to bore out his eyes with a
red-hot iron with which it was armed. Artabanus had barely succeeded in
escaping by leaping from his couch and rushing precipitately out of the room.
Artabanus said that he was now convinced and
satisfied. It was plainly the divine will that Xerxes should undertake his
projected invasion, and he would himself, thenceforth, aid the enterprise by
every means in his power. The council was, accordingly, once more convened. The
story of the three apparitions was related to them, and the final decision
announced that the armies were to be assembled for the march without any
further delay.
It is proper here to repeat, once for all in this
volume, a remark which has elsewhere often been made in the various works of
this series, that in studying ancient history at the present day, it is less
important now to know, in regard to transactions so remote, what the facts
actually were which really occurred, than it is to know the story respecting
them, which, for the last two thousand years, has been in circulation among
mankind. It is now, for example, of very little consequence whether there ever
was or never was such a personage as Hercules, but it is essential that every educated
man should know the story which ancient writers tell in relating his doings. In
this view of the case, our object, in this volume, is simply to give the
history of Xerxes just as it stands, without stopping to separate the false
from the true. In relating the occurrences, therefore, which have been
described in this chapter, we simply give the alleged facts to our readers
precisely as the ancient historians give them to us, leaving each reader to
decide for himself how far he will believe the narrative. In respect to this
particular story, we will add, that some people think that Mardonius was really the ghost by whose appearance Artabanus and Xerxes were so
dreadfully frightened.
IV
Preparations for the Invasion Of Greece.
B.C. 481
As soon as the invasion of Greece was finally decided
upon, the orders were transmitted to all the provinces of the empire, requiring
the various authorities and powers to make the necessary preparations. There
were men to be levied, arms to be manufactured, ships to be built, and stores
of food to be provided. The expenditures, too, of so vast an armament as Xerxes
was intending to organize, would require a large supply of money. For all these
things Xerxes relied on the revenues and the contributions of the provinces,
and orders, very full and very imperative, were transmitted, accordingly, to
all the governors and satraps of Asia, and especially to those who ruled over
the countries which lay near the western confines of the empire, and
consequently near the Greek frontiers.
In modern times it is the practice of powerful nations
to accumulate arms and munitions of war on storage in arsenals and naval
depots, so that the necessary supplies for very extended operations, whether of
attack or defense, can be procured in a very short period of time. In respect
to funds, too, modern nations have a great advantage over those of former days,
in case of any sudden emergency arising to call for great and unusual expenditures.
In consequence of the vast accumulation of capital in the hands of private
individuals, and the confidence which is felt in the mercantile honor and good
faith of most established governments at the present day, these governments can
procure indefinite supplies of gold and silver at any time, by promising to pay
an annual interest in lieu of the principal borrowed. It is true that, in these
cases, a stipulation is made, by which the government may, at a certain
specified period, pay back the principal, and so extinguish the annuity; but in
respect to a vast portion of the amount so borrowed, it is not expected that
this repayment will ever be made. The creditors, in fact, do not desire that it
should be, as owners of property always prefer a safe annual income from it to
the custody of the principal; and thus governments in good credit have
sometimes induced their creditors to abate the rate of interest which they were
receiving, by threatening otherwise to pay the debt in full.
These inventions, however, by which a government in
one generation may enjoy the pleasure and reap the glory of waging war, and
throw the burden of the expense on another, were not known in ancient times.
Xerxes did not understand the art of funding a national debt, and there would,
besides, have probably been very little confidence in Persian stocks, if any
had been issued. He had to raise all his funds by actual taxation, and to have
his arms, and his ships and chariots of war, manufactured express. The food,
too, to sustain the immense army which he was to raise, was all to be produced,
and store-houses were to be built for the accumulation and custody of it. All
this, as might naturally be expected, would require time; and the vastness of
the scale on which these immense preparations were made is evinced by the fact
that four years were the time allotted for completing them. This period
includes, however, a considerable time before the great debate on the subject
described in the last chapter.
The chief scene of activity, during all this time, was
the tract of country in the western part of Asia Minor, and along the shores of
the Ægean Sea.
Taxes and contributions were raised from all parts of the empire, but the
actual material of war was furnished mainly from those provinces which were
nearest to the future scene of it. Each district provided such things as it
naturally and most easily produced. One contributed horses, another arms and
ammunition, another ships, and another provisions. The ships which were built
were of various forms and modes of construction, according to the purposes
which they were respectively intended to serve. Some were strictly ships of
war, intended for actual combat; others were transports, their destination
being simply the conveyance of troops or of military stores. There were also a
large number of vessels, which were built on a peculiar model, prescribed by
the engineers, being very long and straight-sided, and smooth and flat upon
their decks. These were intended for the bridge across the Hellespont. They
were made long, so that, when placed side by side across the stream, a greater
breadth might be given to the platform of the bridge. All these things were
very deliberately and carefully planned.
Although it was generally on the Asiatic side of
the Ægean Sea
that these vast works of preparation were going on, and the crossing of the
Hellespont was to be the first great movement of the Persian army, the reader
must not suppose that, even at this time, the European shores were wholly in
the hands of the Greeks. The Persians had, long before, conquered Thrace and a
part of Macedon; and thus the northern shores of the Ægean Sea, and many of the islands, were
already in Xerxes's hands. The Greek
dominions lay further south, and Xerxes did not anticipate any opposition from
the enemy, until his army, after crossing the strait, should have advanced to
the neighborhood of Athens. In fact, all the northern country through which his
route would lie was already in his hands, and in passing through it he
anticipated no difficulties except such as should arise from the elements
themselves, and the physical obstacles of the way. The Hellespont itself was,
of course, one principal point of danger. The difficulty here was to be
surmounted by the bridge of boats. There was, however, another point, which
was, in some respects, still more formidable: it was the promontory of Mount
Athos.
By looking at the map of Greece, placed at the
commencement of the next chapter, the reader will see that there are two or
three singular promontories jutting out from the main land in the northwestern
part of the Ægean Sea.
The most northerly and the largest of these was formed by an immense
mountainous mass rising out of the water, and connected by a narrow isthmus with
the main land. The highest summit of this rocky pile was called Mount Athos in
ancient times, and is so marked upon the map. In modern days it is called Monte
Santo, or Holy Mountain, being covered with monasteries, and convents, and
other ecclesiastical establishments built in the Middle Ages.
Mount Athos is very celebrated in ancient history. It
extended along the promontory for many miles, and terminated abruptly in lofty
cliffs and precipices toward the sea, where it was so high that its shadow, as
was said, was thrown, at sunset, across the water to the island of Lemnos, a distance of twenty leagues. It was a frightful
specter in the eyes of the ancient navigators, when, as they came coasting
along from the north in their frail galleys, on their voyages to Greece and
Italy, they saw it frowning defiance to them as they came, with threatening
clouds hanging upon its summit, and the surges and surf of the Ægean perpetually
thundering upon its base below. To make this stormy promontory the more terrible,
it was believed to be the haunt of innumerable uncouth and misshapen monsters
of the sea, that lived by devouring the hapless seamen who were thrown upon the
rocks from their wrecked vessels by the merciless tumult of the waves.
The plan which Xerxes had formed for the advance of
his expedition was, that the army which was to cross the Hellespont by the
bridge should advance thence through Macedonia and Thessaly, by land, attended
by a squadron of ships, transports, and galleys, which was to accompany the
expedition along the coast by sea. The men could be marched more conveniently
to their place of destination by land. The stores, on the other hand, the arms,
the supplies, and the baggage of every description, could be transported more
easily by sea. Mardonius was somewhat solicitous in
respect to the safety of the great squadron which would be required for this
latter service, in doubling the promontory of Mount Athos.
In fact, he had special and personal reason for his
solicitude, for he had himself, some years before, met with a terrible disaster
at this very spot. It was during the reign of Darius that this disaster
occurred. On one of the expeditions which Darius had intrusted to his charge, he was conducting a
very large fleet along the coast, when a sudden storm arose just as he was
approaching this terrible promontory.
He was on the northern side of the promontory when the
storm came on, and as the wind was from the north, it blew directly upon the
shore. For the fleet to make its escape from the impending danger, it seemed
necessary, therefore, to turn the course of the ships back against the wind;
but this, on account of the sudden and terrific violence of the gale, it was
impossible to do. The sails, when they attempted to use them, were blown away
by the howling gusts, and the oars were broken to pieces by the tremendous
dashing of the sea. It soon appeared that the only hope of escape for the
squadron was to press on in the desperate attempt to double the promontory, and
thus gain, if possible, the sheltered water under its lee. The galleys,
accordingly, went on, the pilots and the seamen exerting their utmost to keep
them away from the shore.
All their efforts, however, to do this, were vain. The
merciless gales drove the vessels, one after another, upon the rocks, and
dashed them to pieces, while the raging sea wrenched the wretched mariners from
the wrecks to which they attempted to cling, and tossed them out into the
boiling whirlpools around, to the monsters that were ready there to devour them,
as if she were herself some ferocious monster, feeding her offspring with their
proper prey. A few, it is true, of the hapless wretches succeeded in
extricating themselves from the surf, by crawling up upon the rocks, through
the tangled sea-weed, until they were above the reach of the surges; but when
they had done so, they found themselves hopelessly imprisoned between the
impending precipices which frowned above them and the frantic billows which
were raging and roaring below. They gained, of course, by their apparent
escape, only a brief prolongation of suffering, for they all soon miserably
perished from exhaustion, exposure, and cold.
Mardonius had no desire to encounter this
danger again. Now the promontory of Mount Athos, though high and rocky itself,
was connected with the main land by an isthmus level and low, and not very
broad. Xerxes determined on cutting a canal through this isthmus, so as to take
his fleet of galleys across the neck, and thus avoid the stormy navigation of
the outward passage. Such a canal would be of service not merely for the
passage of the great fleet, but for the constant communication which it would
be necessary for Xerxes to maintain with his own dominions during the whole
period of the invasion.
It might have been expected that the Greeks would have
interfered to prevent the execution of such a work as this; but it seems that
they did not, and yet there was a considerable Greek population in that
vicinity. The promontory of Athos itself was quite extensive, being about thirty
miles long and four or five wide, and it had several towns upon it. The canal
which Xerxes was to cut across the neck of this peninsula was to be wide enough
for two triremes to pass each other. Triremes were galleys propelled by three
banks of oars, and were vessels of the largest class ordinarily employed; and
as the oars by which they were impelled required almost as great a breadth of
water as the vessels themselves, the canal was, consequently, to be very wide.
The engineers, accordingly, laid out the ground, and,
marking the boundaries by stakes and lines, as guides to the workmen, the
excavation was commenced. Immense numbers of men were set at work, arranged
regularly in gangs, according to the various nations which furnished them. As
the excavation gradually proceeded, and the trench began to grow deep, they
placed ladders against the sides, and stationed a series of men upon them; then
the earth dug from the bottom was hauled up from one to another, in a sort of
basket or hod, until it reached the top, where
it was taken by other men and conveyed away.
The work was very much interrupted and impeded, in
many parts of the line, by the continual caving in of the banks, on account of
the workmen attempting to dig perpendicularly down. In one section—the one
which had been assigned to the Phœnicians—this
difficulty did not occur; for the Phœnicians,
more considerate than the rest, had taken the precaution to make the breadth of
their part of the trench twice as great at the top as it was below. By this
means the banks on each side were formed to a gradual slope, and consequently
stood firm. The canal was at length completed, and the water was let in.
North of the promontory of Mount Athos the reader will
find upon the map the River Strymon,
flowing south, not far from the boundary between Macedon and Thrace, into
the Ægean Sea.
The army of Xerxes, in its march from the Hellespont, would, of course, have to
cross this river; and Xerxes having, by cutting the canal across the isthmus of
Mount Athos, removed an obstacle in the way of his fleet, resolved next to
facilitate the progress of his army by bridging the Strymon.
The king also ordered a great number of granaries and
store-houses to be built at various points along the route which it was
intended that his army should pursue. Some of these were on the coasts of
Macedonia and Thrace, and some on the banks of the Strymon. To these magazines the corn raised in Asia
for the use of the expedition was conveyed, from time to time, in transport
ships, as fast as it was ready, and, being safely deposited, was protected by a
guard. No very extraordinary means of defense seems to have been thought
necessary at these points, for, although the scene of all these preliminary
arrangements was on the European side of the line, and in what was called Greek
territory, still this part of the country had been long under Persian dominion.
The independent states and cities of Greece were all further south, and the
people who inhabited them did not seem disposed to interrupt these
preparations. Perhaps they were not aware to what object and end all these
formidable movements on their northern frontier were tending.
Xerxes, during all this time, had remained in Persia.
The period at length arrived when, his preparations on the frontiers being far
advanced toward completion, he concluded to move forward at the head of his
forces to Sardis. Sardis was the great capital of the western part of his
dominions, and was situated not far from the frontier. He accordingly assembled
his forces, and, taking leave of his capital of Susa with much parade and many
ceremonies, he advanced toward Asia Minor. Entering and traversing Asia Minor,
he crossed the Halys, which had been, in former
times, the western boundary of the empire, though its limits had now been
extended very far beyond. Having crossed the Halys,
the immense procession advanced into Phrygia.
A very romantic tale is told of an interview between
Xerxes and a certain nobleman named Pythius, who
resided in one of the Phrygian towns. The circumstances were these: After
crossing the Halys, which river flows north
into the Euxine Sea, the army went on to
the westward through nearly the whole extent of Phrygia, until at length they
came to the sources of the streams which flowed west into the Ægean Sea. One of the most
remarkable of these rivers was the Meander. There was a town built exactly at
the source of the Meander—so exactly, in fact, that the fountain from which the
stream took its rise was situated in the public square of the town, walled in
and ornamented like an artificial fountain in a modern city. The name of this
town was Celænæ.
When the army reached Celænæ and encamped there, Pythius made a great entertainment for the officers, which, as the number was very
large, was of course attended with an enormous expense. Not satisfied with
this, Pythius sent word to the king that if he was,
in any respect, in want of funds for his approaching campaign, he, Pythius, would take great pleasure in supplying him.
Xerxes was surprised at such proofs of wealth and
munificence from a man in comparatively a private station. He inquired of his
attendants who Pythius was. They replied that, next
to Xerxes himself, he was the richest man in the world. They said, moreover,
that he was as generous as he was rich. He had made Darius a present of a
beautiful model of a fruit-tree and of a vine, of solid gold. He was by birth,
they added, a Lydian.
Lydia was west of Phrygia, and was famous for its
wealth. The River Pactolus, which was so
celebrated for its golden sands, flowed through the country, and as the princes
and nobles contrived to monopolize the treasures which were found, both in the
river itself and in the mountains from which it flowed, some of them became
immensely wealthy.
Xerxes was astonished at the accounts which he heard
of Pythius's fortune.
He sent for him, and asked him what was the amount of his treasures. This was
rather an ominous question; for, under such despotic governments as those of
the Persian kings, the only real safeguard of wealth was, often, the
concealment of it. Inquiry on the part of a government, in respect to treasures
accumulated by a subject, was, often, only a preliminary to the seizure and
confiscation of them.
Pythius, however, in reply to the king's
question, said that he had no hesitation in giving his majesty full information
in respect to his fortune. He had been making, he said, a careful calculation
of the amount of it, with a view of determining how much he could offer to
contribute in aid of the Persian campaign. He found, he said, that he had two
thousand talents of silver, and four millions, wanting seven thousand, of staters of gold.
The stater was a
Persian coin. Even if we knew, at the present day, its exact value, we could
not determine the precise amount denoted by the sum which Pythius named, the value of money being subject to such vast fluctuations in different
ages of the world. Scholars who have taken an interest in inquiring into such
points as these, have come to the conclusion that the amount of gold and silver
coin which Pythius thus reported to Xerxes was equal
to about thirty millions of dollars.
Pythius added, after stating the amount
of the gold and silver which he had at command, that it was all at the service
of the king for the purpose of carrying on the war. He had, he said, besides
his money, slaves and farms enough for his own maintenance.
Xerxes was extremely gratified at this generosity, and
at the proof which it afforded of the interest which Pythius felt in the cause of the king. "You are the only man," said he,
"who has offered hospitality to me or to my army since I set out upon this
march, and, in addition to your hospitality, you tender me your whole fortune.
I will not, however, deprive you of your treasure. I will, on the contrary,
order my treasurer to pay to you the seven thousand staters necessary
to make your four millions complete. I offer you also my friendship, and will
do anything in my power, now and hereafter, to serve you. Continue to live in
the enjoyment of your fortune. If you always act under the influence of the
noble and generous impulses which govern you now, you will never cease to be
prosperous and happy."
If we could end the account of Pythius and Xerxes here, what generous and noble-minded men we might suppose them to
be! But alas! how large a portion of the apparent generosity and nobleness
which shows itself among potentates and kings, turns into selfishness and
hypocrisy when closely examined. Pythius was one of
the most merciless tyrants that ever lived. He held all the people that lived
upon his vast estates in a condition of abject slavery, compelling them to toil
continually in his mines, in destitution and wretchedness, in order to add more
and more to his treasures. The people came to his wife with their bitter
complaints. She pitied them, but could not relieve them. One day, it is said
that, in order to show her husband the vanity and folly of living only to amass
silver and gold, and to convince him how little real power such treasures have
to satisfy the wants of the human soul, she made him a great entertainment, in
which there was a boundless profusion of wealth in the way of vessels and
furniture of silver and gold, but scarcely any food. There was everything to
satisfy the eye with the sight of magnificence, but nothing to satisfy hunger.
The noble guest sat starving in the midst of a scene of unexampled riches and
splendor, because it was not possible to eat silver and gold.
And as for Xerxes's professions
of gratitude and friendship for Pythius, they were
put to the test, a short time after the transactions which we have above
described, in a remarkable manner. Pythius had five
sons. They were all in Xerxes's army. By
their departure on the distant and dangerous expedition on which Xerxes was to
lead them, their father would be left alone. Pythius,
under these circumstances, resolved to venture so far on the sincerity of his
sovereign's professions of regard as to request permission to retain one of his
sons at home with his father, on condition of freely giving up the rest.
Xerxes, on hearing this proposal, was greatly enraged.
"How dare you," said he, "come to me with such a demand? You and
all that pertain to you are my slaves, and are bound to do my bidding without a
murmur. You deserve the severest punishment for such an insolent request. In
consideration, however, of your past good behavior, I will not inflict upon you
what you deserve. I will only kill one of your sons—the one that you seem to
cling to so fondly. I will spare the rest." So saying, the enraged king
ordered the son whom Pythius had endeavored to retain
to be slain before his eyes, and then directed that the dead body should be
split in two, and the two halves thrown, the one on the right side of the road
and the other on the left, that his army, as he said, might "march between
them."
On leaving Phrygia, the army moved on toward the west.
Their immediate destination as has already been said, was Sardis, where they
were to remain until the ensuing spring. The historian mentions a number of
objects of interest which attracted the attention of Xerxes and his officers on
this march, which mark the geographical peculiarities of the country, or
illustrate, in some degree, the ideas and manners of the times.
There was one town, for example, situated, not
like Celænæ, where a
river had its origin, but where one disappeared. The stream was a branch of the
Meander. It came down from the mountains like any other mountain torrent, and
then, at the town in question, it plunged suddenly down into a gulf or chasm
and disappeared. It rose again at a considerable distance below, and thence
flowed on, without any further evasions, to the Meander.
On the confines between Phrygia and Lydia the army came
to a place where the road divided. One branch turned toward the north, and led
to Lydia; the other inclined to the south, and conducted to Caria. Here, too,
on the frontier, was a monument which had been erected by Crœsus, the great king of Lydia,
who lived in Cyrus's day, to mark the eastern boundaries of his kingdom. The
Persians were, of course, much interested in looking upon this ancient
landmark, which designated not only the eastern limit of Crœsus's empire, but also
what was, in ancient times, the western limit of their own.
There was a certain species of tree which grew in
these countries called the plane-tree. Xerxes found one of these trees so large
and beautiful that it attracted his special admiration. He took possession of
it in his own name, and adorned it with golden chains, and set a guard over it.
This idolization of a tree was a striking instance of the childish caprice and
folly by which the actions of the ancient despots were so often governed.
As the army advanced, they came to other places of
interest and objects of curiosity and wonder. There was a district where the
people made a sort of artificial honey from grain, and a lake from which the
inhabitants procured salt by evaporation, and mines, too, of silver and of
gold. These objects interested and amused the minds of the Persians as they
moved along, without, however, at all retarding or interrupting their progress.
In due time they reached the great city of Sardis in safety, and here Xerxes
established his head-quarters, and awaited the coming of spring.
In the mean time, however,
he sent heralds into Greece to summon the country to surrender to him. This is
a common formality when an army is about to attack either a town, a castle, or
a kingdom. Xerxes's heralds crossed
the Ægean Sea,
and made their demands, in Xerxes's name,
upon the Greek authorities. As might have been expected, the embassies was
fruitless; and the heralds returned, bringing with them, from the Greeks, not
acts or proffers of submission, but stern expressions of hostility and
defiance. Nothing, of course, now remained, but that both parties should
prepare for the impending crisis.
Chapter V
Crossing the Hellespont.
Although the ancient Asia Minor was in the same
latitude as New York, there was yet very little winter there. Snows
fell, indeed, upon the summits of the mountains and ice formed occasionally
upon quiet streams, an 1 yet, in general, the imaginations of the
inhabitants, in forming mental images of frost and snow, sought them not
in their own winters, but in the cold and icy regions of the north, of
which, however, scarcely any thing was known to them except what was
disclosed by wild and exaggerated rumors and legends.
There was, however, a period of blustering winds and
chilly rains which was called winter, and Xerxes was compelled to wait,
before commencing his invasion, until the inclement season had passed. As it
was, he did not wholly escape the disastrous effects of the
wintery gales. A violent storm arose while he was at Sardis, and
broke up the bridge which he had built across the Hellespont. When the tidings of
this disaster were brought to Xerxes at his winter quarters, he was very much
enraged. He was angry both with the sea for having destroyed the structure, and
with the architects who had built it for not having made it
strong enough to stand against its fury. He determined to punish both the
waves and the workmen. He ordered the sea to be scourged with a monstrous
whip, and directed that heavy chains should be thrown into it, as symbols
of his defiance of its power, and of his determination to subject it to
his control. The men who administered this senseless discipline cried
out to the sea, as they did it, in the following words, which Xerxes
had dictated to them: “Miserable monster! this is the punishment
which Xerxes your master inflicts upon you, on account of the unprovoked
and wanton injury you have done him. Be assured that he will
pass over you, whether you will or no. He hates and defies you,
object as you are, through your insatiable cruelty, and the nauseous
bitterness of your waters, of the common abomination of mankind.”
As for the men who had built the bridge, which had
been found thus inadequate to withstand the force of a wintery tempest, he
ordered every one of them to be beheaded.
The vengeance of the king being thus satisfied, a new
set of engineers and workmen were designated and ordered to build another
bridge Knowing, as, of course, they now did, that their lives
depended upon the stability of their structure, they omitted no possible
precaution which could tend to secure it They selected the strongest
ships, and arranged them in positions which would best enable them to
withstand the pressure of the current Each vessel was secured in its place
by strong anchors, placed scientifically in such a manner as to resist, to
the best advantage, the force of the strain to which they would be
exposed. There were two ranges of these vessels, extending from shore to
shore, containing over three hundred in each. In each range one or
two vessels were omitted, on the Asiatic side, to allow boats and galleys
to pass through, in order to keep the communication open. These
omissions did not interfere with the use of the bridge, as the
superstructure and the roadway above was continued over them.
The vessels which were to serve for the foundation of
the bridge being thus arranged and secured in their places, two immense
cables were made and stretched from shore to shore, each being
fastened, at the ends, securely to the banks, and resting in the middle on the
decks of the vessels. For the fastenings of these cables on the shore there
were immense piles driven into the ground, and huge rings attached to the
piles. The cables, as they passed along the decks of the vessels over the
water, were secured to them all by strong cordage, so that each vessel was
firmly and indissolubly bound to all the rest
Over these cables a platform was made of trunks of
trees, with branches placed upon them to fill the interstices and level
the surface. The whole was then covered with a thick stratum of
earth, which made a firm and substantial road like that of a public
highway. A high and close fence was also erected on each side, so
as to shut off the view of the water, which might otherwise alarm the
horses and the beasts of burden that were to cross with the army.
When the news was brought to Xerxes at Sardis that the
bridge was completed, and that all things were ready for the passage, he
made arrangements for commencing his march. A circumstance, however,
here occurred that at first alarmed him. It was no less a phenomenon than
an eclipse of the sun. Eclipses were considered in those days as
extraordinary and supernatural omens, and Xerxes was naturally anxious to know
what this sudden darkness was meant to portend. He directed the magi
to consider the subject, and to give him their opinion. Their answer was,
that, as the sun was the guardian divinity of the Greeks, and
the moon that of the Persians, the meaning of the sudden withdrawal
of the light of day doubtless was, that Heaven was about to withhold ts protection
from the Greeks in the approaching struggle. Xerxes was satisfied with
this explanation, and the preparations for the march went on.
The movement of the grand procession from the city of
Sardis was inconceivably splendid. First came the long trains of baggage,
on mules, and camels, and horses, and other beasts of burden, attended by
the drivers, and the men who had the baggage in charge. Next came an
immense body of troops of all nations, marching irregularly, but under the
command of the proper officers. Then, after a considerable interval, came
a body of a thousand horse, splendidly caparisoned, and followed by a
thousand spearmen, who marched trailing their spears upon the ground, in
token of respect and submission to the king who was coming behind them.
Next to these troops, and immediately in advance of
the King, were certain religious and sacred objects and personages, on which
the people who gazed upon this gorgeous spectacle looked with the
utmost awe and veneration. There were, first, ten sacred horses,
splendidly caparisoned, each led by his groom, who was clothed in
appropriate robes, as a sort of priest officiating in the service of a
god. Behind these came the sacred car of Jupiter. This car was very
large, and elaborately worked, and was profusely ornamented with gold. It
was drawn by eight white horses. No human being was allowed to set
his foot upon any part of it, and, consequently, the reins of the horses
were carried back, under the car, to the charioteer, who walked behind.
Xerxes’s own chariot came next, drawn by very splendid horses, selected especially
for their size and beauty. His charioteer, a young Persian noble, sat by his
side.
Then came great bodies of troops. There was one corps
of two thousand men, the lifeguards of the king, who were armed in a
very splendid and costly manner, to designate their high rank in the
army, and the exalted nature of their duty as personal attendants on the
sovereign. One thousand of these life-guards were foot
soldiers, and the other thousand horsemen. After the life-guards came a body of
ten thou, sand infantry, and after them ten thousand cavalry. This
completed what was strictly the Persian part of the army. There was an
interval of about a quarter of a mile in the real of
these bodies of troops, and then came a vast and countless multitude of
servants, attendants, adventurers, and camp followers of every
description—a confused, promiscuous, disorderly, and noisy throng.
The immediate destination of this vast horde was
Abydos; for it was between Sestos, on the European shore, and Abydos, on
the Asiatic, that the bridge had been built. To reach Abydos, the route
was north, through the province of Mysia. In their progress the guides of
the army kept well inland, so as to avoid the indentations of the coast,
and the various small rivers which here flow westward toward the
sea. Thus advancing, the army passed to the right of Mount Ida, and
arrived at last on the bank of the Scamander. Here they encamped.
They were upon the plain of Troy.
The world was filled, in those days, with the glory of
the military exploits which had been performed, some ages before, in the
siege and capture of Troy; and it was the custom for every military hero
who passed the site of the city to pause in his march and spend some
time amid the scenes of those ancient conflicts, that he might
inspirit and invigorate his own ambition by the associations of the spot, and
also render suitable honors to the memories of those that fell
'there. Xerxes did this. Alexander subsequently did it. Xerxes examined
the various localities, ascended the ruins of the citadel of Priam, walked over
the ancient battle fields, and at length, when his curiosity had thus
been satisfied, he ordered a grand sacrifice of a thousand oxen to be
made, and a libation of corresponding magnitude to be offered,
in honor of the shades of the dead heroes whose deeds had consecrated
the spot.
Whatever excitement and exhilaration, however, Xerxes
himself may have felt, in approaching, under these circumstances, the transit
of the stream, where the real labors and dangers of his expedition were to
commence, his miserable and helpless soldiers did not share them. Their
condition and prospects were wretched in the extreme. In the first place,
none of them went willingly. In modern times, at least in England and
America, armies are recruited by enticing the depraved and the miserable
to enlist, by tendering them a bounty, as it is called, that is, a sum of
ready money, which, as a means of temporary and often vicious
pleasure, presents a temptation they cannot resist. The act of
enlistment is, however, in a sense voluntary, so that those who have homes, and
friends, and useful pursuits in which they are peacefully engaged, are not
disturbed. It was not so with the soldiers of Xerxes. They were
slaves, and had been torn from their rural homes all over the empire
by a merciless conscription, from which there was no possible escape.
Their life in camp, too, was comfortless and wretched. At the present day,
when it is so much more difficult than it then was to obtain sol diers, and when so much more time and attention are
required to train them to their work in the modern art of war, soldiers
must be taken care of when obtained; but in Xerxes’s day it was much
easier to get new supplies of recruits than to incur any great expense in
providing for the health and comfort of those already in the service.
The arms and trappings, it is true, of such troops as were in immediate
attendance on the king, were very splendid and gay, though this was
only decoration, after all, and the king’s decoration too, not theirs. In
respect, however, to everything like personal comfort, whether of food and
of clothing, or the means of shelter and repose, the common soldiers
were utterly destitute and wretched. They felt no interest in the
campaign; they had nothing to hope for from its success, but a
continuance, if their lives were spared, of the same
miserable bondage which they had always endured. There was, however,
little probability even of this; for whether, in the case of such an
invasion, the aggressor was to succeed or to fail, the destiny of the
soldiers personally was almost inevitable destruction. The mass of
Xerxes’s army was thus a mere herd of slaves, driven along by the
whips of their officers, reluctant, wretched, and despairing.
This helpless mass was overtaken one night, among the
gloomy and rugged defiles and passes of Mount Ida, by a dreadful storm of
wind and rain, accompanied by thunder and lightning Unprovided as they
were with the means of protection against such tempests, they
were thrown into confusion, and spent the night in terror. Great
numbers perished, struck by the lightning, or exhausted by the cold and
exposure ; and afterward, when they encamped on the plains of Troy, near the
Scamander, the whole of the water of the stream was not enough to supply
the wants of the soldiers and the immense herds of beasts of burden, so that
many thousands suffered severely from thirst.
All these things conspired greatly to depress the
spirits of the men, so that, at last, when they arrived in the vicinity of
Abydos, the whole army was in a state of extreme dejection
and despair. This, however, was of little consequence. The repose of a
master so despotic and lofty as Xerxes is very little disturbed
by the mental sorrows of his slaves. Xerxes reached Abydos, and prepared
to make the passage of the strait in a manner worthy of the
grandeur of the occasion.
The first thing was to make arrangements for a great
parade of his forces, not, apparently, for the purpose of accomplishing
any useful end of military organization in the arrangement of the
troops, but to gratify the pride and pleasure of the sovereign with an
opportunity of surveying them. A great white throne of marble was
accordingly erected on an eminence not far from the shore of the
Hellespont, from which Xerxes looked down with great complacency and
pleasure, on the one hand, upon the long lines of troops, the countless
squadrons of horsemen, the ranges of tents, and the vast herds of beasts
of burden which were assembled on the land, and, on the other hand, upon
the fleets of ships, and boats, and galleys at anchor upon the sea;
while the shores of Europe were smiling in the distance, and the long and
magnificent roadway which he had made lay floating upon the water, all
ready to take his enormous armament across whenever he should issue
the command.
Any deep emotion of the human soul, in persons of a
sensitive physical organization, tends to tears; and Xerxes’s heart, being
filled with exultation and pride, and with a sense of inexpressible
grandeur and sublimity as he looked upon this scene, was softened by the
pleasurable excitements of the hour, and though, at first his countenance
was beaming with satisfaction and pleasure, his uncle Artabanus, who
stood by his side, soon perceived that tears were standing in his
eyes. Artabanus asked him what this meant. It made him sad, Xerxes
replied, to reflect that, immensely vast as the countless multitude before
him was, in one hundred years from that time not one of them all
would be alive.
The tender-heartedness which Xerxes manifested on this
occasion, taken in connection with the stern and unrelenting tyranny which he
was exercising over the mighty mass of humanity whose mortality he
mourned, has drawn forth a great variety of comments from writers of every
age who have repeated the story. Artabanus replied to it on the spot by saying
that he did not think that the king ought to give himself too much
uneasiness on the subject of human liability to death, for it happened, in a
vast number of cases, that the privations and sufferings of men were so
great, that often, in the course of their lives, they rather wished to
die than to live; and that death was, consequently, in some respects, to
be regarded, not as in itself a woe, but rather as the relief and remedy
for woe.
There is no doubt that this theory of Artabanus, so
far as it applied to the unhappy soldiers of Xerxes, all marshaled before him
when he uttered it, was eminently true.
Xerxes admitted that what his uncle said was just, but
it was, he said, a melancholy subject, and so he changed the conversation.
He asked his uncle whether he still entertained the same doubts and
fears in respect to the expedition that he had expressed at Susa when the plan
was first proposed in the council. Artabanus replied that he most
sincerely hoped that the prognostications of the vision would prove
true, but that he had still great apprehensions of the result. “ I
have been reflecting,” continued he, “ with great care on the whole
subject, and it seems to me that there are two dangers of
very serious character to which your expedition will be imminently
exposed.”
Xerxes wished to know what they were.
“They both arise,” said Artabanus, “ from the immense
magnitude of your operations. In *he first place, you have so large a
number of ships, galleys, and transports in your fleet, that I do not
see how, when you have gone down upon the Greek coast, if a storm should
arise, you are going to find shelter for them. There are no harbors
there large enough to afford anchorage ground for such an immense number of
vessels.”
“And what is the other danger?” asked Xerxes.
“The other is the difficulty of finding food for such
a vast multitude of men as you have brought together in your armies. The
quantity of food necessary to supply such countless numbers is almost
incalculable. Your granaries and magazines will soon be exhausted, and then, as
no country whatever that you can pass through will have resources of food
adequate for such a multitude of mouths, it seems to me that your
march must inevitably end in a famine. The less resistance you meet with,
and the further you consequently advance, the worse it will be for
you. I do not see how this fata) result can possibly be avoided; and so
uneasy and anxious am I on the subject, that I have no rest or
peace.”
“I admit,” said Xerxes, in reply, “that what you say
is not wholly unreasonable; but in great undertakings it will never do to
take counsel wholly of our fears. I am willing to submit to a very
large portion of the evils to which I expose myself on this expedition,
rather than not accomplish the end which I have in view Besides, the most
prudent and cautious counsels are not always the best. He who hazards
nothing gains nothing. I have always observed that in all the affairs of human
life, those who exhibit some enterprise and courage in what they
undertake are far more likely to be successful than those who weigh every
thins and consider every thing, and will not
advance where they can see any remote prospect of danger. If my predecessors
had acted on the principles which you recommend, the Persian empire would never
have acquired the greatness to which it has now attained. In
continuing to act on the same principles which governed them, I
confidently expect the same success. We shall conquer Europe, and then
return in peace, I feel assured, without encountering the famine
which you dread so much, or any other great calamity.”
On hearing these words, and observing how fixed and
settled the determinations of Xerxes were, Artabanus said no more on the
general subject, but on one point he ventured to offer his counsel to
his nephew, and that was on the subject of employing the Ionians in the
war. The Ionians were Greeks by descent. Their ancestors had crossed
the Aegean Sea, and settled at various places along the coast of
Asia Minor, in the western part of the provinces of Caria, Lydia, and
Mysia. Artabanus thought it was dangerous to take these men to
fight against their countrymen. However faithfully disposed they
might be in commencing the enterprise, a thousand circumstances might
occur to shake their fidelity and lead them to revolt when they found
themselves in the land of their forefathers, and heard the enemies against
whom they had been brought to contend speaking their own mother tongue.
Xerxes, however, was not convinced by Artabanus’s arguments. He thought that the employment
of the Ionians was perfectly safe. They had been eminently faithful and
firm, he said, under Histiaeus, in the time of Darius’s invasion of
Scythia, when Darius had left them to guard his bridge over the Danube.
They had proved themselves trustworthy then, and he would, he said,
accordingly trust them now. “Besides,” he added, “they have left their
property, their wives and their children, and all else that they hold
dear, in our hands in Asia, and they will not dare, while we retain such
hostages, to do any thing against us.”
Xerxes said, however, that since Artabanus was so much
concerned* in respect to the result of the expedition, he should not be
compelled to accompany it any further, but that he might return to
Susa instead, and take charge of the government there until Xerxes should
return.
A part of the celebration on the great day of parade,
on which this conversation between the king and his uncle was held,
consisted of a naval sea fight, waged on the Hellespont, between two of
the nations of his army, for the king’s amusement. The Phoenicians were
the victors in this combat. Xerxes was greatly delighted with the
combat, and, in fact, with the whole of the magnificent spectacle which
the day had displayed.
Soon after this, Xerxes dismissed Artabanus, ordering
him to return to Susa, and to assume the regency of the empire. He
convened, also, another general council of the
nobles of his court and the officers of the army, to announce to them
that the time had arrived for crossing the bridge, and to make his
farewell address to them before they should take their final departure
from Asia. He exhorted them to enter upon the great work before them with
a determined and resolute spirit, saying that if the Greeks were once
subdued, no other enemies able at all to cope with the Persians would
be left on the habitable globe.
On the dismission of the council, orders were given to
commence the crossing of the bridge the next day at sunrise. The
preparations were made accordingly. In the morning, as soon as it was
light, and while waiting for the rising of the sun, they burned upon the
bridge all manner of perfumes, and strewed the way with branches of myrtle, the
emblem of triumph and joy. As the time for the rising of the sun drew
nigh, Xerxes stood with a golden vessel full of wine, which he was to pour
out as a libation as soon as the first dazzling beams should appear above
the horizon. When, at length, the moment arrived, he poured out the
wine into the sea, throwing the vessel in which it had been contained
after it as an offering. He also threw in, at the same time, a golden
goblet of great value, and a Persian cimeter.
The ancient historian who records these facts was uncertain whether these
offerings were intended as acts of adoration addressed to the sun, or
as oblations presented to the sea—a sort of peace offering, perhaps,
to soothe the feelings of the mighty monster, irritated and chafed by
the chastisement which it had previously received.
One circumstance indicated that the offering was
intended for the sun, for, at the time of making it, Xerxes addressed to
the great luminary a sort of petition, which might be considered either an
apostrophe or a prayer, imploring its protection. He called upon the sun
to accompany and defend the expedition, and to preserve it from every calamity
until it should have accomplished its mission of subjecting all Europe to the
Persian sway.
The army then commenced its march. The order of march
was very much the same as that which had been observed in the departure
from Sardis. The beasts of burden and the baggage were preceded and
followed by immense bodies of troops of all nations. The whole of the
first day was occupied by the passing of this part of the army.
Xerxes himself, and the sacred portion of the train, were to follow them on
the second day. Accordingly, there came, on the second day, first, an
immense squadron of horse, with garlands on the heads of the
horsemen; next, the sacred horses and the sacred car of Jupiter. Then
came Xerxes himself, in his war chariot, with trumpets sounding, and
banners waving in the air. At the moment when Xerxes’s chariot entered
upon the bridge, the fleet of galleys, which had been drawn up
in preparation near the Asiatic shore, were set in motion, and moved
in a long and majestic line across the strait to the European side,
accompanying and keeping pace with their mighty master in his progress.
Thus was spent the second day.
Five more days were consumed in getting over the
remainder of the army, and the immense trains of beasts and of baggage which
followed. The officers urged the work forward as rapidly as possible, and,
toward the end, as is always the case in the movement of
such enormous masses, it became a scene of inconceivable noise, terror,
and confusion. The officers drove forward men and beasts alike by
the lashes of their whips—every one struggling, under the influence
of such stimulants, to get forward—while fallen animals, broken
wagons, and the bodies of those exhausted and dying with excitement
and fatigue, choked the way. The mighty mass was, however, at last
transferred to the European continent, full of anxious fears in respect to what
awaited them, but yet having very faint and feeble conceptions of the
awful scenes in which the enterprise of their reckless leader was to end.
Chapter VI.
The Review of the Troops at Doriscus.
AS soon as the expedition of Xerxes had crossed the
Hellespont and arrived safely on the European side, as narrated in the
last chapter, it became necessary for the fleet and the army to
separate, and to move, for a time, in opposite directions from each other.
The reader will observe, by examining the map, that the army, on
reaching the European shore, at the point to which they would be conducted
by a bridge at Abydos, would find themselves in the middle of a long
and narrow peninsula called the Chersonesus, and
that, before commencing its regular march along the northern coast of the Aegean
Sea, it would be necessary first to proceed for fifteen or twenty miles to
the eastward, in order to get round the bay by which the peninsula is
bounded on the north and west. While, therefore, the fleet went directly
westward along the coast, the army turned to the eastward, a place of
rendezvous having been appointed on the northern coast of the sea, where they
were all soon to meet again.
The army moved on by a slow and toilsome progress
until it reached the neck of the peninsula, and then turning at the head of the
bay,, it moved westward again, following the direction of the coast. The
line of march was, however, laid at some distance from the shore, partly for
the sake of avoiding the indentations-made in the land by gulfs and bays, and
partly for the sake of crossing the streams from the interior at
points so far inland that the water found in them should be fresh and
pure. Notwithstanding these precautions, however, the water often failed.
So immense were the multitudes of men and of beasts, and so craving was
the thirst which the heat and the fatigues of the march engendered, that,
in several instances, they drank the little rivers dry.
The first great and important river which the army had
to pass after entering Europe was the Hebrus.
Not far from the mouth of the Hebrus, where it
emptied into the Aegean Sea, was a great plain, which was called the
plain of Doriscus. There was an extensive
fortress here, which had been erected by the orders of Darius when he
had subjugated this part of the country. The position of this fortress was an
important one, because it commanded the whole region watered by the Hebrus, which was a very fruitful and populous
district. Xerxes had been intending to have a grand review and enumeration
of his forces on entering the European territories, and he judged Doriscus to be a very suitable place for his purpose.
He could establish his own head-quarters in the fortress, while his armies
could be marshaled and reviewed on the plain. The fleet, too, had been
ordered to draw up to the shore at the same spot, and when the army
reached the ground, they found the vessels already in the offing.
The army accordingly halted, and the necessary arrangements
were made for the review. The first thing was to ascertain the numbers of
the troops; and as the soldiers were too numerous to be counted, Xerxes
determined to measure the mighty mass as so much bulk, and then
ascertain the numbers by a computation. They made the measure itself in
the following manner: They counted off, first, ten thousand men, and
brought them together in a compact circular mass, in the middle of the
plain, and then marked a line upon the ground inclosing them. Upon
this line, thus determined, they built a stone wall, about four feet high, with
openings on opposite sides of it, by which men might enter and go out When
the wall was built, soldiers were sent into the inclosure— just
as corn would be poured by a husbandman into a wooden peck—until it was
full. The mass thus required to fill the inclosure was deemed and taken to be ten thousand men This was the first
filling of the measure. These men were then ordered to retire, and a
fresh mass was introduced, and so on until the whole army was
measured. The inclosure was filled one hundred
and seventy times with the foot soldiers before the process was completed,
indicating, as the total amount of the infantry of the army, a force of
one million seven hundred thousand men. This enumeration, it must
be remembered, included the land forces alone.
This method of measuring the army in bulk was applied
only to the foot soldiers; they constituted the great mass of the forces
convened There were, however, various other bodies oi troops in the
army, which, from their nature, were more systematically organized than
the common foot soldiers, and so their numbers were known by the
regular enrollment. There was, for example, a cavalry force of eighty thousand
men. There was also a corps of Arabs, no camels, and another of Egyptians,
in war chariots, which together amounted to twenty thousand, Then, besides
these land forces, there were half a million of men in the fleet. Immense
as these numbers are, they were still further increased, as the army moved on,
by Xerxes’s system of compelling the forces of every kingdom and province
through which he passed to join the expedition; so that, at length,
when the Persian king fairly entered the heart of the Greek
territory, Herodotus, the great narrator of his history, in summing up the
whole number of men regularly connected with the army makes a total of
about five millions of men One hundred thousand men, which is but
one fiftieth part of five millions, is considered, in modern times,
an immense army ; and, in fact, half even of that number was thought, in
the time of the American Revolution, a sufficient force to threaten
the colonies with overwhelming destruction. “ If ten thousand men will not
do to put down the rebellion,” said an orator in the House of Commons, “fifty
thousand shall”
Herodotus adds that, besides the five millions
regularly connected with the army, there was an immense and promiscuous
mass of women, slaves, cooks, bakers, and camp followers of every
description, that no human powers could estimate or number.
But to return to the review. The numbers of the army
having been ascertained, the next thing was to marshal and arrange the
men by nations under their respective leaders, to be reviewed by the
king. A very full enumeration of these divisions of the army is given
by the historians of the day, with minute descriptions .of the kind of
armor which the troops of the several nations wore. There were
more than fifty of these nations in all. Some of them were highly
civilized, others were semi-barbarous tribes; and, of course, they presented,
as marshaled in long array upon the plain, every possible variety of
dress and equipment. Some were armed with brazen helmets, and coats
of mail formed of plates of iron; others wore linen tunics, or rude
garments made of the skins of beasts. The troops of one nation had
then heads covered with helmets, those of another with miters, and of
a third with tiaras. There was one savage-looking horde that had
caps made of the skin of the upper part of a horse’s head, in its
natural form, with the ears standing up erect at the top, and the mane
flowing down behind. These men held the skins of cranes before them
instead of shields, so that they looked like horned monsters, half
beast and half bird, endeavoring to assume the guise and attitude of
men. There was another corps whose men were really horned, since they
wore caps made from the skins of the heads of oxen, with the horns
standing. Wild beasts were personated, too, as well as tame; for some
nations were clothed in lions’ skins, and others in panthers’ skins—the
clothing being considered, apparently, the more honorable, in
proportion to the ferocity of the brute to which it had originally
belonged.
The weapons, too, were of every possible form and
guise. Spears—some pointed with iron, some with stone, and others shaped
simply by being burned to a point in the fire; bows and arrows, of
every variety of material and form. swords, daggers, slings, clubs, darts,
javelins, and every other imaginable species of weapon which human
ingenuity, savage or civilized; had then conceived. Even the lasso—the
weapon of the American aborigines of modern times —was there. It is
described by the ancient historian as a long thong of leather wound into a
coil, and finished in a noose at the end, which noose the rude warrior who used
the implement lanched through the air at the
enemy, and entangling rider and horse together by means of it, brought
them both to the ground.
There was every variety of taste, too, in the fashion
and the colors of the dresses which were worn. Some were of artificial
fabrics, and dyed in various and splendid hues. Some were very plain,
the wearers of them affecting a simple and savage ferocity in the fashion
of their vesture. Some tribes had painted skins—beauty, in their view,
consisting, apparently, in hideousness. There was one barbarian horde
who wore very little clothing of any kind. They had knotty clubs for
weapons, and, in lieu of a dress, they had painted their naked bodies
half white and half a bright vermilion.
In all this vast array, the corps which stood at the
head, in respect to their rank and the costliness and elegance of their
equipment, was a Persian squadron of ten thousand men, called the
Immortals. They had received this designation from the fact that the body was
kept always exactly full, as, whenever any one of the number died, another
soldier was instantly put into his place, whose life was considered in some
respects a continuation of the existence of the man who had fallen. Thus, by a
fiction somewhat analogous to that by which the king, in England,
never dies, these ten thousand Persians were an immortal band. They were
all carefully-selected soldiers, and they enjoyed very unusual
privileges .and honors. They were mounted troops, and their dress and
their armor were richly decorated with gold. They were accompanied in
their campaigns by their wives and families, for whose use carriages were provided
which followed the camp, and there was a long train of camels besides,
attached to the service of the corps, to carry their provisions and
their baggage.
While all these countless varieties of land troops
were marshaling and arranging themselves upon the plain, each under its own
officers and around its own standards, the naval commanders were employed
in bringing up the fleet of galleys to the shore, where they
were anchored in a long line not far from the beach, and with their
prows toward the land. Thus there was a space of open water left
between the line of vessels and the beach, along which Xerxes’s barge
was to pass when the time for the naval part of the review should arrive.
When all things were ready, Xerxes mounted his war
chariot and rode slowly around the plain, surveying attentively, and with great
interest and pleasure, the long lines of soldiers, in all their variety of
equipment and costume, as they stood displayed before him. It required
a progress of many miles to see them all. When this review of the
land forces was concluded, the king went to the shore, and embarked
on board a royal galley which had been prepared for him, and there,
seated upon the deck under a gilded canopy, he was rowed by the
oarsmen along the line of ships, between their prows and the land.
The ships were from many nations as well as the soldiers, and exhibited
the same variety of fashion and equipment. The land troops had come
from the inland realms and provinces which occupied the heart of
Asia, while the ships and the seamen had been furnished by the maritime
regions which extended along the coasts of the Black, and the Aegean, and
the Mediterranean Seas. Thus the people of Egypt had furnished two hundred
ships, the Phoenicians three hundred, Cyprus fifty, the Cilicians and the Ionians one hundred each, and so
with a great many other nations and tribes
The various squadrons which were thus combined in
forming this immense fleet were manned and officered, of course, from the
nations that severally furnished them, and one of them was actually
commanded in person by a queen. The name of this lady admiral was
Artemisia, She was the Queen of Caria, a small province in the
southwestern part of Asia Minor, having Halicarnassus for its capital.
Artemisia, though in history called a queen, was, in reality, more
properly a regent, as she governed in the name of her Son, who was yet a
child. The quota of ships which Caria was to furnish was five.
Artemisia, being a lady of ambitious and masculine turn of mind, and fond
of adventure, determined to accompany the expedition. Not only her
own vessels, but also those from some neighboring islands, were placed
under her charge, so that she commanded quite an important division of the
fleet. She proved, also, in the course of the voyage, to be
abundantly qualified for the discharge of her duties. She became, in
fact, one of the ablest and most efficient commanders in the fleet, not only
maneuvering and managing her own particular division in a very successful
manner, but also taking a very active and important part in
the general consultations, where what she said was listened to with great
respect, and always had great weight in determining the decisions. In the
great battle of Salamis she acted a very conspicuous part, as will
hereafter appear.
The whole number of galleys of the first class in
Xerxes’s fleet was more than twelve hundred. a number abundantly sufficient to
justify the apprehensions of Artabanus that no harbor would be found
capacious enough to shelter them in the event of a sudden storm. The line which
they formed on this occasion, when drawn up side by side upon the shore
for review, must have extended many miles.
Xerxes moved slowly along this line in his barge,
attended by the officers of his court and the great generals of his army,
who surveyed the various ships as they passed them, and noted the diverse
national costumes and equipments of the men with
curiosity and pleasure. Among those who attended the king on this occasion
was a certain Greek named Demaratus, an exile from his native land, who
had fled to Persia, and had been kindly received by Darius some years
before. Having remained in the Persian court until Xerxes succeeded to
the throne and undertook the invasion of Greece he concluded to
accompany the expedition
The story of the political difficulties in which
Demaratus became involved in his native land, and which led to his flight
from Greece, was very extraordinary. It was this:
The mother of Demaratus was the daughter of parents of
high rank and great affluence in Sparta, but in her childhood her features
were extremely plain and repulsive. Now there was a temple in the
neighborhood of the place where her parents resided, consecrated to Helen,
a princess who, while she lived, enjoyed the fame of being the most
beautiful woman in the world. The nurse recommended that the child
should be taken every day to this temple, and that petitions should be
offered there at the shrine of Helen that the repulsive deformity of her
features might be removed. The mother consented to this plan, only enjoining
upon the nurse not to let anyone see the face of her unfortunate offspring
in going and returning. The nurse accordingly carried the child to the
temple day after day, and holding it in her arms before the shrine, implored
the mercy of Heaven for her helpless charge, and the bestowal upon it of
the boon of beauty.
These petitions were, it seems, at length heard, for
one day, when the nurse was coming down from the temple, after offering her customary
prayer, she was met and accosted by a mysterious-looking woman, who asked
her what it was that she was carrying in her arms. The nurse replied
that it was a child. The woman wanted to look at it. The nurse refused
to show the face of the child, saying that she had been forbidden to
do so. The woman, however, insisted upon seeing its face, and at last
the nurse consented and removed the coverings. The stranger stroked
down the face of the child, saying, at the same time, that now that
child should become the most beautiful woman of Sparta.
Her words proved true. The features of the young girl
rapidly changed, and her countenance soon became as wonderful for its
loveliness as it had been before for its hideous deformity. When she arrived at
a proper age, a certain Spartan nobleman named Agetus,
a particular friend of the king’s, made her his wife.
The name of the king of Sparta at that time was
Ariston. He had been twice married, and his second wife was still living,
but he had no children. When he came to see and to know the beautiful
wife of Agetus, he wished to obtain her for himself,
and began to revive the subject in his mind, with a view to discover some
method by which he might hope to accomplish his purpose. He decided at length
upon the following plan. He proposed to Agetus to make
an exchange of gifts, offering to give to him any one object which he
might choose from all his, that is, Ariston’s effects, provided that Agetus would, in the same manner, give to Ariston
whatever Ariston might choose. Agetus consented to
the proposal, without, however, giving it any serious consideration. As
Ariston was already married, he did not for a moment imagine that his wife
could be the object which the king would demand. The parties to this
foolish agreement confirmed the obligation of it by a solemn oath, and
then each made known to the other what he had selected. Agetus gained some jewel, or costly garment, or perhaps
a gilded and embellished weapon, and lost forever his beautiful wife.
Ariston repudiated his own second wife, and put the prize which he had
thus surreptitiously acquired in her place as a third.
About seven or eight months after this time Demaratus
was born. The intelligence was brought to Ariston one day by a slave, when
he was sitting at a public tribunal. Ariston seemed surprised at the
intelligence, and exclaimed that the child was not his. He, however, afterward
retracted this disavowal, and owned Demaratus as his son. The child grew
up, and in process of time, when his father died, he succeeded to the throne.
The magistrates, however, who had heard the declaration of his father at the
time of his birth, remembered it, and reported it to others; and when
Ariston died and Demaratus assumed the supreme power, the next heir denied
his right to the succession, and in process of time formed a strong party
against him. A long series of civil dissensions arose, and at length the claims
of Demaratus were defeated, his enemies triumphed, and he fled from the
country to save his life. He arrived at Susa near the close of Darius’s reign,
and it was his counsel which led the king to decide the contest among his
sons for the right of succession, in favor of Xerxes, as described at the
close of the first chapter. Xerxes had remembered his obligations to Demaratus
for this interposition. He had retained him in the royal court after his
accession to the throne, and had bestowed upon him many marks of
distinction and honor.
Demaratus had decided to accompany Xerxes on his
expedition into Greece, and now, while the Persian officers were looking with so
much pride and pleasure on the immense preparations which they were making
for the subjugation of a foreign and hostile state, Demaratus, too, was in
the midst of the scene, regarding the spectacle with no less of interest,
probably, and yet, doubtless, with very different feelings, since the
country upon which this dreadful cloud of gloom and destruction was about
to burst was his own native land.
After the review was ended, Xerxes sent for Demaratus
to come to the castle. When he arrived, the king addressed him as follows:
“You are a Greek, Demaratus, and you know your
countrymen well; and now, as you have seen the fleet and the army that
have been displayed here to-day, tell me what is your opinion. Do you
think that the Greeks will undertake to defend themselves against such
a force, or will they submit at once without attempting any resistance ?”
Demaratus seemed at first perplexed and uncertain, as
if not knowing exactly what answer to make to the question. At length he
asked the king whether it was his wish that he should respond by
speaking the blunt and honest truth, or by saying what would be polite and
agreeable.
Xerxes replied that he wished him, of course, to speak
the truth. The truth itself would be what he should consider the most
agreeable.
“ Since you desire it, then,” said Demaratus, “ I will
speak the exact truth. Greece is the child of poverty. The inhabitants of
the land have learned wisdom and discipline in the severe school of
adversity, and their resolution and courage are absolutely indomitable.
They all deserve this praise; but I speak more particularly of my own
countrymen, the people of Sparta. I am sure that they will reject
any proposal which you may make to them for submission to your power, and
that they will resist you to the last extremity. The disparity
of numbers will have no influence whatever on their decision. If all
the rest of Greece were to submit to you, leaving the Spartans
alone, and if they should find themselves unable to muster more than
a thousand men, they would give you battle.”
Xerxes expressed great surprise at this assertion, and
thought that Demaratus could not possibly mean what he seemed to say. “ I
appeal to yourself,” said he; 'f would you dare to encounter, alone, ten men?
You have been the prince of the Spartans, and a prince ought, at least, to
be equal to two common men; so that to show that the Spartans in general
could be brought to fight a superiority of force of even ten to one,
it ought to appear that you would dare to engage twenty. This is
manifestly absurd. In fact, for any person to pretend to be able or
willing to fight under such a disparity of numbers, evinces only pride and
insolent presumption. And even this proportion of ten to one, or even
twenty to one, is nothing compared to the real disparity; for. even if we
grant to the Spartans as large a force as there is any possibility of
their obtaining, I shall then have a thousand to one against them.
“Besides,” continued the king, u there is a great
difference in the character of the troops. The Greeks are all freemen,
while my soldiers are all slaves—bound absolutely to do my bidding,
without complaint or murmur. Such soldiers as mine, who are habituated to
submit entirely to the will of another, and who live under the continual
fear of the lash, might, perhaps, be forced to go into battle against a
great superiority of numbers, or under other manifest disadvantages;
but free men, never. I do not believe that a body of Greeks could be brought to
engage a body of Persians, man for man. Every consideration shows, thus,
that the opinion which you have expressed is unfounded. You could only
have been led to entertain such an opinion through ignorance and
unaccountable presumption.”
“I was afraid,” replied Demaratus, “from the first,
that, by speaking the truth, I should offend you. I should not have given
you my real opinion of the Spartans if you had not ordered me to speak
without reserve. You certainly cannot suppose me to have been influenced by a
feeling of undue partiality for the men whom I commended, since they have
been my most implacable and bitter enemies, and have driven me into
hopeless exile from my native land. Your father, on the other hand, received
and protected me, and the sincere gratitude which I feel for the favors which I
have received from him and from you incline me to take the most
favorable view possible of the Persian cause.
“I certainly should not be willing, as you justly
suppose, to engage, alone, twenty men, or ten, or even one, unless there
was an absolutt necessity for it I do not say that
any single Lacedemonian could successfully encounter ten or twenty Persians,
although in personal conflicts they are certainly not inferior to
other men. It is when they are combined in a bod_ even though that
body be small, that their great superiority is seen.
“As to their being free, and thus not easily led into
battle in circumstances of imminent danger, it must be considered that
their freedom is not absolute, like that of savages in a fray, where
each acts according to his own individual will and pleasure, but it is
qualified and controlled by law. The Spartan soldiers are not
personal slaves, governed by the lash of a master, it is true; but they
have certain principles of obligation and duty which they all feel most
solemnly bound to obey. They stand in greater awe of the authority of this
law than your subjects do of the lash. It commands them never to fly
from the field of battle, whatever may be the number of their
adversaries. It commands them to preserve their ranks, to stand firm at
the posts assigned them, and there to conquer or die.
“ This is the truth in respect to them, if what I say
seems to you absurd, I will in future be silent. I have spoken honestly what
I think, because your majesty commanded me to do so; and, notwithstanding
what I have said? I sincerely wish that all your majesty’s
desires and expectations may be fulfilled.”
The ideas which Demaratus thus appeared to entertain
of danger to the countless and formidable hosts of Xerxes’s army, from so
small and insignificant a power as that of Sparta, seemed to Xerxes
too absurd to awaken any serious displeasure in his mind. He only smiled,
therefore, at Demaratus’s fears, and dismissed him.
Leaving a garrison and a governor in possession of the
castle of Doriscus, Xerxes resumed his march
along the northern shores of the Aegean Sea, the immense swarms of men
filling all the roads, devouring every thing capable of being used as food, either for beast or man, and drinking
all the brooks and smaller rivers dry. Even with this total consumption of
the food and the water which they obtained on the march, the supplies
would have been found insufficient if the whole army had advanced through
one tract of country. They accordingly divided the host into three great
columns, one of which kept near the shore; the other marched far in
the interior, and the third in the intermediate space. They thus exhausted the
resources of a very wide region. All the men, too, that were capable of
bearing arms in the nations that these several divisions passed
on the way, they compelled to join them, so that the army left, as it
moved along, a very broad extent of country trampled down, impoverished, desolate,
and full of lamentation and woe. The whole march was perhaps the most
gigantic crime against the rights and the happiness of man that human
wickedness has ever been able to commit.
The army halted, from time to time, for various
purposes, sometimes for the performance of what they considered religious
ceremonies, which were intended to propitiate the supernatural powers of
the earth and of the air. When they reached the Strymon,
where, it will be recollected, a bridge had been previously built, so as
to be ready for the army when it should arrive, they offered a sacrifice of
five white horses to the river. In the same region, too, they halted
at a place called the Nine Ways, where Xerxes resolved to offer a human
sacrifice to a certain god whom the Persians believed to reside in the
interior of the earth. The mode of sacrificing to this god was to bury the
wretched victims alive. The Persians seized, accordingly, by Xerxes’s
orders, nine young men and nine girls from among the people of the
country, and buried them alive!
Marching slowly on in this manner, the army at length
reached the point upon the coast where the canal had been cut across the
isthmus of Mount Athos. The town which was nearest to this spot was
Acanthus, the situation of which, together with that of the canal, will be
found upon the map. The fleet arrived at this point by sea nearly at the
same time with the army coming by land. Xerxes examined the canal, and was
extremely well satisfied with its construction. He commended the
chief engineer, whose name was Artachaees, in the highest terms, for
the successful manner in which he had executed the work, and
rendered him very distinguished honors.
It unfortunately happened, however, that, a few days
after the arrival of the fleet and the army at the canal, and before the
fleet had commenced the passage of it, that Artachaees died. The king
considered this event as a serious calamity to him, as he expected that other
occasions would arrive on which he would have occasion to avail himself of
the engineer’* talents and skill. He ordered preparations to be made
for a most magnificent burial, and the body was in due time deposited in
the grave with imposing funeral solemnities. A very splendid
monument, too, was raised upon the spot, which employed, for some time,
all the mechanical force of the army in its erection.
While Xerxes remained at Acanthus, he required the
people of the neighboring country to entertain his army at a grand feast, the
cost of which totally ruined them. Not only was al! the food of the
vicinity consumed, but all the means and resources of the inhabitants, of
every kind, were exhausted in the additional supplies which they had to procure
from the surrounding regions. At this feast the army in general ate,
seated in groups upon the ground, in the open air; but for Xerxes and the
nobles of the court a great pavilion was built, where tables were
spread, and vessels and furniture of silver and gold, suitable to the
dignity of the occasion, were provided. Almost all the property which the
people of the region had accumulated by years of patient industry was consumed
at once in furnishing the vast amount of food which was required for this
feast, and the gold and silver plate which was to be used in the pavilion.
During the entertainment, the inhabitants of the country waited upon
their exacting and insatiable guests until they were utterly
exhausted by the fatigues of the service. When, at length, the feast was
ended, and Xerxes and his company left the pavilion, the vast
assembly outside broke up in disorder, pulled the pavilion to pieces, plundered
the tables of the gold and silver plate, and departed to their
several encampments, leaving nothing behind them.
The inhabitants of the country were so completely
impoverished and ruined by these exactions, that those who were not impressed
into Xerxes’s service and compelled to follow his army, abandoned their
homes, and roamed away in the hope of finding elsewhere the means
of subsistence which it was no longer possible to obtain on their own
lands; and thus, when Xerxes at last gave orders to the fleet to
pass through the canal, and to his army to resume its march, he left
the whole region utterly depopulated and desolate.
He went on to Therma, a port situated on the
northwestern corner of the Aegean Sea, which was the last of his places of
rendezvous before his actual advance into Greece.
Chapter VII.
The Preparations of the Greeks for Defense.
WE must now leave, for a time, the operations of
Xerxes and his army, and turn our attention to the Greeks, and to the
preparations which they were making to meet the emergency.
The two states of Greece which were most prominent in
the transactions connected with the invasion of Xerxes were Athens and
Sparta. By referring to the map, Athens will be found to have been
situated upon a promontory just without the Peloponnesus, while
Sparta, on the other hand, was in the center of a valley which lay in
the southern part of the peninsula. Each of these cities was the center
and stronghold of a small but very energetic and powerful commonwealth. The two
states were entirely independent of each other, and each had its own
peculiar system of government, of usages, and of laws. These systems, and, in
fact, the characters of the two communities, in all respects, were
extremely dissimilar.
Both these states, though in name republics, had
certain magistrates, called commonly, in history, kings. These kings were,
however, in fact, only military chieftains, commanders of the armies
rather than sovereign rulers of the state. The name by which such a
chieftain was actually called by the people themselves, in those
days, was tyrannies, the name from which our word tyrant is derived. As,
however, the word tyrannus had none of that
opprobrious import which is associated with its English derivative, the
latter is not now a suitable substitute for the former.
Historians, therefore, commonly use the word king instead, though
that word does not properly express the idea. They were commanders,
chieftains, hereditary generals, but not strictly kings. We shall,
however, often call them kings, in these narratives, in conformity with
the general usage. Demaratus, who had fled from Sparta to seek refuge
with Darius, and who was now accompanying Xerxes on his march to Greece,
was one of these
kings.
It was a peculiarity in the constitution of Sparta
that, from a very early period of its history, there had been always two kings,
who had held the supreme command in conjunction with each other, like
the Roman consuls in later times. This custom was sustained partly
by the idea that by this division of the executive power of the
state, the exercise of the power was less likely to become despotic or
tyrannical. It had its origin, however, according to the ancient legends,
in the following singular occurrences :
At a very early period in the history of Sparta, when
the people had always been accustomed, like other states, to have one prince or
chieftain, a certain prince died, leaving his wife, whose name was Argia, and two infant children, as his survivors. The
children were twins, and the father had died almost immediately after they
were born. Now the office of king was in a certain sense hereditary, and
yet not absolutely so; for the people were accustomed to assemble on the
death of the king, and determine who should be his successor, choosing always,
however, the oldest son of the former monarch, unless there was some very
extraordinary and imperious reason for not doing so. In this case they
decided, as usual, that the oldest son should be king.
But here a very serious difficulty arose, which was,
to determine which of the twins was the oldest son. They resembled each other
so closely that no stranger could distinguish one from the other at all. The
mother said that she could not distinguish them, and that she did not
know which was the first-born. This was not strictly true; for she did, in
fact, know, and only denied her power to decide the question because she
wished to have both of her children kings.
In this perplexity the Spartans sent to the oracle at
Delphi to know what they were to do The oracle gave, as usual, an
ambiguous and unsatisfactory response. It directed the people to make
both the children kings, but to render the highest honors to the
first-born. When this answer was reported at Sparta, it only increased the
difficulty; for how were they to render peculiar honors to the first-born
unless they could ascertain which the first-born was ?
In this dilemma, some person suggested to the
magistrates that perhaps Argia really knew which
was the eldest child, and that if so, by watching her, to see whether she
washed and fed one, uniformly, before the other, or gave
it precedence in any other way, by which her latent maternal instinct or
partiality might appear, the question might possibly be determined. This plan
was accordingly adopted. The magistrates contrived means to place a
servant maid in the house to watch the mother in the way proposed,
and the result was that the true order of birth was revealed. From that
time forward, while they were both considered a? princes, the one now
supposed to be the firstborn took precedence of the other.
When, however, the children arrived at an age to
assume the exercise of the governmental power, as there was no perceptible
difference between them in age, or strength, or accomplishments, the one
who had been decided to be the younger was little disposed to submit
to the other. Each had his friends and adherents, parties were
formed, and a long and angry civil dissension ensued. In the end the
question was compromised, the command was divided, and the system of
having two chief magistrates became gradually established, the power descending
in two lines, from father to son, through many generations. Of course
there was perpetual jealousy and dissension, and often open and terrible
conflicts, between these two rival lines.
The Spartans were an agricultural people, cultivating
the valley in the southeastern part of the Peloponnesus, the waters of which
were collected and conveyed to the sea by the River Eurotas and its branches. They lived in the plainest possible manner, and prided
themselves on the stern and stoical resolution with which they
rejected all the refinements and luxuries of society. Courage, hardihood,
indifference to life, and the power to endure without a murmur the most
severe and protracted sufferings, were the qualities which they valued.
They despised wealth just as other nations despise effeminacy and
foppery. Their laws discouraged commerce, lest it should make some of the people
rich. Their clothes were scanty and plain, their houses were comfortless,
their food was a coarse bread, hard and brown, and their money was of
iron. With all this, however, they were the most ferocious and terrible
soldiers in the world.
They were, moreover, with all their plainness of
manners and of life, of a very proud and lofty spirit. All agricultural toil,
and every other species of manual labor in their state,
were performed by a servile peasantry, while the free citizens, whose
profession was exclusively that of arms, were as aristocratic and exalted
in soul any nobles on earth. People are sometimes, in our day, when
money is so much valued, proud, notwithstanding their poverty.
The Spartans were proud of their poverty itself. They could be rich
if they chose, but they despised riches. They looked down on all the
refinements and delicacies of dress and of living from an elevation far
above them. They looked down on labor, too, with the same contempt. They
were yet very nice and particular about their dress and military
appearance, though every thing pertaining to both was
coarse and simple, and they had slaves to wait upon them even in
their campaigns.
The Athenians were a totally different people. The
leading classes in their commonwealth were cultivated, intellectual, and
refined. The city of Athens was renowned for the splendor of its architecture,
its temples, its citadels, its statues, and its various public institutions,
which in subsequent times made it the great intellectual center of Europe.
It was populous and wealthy. It had a great commerce and a powerful fleet.
The Spartan character, in a word, was stern, gloomy, indomitable, and wholly
unadorned. The Athenians were rich, intellectual, and refined. The
two nations were nearly equal in power, and were engaged in a
perpetual and incessant rivalry. There were various other states and cities in
Greece, but Athens and Sparta were at this time the most considerable, and
they were altogether the most resolute and determined in their refusal to
submit to the Persian sway. In fact, so well known and understood was the spirit of defiance with which these two
powers were disposed to regard the Persian invasion, that when Xerxes
sent his summons demanding submission, to the other states of Greece,
he did not send any to these. When Darius invaded Greece some years
before, he had summoned Athens and Sparta as well as the others, but his
demands were indignantly rejected. It seems that the custom was for a
government or a prince, when acknowledging the dominion of a superior
power, to send, as a token of territorial submission, a little earth and
water, which was a sort of legal form of giving up possession of their
country to the sovereign who claimed it. Accordingly, when Darius sent
his embassadors into Greece to summon the
country to surrender, the embassadors, according
to the usual form, called upon the governments of the several states
to send earth and water to the king. The Athenians, as has been
already said, indignantly refused to comply with this demand. The
Spartans, not content with a simple refusal, seized the embassadors and threw them into a well, telling them, as they went down, that if
they wanted earth and water for the King of Persia, they might get
it there.
The Greeks had obtained some information of Xerxes’s
designs against them before they received his summons. The first
intelligence was communicated to the Spartans by Demaratus himself, while
he was at Susa, in the following singular manner. It was the custom, in
those days, to write with a steel point on a smooth surface of wax. The
wax was spread for this purpose on a board or tablet of metal, in a
very thin stratum, forming a ground upon which the letters traced with the
point were easily legible. Demaratus took two writingtablets such as these, and removing the wax from them, he wrote a brief account of
the proposed Persian invasion, by tracing the characters upon the surface of
the wood or metal itself, beneath; then, restoring the wax so as
to conceal the letters, he sent the two tablets, seemingly blank, to
Leonidas, king of Sparta. The messengers who bore them had other pretexts
for their journey, and they had various other articles to carry. The
Persian guards who stopped and examined the messengers from time to time
along the route, thought nothing of the blank tablets, and so they reached
Leonidas in safety.
Leonidas being a blunt, rough soldier, and not much
accustomed to cunning contrivances himself, was not usually much upon the
watch for them from others, and when he saw no obvious communication upon
the tablets, he threw them aside, not knowing what the sending
of them could mean, and not feeling any strong interest in
ascertaining. His wife, however— her name was Gorgo—
had more curiosity. There was something mysterious about the affair. and
she wished to solve it. She examined the tablets attentively in every
part, and at length removed cautiously a little of the wax. The
letters began to appear. Full of excitement and pleasure, she proceeded with
the work until the whole cereous coating was
removed. The result was, that the communication was revealed, and
Greece received the warning.
When the Greeks heard that Xerxes was at Sardis, they
sent three messengers in disguise, to ascertain the facts in respect to
the Persian army assembled there, and, so far as possible, to learn
the plans and designs of the king. Notwithstanding all the efforts of
these men to preserve their concealment and disguise, they were
discovered, seized, and tortured by the Persian officer who took them,
until they confessed that they were spies. The officer was about to put
them to death, when Xerxes himself received information of the circumstances. He
forbade the execution, and directed, on the other hand, that the men
should be conducted through all his encampments, and be allowed to
view and examine every thing. He then dismissed
them, with orders to return to Greece and report what they had seen. He
thought, he said, that the Greeks would be more likely to surrender
if they knew how immense his preparations were for effectually
vanquishing them if they attempted resistance.
The city of Athens, being farther north than Sparta,
would be the one first exposed to danger from the invasion, and when the
people heard of Xerxes’s approach, the whole city was filled with
anxiety and alarm. Some of the inhabitants were panic-stricken, and wished
to submit; others were enraged, and uttered nothing but threats and
defiance. A thousand different plans of defense were proposed and eagerly
discussed. At length the government sent messengers to the oracle at Delphi, to
learn what their destiny was to be, and to obtain, if possible,
divine direction in respect to the best mode of averting the danger. The
messengers received an awful response, portending, in wild and
solemn, though dark and mysterious language, the most dreadful calamities to
the LI-fated city. The messengers were filled with alarm at hearing this
reply. One of the inhabitants of Delphi, the city in which the oracle was
situated, proposed to them to make a second application, in the character of
the most humble supplicants, and to implore that the oracle would give
them some directions in respect to the best course for them to pursue in
order to avoid, or, at least, to mitigate the impending danger. They
did so, and after a time they received an answer, vague, mysterious, and
almost unintelligible, but which seemed to denote that the safety of the
city was connected in some manner with Salamis, and with
certain wooden walls,” to which the inspired distich of the response
obscurely alluded.
The messengers returned to Athens and reported the
answer which they had received. The people were puzzled and perplexed in
their attempts to understand it. It seems that the citadel of Athens
had been formerly surrounded by a wooden palisade. Some thought that
this was what was referred to by the “wooden walls,” and that the
meaning of the oracle was that they must rebuild the palisade, and
then retreat to the citadel when the Persians should approach, and
defend themselves there.
Others conceived that the phrase referred to ships,
and that the oracle meant to direct them to meet their enemies with a
fleet upon the sea Salamis, which was also mentioned by the oracle, was an
island not far from Athens, being west of the city, between it and the
Isthmus of Corinth. Those who supposed that by the “ wooden walls”
was denoted the fleet, thought that Salamis might have been alluded to as
the place near which the great naval battle was to be fought. This
was the interpretation which seemed finally to prevail.
The Athenians had a fleet of about two hundred galleys.
These vessels had been purchased and built, some time before this, for the
Athenian government, through the influence of a certain public officer of
high rank and influence, named Themistocles. It seems that a large sum had
accumulated in the public treasury, the produce of certain mines belonging to
the city, and a proposal was made to divide it among the citizens, which would
have given a small sum to each man. Themistocles opposed this
proposition, and urged instead that the government should build and equip a
fleet with the money. This plan was finally adopted. The fleet was
built, and it was now determined to call it into active service to meet
and repel the Persians, though the naval armament of Xerxes was six times
as large.
The next measure was to establish a confederation, if
possible, of the Grecian states, or at least of all those who were willing to
combine, and thus to form an allied army to resist the invader. The
smaller states were very generally panic-stricken, and had either already signified
their submission to the Persian rule, oi were timidly hesitating, in doubt
whether B would be safer for them to submit to the overwhelming force
which was advancing against them, or to join the Athenians and the
Spartans in their almost desperate attempts to resist it. The
Athenians and Spartans settled, for the time, their own quarrels, and held
a council to take the necessary measures for forming a more extended
confederation.
All this took place while Xerxes was slowly advancing
from Sardis to the Hellespont, and from the Hellespont to Doriscus, as described in the preceding chapter.
The council resolved on dispatching an embassy at once
to all the states of Greece, as well as to some of the remoter neighboring
powers asking them to join the alliance.
The first Greek city to which these embassadors came was Argos, which was the capital of a
kingdom or state lying between Athens and Sparta, though within the
Peloponnesus. The states of Argos and of Sparta, being neighbors, had
been constantly at war. Argos had recently lost six thousand men in a battle
with the Spartans, and were, consequently, not likely to be in a very
favorable mood for a treaty of friendship and alliance.
When the embassadors had
delivered their message, the Argolians replied that
they had anticipated such a proposal from the time that they had
heard that Xerxes had commenced his march toward Greece, and that they had
applied, accordingly, to the oracle at Delphi, to know what it would be
best for them to do in case the proposal were made. The answer of the
oracle had been, they said, unfavorable to their entering into an alliance with
the Greeks They were willing, however, they added, notwithstanding this, to
enter into an alliance, offensive and defensive, with the Spartans,
for thirty years, on condition that they should themselves have the
command of half the Peloponnesian troops. They were entitled to
the command of the whole, being, as they contended, the superior nation in
rank, but they would waive their just claim, and be satisfied
with half, if the Spartans would agree to that arrangement.
The Spartans replied that they could not agree to
those conditions. They were themselves, they said, the superior nation in
rank, and entitled to the whole command; and as they had two kings,
and Argos but one, there was a double difficulty in complying with
the Argive demand. They could not surrender one half of the command
without depriving one of their kings of his rightful power.
Thus the proposed alliance failed entirely, the people
of Argos saying that they would as willingly submit to the dominion of
Xerxes as to the insolent demand'? and assumptions of superiority made by
the government of Sparta.
The embassadors among other
countries which they visited in their attempts to obtain alliance and aid,
went to Sicily. Gelon was the King of Sicily,
and Syracuse was his capital. Here the same difficulty occurred which had
broken up the negotiations at Argos. The embassadors,
when they arrived at Syracuse, represented to Gelon that, if the Persians subdued Greece, they would come to Sicily next, and
that it was better for him and for his countrymen that they should meet the
enemy while he was still at a distance, rather than to wait until he
came near. Gelon admitted the justice of this
reasoning, and said that he would burnish a large force, both of ships and
men, for carrying on the war, provided that he might have the command
of the combined army. To this, of course, the Spartans would not
agree. He then asked that he might command the fleet, on condition of
giving up his claim to the land forces. This proposition the Athenian embassadors rejected, saying to Gelon that what they were in need of, and came to him to obtain, was a
supply of troops, not of leaders. The Athenians, they said, were to
command the fleet, being not only the most ancient nation of Greece,
but also the most immediately exposed to the invasion, so that they were
doubly entitled to be considered as the principals and leaders in the war.
Gelon then told the embassadors that, since toey wished to obtain every
thing and to concede nothing, they had better leave his dominions
without delay, and report to their countrymen that they had nothing to expect
from Sicily.
The embassadors went then to
Corcyra, a large island on the western coast of Greece, in the Adriatic
Sea. It is now called Corfu. Here they seemed to meet with their first
success. The people of Corcyra acceded to the proposals made to them, and
promised at once to equip and man their fleet, and send it round into
the Aegean Sea. They immediately engaged in the work, and seemed to be
honestly intent on fulfilling their promises. They were, however, in
fact, only pretending. They were really undecided which cause to espouse,
the Greek or the Persian, and kept their promised squadron back by
means of various delays, until its aid was no longer needed.
But the most important of all these negotiations of
the Athenians and Spartans with the neighboring states were those opened
with Thessaly. Thessaly was a kingdom in the northern part of Greece. It was,
therefore, the territory which the Persian armies would first enter,
on turning the northwestern corner of the Aegean Sea. There were,
moreover, certain points in its geographical position, and in the physical conformation
of the country, that gave it a peculiar importance in respect to the
approaching conflict.
By referring to the map placed at the commencement of
the fifth chapter, it will be seen that Thessaly was a vast valley, surrounded
on all sides by mountainous land, and drained by the River Peneus and
its branches. The Peneus flows eastwardly to the Aegean Sea, and escapes
from the great valley through a narrow and romantic pass lying between the
Mountains Olympus and Ossa. This pass was called in ancient times the Olympio Straits, and a part of it formed a
romantic and beautiful glen called the Vale of Tempe. There was a
road through this pass, which was the only access by which Thessaly could
be entered from the eastward.
To the south of the Vale of Tempe, the mountains, as
will appear from the map, crowded so hard upon the sea as not to allow
any passage to the eastward of them. The natural route of Xerxes,
therefore, in descending into Greece, would be to come down along the
coast until he reached the mouth of the Peneus, and then, following
the river up through the Vale of Tempe into Thessaly, to pass down
toward the Peloponnesus on the western side of Ossa and Pelion, and
of the other mountains near the sea. If he could get through the
Olympic Straits and the Vale of Tempe, the way would be open and
unobstructed until he should reach the southern frontier of Thessaly,
where there was another narrow pass leading from Thessaly into
Greece. This last defile was close to the sea, and was called the Straits
of Thermopylae
Thus Xerxes and his hosts, in continuing their march
to the southward, must necessarily traverse Thessaly, and in doing so they
would have two narrow and dangerous defiles to pass one at Mount
Olympus, to get into the country, and the other at Thermopylae, to get
out of it. It Consequently became a point of great importance to the
Greeks to determine at which of these two passes they should make
their stand against the torrent which was coming down upon them.
This question would, of course, depend very much upon
the disposition of Thessaly herself.
The government of that country, understanding the
critical situation in which they were placed, had not waited for the
Athenians and Spartans to send embassadors to
them, but, at a very early period of the war—before, in fact,
Xerxes had yet crossed the Hellespont, had sent messengers to Athens to
concert some plan of action. These messengers were to say to the
Athenians that the government of Thessaly were expecting every day to
receive a summons from Xerxes, and that they must speedily decide
what they were to do; that they themselves were very unwilling to
submit to him, but they could not undertake to make a stand
against his immense host alone; that the southern Greeks might
include Thessaly in their plan of defense, or exclude it, just as they
thought best If they decided to include it, then they must make a
stand at the Olympic Straits, that is, at the pass between Olympus and
Ossa; and to do that, it would be necessary to send a strong force
immediately to take possession of the pass. If, on the contrary, they
decided not to defend Thessaly, then the pass of Thermopylae would be
the point at which they must make their stand, and in that case Thessaly
must be at liberty to submit on the first Persian summons
The Greeks, after consultation on the subject, decided
that it would be best for them to defend Thessaly, and to take their stand,
accordingly, at the Straits of Olympus. They immediately put a large force
on board their fleet, armed and equipped for the expedition. This was
at the time when Xerxes was just about crossing the Hellespont. The fleet
sailed from the port of Athens, passed up through the narrow strait called
Euripus, lying between the island of Euboea and the main land,
and finally landed at a favorable point of disembarkation, south of
Thessaly. From this point the forces marched to the northward until
they reached the Peneus, and then established themselves at the narrowest
part of the passage between the mountains, strengthened their position there as
much as possible, and awaited the coming of the enemy. The amount of the
force was ten thousand men.
They had not been here many days before a messenger
came to them from the King of Macedon, which country, it will be seen, lies
immediately north of Thessaly, earnestly dissuading them from attempting
to make a stand at the Vale of Tempe. Xerxes was coming on, he said,
with an immense and overwhelming force, one against which it would be
utterly impossible for them to make good their defense at such a point as
that. It would be far better for them to fall back to Thermopylae, which,
being a narrower and more rugged pass, could be more easily defended.
Besides this, the messenger said that it was possible
for Xerxes to enter Thessaly without going through the Vale of Tempe at
all. The country between Thessaly and Macedon was mountainous, but it
was not impassable, and Xerxes would very probably come by that
way. The only security, therefore, for the Greeks, would be to fall
back and intrench themselves at Thermopylae. Nor was there any time
to be lost. Xerxes was crossing the Hellespont, and the whole country
was full of excitement and terror.
The Greeks determined to act on this advice They broke
up their encampment at the Olympic Straits, and, retreating to the
southward, established themselves at Thermopylae, to await there the
coming of the conqueror. The people of Thessaly then surrendered to Xerxes
as soon as they received his summons.
Xerxes, from his encampment at Therma, where we left
him at the close of the last chapter, saw the peaks of Olympus and Ossa in the
southern horizon. They were distant perhaps fifty miles from where he
stood. He inquired about them, and was told that the River Peneus flowed
between them to the sea, and that through the same defile there lay the
main entrance to Thessaly. He had previously determined to march his army round
the other way, as the King of Macedon had suggested, but he said that
he should like to see this defile. So he ordered a swift Sidonian galley
to be prepared, and, taking with him suitable guides, and a fleet of
other vessels in attendance on his galley, he sailed to the mouth of the
Peneus, and, entering that river, he ascend ed it until he came to the
defile.
Seen from any of the lower elevations which projected
from the bases of the mountains at the head of this defile, Thessaly lay
spread out before the eye as one vast valley—level, verdant, fertile, and
bounded by distant groups and ranges of mountains, which formed a blue
and beautiful horizon on every side. Through the midst of this scene
of rural loveliness the Peneus, with its countless branches,
gracefully meandered, gathering the water from every part of the
valley, and then pouring it forth in a deep and calm current through the gap in
the mountains at the observer’s feet. Xerxes asked his guides if it would be possible
to find any other place where the waters of the Peneus could
be conducted to the sea. They replied that it would not be, for the
valley was bounded on every side by ranges of mountainous land.
“ Then,” said Xerxes, “ the Thessalians were wise in
submitting at once to my summons; for, if they had not done so, I would
have raised a vast embankment across the valley here, and thus stopped the
river, turned their country into a lake, and drowned them all.”
Chapter VIII
The Advance of Xerxes into Greece.
FROM Therma—the last of the great stations at which
the Persian army halted before its final descent upon Greece—the army commenced
its march, and the fleet set sail, nearly at the same time, which was
early in the summer. The army advanced slowly, meeting with the usual
difficulties and delays, but without encountering any special or
extraordinary occurrences, until, after having passed through Macedon
into Thessaly, and through Thessaly to the northern frontier of Phocis,
they began to approach the Straits of Thermopylae.. What took place
at Thermopylae will be made the subject of the next chapter. The
movements of the fleet are to be narrated in this.
In order distinctly to understand these movements, it
is necessary that the reader should first have a clear conception of the
geographical conformation of the coasts and seas along which the path
of the expedition lay. By referring to the map of Greece, we shall see
that the course which the fleet would naturally take from Therma to the
southeastward, along the coast, was unobstructed and clear for about a
hundred miles. We then come to a group of four islands, extending in a
range at right angles to the coast. The only one of these islands
with which we have particularly to do in this history is the innermost
of them, which was named Sciathus. Opposite to
these islands the line of the coast, having passed around the point of
a mountainous and rocky promontory called Magnesia, turns suddenly to the
westward, and runs in that direction for about thirty miles, when
it again turns to the southward and eastward as before. In the sort
of corner thus cut off by the deflection of the coast lies the long island
of Euboea, which may be considered, in fact, as almost a continuation
of the continent, as it is a part of the same conformation of country,
and is separated from the main land only by submerged valleys on the north
and on the east Into these sunken valleys the sea of course flows,
forming straits or channels. The one on the north was, in ancient times,
called Artemisium, and the one on the west, at its
narrowest point, Euripus. All these islands and coasts were high and
picturesque. They were also, in the days of Xerxes, densely populated, and
adorned profusely with temples, citadels, and towns.
On passing the southernmost extremity of the island of
Euboea, and turning to the westward, we come to a promontory of the
main and. which constituted Attica, and in the middle of which the city of
Athens was situated. Beyond this is a capacious gulf, called the Saronian Gulf. It lies between Attica and
the Peloponnesus. In the middle of the Saronian Gulf
lies the island of Aegina, and in the northern part of it the island of
Salamis. The progress of the Persian fleet was from Therma down the coast
to Sciathus, thence along the shores of Euboea
to its southern point, and so round into the Saronian Gulf to the island of Salamis. The distance of this voyage was perhaps two
hundred and fifty miles. In accomplishing it the fleet encountered many
dangers, and met with a variety of incidents and events, which we
shall now proceed to describe.
The country, of course, was everywhere in a state of
the greatest excitement and terror The immense army was slowly coming
down by land, and the fleet, scarcely less terrible since its
descents upon the coast would be so fearfully sudden and overwhelming when
they were made, was advancing by sea. The inhabitants of the country were
consequently in a state of extreme agitation. The sick and the infirm, who
were, of course, utterly helpless in such a danger, exhibited everywhere
the spectacle of silent dismay. Mothers, wives, maidens, and children, on the
other hand, were wild with excitement and terror. The men, too
full of passion to fear, or too full of pride to allow their fears to
be seen, were gathering in arms, or hurrying to and fro with intelligence, or making hasty arrangements to remove their wives and
children from the scenes of cruel suffering which were to ensue. They
stationed watchmen on the hills to give warning of the approach of the
enemy. They agreed upon signals, and raised piles of wood for beacon fires
on every commanding elevation along the coast; while all the roads
leading from the threatened provinces to other regions more remote from
the danger were covered with flying parties, endeavoring to make their
escape, and carrying, wearily and in sorrow, whatever they
valued most and were most anxious to save. Mothers bore their children,
men their gold and silver, and sisters aided their sick or feeble brothers
to sustain the toil and terror of the flight.
All this time Xerxes was sitting in his war chariot,
in the midst of his advancing army fall of exultation, happiness, and
pride at the thoughts of the vast harvest of glory which all this
panic and suffering were bringing him in.
The fleet, at length—which was under the command of
Xerxes’s brothers and cousins, whom he had appointed the admirals of
it—began to move down the coast from Therma, with the intention of first
sweeping the seas clear of any naval force which the Greeks might have sent
forward there to act against them, and then of landing upon some point on
the coast, wherever they could do so most advantageously for co-operation
with the army on the land. The advance of the ships was necessarily slow.
So immense a flotilla could not have been otherwise kept together. The
admirals, however, selected ten of the swiftest of the galleys,
and, after manning and arming them in the most perfect manner, sent
them forward to reconnoiter. The ten galleys were ordered to
advance rapidly, but with the greatest circumspection They were not
to incur any needless danger, but, if they met with any detached ships of
the enemy, they were to capture them, if possible They were,
moreover, to be constantly on the alert, to observe every
thing, and to send back to the fleet all important intelligence
which they could obtain.
The ten galleys went on without observing way thing
remarkable until they reached the island of Sciathus.
Here they came in sight of three Greek ships, a sort of advanced
guard, which had been stationed there to watch the movements of the
enemy.
The Greek galleys immediately hoisted their anchors
and fled; the Persian galleys manned their oars, and pressed on after
them.
They overtook one of the guard-ships very soon, and,
after a short conflict, they succeeded in capturing it. The Persians made
prisoners of the officers and crew, and then, selecting from among
them the fairest and most noble looking man, just as they would have
selected a bullock from a herd, they sacrificed him to one of their
deities on the prow of the captured ship. This was a religious ceremony,
intended to signalize and sanctify their victory.
The second vessel they also overtook and captured The
crew of this ship were easily subdued, as the overwhelming superiority of their
enemies appeared to convince them that all resistance was hopeless, and to
plunge them into despair. There was one man, however, who, it seems, could not
be conquered. He fought like a tiger to the last, and only ceased to deal
his furious thrusts and blow’s at the enemies that surrounded him when,
after being entirely covered with wounds, he fell faint and nearly lifeless
upon the bloody deck. When the conflict with him was thus ended, the
murderous hostility of his enemies seemed suddenly to be changed into pity
for his sufferings and admiration of his valor. They gathered around him,
bathed and bound up his wounds, gave him cordials, and at length restored
him to life. Finally, when the detachment returned to the fleet, some
days afterward, they carried this man with them, and presented him to the
commanders as a hero worthy of the highest admiration and honor. The rest of
the crew were made slaves.
The third of the Greek guard-ships contrived to
escape, or, rather, the crew escaped, while the vessel itself was taken.
This ship, in its flight, had gone toward the north, and the crew at
last succeeded in running it on shore on the coast of Thessaly, so as to
escape, themselves, by abandoning the vessel to the enemy.
The officers and crew, thus escaping to the shore, went through
Thessaly into Greece, spreading the tidings everywhere that the Persians
were at hand. This intelligence was communicated, also, along the
coast, by beacon fires which the people of Sciathus built upon the heights of the island as a signal, to give the alarm to the
country southward of them, according to the preconcerted plan. The alarm was
communicated by other fires built on other heights, and sentinels were
stationed on every commanding eminence on the highlands of Euboea toward
the south, to watch for the first appearance of the enemy.
The Persian galleys that had been sent forward having
taken the three Greek guard-ships, and finding the sea before them now clear
of all appearances of an enemy, concluded to return to the fleet with
their prizes and their report. They had been directed, when they were dispatched
from the fleet, to lay up a monument of stones at the furthest point which
they should reach in their cruise: a measure often resorted to in
similar cases, by way of furnishing proof that a party thus sent forward
have really advanced as far as they pretend on their return. The
Persian detachment had actually brought the stones for the erection of
their landmark with them in one of their galleys. The galley containing
the stones, and two others to aid it. pushed on beyond Sciathus to a small rocky islet standing in a conspicuous position in the sea,
and there they built their monument or cairn. The detachment then returned
to meet the fleet. The time occupied by this whole expedition was
eleven days.
The fleet was, in the meantime, coming down along the
coast of Magnesia. The whole company of ships had advanced safely and
prosperously thus far, but now a great calamity was about to befall
them—the first of the series of disasters by which the expedition was
ultimately ruined. It was a storm at sea.
The fleet had drawn up for the night in a long and
shallow bay on the coast. There was a rocky promontory at one end of this
bay and a cape on the other, with a long beach between them. It was a
very good place of refuge and rest for the night in calm weather, but such
a bay afforded very little shelter against a tempestuous wind, or even
against the surf and swell of the sea, which were sometimes
produced by a distant storm. When the fleet entered this bay in the
evening, the sea was calm and the sky serene. The commanders expected to remain
there for the night, and to proceed on the voyage on the following day.
The bay was not sufficiently extensive to al low of
the drawing up of so large a fleet in a single line along the shore. The
ships were accordingly arranged in several fines, eight in all. The
innermost of these lines was close to the shore; the others were at
different distances from it, and every separate ship was held to
the place assigned it by its anchors. In this position the fleet passed
the night in safety, but before morning there were indications of a
storm. The sky looked wild and lurid. A heavy swell came rolling in
from the offing. The wind began to rise, and to blow in fitful gusts. Its direction
was from the eastward, so that its tendency was to drive the fleet upon the
shore. The seamen were anxious and afraid, and the commanders of the
several ships began to devise, each for his own vessel, the best means
of safety. Some, whose vessels were small, drew them up upon the
sand, above the reach of the swell Others strengthened the
anchoring tackle, or added new anchors to those already down. Others
raised their anchors altogether, and attempted to row their galleys away,
up or down the coast, in hope of finding some better place of shelter.
Thus all was excitement and confusion in the fleet, through the eager
efforts made by every separate crew to escape the impending danger.
In the meantime, the storm came on apace. The rising
and roughening sea made the oars useless, and the wind howled frightfully
through the cordage and the rigging. The galleys soon began to be
forced away from their moorings. Some were driven upon the beach and
dashed to pieces by the waves. Some were wrecked on the rocks at one
or the other of the projecting points which bounded the bay on either
hand Some foundered at their place of anchorage Vast numbers of men
were drowned. Those who escaped to the shore were in hourly dread of
an attack from the inhabitants of the country. To save themselves, if possible,
from this danger, they dragged up the fragments of the wrecked
vessels upon the beach, and built a fort with them on the shore. Here they
intrenched themselves, and then prepared to defend their lives, armed with the
weapons which, like the materials for their fort, were washed up,
from time to time, by the sea.
The storm continued for three days. It destroyed about
three hundred galleys, besides an immense number of provision transports
and other smaller vessels. Great numbers of seamen, also, were drowned.
The inhabitants of the country along the coast enriched
themselves with the plunder which they obtained from the wrecks, and
from the treasures, and the gold and silver vessels, which continued for
some time to be driven up upon the beach by the waves. The Persians
themselves recovered, it was said, a great deal of valuable treasure,
by employing a certain Greek diver, whom they had in their fleet, to
dive for it after the storm was over. This diver, whose name was Scyllias, was famed far and wide for his power
of remaining under water. As an instance of what they believed him
capable of performing, they said that when, at a certain period subsequent
to these transactions, he determined to desert to the Greeks, he
accomplished his design by diving into the sea from the deck of a Persian
galley, and coming up again in the midst of the Greek fleet, ten miles
distant!
After three days the storm subsided. The Persians then
repaired the damages which had been sustained, so far as it was now
possible to repair them, collected what remained of the fleet, took
the shipwrecked mariners from their rude fortification on the beach, and
set sail again on their voyage to the southward.
In the meantime, the Greek fleet had assembled in the
arm of the sea lying north of Euboea, and between Euboea and the
main land. It was an allied fleet, made up of contributions from various
states that had finally agreed to come into the confederacy. As
is usually the case, however, with allied or confederate forces, they were
not well agreed among themselves. The Athenians had furnished far the
greater number of ships, and they considered themselves, therefore, entitled to
the command ; but the other allies were envious and jealous of them on
account of that very superiority of wealth and power which enabled them to
supply a greater portion of the naval force than the rest. They were
willing that one of the Spartans should command, but they would not
consent to put themselves under an Athenian. If an Athenian leader were chosen,
they would disperse, they said, and the various portions of the fleet
return to their respective homes.
The Athenians, though burning with resentment at this
unjust declaration, were compelled to submit to the necessity of the case.
They could not take the confederates at their word; and allow the
fleet to be broken up, for the defense of Athens was the great object for
which it was assembled. The other states might make their peace with
the conqueror by submission, but the Athenians could not do so. In respect
to the rest of Greece, Xerxes wished only for dominion. In respect to
Athens, he wished for vengeance. The Athenians had burned the Persian
city of Sardis, and he had determined to give himself no rest until he
had burned Athens in return.
It was well understood, therefore, that the assembling
of the fleet, and giving battle to the Persians where they now were, was a
plan adopted mainly for the defense and benefit of the Athenians. The
Athenians, accordingly, waived their claim to command, secretly resolving
that, when the war was over, they would have their revenge for the insult
and injury.
A Spartan was accordingly appointed commander of the fleet.
His name was Eurybiades
Things were in this state when the two fleets came in
sight of each other in the stra*t between the
northern end of Euboea and the main land. Fifteen of the Persian galleys,
advancing incautiously some miles in front of the rest came suddenly upon tje Greek fleet, and were all captured. The crews were
made prisoners and sent into Greece. The remainder of the fleet
entered the strait, and anchored at the eastern extremity of it, sheltered by
the promontory of Magnesia, which now lay to the north of them.
The Greeks were amazed at the immense magnitude of the
Persian fleet, and the first opinion of the commanders was, that it
was wholly useless for them to attempt to engage them. A council was
convened, and, after a* long and anxious debate, they decided that
it was best to retire to the southward. The in habitants of Euboea,
who had been already in a state of great excitement and terror at
the near approach of so formidable an enemy, were thrown, by this
decision of the allies, into a state of absolute dismay. It was abandoning
them to irremediable and hopeless destruction.
The government of the island immediately raised a very
large sum of money, and went with it to Themistocles, one of the most
influential of the Athenian leaders, and offered it to him if he would
contrive any way to persuade the commanders of the fleet to remain and
give the Persians battle where they were. Themistocles took the money, and
agreed to the cond tion. He
went with a small part of it—though this part was a very considerable
sum—to Eurybiades, the commander-in-chief, and
offered it to him if he would retain the fleet in its present position.
There were some other similar offerings made to other influential men,
judiciously selected. All this was done in a very private manner, and, of
course, Themistocles took care to reserve to himself the lion’s
share of the Euboean contribution. The effect of this money in
altering the opinions of the naval officers was marvelous. A new council was
called, the former decision was annulled, and the Greeks determined to
give their enemies battle where they were.
The Persians had not been unmindful of the danger that
the Greeks might retreat by retiring through the Euripus, and so escape
them. In order to prevent this, they secretly sent off a fleet of two
hundred of their strongest and fleetest galleys, with orders to sail round
Euboea and enter the Euripus from the south, so as to cut off the
retreat of the Greeks in that quarter. They thought that by this plan the
Greek fleet would be surrounded, and could have no possible mode of
escape. They remained, therefore, with the principal fleet, at the outer en trance of the northern strait for some days, be fore attacking the Greeks, in order to give
time for the detachment to pass round the island.
The Persians sent off the two hundred galleys with
great secrecy, not desiring that the Greeks should discover their design of
thus intercepting their retreat. They did discover it, however, for this
was the occasion on which the great diver, Scyllias,
made his escape from one fleet to the other by swimming under water
ten miles, and he brought the Greeks the tidings.
The Greeks dispatched a small squadron of ships with
orders to proceed southward into the Euripus, to meet this detachment
which the Persians sent round; and, in the meantime, they determined
themselves to attack the main Persian fleet without any delay.
Notwithstanding their absurd dissensions and jealousies, and the extent to
which the leaders were influenced by intrigues and bribes, the Greeks
always evinced an undaunted and indomitable spirit when the day of
battle came. It was, moreover, in this case, exceedingly important to defend
the position which they had taken. By referring to the map once more, it will
be see that the Euripus was the great highway to Athens by sea, as
the pass of Thermopylae was by land. Thermopylae was west of Artemisium, where the fleet was now stationed, and
not many miles from it. The Greek army had made its great stand at
Thermopylae, and Xerxes was fast coming down the country with all his
forces to endeavor to force a passage there. The Persian fleet, in entering Artemisium, was making the same attempt by sea
in respect to the narrow passage of Euripus; and for either of the
two forces, the fleet or the army, to fail of making good the defense of
its position, without a desperate effort to do so, would justly
be considered a base betrayal and abandonment of the other.
The Greeks therefore advanced, one morning, to the
attack of the Persians, to the utter astonishment of the latter, who believed
that their enemies were insane when they thus saw them coming into
the jaws, as they thought, of certain destruction. Before night,
however, they were to change their opinions in respect to the
insanity of their foes. The Greeks pushed boldly on into the midst of the
Persian fleet, where they were soon surrounded. They then formed themselves
into a circle, with the prows of the vessels outward, and the sterns
toward the center within, and fought in this manner with the utmost
desperation all the day. With the night a storm came on, or, rather, a
series of thunder-showers and gusts of wind, so severe that both
fleets were glad to retire from the scene of contest. The Persians went
back toward the east, the Greeks to the westward, toward Thermopylae—each party
busy in repairing their wrecks, taking care of their wounded, and saving
their vessels from the tempest. It was a dreadful night. The Persians, particularly,
spent it in the midst of scenes of horror. The wind and the current, it
seems, set outward, toward the sea, and carried the masses and fragments
of the wrecked vessels, and the swollen and ghastly bodies of the dead, in
among the Persian fleet, and so choked up the surface of the water that
the oars became entangled and useless. The whole mass of seamen in
the Persian fleet, during this terrible night, were panic-stricken
and filled with horror. The wind, the perpetual thunder, the concussions
of the vessels with the wrecks and with one another, end the heavy
shocks of the seas, kept them in continual alarm; and the black and inscrutable
darkness was rendered the more dreadful, while it prevailed, by the
hideous spectacle which, at every flash of lightning, glared brilliantly
upon every eye from the wide surface of the sea. The shouts and cries
of officers vociferating orders, of wounded men writhing in agony,
of watchmen and sentinels in fear of collisions, mingled with the
howling wind and roaring seas, created a scene of indescribable terror
and confusion.
The violence of the sudden gale was still greater
further out at sea, and the detachment of ships which had been sent around
Euboea was wholly dispersed and destroyed by it.
The storm was, however, after all, only a series of
summer evening showers, such as to the inhabitants of peaceful dwellings on the
land have no terror, but only come to clear the sultry atmosphere in the
night, and in the morning are gone. When the sun rose, according ly, upon the Greeks and Persians on the morning after their
conflict, the air was calm, the sky serene, and the sea as blue and pure
as ever. The bodies and the wrecks had been floated away into the
offing. The courage or the ferocity whichever we choose to call it, of the combatants,
returned, and they renewed the conflict. It continued, with varying
success, for two more days.
During all this time the inhabitants of the island of
Euboea were in the greatest distress and terror. They watched these
dreadful conflicts from the heights, uncertain how the struggle would end, but
fearing lest their defenders should be beaten, in which case the
whole force of the Persian fleet would be landed on their island, to
sweep it with pillage and destruction. They soon began to anticipate the
worst, and, in preparation for it, they removed their goods—all that
could be removed—and drove their cattle down to the southern part of
the island, so as to be ready to escape to the main land. The Greek
commanders, finding that the fleet would probably be compelled to retreat
in the end, sent to them here, recommending that they should kill
their cattle and eat them, roasting the flesh at fires which they should
kindle on the plain. The cattle could not be transported, they said,
across the channel, and it was better that the flying population should be
fed, than that the food should fall into Persian hands. If they would
dispose of their cattle in this manner, Euryblades would endeavor, he said, to transport the people themselves and their
valuable goods across into Attica.
How many thousand peaceful and happy hemes were broken
up and destroyed forever by this ruthless invasion!
In the meantime, the Persians, irritated by the
obstinate resistance of the Greeks, were, on the fourth day, preparing for
some more vigorous measures, when they saw a small boat coming toward the fleet
from down the channel. It proved to contain a countryman, who came to
tell them that the Greeks had gone away. The whole fleet, he said, had
sailed off to the southward, and abandoned those seas altogether. The
Persians did not, at first, believe this intelligence. They suspected some
ambuscade or stratagem. They advanced slowly and cautiously down the
channel. When they had gone half down to Thermopylae, they stopped
at a place called Histiaea, where, upon the
rocks on the shore, they found an inscription addressed to the
Ionians—who, it will be recollected, had been brought by Xerxes as
auxiliaries, contrary to the advice of Artabanus—entreating them not to
fight against their countrymen. This inscription was written in large and
conspicuous characters on the face of the cliff, sc
The commanders of the Persian fleet summoned to Thermopyla. that it could be read by the Ionian seamen
as they passed in their galleys.
The fleet anchored at Histiaea,
the commanders being somewhat uncertain in respect to what it was best to do.
Their suspense was very soon relieved by a messenger from Xerxes, who
came in a galley up the channel from Thermopylae, with the news that
Xerxes had arrived at Thermopylae, had fought a great battle there,
defeated the Greeks, and obtained possession of the pass, and that any of the
officers of the fleet who chose to do so might come and view the
battle ground. This intelligence and invitation produced, throughout the
fleet, a scene of the wildest excitement, enthusiasm, and joy. All
the boats and smaller vessels of the fleet were put into requisition to
carry the officers down. When they arrived at Thermopylae the tidings all
proved true Xerxes was in possession of the pass, and the Greek fleet
was irone.
IX
The Battle of Thermopyle.
B.C. 480
The pass of Thermopile was not a ravine among
mountains, but a narrow space between mountains and the sea. The mountains
landward were steep and inaccessible; the sea was shoal. The passage between
them was narrow for many miles along the shore, being narrowest at the ingress
and egress. In the middle the space was broader. The place was celebrated for
certain warm springs which here issued from the rocks, and which had been used
in former times for baths.
The position had been considered, long before Xerxes's day, a very important one in a military
point of view, as it was upon the frontier between two Greek states that were
frequently at war. One of these states, of course, was Thessaly. The other was
Phocis, which lay south of Thessaly. The general boundary between these two
states was mountainous, and impassable for troops, so that each could invade
the territories of the other only by passing round between the mountains and
the shore at Thermopile.
The Phocæans,
in order to keep the Thessalians out, had, in former times, built a wall across
the way, and put up gates there, which they strongly fortified. In order still
further to increase the difficulty of forcing a passage, they conducted the
water of the warm springs over the ground without the wall, in such a way as to
make the surface continually wet and miry. The old wall had now fallen to
ruins, but the miry ground remained. The place was solitary and desolate, and
overgrown with a confused and wild vegetation. On one side the view extended
far and wide over the sea, with the highlands of Eubœa in the distance, and on the other dark
and inaccessible mountains rose, covered with forests, indented with mysterious
and unexplored ravines, and frowning in a wild and gloomy majesty over the
narrow pass-way which crept along the shore below.
The Greeks, when they retired from Thessaly, fell back
upon Thermopile, and established themselves there. They had a force variously
estimated, from three to four thousand men. These were from the different
states of Greece, some within and some without the Peloponnesus—a few hundred men
only being furnished, in general, from each state or kingdom. Each of these
bodies of troops had its own officers, though there was one general-in-chief,
who commanded the whole. This was Leonidas the Spartan. He had brought with him
three hundred Spartans, as the quota furnished by that city. These men he had
specially selected himself, one by one, from among the troops of the city, as
men on whom he could rely.
It will be seen from the map that Thermopile is at
some distance from the Isthmus of Corinth, and that of the states which would
be protected by making a stand at the pass, some were without the isthmus and
some within. These states, in sending each a few hundred men only to
Thermopile, did not consider that they were making their full contribution to
the army, but only sending forward for the emergency those that could be
dispatched at once; and they were all making arrangements to supply more troops
as soon as they could be raised and equipped for the service. In the meantime,
however, Xerxes and his immense hordes came on faster than they had expected,
and the news at length came to Leonidas, in the pass, that the Persians, with
one or two millions of men, were at hand, while he had only three or four
thousand at Thermopile to oppose them. The question arose, What was to be done?
Those of the Greeks who came from the Peloponnesus
were in favor of abandoning Thermopile, and falling back to the isthmus. The
isthmus, they maintained, was as strong and as favorable a position as the
place where they were; and, by the time they had reached it, they would have
received great re-enforcements; whereas, with so small a force as they had then
at command, it was madness to attempt to resist the Persian millions. This
plan, however, was strongly opposed by all those Greeks who represented
countries without the Peloponnesus; for, by abandoning Thermopile, and falling
back to the isthmus, their states would be left wholly at the mercy of the
enemy. After some consultation and debate, it was decided to remain at
Thermopile. The troops accordingly took up their positions in a deliberate and
formal manner, and, intrenching themselves
as strongly as possible, began to await the onset of the enemy. Leonidas and
his three hundred were foremost in the defile, so as to be the first exposed to
the attack. The rest occupied various positions along the passage, except one
corps, which was stationed on the mountains above, to guard the pass in that
direction. This corps was from Phocis, which, being the state nearest to the
scene of conflict, had furnished a larger number of soldiers than any other.
Their division numbered a thousand men. These being stationed on the declivity
of the mountain, left only two or three thousand in the defile below.
From what has been said of the stern and savage
character of the Spartans, one would scarcely expect in them any indications or
displays of personal vanity. There was one particular, it seems, however, in
regard to which they were vain, and that was in respect to their hair. They
wore it very long. In fact, the length of the hair was, in their commonwealth,
a mark of distinction between freemen and slaves. All the agricultural and
mechanical labors were performed, as has already been stated, by the slaves, a
body which constituted, in fact, the mass of the population; and the Spartan
freemen, though very stern in their manners, and extremely simple and plain in
their habits of life, were, it must be remembered, as proud and lofty in spirit
as they were plain and poor. They constituted a military aristocracy, and a
military aristocracy is always more proud and overbearing than any other.
It must be understood, therefore, that these Spartan
soldiers were entirely above the performance of any useful labors; and while
they prized, in character, the savage ferocity of the tiger, they had a taste,
in person, for something like his savage beauty too. They were never, moreover,
more particular and careful in respect to their personal appearance than when
they were going into battle. The field of battle was their particular theater
of display, not only of the substantial qualities of strength, fortitude, and
valor, but also of such personal adornments as were consistent with the
plainness and severity of their attire, and could be appreciated by a taste as
rude and savage as theirs. They proceeded, therefore, when established at their
post in the throat of the pass, to adorn themselves for the approaching battle.
In the meantime the armies of Xerxes were approaching.
Xerxes himself, though he did not think it possible that the Greeks could have
a sufficient force to offer him any effectual resistance, thought it probable
that they would attempt to make a stand at the pass, and, when he began to draw
near to it, he sent forward a horseman to reconnoiter the ground. The horseman
rode into the pass a little way, until he came in sight of the enemy. He
stopped upon an eminence to survey the scene, being all ready to turn in an
instant, and fly at the top of his speed, in case he should be pursued. The
Spartans looked upon him as he stood there, but seemed to consider his
appearance as a circumstance of no moment, and then went on with their
avocations. The horseman found, as he leisurely observed them, that there was
an intrenchment thrown across the straits,
and that the Spartans were in front of it. There were other forces behind, but
these the horseman could not see. The Spartans were engaged, some of them in
athletic sports and gymnastic exercises, and the rest in nicely arranging their
dress, which was red and showy in color, though simple and plain in form, and
in smoothing, adjusting, and curling their hair. In fact, they seemed to be,
one and all, preparing for an entertainment.
And yet these men were actually preparing themselves
to be slaughtered, to be butchered, one by one, by slow degrees, and in the
most horrible and cruel manner; and they knew perfectly well that it was so.
The adorning of themselves was for this express and particular end.
The horseman, when he had attentively noticed all that
was to be seen, rode slowly back to Xerxes, and reported the result. The king
was much amused at hearing such an account from his messenger. He sent for
Demaratus, the Spartan refugee, with whom, the reader will recollect, he held a
long conversation in respect to the Greeks at the close of the great review
at Doriscus. When
Demaratus came, Xerxes related to him what the messenger had reported.
"The Spartans in the pass," said he, "present, in their
encampment, the appearance of being out on a party of pleasure. What does it
mean? You will admit now, I suppose, that they do not intend to resist us."
Demaratus shook his head. "Your majesty does not
know the Greeks," said he, "and I am very much afraid that, if I
state what I know respecting them, I shall offend you. These appearances which
your messenger observed indicate to me that the men he saw were a body of
Spartans, and that they supposed themselves on the eve of a desperate conflict.
Those are the men, practicing athletic feats, and smoothing and adorning their
hair, that are the most to be feared of all the soldiers of Greece. If you can
conquer them, you will have nothing beyond to fear."
Xerxes thought this opinion of Demaratus extremely
absurd. He was convinced that the party in the pass was some small detachment
that could not possibly be thinking of serious resistance. They would, he was
satisfied, now that they found that the Persians were at hand, immediately
retire down the pass, and leave the way clear. He advanced, therefore, up to
the entrance of the pass, encamped there, and waited several days for the
Greeks to clear the way. The Greeks remained quietly in their places, paying
apparently no attention whatever to the impending and threatening presence of
their formidable foes.
At length Xerxes concluded that it was time for him to
act. On the morning, therefore, of the fifth day, he called out a detachment of
his troops, sufficient, as he thought, for the purpose, and sent them down the
pass, with orders to seize all the Greeks that were there, and bring them,
alive, to him. The detachment that he sent was a body of Medes, who were
considered as the best troops in the army, excepting always the Immortals, who,
as has been before stated, were entirely superior to the rest. The Medes,
however, Xerxes supposed, would find no difficulty in executing his orders.
The detachment marched, accordingly, into the pass. In
a few hours a spent and breathless messenger came from them, asking for
re-enforcements. The re-enforcements were sent. Toward night a remnant of the
whole body came back, faint and exhausted with a long and fruitless combat, and
bringing many of their wounded and bleeding comrades with them. The rest they
had left dead in the defile.
Xerxes was both astonished and enraged at these
results. He determined that this trifling should continue no longer. He ordered
the Immortals themselves to be called out on the following morning, and then,
placing himself at the head of them, he advanced to the vicinity of the
Greek intrenchments. Here he ordered a seat or
throne to be placed for him upon an eminence, and, taking his seat upon it,
prepared to witness the conflict. The Greeks, in the meantime, calmly arranged
themselves on the line which they had undertaken to defend, and awaited the
charge. Upon the ground, on every side, were lying the mangled bodies of the
Persians slain the day before, some exposed fully to view, ghastly and horrid
spectacles, others trampled down and half buried in the mire.
The Immortals advanced to the attack, but they made no
impression. Their superior numbers gave them no advantage, on account of the
narrowness of the defile. The Greeks stood, each corps at its own assigned
station on the line, forming a mass so firm and immovable that the charge of
the Persians was arrested on encountering it as by a wall. In fact, as the
spears of the Greeks were longer than those of the Persians, and their muscular
and athletic strength and skill were greater, it was found that in the
desperate conflict which raged, hour after hour, along the line, the Persians
were continually falling, while the Greek ranks continued entire. Sometimes the
Greeks would retire for a space, falling back with the utmost coolness,
regularity, and order; and then, when the Persians pressed on in pursuit,
supposing that they were gaining the victory, the Greeks would turn so soon as
they found that the ardor of pursuit had thrown the enemies' lines somewhat
into confusion, and, presenting the same firm and terrible front as before,
would press again upon the offensive, and cut down their enemies with redoubled
slaughter. Xerxes, who witnessed all these things from among the group of
officers around him upon the eminence, was kept continually in a state of
excitement and irritation. Three times he leaped from his throne, with loud
exclamations of vexation and rage.
All, however, was of no avail. When night came the
Immortals were compelled to withdraw, and leave the Greeks in possession of
their intrenchments.
Things continued substantially in this state for one
or two days longer, when one morning a Greek countryman appeared at the tent of
Xerxes, and asked an audience of the king. He had something, he said, of great
importance to communicate to him. The king ordered him to be admitted. The
Greek said that his name was Ephialtes, and
that he came to inform the king that there was a secret path leading along a
wild and hidden chasm in the mountains, by which he could guide a body of
Persians to the summit of the hills overhanging the pass at a point below the
Greek intrenchment. This point being once
attained, it would be easy, Ephialtes said,
for the Persian forces to descend into the pass below the Greeks, and thus to
surround them and shut them in, and that the conquest of them would then be
easy. The path was a secret one, and known to very few. He knew it, however,
and was willing to conduct a detachment of troops through it, on condition of
receiving a suitable reward.
The king was greatly surprised and delighted at this
intelligence. He immediately acceded to Ephialtes's proposals,
and organized a strong force to be sent up the path that very night.
On the north of Thermopile there was a small stream,
which came down through a chasm in the mountains to the sea. The path
which Ephialtes was to show commenced
here, and following the bed of this stream up the chasm, it at length turned to
the southward through a succession of wild and trackless ravines, till it came
out at last on the declivities of the mountains near the lower part of the
pass, at a place where it was possible to descend to the defile below. This was
the point which the thousand Phocæans had
been ordered to take possession of and guard, when the plan for the defense of
the pass was first organized. They were posted here, not with the idea of
repelling any attack from the mountains behind them—for the existence of the
path was wholly unknown to them—but only that they might command the defile
below, and aid in preventing the Persians from going through, even if those who
were in the defile were defeated or slain.
The Persian detachment toiled all night up the steep
and dangerous pathway, among rocks, chasms, and precipices, frightful by day,
and now made still more frightful by the gloom of the night. They came out at
last, in the dawn of the morning, into valleys and glens high up the declivity
of the mountain, and in the immediate vicinity of the Phocæan encampment. The Persians were
concealed, as they advanced, by the groves and thickets of stunted oaks which
grew here, but the morning air was so calm and still, that the Phocæan sentinels heard the
noise made by their trampling upon the leaves as they came up the glen.
The Phocæans immediately
gave the alarm. Both parties were completely surprised. The Persians had not
expected to find a foe at this elevation, and the Greeks who had ascended there
had supposed that all beyond and above them was an impassable and trackless
desolation.
There was a short conflict, The Phocæans were driven off
their ground. They retreated up the mountain, and toward the southward. The
Persians decided not to pursue them. On the other hand, they descended toward
the defile, and took up a position on the lower declivities of the mountain,
which enabled them to command the pass below; there they paused, and
awaited Xerxes's orders.
The Greeks in the defile perceived at once that they
were now wholly at the mercy of their enemies. They might yet retreat, it is
true, for the Persian detachment had not yet descended to intercept them; but,
if they remained where they were, they would, in a few hours, be hemmed in by
their foes; and even if they could resist, for a little time, the double onset
which would then be made upon them, their supplies would be cut off, and there
would be nothing before them but immediate starvation. They held hurried
councils to determine what to do.
There is some doubt as to what took place at these
councils, though the prevailing testimony is, that Leonidas recommended that
they should retire—that is, that all except himself and the three hundred
Spartans should do so. "You," said he, addressing the other Greeks,
"are at liberty, by your laws, to consider, in such cases as this, the
question of expediency, and to withdraw from a position which you have taken,
or stand and maintain it, according as you judge best. But by our laws, such a
question, in such a case, is not to be entertained. Wherever we are posted,
there we stand, come life or death, to the end. We have been sent here from
Sparta to defend the pass of Thermopile. We have received no orders to
withdraw. Here, therefore, we must remain; and the Persians, if they go through
the pass at all, must go through it over our graves. It is, therefore, your
duty to retire. Our duty is here, and we will remain and do it."
After all that may be said of the absurdity and folly
of throwing away the lives of three hundred men in a case like this, so utterly
and hopelessly desperate, there is still something in the noble generosity with
which Leonidas dismissed the other Greeks, and in the undaunted resolution with
which he determined himself to maintain his ground, which has always strongly
excited the admiration of mankind. It was undoubtedly carrying the point of
honor to a wholly unjustifiable extreme, and yet all the world, for the twenty
centuries which have intervened since these transactions occurred, while they
have unanimously disapproved, in theory, of the course which Leonidas pursued,
have none the less unanimously admired and applauded it.
Leonidas retained with him a body of Thebans, whom he
suspected of a design of revolting to the enemy. Whether he considered his
decision to keep them in the pass equivalent to a sentence of death, and
intended it as a punishment for their supposed treason, or only that he wished
to secure their continued fidelity by keeping them closely to their duty, does
not appear. At all events, he retained them, and dismissed the other allies.
Those dismissed retreated to the open country below. The Spartans and the
Thebans remained in the pass. There were also, it was said, some other troops,
who, not willing to leave the Spartans alone in this danger, chose to remain
with them and share their fate. The Thebans remained very unwillingly.
The next morning Xerxes prepared for his final effort.
He began by solemn religious services, in the presence of his army, at an early
hour; and then, after breakfasting quietly, as usual, and waiting, in fact,
until the business part of the day had arrived, he gave orders to advance. His
troops found Leonidas and his party not at their intrenchments,
as before, but far in advance of them. They had come out and forward into a
more open part of the defile, as if to court and anticipate their inevitable
and dreaded fate. Here a most terrible combat ensued; one which, for a time,
seemed to have no other object than mutual destruction, until at length
Leonidas himself fell, and then the contest for the possession of his body
superseded the unthinking and desperate struggles of mere hatred and rage. Four
times the body, having been taken by the Persians, was retaken by the Greeks:
at last the latter retreated, bearing the dead body with them past their intrenchment, until they gained a small eminence in the
rear of it, at a point where the pass was wider. Here the few that were still
left gathered together. The detachment which Ephialtes had
guided were coming up from below. The Spartans were faint and exhausted with
their desperate efforts, and were bleeding from the wounds they had received;
their swords and spears were broken to pieces, their leader and nearly all
their company were slain. But the savage and tiger-like ferocity which animated
them continued unabated till the last. They fought with tooth and nail when all
other weapons failed them, and bit the dust at last, as they fell, in
convulsive and unyielding despair. The struggle did not cease till they were
all slain, and every limb of every man ceased to quiver.
There were stories in circulation among mankind after
this battle, importing that one or two of the corps escaped the fate of the
rest. There were two soldiers, it was said, that had been left in a town near
the pass, as invalids, being afflicted with a severe inflammation of the eyes.
One of them, when he heard that the Spartans were to be left in the pass, went
in, of his own accord, and joined them, choosing to share the fate of his
comrades. It was said that he ordered his servant to conduct him to the place.
The servant did so, and then fled himself, in great terror. The sick soldier
remained and fought with the rest. The other of the invalids was saved, but, on
his return to Sparta, he was considered as stained with indelible disgrace for
what his countrymen regarded a base dereliction from duty in not sharing his
comrade's fate.
There was also a story of another man, who had been
sent away on some mission into Thessaly, and who did not return until all was
over; and also of two others who had been sent to Sparta, and were returning
when they heard of the approaching conflict. One of them hastened into the
pass, and was killed with his companions. The other delayed, and was saved.
Whether any or all of these rumors were true, is not now certain; there is,
however, no doubt that, with at most a few exceptions such as these, the whole
three hundred were slain.
The Thebans, early in the conflict, went over in a
body to the enemy.
Xerxes came after the battle to view the ground. It
was covered with many thousands of dead bodies, nearly all of whom, of course,
were Persians. The wall of the intrenchment was
broken down, and the breaches in it choked up by the bodies. The morasses made
by the water of the springs were trampled into deep mire, and were full of the
mutilated forms of men and of broken weapons. When Xerxes came at last to the
body of Leonidas, and was told that that was the man who had been the leader of
the band, he gloried over it in great exaltation and triumph. At length he
ordered the body to be decapitated, and the headless trunk to be nailed to a
cross.
Xerxes then commanded that a great hole should be dug,
and ordered all the bodies of the Persians that had been killed to be buried in
it, except only about a thousand, which he left upon the ground. The object of
this was to conceal the extent of the loss which his army had sustained. The
more perfectly to accomplish this end, he caused the great grave, when it was filled
up, to be strewed over with leaves, so as to cover and conceal all indications
of what had been done. This having been carefully effected, he sent the message
to the fleet, which was alluded to at the close of the last chapter, inviting
the officers to come and view the ground.
The operations of the fleet described in the last
chapter, and those of the army narrated in this, took place, it will be
remembered, at the same time, and in the same vicinity too; for, by referring
to the map, it will appear that Thermopylæ was
upon the coast, exactly opposite to the channel or arm of the sea lying north
of Eubœa, where the
naval contests had been waged; so that, while Xerxes had been making his
desperate efforts to get through the pass, his fleet had been engaged in a
similar conflict with the squadrons of the Greeks, directly opposite to him,
twenty or thirty miles in the offing.
After the battle of Thermopylæ was over, Xerxes sent for
Demaratus, and inquired of him how many more such soldiers there were in Greece
as Leonidas and his three hundred Spartans. Demaratus replied that he could not
say how many precisely there were in Greece, but that there were eight thousand
such in Sparta alone. Xerxes then asked the opinion of Demaratus as to the
course best to be pursued for making the conquest of the country. This
conversation was held in the presence of various nobles and officers, among
whom was the admiral of the fleet, who had come, with the various other naval
commanders, as was stated in the last chapter, to view the battle-field.
Demaratus said that he did not think that the king
could easily get possession of the Peloponnesus by marching to it directly, so
formidable would be the opposition that he would encounter at the isthmus.
There was, however, he said, an island called Cythera, opposite to the
territories of Sparta, and not far from the shore, of which he thought that the
king could easily get possession, and which, once fully in his power, might be
made the base of future operations for the reduction of the whole peninsula, as
bodies of troops could be dispatched from it to the main land in any numbers
and at any time. He recommended, therefore, that three hundred ships, with a
proper complement of men, should be detached from the fleet, and sent round at
once to take possession of that island.
To this plan the admiral of the fleet was totally
opposed. It was natural that he should be so, since the detaching of three
hundred ships for this enterprise would greatly weaken the force under his
command. It would leave the fleet, he told the king, a miserable remnant, not
superior to that of the enemy, for they had already lost four hundred ships by
storms. He thought it infinitely preferable that the fleet and the army should
advance together, the one by sea and the other on the land, and complete their
conquests as they went along. He advised the king, too, to beware of Demaratus's advice. He was a Greek, and, as such, his
object was, the admiral believed, to betray and ruin the expedition.
After hearing these conflicting opinions, the king
decided to follow the admiral's advice. "I will adopt your counsel,"
said he, "but I will not hear anything said against Demaratus, for I am
convinced that he is a true and faithful friend to me." Saying this, he
dismissed the council.
Chapter X.
The Burning of Athens.
WHEN the officers of the Persian fleet had satisfied
themselves with examining the battle-field at Thermopylae, and had heard
the narrations given by the soldiers of the terrible combats that had
been fought with the desperate garrison which had been stationed to defend the
pass, they went back to their vessels, and prepared to make sail to the
southward, in pursuit of the Greek fleet The Greek fleet had gone to
Salamis. The Persians in due time overtook them there, and a great
naval conflict occurred, which is known in history as the battle of Salamis,
and was one of the most celebrated naval battles of ancient times.
.An account of this battle will form the subject of the next chapter.
In this we are to follow the operations of the army on the land.
As the Pass of Thermopylae was now in Xerxes’s
possession, the way was open before him to all that portion of the great
territory which lay north of the Peloponnesus. Of course, before he could
enter the peninsula itself, he must pass the Isthmus of Corinth, where he
might, perhaps, encounter some concentrated resistance. North of the
isthmus, however, there was no place where the Greeks could make a
stand. The country was all open, or, rather, there were a thousand ways
open through the various valleys and glens, and along the banks of the rivers.
All that was necessary was to procure guides and proceed.
The Thessalians were very ready to furnish guides.
They had submitted to Xerxes before the battle of Thermopylae, and they
considered themselves, accordingly, as his allies. They had, besides,
a special interest in conducting the Persian army, on account of the
hostile feelings which they entertained toward the people immediately
south of the pass, into whose territories Xerxes would first carry his
ravages. This people were the Phocaeans. Their
country, as has already been stated, was separated from Thessaly by
impassable mountains, except where the Straits of Thermopylae opened a
passage ; and through this pass both nations had been continually making
hostile incursions into the territory of the other for many years
before the Persian invasion. The Thessalians had surrendered readily
to the summons of Xerxes while the Phocaeans had
determined to resist him, and adhere to the cause of the Greeks
in the struggle. They were suspected of having been influenced, in a
great measure, in their determination to resist, by the fact that the
Thessalians had decided to surrender. They were resolved that they would
not, on any account, be upon the same side with their ancient
and inveterate foes.
The hostility of the Thessalians to the Pho-cleans was
equally implacable. At the last incursion which they had made into the Phocaean territory, they had been defeated by means
of stratagems in a manner which tended greatly to vex and irritate
them. There were two of these stratagems, which were both
completely successful, and both of a very extraordinary character.
The first was this. The Thessalians were in the Phocaean country in great force, and the Phocaeans had found themselves utterly unable to expel
them. Under these circumstances, a body of the Phocaeans,
six hundred in number, cue day whitened their faces, their arms and hands, their
clothes, and all their weapons, with chalk, and then, at the dead of
night—perhaps, however, when the moon was shining—made an onset upon the camp
of the enemy. The Thessalian sentinels were terrified and ran away, and the
soldiers, awakened from their slumbers by these unearthly-looking troops,
screamed with fright, and fled in all directions, in utter confusion and
dismay. A night attack is usually a dangerous attempt, even if the
assaulting party is the strongest, as, in the darkness and confusion
which then prevail, the assailants cannot ordinarily distinguish friends from
foes, and so are in great danger, amid the tumult and obscurity, of
slaying one another. That difficulty was obviated in this case by the
strange disguise which the Phocaeans had
assumed. They knew that all were Thessalians who were not
whitened like themselves. The Thessalians were totally discomfited
and dispersed by this encounter.
The other stratagem was of a different character, and
was directed against a troop of cavalry. The Thessalian cavalry were renowned
throughout the world. The broad plains extending through the heart of their
country co-tained excellent fields for training and
exercising such troops, and the mountains which sur-sounded it furnished grassy
slopes and verdant valleys, that supplied excellent pasturage for the
rearing of horses. The nation was very strong, therefore, in this species of
force, and many of the states and kingdoms of Greece when planning
their means of internal defense, and potentates and conquerors, when going
forth on great campaigns, often considered their armies incomplete unless
there was included in them a corps of Thessalian cavalry.
A troop of this cavalry had invaded Phocis, and the Phocaeans, conscious of their inability to resist them
in open war, contrived to entrap them in the following manner. They dug
a long trench in the ground, and then putting in baskets or casks
sufficient nearly to fill the space, they spread over the top a thin layer
of soil. They then concealed all indications that the ground had been
disturbed, by spreading leaves over the surface. The trap being thus
prepared, they contrived to entice the Thessalians to the spot by a
series of retreats, and at length led them into the pitfall thus provided
for them. The substructure of casks was strong enough to sustain the Phocaeans, who went over it as footmen, but was too fragile
to bear the weight of the mounted troops. The horses broke
through, and the squadron was thrown into such confusion by so unexpected
a disaster, that, when the Phocaeans turned and fell
upon them, they were easily overcome.
These things had irritated and vexed the Thessalians
very much. They were eager for revenge, and they were very ready to guide
the armies of Xerxes into the country of their enemies in order to obtain
it.
The troops advanced accordingly, awakening everywhere,
as they came on, the greatest consternation and terror among the
inhabitants, and producing on all sides scenes of indescribable anguish
and suffering. They came into the valley of the Cephisus,
a beautiful river flowing through a delightful and fertile region,
which contained many cities and towns, and was filled everywhere with
an industrious rural population. Through this scene of peace, and happiness,
and plenty, the vast horde of invaders swept on with the destructive force
of a tornado. They plundered the towns of everything which could be
carried away, and destroyed what they were compelled to leave behind them.
There it a catalogue of twelve cities in this valley which they
burned. The inhabitants, too, were treated with the utmost cruelty. Some were
seized, and compelled to follow the army as slaves; others were slain; and
others still were subjected to nameless cruelties and atrocities, worse sometimes
than death. Many of the women, both mothers and maidens, died in
consequence of the brutal violence with which the soldiers treated them.
The most remarkable of the transactions connected with
Xerxes’s advance through the country of Phocis, on his way to Athens, were
those connected with his attack upon Delphi. Delphi was a sacred town, the seat
of the oracle It was in the vicinity of Mount Parnassus and of the
Castalian spring, places of very great renown in the Greek mythology.
Parnassus was the name of a short mountainous range
rather than of a single peak, though the loftiest summit of the range
was called Parnassus too. This summit is found, by modern
measurement, to be about eight thousand feet high, and it is covered with snow
nearly all the year. When bare it consists only of a desolate range of
rocks, with mosses and a few Alpine plants growing on the sheltered and
sunny sides of them. From the top of Parnassus travelers who now visit it look
down upon almost all of Greece as upon a map. The Gulf of Corinth is
a silver lake at their feet, and the plains of Thessaly are seen extending
far and wide to the northward, with Olympus, Pelion, and Ossa, blue and distant
peaks, bounding the view.
Parnassus has, in fact, a double summit, between the
peaks of which a sort of ravine commences, which, as it extends down the
mountain, becomes a beautiful valley, shaded with rows of trees, and
adorned with slopes of verdure and banks of flowers. In a glen connected with
this valley there is a fountain of water springing copiously from among
the rocks, in a grove of laurels. This fountain gives rise to
a stream, which, after bounding over the rocks, and meandering
between mossy banks for a long distance down the mountain glens, becomes a quiet
lowland stream, and flows gently through a fertile and undulating country
to the sea. This fountain was the famous Castalian spring. It was, as
the ancient Greek legends said, the favorite resort and residence of
Apollo and the Muses, and its waters became, accordingly, the symbol
and the emblem of poetical inspiration.
The city of Delphi was built upon the lower
declivities of the Parnassian ranges, and yet high above the surrounding
country. It was built in the form of an amphitheater, in a sort of
lap in the hill where it stood, with steep precipices descending to a great
depth on either side. It was thus a position of difficult access, and was
considered almost impregnable in respect to its military strength. Besides
its natural defenses, it was considered as under the special protection
of Apollo.
Delphi was celebrated throughout the world, in ancient
times, not only for the oracle itself, but for the magnificence of the
architectural structures, the boundless profusion of the works of
art, and the immense value of the treasures which, in process of time, had
been accumulated there. The various powers and potentates that had
resorted to it to obtain the responses of the oracle, had brought rich
presents, or made costly contributions in some way, to the service of
the shrine. Some had built temples, others had constructed porches or
colonnades. Some had adorned the streets of the city with architectural
embellishments; others had caused statues to be erected; and others had
made splendid donations of vessels of gold and silver, until at
length the wealth and magnificence of Delphi was the wonder of the world.
All nations resorted to it, some to see its splendors, and others to
obtain the counsel and direction of the oracle in emergencies of
difficulty or danger
In the time of Xerxes, Delphi had been for several
hundred years in the enjoyment of its fame as a place of divine
inspiration. It was said to have been originally discovered in
the following manner. Some herdsmen on the mountains, watching their
flocks, observed one day a number of goats performing very
strange and unaccountable antics among some crevices in the rocks,
and, going to the place, they found that a mysterious wind was issuing
from the crevices, which produced an extraordinary exhilaration on all who
breathed it. Every thing extraordinary was
thought, in those days, to be supernatural and divine, and the fame of
this discovery was spread everywhere, the people supposing that the
effect produced upon the men and animals by breathing the mysterious
air was a divine inspiration. A temple was built over the spot,
priests and priestesses were installed, a city began to rise, and in process
of time Delphi became the most celebrated oracle in the world; and as
the vast treasures which had been accumulated there consisted
mainly of gifts and offerings consecrated to a divine and sacred
service, they were all understood to be under divine protection. They were
defended, it is true, in part by the inaccessibleness of the position of
Delphi, and by the artificial fortifications which had been added from time to
time to increase the security, but still more by the feeling which everywhere
prevailed, that any violence offered to such a shrine would be punished by
the gods as sacrilege. The account of the manner in which Xerxes was
repulsed, as related by the ancient historians, is somewhat marvelous.
We, however, in this case, as in all others, transmit the story to our
readers as the ancient historians give it to us.
The main body of the army pursued its way directly
southward toward the city of Athens, which was now the great object at
which Xerxes aimed. A large detachment, however, separating from the main body,
moved more to the westward, toward Delphi. Their plan was to plunder
the temples and the city, and send the treasures to the king.. The
Delphians, on hearing this, were seized with consternation. They made
application themselves to the oracle, to know what they were to do in
respect to the sa. cred treasures. They could
not defend them, they said, against such a host, and they
inquired whether they should bury them in the earth, or attempt to
remove them to some distant place of safety.
The oracle replied that they were to do nothing at all
in respect to the sacred treasures. The deity, it said, was able to
protect what was its own. They, on their part, had only to
provide for themselves, their wives, and their children.
On hearing this response, the people dismissed all
care in respect to the treasures of the temple and of the shrine, and made
arrangements for removing their families and their own effects to some
place of safety toward the southward. The military force of the city and a
small number of the inhabitants alone remained.
When the Persians began to draw near, a prodigy
occurred in the temple, which seemed intended to warn the profane invaders
away. It seems that there was a suit of arms, of a costly character
doubtless, and highly decorated with gold and gems—the present, probably,
of some Grecian state or king—which were hung in an inner and sacred
apartment of the temple, and which it was sacrilegious for any human hand
to touch. These arms were found, on the day when the Persians were
approaching, removed to the outward front of the temple. The priest who
first observed them was struck with amazement and awe. He spread the
intelligence among the soldiers and the people that remained, and the
circumstance awakened in them great animation and courage.
Nor were the hopes of divine interposition which this
wonder awakened disappointed in the end; for, as soon as the detachment of
Persians came near the hill on which Delphi was situated, loud thunder
burst from the sky, and a bolt, descending upon the precipices near
the town, detached two enormous masses of rock, which rolled down
upon the ranks of the invaders. The Delphian soldiers, taking advantage of
the scene of panic and confusion which this awful visitation produced,
rushed down upon their enemies and completed their discomfiture. They
were led on and assisted in this attack by the spirits of two ancient heroes,
who had been natives of the country, and to whom two of the temples
of Delphi had been consecrated. These spirits appeared in the form of tall
and full-armed warriors, who led the attack, and performed prodigies of
strength and valor in the onset upon the Persians; and then, when the
battle was over, disappeared as mysteriously as they came.
In the meantime the great body of the army of Xerxes,
with the monarch at their head, was advancing on Athens. During his
advance the city had been in a continual state of panic and confusion. In
the first place, when the Greek fleet had concluded to give up the contest in
the Artemisian Channel, before the battle of
Thermopylae, and had passed around to Salamis, the commanders in the city
of Athens had given up the hope of making any effectual defense,
and had given orders that the inhabitants should save themselves by
seeking a refuge wherever they could find it. This annunciation, of
course, filled the city with dismay, and the preparations for a
general flight opened everywhere scenes of terror and distress, of which
those who have never witnessed the evacuation of a city by
its inhabitants can scarcely conceive.
The immediate object of the general terror was, at
this time, the Persian fleet; for the Greek fleet, having determined to
abandon the waters on that side of Attica, left the whole coast
exposed, and the Persians might be expected at any hour to make a landing
within a few miles of the city. Scarcely, however, had the impending
of this danger been made known to the city, before the tidings of one
still more imminent reached it, in the news that the Pass of Thermopylae
had been carried, and that, in addition to the peril with which the
Athenians were threatened by the fleet on the side of the sea, the whole
Persian army was coming down upon them by land. This fresh alarm
greatly increased, of course, the general consternation. All the
roads leading from the city toward the south and west were soon covered
with parties of wretched fugitives, exhibiting as they pressed forward, weary
and wayworn, on their toilsome and almost hopeless flight, every
possible phase of misery, destitution, and despair. The army fell
back to the isthmus, intending to make a stand, if possible, there, to
defend the Peloponnesus. The fugitives made the best of their way to the
sea-coast, where they were received on board transport ships sent thither
from the fleet, and conveyed, some toEgina, some
to Salamis, and others to other points on the coasts and islands to the
south, wherever the terrified exiles thought there was the best prospect
of safety.
Some, however, remained at Athens. There was a part of
the population who believed that the phrase “wooden walls,” used by the
oracle, referred, not to the ships of the fleet, but to the wooden
palisade around the citadel. They accordingly repaired and strengthened the
palisade, and established themselves in the fortress with a small garrison
which undertook to defend it.
The citadel of Athens, or the Acropolis, as it was
called, was the richest, and most splendid, and magnificent fortress in
the world. It was built upon an oblong rocky hill, the sides of which
were perpendicular cliffs, except at one end, where alone the summit was
accessible. This summit presented an area of an oval form, about a
thousand feet in length and five hundred broad, thus containing a space of
about ten acres. This area upon the summit, and also the approaches
at the western end, were covered with the most grand, imposing, and
costly architectural structures that then existed in the whole
European world. There were temples, colonnades, gateways, stairways,
porticoes, towers, and walls, which, viewed as a whole, presented a most
magnificent spectacle, that excited universal admiration, and which,
when examined in detail, awakened a greater degree of wonder still by
the costliness of the materials, the beauty and perfection of the workmanship,
and the richness and profusion of the decorations, which were seen on every
handle. The number and variety of statues of bronze and of marble
which had been erected in the various temples and upon the different
platforms were very great There was one, a statue of Minerva, which was
executed by Phidias, the great Athenian sculptor, after the celebrated
battle of Marathon, in the days of Darius, which, with its pedestal,
was sixty feet high. It stood on the left of the grand entrance, towering
above the buildings in full view from the country below, and leaning upon
its long spear like a colossal sentinel on guard. In the distance, on the
right, from the same point of view, the great temple called the Parthenon
was to be seen, a temple which was, in some respects, the most celebrated
in the world. The ruins of these edifices remain to the present day,
standing in desolate and solitary grandeur on the rocky hill which
they once so richly adorned.
When Xerxes arrived at Athens, he found, of course, no
difficulty in obtaining possession of the city itself, since it had been
deserted by its inhabitants, and left defenseless. The people that
remained had all crowded into the citadel. They had built the wooden palisade
across the only approach by which it was possible to get near the gates,
and they had collected large stones on the tops of the rocks, to roll down
upon their assailants if they should attempt to ascend
Xerxes, after ravaging and burning the town, took up a
position upon a hill opposite to the citadel, and there he had engines
constructed to throw enormous arrows, on which tow that had been dipped in
pitch was wound. This combustible envelopment of the arrows was set on
fire before the weapon was discharged, and a shower of the burning
missiles thus formed was directed toward the palisade. The wooden walls
were soon set on fire by them, and totally consumed. The access to
the Acropolis was, however, still difficult, being by a steep acclivity,
up which it was very dangerous to ascend so long as the besiegers were
ready to roll down rocks upon their assailants from above.
At last, however, after a long conflict and much
slaughter, Xerxes succeeded in forcing his way into the citadel. Some of
his troops contrived to find a path by which they could climb up to
the walls. Here, after a desperate combat with those who were stationed to
guard the place, they succeeded in gaining admission, and then opened
the gates to their comrades be* low. The Persian soldiers, exasperated
with the resistance which they had encountered, slew the soldiers of
the garrison, perpetrated ever} imaginable violence on the wretched
inhabitants who had fled there for shelter, and then plundered the citadel
and set it on fire.
The heart of Xerxes was filled with exultation and joy
as he thus arrived at the attainment of what had been the chief and prominent
object of his campaign. To plunder and destroy the city of Athens had been
the great pleasure that he had promised himself in all the
mighty preparations that he had made. This result was now realized,
and he dispatched a special messenger immediately to Susa with the triumphant
tidings.
Chapter XL
The Battle of Salamis.
SALAMIS is an island of a very irregular form, lying
in the Saronian Gulf, north of Aegina, and to
the westward of Athens. What was called the Port of Athens was on the
shore opposite to Salamis, the city itself being situated on elevated land
four or five miles back from the sea. From this port to the bay on the
southern side of Salamis, where the Greek fleet was lying, it was only
four or five miles more, so that, when Xerxes burned the city, the people on
board the galleys in the fleet might easily see the smoke of the
conflagration.
The Isthmus of Corinth was west of Salamis, some
fifteen miles, across the bay. The army, in retreating from Athens toward
the isthmus, would have necessarily to pass round the bay in a course
somewhat circuitous, while the fleet, in following them, would pass in a
direct line across it. The geographical relations of these places, a
knowledge of which is necessary to a full understanding of the operations
of the Greek and Persian forces, will be distinctly seen by comparing the above
description with the map placed at the commencement of the
fifth chapter.
It had been the policy of the Greeks to keep the fleet
and army as much as possible together, and thus, during the time in which
the troops were attempting a concentration at Thermopylae, the ships made
their rendezvous in the Artemisian Strait or Channel,
directly opposite to that point of the coast. There they
fought, maintaining their position desperately, day after day, as
long as Leonidas and his Spartans held their ground on the shore. Their
sudden disappearance from those waters, by which the Persians had been so much
surprised, was caused by their having received intelligence that
the pass had been carried and Leonidas destroyed. They knew then that
Athens would be the next point of resistance by the land forces.
They therefore fell back to Salamis, or, rather, to the bay lying
between Salamis and the Athenian shore, that being the nearest position
that they could take to support the operations of the army in their
attempts to defend the capital. When, however, the tidings came to them
that Athens bad fallen, and that what remained of the army had retreated
to the isthmus, the question at once arose whether the fleet should retreat
too, across the bay, to the isthmus shore, with a view to co-operate
more fully with the army in the new position which the latter had taken, or whether
it should remain where it was, and defend itself as it best could against the
Persian squadrons which would soon be drawing near. The commanders of
the fleet held a consultation to consider this question.
In this consultation the Athenian and the Corinthian
leaders took different views. In fact, they were very near coming into open
collision Such a difference of opinion, considering the circumstances of
the case, was not at all surprising. It might, indeed, have naturally been
expected to arise, from the relative situation of the two cities, in
respect to the danger which threatened them. If the Greek fleet were to
withdraw from Salamis to the isthmus, it might be in a better position
to defend Corinth, but it would, by such a movement, be withdrawing from
the Athenian territories, and abandoning what remained in Attica wholly to
the conqueror. The Athenians were, therefore, in favor of maintaining the
position at Salamis, while the Corinthians were disposed to retire to the
shores of the isthmus, and co-operate with the army there.
The council was convened to deliberate on this subject
before the news arrived of the actual fall of Athens, although, inasmuch as
the Persians were advancing into Attica in immense numbers, and there was
no Greek force left to defend the city, they considered its fall as
all but inevitable. The tidings of the capture and destruction of Athens came
while the council was in session. This seemed to determine the question.
The Corinthian commanders, and those from the other Peloponnesian
cities, declared that it was perfectly absurd to remain any longer at
Salamis, in a vain attempt to defend a country already conquered. The council
was broken up in confusion, each commander retiring to his own ship, and the
Peloponnesians resolving to withdraw on the following morning. Eurybiades, who, it will be recollected, was the
commander-in-chief of all the Greek Sect, finding thus that it was
impossible any longer to keep the ships together at Salamis, since a part
of them would, at all events, withdraw, concluded to yield to the
necessity of the case and to conduct the whole fleet to the
isthmus He issued his orders accordingly, and the several commanders
repaired to their respective ships to make the preparations. It was
night when the council was dismissed, and the fleet was to move in
the morning.
One of the most influential and distinguished of the
Athenian officers was a general named Themistocles. Very soon after he had
returned to his ship from this council, he was visited by another Athenian
named Mnesiphilus, who, uneasy and anxious in
the momentous crisis, had come in his boat, in the darkness of the night,
to Themistocles’s ship, to converse with him on the plans of the
morrow. Mnesiphilus asked Themistocles what was the
decision of the council.
“ To abandon Salamis,” said Themistocles, “ and retire
to the isthmus.”
“Then,” said Mnesiphilus,
“we shall never have an opportunity to meet the enemy. I am sure that if
we leave this position the fleet will be wholly broken up, and that each
portion will go, under its own commander, to defend its own state or
seek its own safety, independently of the lest. We shall never be able to
concentrate our forces again. The result will be the inevitable
dissolution of the fleet as a combined and allied force, in spite of all
that Euryblades or anyone else can do to prevent
it.”
Mnesiphilus urged this danger with so much earnestness and
eloquence as to make a very considerable impression on the mind of Themistocles.
Themistocles said nothing, hut his countenance indicated that he was very
strongly inclined to adopt Mnesiphilus’s views. Mnesiphilus urged him to go immediately to Euryblades, and endeavor to induce him to obtain a reversal
of the decision of the council. Themistocles, without expressing either assent
or dis sent, took his boat, and ordered the oarsmen to row him to the
galley of Eurybiades. Mnesiphilus,
having so far accomplished his object went away.
Themistocles came in his boat to the side of Eurybiades’s galley. He said that he wished to speak
with the general on a subject of great importance. Eurybiades,
when this was re. ported to him, sent to invite Themistocles to come
on board. Themistocles did so, and he urged upon the general the same
arguments that Mnesiphilus had pressed upon him,
namely, that if the fleet were once to move from their
actual position, the different squadrons would inevitably separate, and
could never be assembled again. He urged Eurybiades,
therefore, very strenuous to call a new council, with a view of reversing
the decision that had been made to retire, and of resolving instead to give
battle to the Persians at Salamis.
Eurybiades was persuaded, and immediately took measures for
convening the council again. The summons, sent around thus at
midnight, calling upon the principal officers of the fleet to repair
again in haste to the commander’s galley, when they had only a short time
before been dismissed from it, produced great excitement. The
Corinthians, who had been in favor of the plan of abandoning Salamis,
conjectured that the design might be to endeavor to reverse
that decision, and they came to the council determined to resist any such
attempt, if one should be made.
When the officers had arrived, Themistoclea began immediately to open the discussion, before, in fact, Eurybiades had stated why he had called them together. A Corinthian officer
interrupted and rebuked him for presuming to speak before his time.
Themistocles retorted upon the Corinthian, and continued his harangue. He
urged the council to review their former decision, and to determine, after
all, to remain at Salamis. He, however, now used different arguments
from those which he had employed when speaking to Eurybiades alone; for to have directly charged the officers themselves with the design of
which he had accused them to Eurybiadesj namely,
that of abandoning their allies, and retiring with their respective ships, each
to his own coast, in case the position at Salamis were to be given up,
would only incense them, and arouse a hostility which would determine
them against any thing that he might propose.
He therefore urged the expediency of remaining at
Salamis on other grounds. Salamis was a much more advantageous position, he
said, than the coast of the isthmus, for a small fleet to occupy in
awaiting an attack from a large one. At Salamis they were defended in
part by the projections of the land, which protected their flanks,
and prevented their being assailed, except in front, and their front they
might make a very narrow one. At the isthmus, on the contrary, there was a
long, unvaried, and unsheltered coast, with no salient points to give
strength or protection to their position there. They could not expect
to derive serious advantage from any degree of co-operation with the army
on the land which would be practicable at the isthmus, while their
situation at sea there would be far more exposed and dangerous than where they
then were. Besides, many thousands of the people had fled to Salamis for
refuge and protection, and the fleet, by leaving its present position,
would be guilty of basely abandoning them all to hopeless destruction,
without even making an effort to save them.
This last was, in fact, the great reason why the
Athenians were so unwilling to abandon Salamis. The unhappy fugitives with
which the island was thronged were their wives and children, and they
were extremely unwilling to go away and leave them to so cruel a fate
as they knew would await them if the fleet were to be withdrawn. The
Corinthians, on the other hand, considered Athens as already lost, and it
seemed madness to them to linger uselessly in the vicinity of the ruin
which had been made, while there were other states and cities in
other quarters of Greece yet to be saved. The Corinthian speaker who had
rebuked Themistocles at first, interrupted him again, angrily,
before he finished his appeal.
“ You have no right to speak,” said he. “You have no
longer a country. When you cease to represent a power, you have no right ir take a part in our councils.”
This cruel retort aroused in the mind of Themistocles
a strong feeling of indignation and an ger against the Corinthian. He loaded
his opponent, in return, with bitter reproaches, and said, in conclusion, that
as long as the Athenians had two hundred ships in the fleet, they
had still a country—one, too, of sufficient importance to the general
defense to give them a much better title to be heard in the common
consultations than any Corinthian could presume to claim.
Then turning to Eurybiades again, Themistocles implored him to remain at Salamis, and give battle to the
Persians there, as that was, he said, the only course by which any hope
remained to them of the salvation of Greece. He declared that the Athenian
part of the fleet would never go to the isthmus. If the
others decided on going there, they, the Athenians, would gather all
the fugitives they could from the island of Salamis and from the coasts of
Attica, and make the best of their way to Italy, where there was a
territory to which they had some claim, and, abandoning Greece
forever, they would found a new kingdom there.
Eurybiades, the commander-in-chief, if he was not convinced by
the arguments that Themistocles had offered, was alarmed at his declaration
that the Athenian ships would abandon the cause of the Greeks if the fleet
abandoned Salamis; he accordingly gave his voice very decidedly for
remaining where they were. The rest of the officers finally acquiesced in
this decision, and the council broke up, the various members of it
returning each to his own command. It was now nearly morning. The
whole fleet had been, necessarily, during the night in a state of
great excitement and suspense, all anxious to learn the result of these
deliberations. The awe and solemnity which would, of course, pervade
the minds of men at midnight, while such momentous questions were pending,
were changed to an appalling sense of terror, toward the dawn, by an
earthquake which then took place, and which, as is usually the case
with such convulsions, not only shook the land, but was felt by
vessels on the sea. The men considered this phenomenon as a solemn
warning from heaven, and measures were immediately adopted for
appeasing, by certain special sacrifices and ceremonies, the divine
displeasure which the shock seemed to portend.
In the meantime the Persian fleet, which we left, it
will be recollected, in the channels between Euboea and the main land, near to
Thermopylae, had advanced when they found that the Greeks had left those
waters, and, following their enemies to the southward through
the channel called the Euripus, had doubled the promontory called Sunium, which is the southern promontory of Attica, and
then, moving northward again along the western coast of Attica, had
approached Phalerum, which was not far from
Salamis. Xerxes, having concluded his operations at Athens, advanced to
the same point by land.
The final and complete success of the Persian
expedition seemed now almost sure. All the country north of the peninsula had
fallen. The Greek army had retreated to the isthmus, having been
driven from every other post, and its last forlorn hope of being able to resist
the advance of its victorious enemies was depending there. And the
commanders of the Persian fleet, having driven the Greek squadrons in
the same manner from strait to strait and from sea to sea, saw the
discomfited galleys drawn up, in apparently their last place of refuge, in
the Bay of Salamis, and only waiting to be captured and destroyed.
In a word, everything seemed ready for the decisive
and final blow, and Xerxes summoned a grand council of war on board one of the
vessels of the fleet as soon as he arrived at Phalerum,
to decide upon the time and manner of striking it.
The convening of this council was arranged, and the
deliberations themselves conducted, with great parade and ceremony. The
princes of the various nations represented in the army and in the
fleet, and the leading Persian officers and nobles, were summoned to
attend it. It was held on board one of the principal galleys, where
great preparations had been made for receiving so august an assemblage. A
throne was provided for the king, and seats for the
various commanders according to their respective ranks, and a
conspicuous place was assigned to Artemisia, the Carian queen, who, the reader
will perhaps recollect, was described as one of the prominent naval
commanders, in the account given of the great review at Doriscus. Mardonius appeared at
the council as the king’s representative and the conductor of the
deliberations, there being required, according to the parliamentary
etiquette of those days, in such royal councils as these, a sort of
mediator, to stand between the king and his counselors, as if the
monarch himself was on too sublime an elevation of dignity and grandeur to be
directly addressed even by princes and nobles.
Accordingly, when the council was convened and the
time arrived for opening the deliberations, the king directed Mardonius to call upon the commanders present, cue by
one, for their sentiments on the question whether it were advisable or not
to attack the Greek fleet at Salamis. Mardonius did
so. They all advised that the attack should be made, urging severally
various considerations to enforce their opinions, and all evincing a great
deal of zeal ana ardor in the cause, and an impatient desire that
the great final conflict should come on.
When, however, it came to Artemisia’s turn to speak,
it appeared that she was of a different sentiment from the rest. She
commenced her speech with something like an apology for presuming to give
the king her council. She said that, notwithstanding her sex, she had
perform ed her part, with other commanders, in the battles which had
already occurred, and that she was, perhaps, entitled accordingly, in the
consultations which were held, to express her opinion. “Say, then, to the
king,” she continued, addressing Mardonius, as
all the others had done, “that my judgment is, that we should not attack the
Greek fleet at Salamis, but, on the contrary, that we should avoid a battle. It
seems to me that we have nothing to gain, but should put a great deal at
hazard by a general naval conflict at the present time. The truth is,
that the Greeks, always terrible as combatants, are rendered
desperate now by the straits to which they are reduced and the losses that
they have sustained. The seamen of our fleet are as inferior to them in
strength and courage as women are to men. I am sure that it will be a
very dangerous thing to encounter them in their present chafed and
irritated temper. Whatever others may think, I myself should not dare to answer
for the result.
“Besides, situated as they are,” continued Artemisia,
“a battle is what they must most desire, and, of course, it is adverse to
our interest to accord it to them. I have ascertained that they have
but a small supply of food, either in their fleet or upon the island of
Salamis, while they have, besides their troops, a great multitude of
destitute and helpless fugitives to be fed. If we simply leave them to
themselves under the blockade in which our position here now place them,
they will soon be reduced to great distress. Or, if we withdraw from them, and
proceed at once to the Peloponnesus, to co-operate with the army there, we
shall avoid all the risk of a battle, and I am sure that the Greek
fleet will never dare to follow or to molest us.”
The several members of the council listened to this
unexpected address of Artemisia with great attention and interest, but
with very different feelings. She had many friends among the counselors,
and they were anxious and uneasy at hearing her speak in this manner,
for they knew very well that it was the king’s decided intention that a
battle should be fought, and they feared that, by this bold and strenuous
opposition to it, Artemisia would incur the mighty monarch’s displeasure.
There were others who were jealous of the influence which Artemisia
enjoyed, and envious of the favor with which they knew that Xerxes
regarded her. These men were secretly pleased to hear her uttering
sentiments by which they confidently believed that she would excite the
anger of the king, and wholly lose her advantageous position. Both
the hopes and the fears, however, entertained respectively by the queen’s
enemies and friends, proved altogether groundless. Xerxes was not
displeased. On the contrary, he applauded Artemisia’s ingenuity and eloquence
in the highest terms, though he said, nevertheless, that he would follow
the advice of the other councilors. He dismissed the assembly, and
gave orders to prepare for battle.
In the meantime a day or two had passed away, and the
Greeks, who had been originally very little inclined to acquiesce in the
decision which Eurybiades had made, under the
influence of Themistocles, to remain at Salamis and give the Persians
battle, became more and more dissatisfied and uneasy as the great crisis
drew nigh. In fact, the discontent and disaffection which appeared in
certain portions of the fleet became so decided and so open, that
Themistocles feared that some of the commanders would actually revolt, and
go away with their squadrons in a body, in defiance of the general decision to
remain. To prevent such a desertion as this, he contrived the following
very desperate stratagem.
He had a slave in his family named Sicinnus,
who was an intelligent and educated man, though a slave. In fact, be was the
teacher of Themistocles’s children. Instances of this kind, in which
slaves were refined and cultivated men, were not uncommon in ancient
times, as slaves were, in many instances, captives taken in war, who before
their captivity had occupied as high social positions as their masters.
Themistocles determined to send Sicinnus to the
Persian fleet with a message from him, which should induce the
Persians themselves to take measures to prevent the dispersion of the Greek
fleet. Having given the slave, therefore, his secret instructions, he
put him into a boat when night came on, with oarsmen who were directed to
row him wherever he should require them to go. The boat pushed off
stealthily from Themistocles’s galley, and, taking care to keep clear of
the Greek ships which lay at anchor near them, went southward toward
the Persian fleet. When the boat reached the Persian galleys, Sicinnus asked to see the commander, and, on being
admitted to an interview with him, he informed him that he came from
Themistocles, who was the leader, he said, of the Athenian portion of the
Greek fleet
“I am charged” he added, “to say to you from
Themistocles that he considers the cause of the Greeks as wholly lost, and
he is now, accordingly, desirous himself of coming over to the Persian
side. This, however, he cannot actually and openly do, on account of the
situation m which he is placed in respect to the rest of the fleet. He
has, however, sent me to inform you that the Greek fleet is in a very
disordered and helpless condition, being distracted by
the dissensions of the commanders, and the general discouragement and
despair of the men; that some divisions are secretly intending to
make their escape; and that, if you can prevent this by surrounding
them, or by taking such positions as to intercept any who may attempt
to withdraw, the whole squadron will inevitably fall into your hands”
Having made this communication, Sicinnus went on board his boat again, and returned to the Greek fleet as secretly
and stealthily as he came.
The Persians immediately determined to resort to the
measures which Themistocles had recommended to prevent the escape of any
part of the Greek fleet. There was a small island between Salamis and
the coast of Attica, that is, on the eastern side of Salamis, called Psyttalia, which was in such a position as to command, in a
great measure, the channel of water between Salamis and the main land on
this side. The Persians sent forward a detachment of galleys to take
possession of this island in the night By this means they hoped to prevent
the escape
The Persians take possession of the Psyttalia. The Greeks hemmed in of any part of the Greek
squadron in that direction. Besides, they foresaw that in the approaching
battle the principal scene of the conflict must be in that vicinity, and that,
consequently, the island would become the great resort of the disabled ships
and the wounded men, since they would naturally seek refuge on the nearest
land. To preoccupy this ground, therefore, seemed an important step. It would
enable them, when the terrible conflict should come on, to drive back any
wretched refugees who might attempt to escape from destruction
by seeking the shore.
By taking possession of this island, and stationing
galleys in the vicinity of it, all which was done secretly in the night, the
Persians cut off all possibility of escape for the Greeks in
that direction. At the same time, they sent another considerable
detachment of their fleet to the westward, which was the direction toward
the isthmus, ordering the galleys thus sent to station themselves in such
a manner as to prevent any portion of the Greek fleet from going
round the island of Salamis, and making their escape through the
northwestern channel. By this means the Greek fleet was environed on
every aide—hemmed in, though they were not aware of it, in such a way as
to defeat any attempt which any division might make to retire from the
scene.
The first intelligence which the Greeks received of
their being thus surrounded was from an Athenian general named Aristides, who
came one night from the island of Aegina to the Greec fleet,
making his way with great difficulty through the lines of Persian galleys.
Aristides had been, in the political conflicts which had taken place
in former years at Athens, Themistocles’s great rival and enemy. He had
been defeated in the contests which had taken place, and had been
banished from Athens. He now, however, made his way through the
enemy’s lines, incurring, in doing it, extreme difficulty and danger,
in order to inform his countrymen of their peril, and to assist, if
possible, in saving them.
When he reached the Greek fleet, the commanders were
in council, agitating, in angry and incriminating debates, the perpetually recuring
question whether they should retire to the isthmus, or remain where they
were. Aristides called Themistocles out of the council. Themistocles was
very much surprised at seeing his ancient enemy thus unexpectedly between
Aristides and Themistocles.
Aristides introduced the conversation by saying that
he thought that at such a crisis they ought to lay aside every private
animosity, and only emulate each other in the efforts and sacrifices which
they could respectively make to defend their country; that he had,
accordingly, come from Aegina to join the fleet, with a view of
rendering any aid that it might be in his power to afford; that it was now
wholly useless to debate the question of retiring to the isthmus, for
such a movement was no longer possible. “ The fleet is surrounded,” said
he. “ The Persian galleys are stationed on every side. It was with the
utmost difficulty that I could make my way through the lines. Even if the
whole assembly, and Eurybiades himself, were
resolved on withdrawing to the isthmus, the thing could not now be
done. Return, therefore, and tell them this, and say that to defend
themselves where they are is the only alternative that now remains.”
In reply to this communication, Themistocles said that
nothing could give him greater pleasure than to learn what Aristides had
stated. “The movement which the Persians have made,” he said, “was in
consequence of a communication which I myself sent to them. I sent it, in order
that some of our Greeks, who seem so very reluctant to fight, might be
compelled to do so. But you must come yourself into the assembly, “ he
added, “ and make your statement directly to the commanders. They will not
believe it if they hear it from me. Come in, and state what you have
seen.”
Aristides accordingly entered the assembly, and
informed the officers who were convened that to retire from their present
position was no longer possible, since the sea to the west was fully
guarded by lines of Persian ships, which had been stationed there to
intercept them. He had just come in himself, he said, from Aegina, and
had found great difficulty in passing through the lines, though he had
only a single small boat, and was favored by the darkness of the
night. He was convinced that the Greek fleet was entirely surrounded.
Having said this, Aristides withdrew. Although he
could come, as a witness, to give his testimony in respect to facts, he was not
entitled to take any part in the deliberations.
The assembly was thrown into a state of the greatest
possible excitement by the intelligence which Aristides had communicated.
Instead of producing harmony among them, it made the discord more violent
and uncontrollable. Of those who had before wished to retire, some were
now enraged that they had not been allowed to do so while the opportunity
remained; others disbelieved Aristides’s statements, and were still
eager to go; while the rest, confirmed in their previous determination to
remain where they were, rejoiced to find that retreat was no longer
possible. The debate was confused and violent. It turned, in a great measure,
on the degree of credibility to be attached to the account which Aristides
had given them. Many of the assembly wholly disbelieved it. It was a
stratagem, they maintained, contrived by the Athenian party, and those who
wished to remain, in order to accomplish their end of keeping the fleet
from changing its position.
The doubts, however, which the assembly felt in
respect to the truth of Aristides’s tidings were soon dispelled by new and
incontestable evidence; for, while the debate was going on, it was
announced that a large galley—a trireme, as it was called—had come in from
the Persian fleet. This galley proved to be a Greek ship from the
island of Tenos, one which Xerxes, in prosecution of his plan of
compelling those portions of the Grecian territories that he had conquered, or
that had surrendered to him, to furnish forces to aid him in subduing the rest,
had pressed into his service. The commander of this galley, unwilling to
take part against his countrymen in the conflict, had decided to desert
the Persian fleet by taking advantage of the night, and to come over to
the Greeks. The name of the commander of this trireme was Paraetius. He confirmed fully all that Aristides had
said. He assured the Greeks that they were completely surrounded, and that
nothing remained for them but to prepare, where they were, to meet
the attack which would certainly be made upon them in the morning. The
arrival of this trireme was thus of very essential service to the Greeks.
It put an end to their discordant debates, and united them, one
and all, in the work of making resolute preparations for action. This
vessel was also of very essential service in the conflict itself which
ensued; and the Greeks were so grateful to Paraetius and to his comrades for the adventurous courage which they displayed
in coming over under such circumstances, in such a night, to espouse
the cause and to share the dangers of their countrymen, that after the
battle they caused all their names to be engraved upon a sacred tripod,
made in the most costly manner for the purpose, and then sent the tripod to be
deposited at the oracle of Delphi, where it long remained a
monument of this example of Delian patriotism and fidelity.
As the morning approached, the preparations were
carried forward with ardor and energy, on board both fleets, for the great
struggle which was to ensue. Plans were formed; orders were given;
arms were examined and placed on the decks of the galleys, where they
would be most ready at hand. The officers and soldiers gave mutual
charges and instructions to each other in respect to the care of their
friends and the disposal of their effects—charges and instructions which
each one undertook to execute for his friend in case he should survive
him. The commanders endeavored to animate and encourage their men by
cheerful looks, and by words of confidence and encouragement. They
who felt resolute and strong endeavored to inspirit the weak and
irresolute, while those who shrank from the approaching contest, and
dreaded the result of it, concealed their fears, and endeavored to appear
impatient for the battle.
Xerxes caused an elevated seat or throne to be
prepared for himself on an eminence near the shore, upon the main land, in
order that he might be a personal witness of the battle. He had a guard and
other attendants around him Among these were a number of scribes or secretaries,
who were prepared with writing materials to record the events which might
take place, as they occurred, and especially to register the names of
those whom Xerxes should see distinguishing themselves by their courage
or by their achievements. He justly supposed that these arrangements,
the whole fleet being fully informed in regard to them, would animate
the several commanders with strong emulation, and excite them to make
redoubled exertions to perform their part well. The record which was thus
to be kept, under the personal supervision of the sovereign, was with a
view to punishments too, as well as to honors and rewards; and it happened
in many instances during the battle that ensued, that commanders, who, after losing
their ships, escaped to the shore, were brought up before Xerxes’s throne,
and there expiated their fault or their misfortune, whichever it might have
been, by being beheaded on the spot, without mercy. Some of the officers thus executed
were Greeks, brutally slaughtered for not being successful in fighting, by
compulsion, against their own countrymen.
As the dawn approached, Themistocles called together
as many of the Athenian forces as it was possible to convene, assembling
them at a place upon the shore of Salamis where he could conveniently
address them, and there made a speech to them, as was customary with
the Greek commanders before going into battle. He told them that, in
such contests as that in which they were about to engage, the result
depended, not on the relative numbers of the combatants, but on the resolution
and activity which they displayed. He reminded them of the in* stances in which small bodies of men,
firmly banded together by a strict discipline, and animated by courage and
energy, had overthrown enemies whose numbers far exceeded their
own The Persians were more numerous, he admitted, than they, but still the
Greeks would conquer them. If they faithfully obeyed their orders, and acted
strictly and perseveringly in concert, according to the plans formed by the
commanders, and displayed the usual courage and resolution of Greeks, he
was sure of victory.
As soon as Themistocles had finished his speech, he
ordered his men to embark, and the fleet immediately afterward formed
itself in battle array.
Notwithstanding the strictness of the order and
discipline which generally prevailed in Greek armaments of every kind,
there was great excitement and much confusion in the fleet while
making all these preparations, and this excitement and confusion increased
continually as the morning advanced and the hour for the conflict drew
nigh. The passing of boats to and fro, the
dashing of the oars, the clangor of the weapons, the vociferations of
orders by the officers and of responses by the men, mingled with each
other in dreadful turmoil, while all the time the vast squadrons were
advancing toward each other, each party of combatants eager to begin the
contest. In fact, so full of wild excitement was the scene, that at length the
battle was found to be raging on every side, while no one knew or could
remember how it began. Some said that a ship, which had been sent
away a short time before to Aegina to obtain succors, was returning
that morning, and that she commenced the action as she came through the Persian
line* Others said the Greek squadron advanced as soon as they could see, and
attacked the Persians; and there were some whose imaginations were so much
excited by the scene, that they saw a female form portrayed among the dim
mists of the morning, that urged the Greeks onward by beckonings and calls. They heard her voice, they said, crying to them, a Come
on! come on! this is no time to linger an your oars?’
However this may be, the battle was soon furiously
raging on every part of the Bay of Salamis, exhibiting a wide-spread scene of
conflict, fury, rage, despair, and death, such as had then been seldom
witnessed in any naval conflict, and such as human eyes can now never look
upon again. In modern warfare the smoke of the guns soon draws an
impenetrable veil over the scene of horror, and the perpetual thunder of
the artillery overpowers the general din. In a modem battle, therefore,
none of the real horrors of the conflict can either be heard or seen by
any spectator placed beyond the immediate scene of it The sights and
the sounds are alike buried and concealed beneath the smoke and the
noise of the cannonading. There were, however, no such causes in this
case to obstruct the observations which Xerxes was making from his
throne on the shore. The air was calm, the sky serene, the water was
smooth, and the atmosphere was as transparent and clear at the end of the
battle as at the beginning. Xerxes could discern every ship, and follow it with
his eye in all its motions. He could see who advanced and who retreated.
Out of the hundreds of separate conflicts he could choose any one, and watch
the progress of it from the commencement to the termination. He could
see the combats on the decks, the falling of repulsed assailants into
the water, the weapons broken, the wounded carried away, and swimmers
struggling like insects on the smooth surface of the sea. He could see the
wrecks, too, which were drifted upon the shores, and the captured galleys,
which, after those who defended them had been vanquished —some
killed, others thrown overboard, and others made prisoners—were slowly
towed away by the victors to a place of safety.
There was one incident which occurred in this scene,
as Xerxes looked down upon it from the eminence where he sat, which
greatly interested and excited him, though he was deceived in respect to the
true nature of it. The incident was one of Artemisia’s stratagems. It must
be premised, in relating the story, that Artemisia was not without enemies
among the officers of the Persian fleet. -Many of them were envious
of the high distinction which she enjoyed, and jealous of the attention
which she received from the king, and of the influence which she
possessed over him. This feeling showed itself very distinctly at the
grand council, when she gave her advice, in connection with that of the
other commanders, to the king. Among the most decided of her enemies was
a certain captain named Damasithymus. Artemisia
had had a special quarrel with him while the fleet was coming through the
Hellespont, which, though settled for the time, left the minds of
both parties in a state of great hostility toward each other.
It happened, in the course of the battle, that the
ship which Artemisia personally commanded and that of Damasithymus were engaged, together with other Persian vessels, in the same part
of the bay; and at a time when the ardor and confusion of the conflict was
at its height, the galley of Artemisia, and some others that were in
company with hers, became separated from the rest, perhaps by the too
eager pursuit of an enemy, and as other Greek ships came up suddenly
to the assistance of their comrades, the Persian vessels found themselves
in great danger, and began to retreat, followed by their enemies. We speak of
the retreating galleys as Persian, because they were on the Persian
side in the contest, though it happened that they were really ships
from Greek nations, which Xerxes had bribed or forced into his
service. The Greeks knew them to be enemies, by the Persian flag
which they bore.
In the retreat, and while the ships were more or less
mingled together in the confusion, Artemisia perceived that the Persian galley
nearest her was that of Damasithymus. She
immediately caused her own Persian flag to be pulled down, and, resorting
to such other artifices as might tend to make her vessel appear to be
a Greek galley, she began to act as if she were one of the pursuers
instead of one of the pursued. She bore down upon the ship of Damasithymus, saying to her crew that to attack
and sink that ship was the only way to save their own lives. They
accordingly attacked it with the utmost fury. The Athenian ships
which were near, seeing Artemisia’s galley thus engaged, supposed that it
was one of their own, and pressed on, leaving the vessel of Damasithymus at Artemisia’s mercy. It was such mercy
as would be expected of a woman who would volunteer to take command of a
squadron of ships of war, and go forth on an active campaign to fight for
her life among such ferocious Tigers as Greek soldiers always were, considering
it ail an excursion of pleasure. Artemisia killed Damasithymus and all of his crew, and sunk his ship, and then, the crisis of danger being
past, she made good her retreat back to the Persian lines. She probably
felt no special animosity against the crew of this ill-fated vessel, but
she thought it most prudent to leave no man alive to tell the story.
Xerxes watched this transaction from his place on the
hill with extreme interest and pleasure. He saw the vessel of Artemisia
bearing down upon the other, which last he supposed, of course, from
Artemisia’s attacking it, was a vessel of the enemy. The only
subject of doubt was whether the attacking ship was really that of
Artemisia. The officers who stood about Xerxes at the time that the
transaction occurred assured him that it was. They knew it well by
certain peculiarities in its construction. Xerxes then watched the progress of
the contest with the most eager interest, and, when be saw the result
of it, he praised Artemisia in the highest terms, saying that the men in
his fleet behaved like women, while the only worn an in it behaved
like a man.
Thus Artemisia’s exploit operated like a double stratagem.
Both the Greeks and the Persians were deceived, and she gained an advantage by
both the deceptions. She saved her life by leading the Greeks to believe that
her galley was their friend, and she gained great glory and renown among
the Persians by making them believe that the vessel which she sunk was
that of an enemy.
Though these and some of the other scenes and
incidents which Xerxes witnessed as he looked down upon the battle gave
him pleasure, yet the curiosity and interest with which he surveyed the
opening of the contest were gradually changed to impatience, vexation, and
rage as he saw in its progress that the Greeks were everywhere gaining the
victory. Notwithstanding the discord and animosity which had
reigned among the commanders in their councils and debates, the men were
united, resolute, and firm when the time arrived for action; and
they fought with such desperate courage and activity, and, at the same
time, with so much coolness, circumspection, and discipline, that
the Persian lines were, before many hours, everywhere compelled to give
way. A striking example of the indomitable and efficient resolution which, on
such occasions, always characterized the Greeks, was shown in the conduct of
Aristides. The reader will recollect that the Persians, on the night
before the battle, had taken possession of the island of Psyttalia— which was near the center of the scene of
contest—for the double purpose of enabling themselves to use it as a place of
refuge and retreat during the battle, and of preventing their enemies from
doing so. Now Aristides had no command. He had been expelled from Athens
by the influence of Themistocles and his other enemies. He had come across
from Aegina to the fleet at Salamis, alone, to give his
countrymen information of the dispositions which the Persians had made for
surrounding them. When the battle began, he had been left, it seems,
on the shore of Salamis a spectator. There was a small body of troops
left there also, as a guard to the shore. In the course of the combat,
when Aristides found that the services of this guard were no longer
likely to be required where they were, he placed himself at the head of
them, obtained possession of boats or a galley, transported the men across the
channel, landed them on the island of Psyttalia,
conquered the post, and killed every man that the Persians had stationed
there.
When the day was spent, and the evening came on, it
was found that the result of the battle was a Greek victory, and yet it was not
a victory so decisive as to compel the Persians wholly to retire.
Vast numbers of the Persian ships were destroyed, but still so many
remained, that when at night they drew back from the scene of the
conflict, toward their anchorage ground at Phalerum,
the Greeks were very willing to leave them unmolested there.
The Greeks, in fact, had full employment on the following day in
reassembling the scattered remnants of their own fleet, repairing the
damages that they had sustained, taking care of their wounded men,
and, in a word, attending to the thousand urgent and pressing exigencies
always arising in the service of a fleet after a battle, even when it
has been victorious in the contest. They did not know in exactly what
condition the Persian fleet had been left, nor how far there might be
danger of a renewal of the conflict on the following day. They devoted all
their time and attention, therefore, to strengthening their defenses
and reorganizing the fleet, so as to be ready in case a new assault should
be made upon them.
But Xerxes had no intention of any new attack. The
loss of this battle gave a final blow to his expectations of being able to
carry his conquests in Greece any further. He too, like the Greeks,
employed his men in industrious and vigorous efforts to repair the damages
which had been done, and to reassemble and reorganize that portion of
the fleet which had not been destroyed. While, however, his men were doing
this, he was himself revolving in his mind, moodily and despairingly,
plans, not for new conflicts, but for the safest and speediest way of
making his own personal escape from the dangers around him back to
his home in Susa.
In the meantime, the surface of the sea, far and wide
in every direction, was covered with the wrecks, and remnants, and
fragments strewed over it by the battle. Dismantled hulks, masses of
entangled spars and rigging, broken oars, weapons of every description,
and the swollen and ghastly bodies of the dead, floated on the
rolling swell of the sea wherever the winds or the currents carried them.
At length many of these mournful memorials of the strife found their
way across the whole breadth of the Mediterranean, and were driven up upon
the beach on the coast of Africa, at a barbarous country called Colias. The savages dragged the fragments up out of the
sand to use as fuel for their fires, pleased with their unexpected
acquisitions, but wholly ignorant, of course, of the nature of the
dreadful tragedy to which their coming was due. The circumstance, however, explained
to the Greeks an ancient prophecy which had been uttered long before in
Athens, and which the interpreters of such mysteries had never been
able to understand. The prophecy was this:
The Colian dames on Afric’e shores
Shall roast their food with Persian oars.
Chapter X.TL
The Return of Xerxes to Persia
MARDONIUS, it will be recollected, was the
Commander-in-chief of the forces of Xerxes, and thus, next to Xerxes
himself, he was the officer highest in rank of all those who attended
the expedition. He was, in fact, a sort of prime minister, on whom the
responsibility for almost all the measures for the government and conduct of
the expedition had been thrown. Men in such positions, while they may
expect the highest rewards and honors from their sovereign in case of
success, have always reason to apprehend the worst of consequences to
themselves in case of failure. The night after the battle of Salamis,
accordingly, Mardonius was in great fear. He did
not distrust the future success of the expedition if it were allowed to go
on; but, knowing the character of such despots as those who ruled
groat nations in that age of the world, he was well aware that he
might reasonably expect, at any moment, the appearance of officers sent
from Xerxes to cut off his head.
His anxiety was increased by observing that Xerxes
seemed very much depressed, and very restless and uneasy, after the
battle, as if he were revolving in his mind some
extraordinary design. He presently thought that he perceived indications
that the king was planning a retreat. Mardonius,
after much hesitation, concluded to speak to him, and endeavor to
dispel his anxieties and fears, and lead him to take a more favorable
view of the prospects of the expedition. He accordingly accosted him on
the subject somewhat as follows:
“It is true,” said he, “that we were not as successful
in the combat yesterday as we de sired to be; but this reverse, as well as
all the preceding disasters that we have met with, is, after all, of
comparatively little moment. Your majesty has gone steadily on,
accomplishing most triumphantly all the substantial objects aimed at
in undertaking the expedition. Your troops have advanced successfully by
land against all opposition. With them you have traversed Thrace,
Macedon, and Thessaly. You have fought your way, against the most
desperate resistance, through the Pass of Thermopylae. You have overrun all
Northern Greece. You have burned Athens. Thus, far from there being any
uncertainty or doubt in respect to the success of the expedition, we see that
ail the great objects which you proposed by it are already accomplished.
The fleet, it is true, has now suffered extensive damage; but we
must remember that it is upon the army, not upon the fleet, that our
hopes and expectations mainly depend. The army is safe; and it cannot be
possible that the Greeks can hereafter bring any force into the field by
which it can be seriously endangered.”
By these and similar sentiments, Mardonius endeavored to revive and restore the failing courage and resolution of the
king. He found, however, that he met with very partial success. Xerxes was
silent, thoughtful, and oppressed apparently with a sense of anxious
concern. Mardonius finally proposed that, even
if the king should think it best to return himself to Susa, he should
not abandon the enterprise of subduing Greece, but that he should
leave b portion of the army under his (Mardonius’s) charge,
and he would undertake, he said, to complete the work which had been so successfully begun.
Three hundred thousand men, he was convinced, would be sufficient for the
purpose.
This suggestion seems to have made a favorable
impression on the mind of Xerxes. He was disposed, in fact, to be pleased with
any plan, provided it opened the way for his own escape from the
dangers in which he imagined that he was entangled. He said that he would
consult some of the other commanders upon the subject. He did so, and
then, before coming to a final decision, he determined to confer with
Artemisia. He remembered that she had counseled him not to attack the
Greeks at Salamis, and, as the result had proved that counsel to be
eminently wise, he felt the greater confidence in asking her judgment
again.
He accordingly sent for Artemisia, and, directing all
the officers, as well as his own attendants, to retire, he held a private
consultation with her in respect to his plans.
“Mardonius proposes,” said
he, “that the expedition should on no account be abandoned in consequence of
this disaster, for he says that the fleet is a very unimportant part of
our force, and that the army still remains unharmed. He proposes that, if
I should decide myself to return to Persia, I should leave three hundred
thousand men with him, and he undertakes, if I will do so, to
complete, with them, the subjugation of Greece. Tell me what you think of
this plan You evinced so much sagacity in foreseeing the result of this
engagement at Salamis, that I particularly wish to know your opinion?’
Artemisia, after pausing a little to reflect upon the
subject, saying, as she hesitated, that it was rather difficult to decide,
under the extraordinary circumstances in which they were placed, what it
really was best to do, came at length to the conclusion that it would be
wisest for the king to accede to Mardonius’s proposal. w Since he offers, of his own accord, to remain and
undertake to complete the subjugation of Greece, you can, very safely to
yourself, allow him to make the experiment. The great object which
was announced as the one which you had chiefly in view in the invasion of
Greece, was the burning of Athens. This is already accomplished. You have
done, therefore, what you undertook to do, and can, consequently, now
return yourself, without dishonor. If Mardonius succeeds in his attempt, the glory of it will redound to you. Ilia
victories will Se considered as only the
successful completion of what you began. On the other hand, if he fails,
the disgrace of failure will be his alone, and the injury will be confined
to his destruction. In any event, your person, your interests, and your
honor are safe, and if Mardonius is willing to take
the responsibility and incur the danger involved in the plan that he
proposes, I would give him the opportunity.”
Xerxes adopted the view of the subject which Artemisia
thus presented with the utmost readiness and pleasure. That advice is always
very welcome which makes the course that we had previously decided
upon as the most agreeable seem the most wise. Xerxes immediately
determined on returning to Persia himself, and leaving Mardonius to complete the conquest. In carrying out this design, he concluded to
march to the northward by land, accompanied by a large portion of his
army and by all his principal officers, until he reached the Hellespont.
Then he was to give up to Mardonius the
command of such troops as should be selected to remain in Greece,
and, crossing the Hellespont, return himself to Persia with the remainder.
If, as is generally the case, it is a panic that
causes a flight, a flight, in its turn, always increases a panic. It happened,
in accordance with this general law, that, as soon as the thoughts of
Xerxes were once turned toward an escape from Greece, his fears increased,
and his mind became more and more the prey of a resless uneasiness and anxiety lest he should not be able to effect his escape. He
feared that the bridge of boats would have been broken down, and then
how would he be able to cross the Hellespont ? To prevent the Greek fleet from
proceeding to the northward, and thus intercepting his passage by
destroying the bridge, he determined to conceal, as long as possible, his own
departure. Accordingly, while he was making the most efficient and rapid
arrangements on the land for abandoning the whole region, he brought
up his fleet by sea, and began to build, by means of the ships, a floating
bridge from the main land to the island of Salamis, as if he
were intent only on advancing. He continued this work all day,
postponing his intended retreat until the night should come, in order to conceal his
movements. In the course of the day he placed all his family and family
relatives on board of Artemisia’s ship, under the charge of a tried
and faithful domestic. Artemisia was to convey them, as rapidly as
possible, to Ephesus, a strong city in Asia Minor, where Xerxes supposed
that they would be safe.
In the night the fleet, in obedience to the orders which
Xerxes had given them, abandoned their bridge and all their other undertakings,
and set sail. They were to make the best of their way to the Hellespont, and
post themselves there to defend the bridge of boats until Xerxes should
arrive. On the following morning, accordingly, when the sun rose, the
Greeks found, to their utter astonishment, that their enemies were
gone.
A scene of the greatest animation and excitement on
board the Greek fleet at once ensued. The commanders resolved on an immediate
pursuit. The seamen hoisted their sails, raised their anchors, and manned
their oars, and the whole squadron was soon in rapid motion.
The fleet went as far as to the island of Andros, looking eagerly all
around the horizon, in every direction, as they advanced, but no signs of
the fugitives were to be seen. The ships then drew up to the shore,
and the commanders were convened in an assembly, summoned by Eurybiades, on the land, for consultation.
A debate ensued, in which the eternal enmity and
dissension between the Athenian and Peloponnesian Greeks broke out anew.
There was, however, now some reason for the disagreement. The Athenian
cause was already ruin ed. Their capital had been burned, their country
ravaged, and their wives and children driven north to exile and misery. Nothing
remained now for them but hopes of revenge. They were eager, therefore, to
press on, and overtake the Persian galleys in their flight, or, if this
could not be done, to reach the Hellespont before Xerxes should arrive
there, and intercept his passage by destroying the bridge. This was the
policy which Themistocles advocated. Eurybiades, on
the other hand, and the Peloponnesian commanders, urged the expediency of not
driving the Persians to desperation by harassing them too closely on
their retreat. They were formidable enemies after all, and, if they were
now disposed to retire and leave the country, it was the true policy
of the Greeks to allow them to do so. To destroy the bridge of boats
would only be to take effectual measures for keeping the pest among
them. Themistocles was outvoted. It was determined best to allow
the Persian forces to retire.
Themistocles, when he found that his counsels were
overruled, resorted to another of the audacious stratagems that marked his
career, which was to send a second pretended message of friendship to
the Persian king. He employed the same Sicinnus on
this occasion that he had sent before into the Persian fleet, on
the eve of the battle of Salamis. A galley was given to Sicinnus, with a select crew of faithful men. They
were all put under the most solemn oaths never to divulge to any person, under
any circumstances, the nature and object of their commission. With this
company, Sicinnus left the fleet secretly in the
night, and went to the coast of Attica. Landing here, he left the
galley, with the crew in charge of it, upon the shore, and, with one or
two select attendants, he made his way to the Persian camp, and desired an
interview with the king. On being admitted to an audience, he said to
Xerxes that he had been sent to him by Themistocles, whom he
represented as altogether the most prominent man among the Greek
commanders, to say that the Greeks had resolved on pressing forward
to the Hellespont, to intercept him on his return, but that he, Themistocles,
had dissuaded them from it, under the influence of the same friendship for
Xerxes which had led him to send a friendly communication to the
Persians before the late battle; that, in consequence of the
arguments and persuasions of Themistocles, the Greek squadrons would remain
where they then were, on the southern coasts, leaving Xerxes to retire
without molestation.
All this was false, but Themistocles thought it would
serve his purpose well to make the statement ; for, in case he should, at any
future time, in following the ordinary fate of the bravest and most
successful Greek generals, be obliged to fly in exile from his country to
save his life, it might be important for him to have a good understanding
beforehand with the King of Persia, though a good understanding, founded
on pretensions so hypocritical and empty as these, would seem to be
worthy of very little reliance. In fact, for a Greek general, discomfited
in the councils of his own nation, to turn to the Persian king
with such prompt and cool assurance, for the purpose of gaining his
friendship by tendering falsehoods so bare and professions so hollow, was
an instance of audacious treachery so original and lofty as to be
almost sublime.
Xerxes pressed on with the utmost diligence toward the
north. The country had been ravaged and exhausted by his march through it
in coming down, and now, in returning, he found Infinite difficulty
in obtaining supplies of food and water for his army. Forty-five days
were consumed in getting back to the Hellespont During all this time
the privations and sufferings of the troops increased every day. The soldiers
were spent with fatigue, exhausted with hunger, and harassed with incessant
apprehensions of attacks from their enemies. Thousands of the sick and
wounded that attempted at first to follow the army, gave out by degrees as
the columns moved on. Some were left at the encampments ; others lay down
by the road-sides, in the midst of the day’s march, wherever
their waning strength finally failed them; and everywhere broken chariots,
dead and dying beasts of burden, and the bodies of soldiers, that
lay neglected where they fell, encumbered and choked the way. In a word,
all the roads leading toward the northern provinces exhibited in
full perfection those awful scenes which usually mark the track of a
great army retreating from an invasion.
The men were at length reduced to extreme distress for
food. They ate the roots and stems of the herbage, and finally stripped
the very bark from the trees and devoured it, in the vain hope that
it might afford some nutriment to re-enforce the vital principle, for a little
time at least, in the dreadful struggle which it was waging within
them. There are certain forms of pestilential disease which, in cases like
this, always set in to hasten the work which famine alone would be too
slow in performing. Accordingly, as was to have been expected, camp fevers,
choleras, and other corrupt and infectious maladies, broke out with great
violence as the army advanced along the northern shores of the Aegean Sea;
and as every victim to these dreadful and hopeless disorders helped, by
his own dissolution, to taint the air for all the rest, the wretched crowd was,
in the end, reduced to the last extreme of misery and terror.
At length Xerxes, with a miserable remnant of his
troops, arrived at Abydos, on the shores of the Hellespont. He found the
bridge broken down. The winds and storms had demolished what the
Greeks had determined to spare. The immense structure, which it had cost
so much toil and time to rear, had wholly disappeared, leaving no
traces of its existence, except the wrecks which lay here and there half
buried in the sand along the shore. There were some small boats at
hand, and Xerxes, embarking in one of them, with a few attendants in the
others, and leaving the exhausted and wretched remnant of his army behind,
was rowed across the strait, and landed at last safely again on
the Asiatic shores.
The place of his landing was Sestos. From Sestos he
went to Sardis, and from Sardis he proceeded, in a short time, to Susa. Mardonius was left in Greece. Mardonius was a general of great military experience and skill, and, when left to
himself, he found no great difficulty in reorganizing the army, and in patting
it again in an efficient condition. He was not able, however, to
accomplish the undertaking which he had engaged to perform. After various
adventures, prosperous and adverse, which it would be foreign to our
purpose here to detail, he was at last defeated in a great battle, and
killed on the field. The Persian army was now obliged to give up the
contest, and was expelled from Greece finally and forever.
When Xerxes reached Susa, he felt overjoy ed to find
himself once more safe, as he thought, in his own palaces. He looked back
upon the hardships, exposures, and perils through which he had
passed, and, thankful for having so narrowly escaped from them, he determined
to encounter no such hazards again. He had had enough of ambition and
glory. He was now going to devote himself to ease and pleasure. Such
a man would not naturally be expected to be very scrupulous in respect to
the means of enjoyment, or to the character of the companions whom he
would select to share his pleasures, and the life of the king soon presented
one continual scene of dissipation, revelry, and vice. He gave himself up
to such prolonged carousals, that one night was sometimes protracted
through the following day into another. The administration of his
government was left wholly to his ministers, and every personal duty was
neglected, that he might give himself to the most abandoned and profligate
indulgence of his appetites and passions.
He had three sons who might be considered as heirs to
his throne—Darius, Hystaspes, and Artaxerxes. Hystaspes was absent in a
neighboring province. The others were at home. He had also a very
prominent officer in his court, whose name, Artabanus, was the same
with that of the uncle who had so strongly attempted to dissuade him from
undertaking the conquest of Greece. Artabanus the uncle disappears finally from
view at the time when Xerxes dismissed him to return to Susa at the
first crossing of the Hellespont. This second Artabanus was the captain of
the king’s body-guard and, consequently, the common executioner
of the despot’s decrees. Being thus established in his palace,
surrounded by his family, and protected by Artabanus and his guard, the monarch
felt that all his toils and dangers were over, and that there was nothing
now before him but a life of ease, of pleasure, and of safety.
In* stead of this, he was, in fact, in the most imminent danger. Artabanus
was already plotting his destruction.
One day, in the midst of one of his carousals, he
became angry with his oldest son Darius for some cause, and gave Artabanus
an order to kill him. Artabanus neglected to obey this order. The
king had been excited with wine when he gave it, and Artabanus supposed
that all recollection of the command would pass away from his mind
with the excitement that occasioned it. The king did not, however, so readily
forget. The next day he demanded why his order had not been obeyed.
Artabanus now began to fear for his own safety, and he determined to proceed at
once to the execution of a plan which he had long been revolving, of
destroying the whole of Xerxes’s family, and placing himself on the throne
in their stead. He contrived to bring the king’s chamberlain into
his schemes, and, with the connivance and aid of this officer, he
went at night into the king’s bedchamber, and murdered the monarch in his sleep.
Leaving the bloody weapon with which the deed had been
perpetrated by the side of the victim, Artabanus went immediately into the
bedchamber of Artaxerxes, the youngest son, and, awaking him suddenly, he
told him, with tones of voice and looks expressive of great excitement and
alarm, that his father had been killed, and that it was his brother Darius
that had killed him. “ His motive is,” continued Artabanus, “to
obtain the throne, and, to make the more sure of an undisturbed possession
of it, he is intending to murder you next. Rise, therefore, and defend
your life.”
Artaxerxes was aroused to a sudden and uncontrollable
paroxysm of anger at this intelligence. He seized his weapon, and rushed into
the apartment of his innocent brother, and slew him on the spot. Other
summary assassinations of a similar kind followed in this complicated tragedy.
Among the victims, Artabanus and all his adherents were slain, and at
length Artaxerxes took quiet possession of the throne and reigned in
his father’s stead.
The End.
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