| READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
|  | BIOGRAPHYCAL UNIVERSAL LIBRARY | 
| THEMISTOCLES524–459 BC
           THEMISTOCLES was the son of Neocles, an Athenian. The vices
          of his early youth were compensated by great virtues, so that no one is thought
          superior, and few are considered equal to him.
           But we must begin from the beginning. His father Neocles was of a good
          family, and married a native of Acharnae,of whom
          Themistocles was the son. Falling under the displeasure of his parents, because
          he lived too freely, and took no care of his property, he was disinherited by
          his father. This disgrace, however, did not dishearten him, but incited him to
          exertion, for being aware that it could not be obliterated without the utmost
          efforts on his part, he devoted himself wholly to affairs of state, studying
          diligently to benefit his friends as well as his own reputation. He was much
          engaged in private causes, and appeared often before the assembly of the
          people; no matter of importance was managed without him; he quickly discovered
          what was necessary to be done, and readily explained it in his speeches. Nor
          was he less ready in managing business than in devising plans for it, for, as
          Thucydides says, he formed a most accurate judgment of present affairs, and the
          shrewdest conjectures as to the future. Hence it happened that he soon became
          distinguished.
           His first step in the management of public affairs
          was in the Corcyraean war.Being chosen commander by the people to conduct it, he
          increased the confidence of the citizens, not only as to the struggle in which
          they were engaged, but for time to come. As the public money, which came in
          from the mines, was annually wasted by the profusion of the magistrates, he
          prevailed on the people that a fleet of a hundred ships should be built with
          that money. This being soon constructed, he first reduced the Corcyraeans, and then, by vigorously pursuing the pirates,
          rendered the sea secure. In acting thus, he both supplied the Athenians with
          wealth, and made them extremely skilful in naval
          warfare. How much this contributed to the safety of Greece in general, was
          discovered in the Persian war, when Xerxes assailed the whole of Europe by sea
          and land, with such a force as no man ever had, before or since; for his fleet
          consisted of two hundred ships of war, on which two thousand transport vessels
          attended, and his land force was seven hundred thousand foot, and four hundred
          thousand horse.
           When the news of his approach was spread through
          Greece, and the Athenians, on account of the battle of Marathon, were said to
          be the chief objects of his attack, they sent to Delphi to ask what they should
          do in their present circumstances. As soon as they put the question, the Pythian priestess replied that "they must defend
          themselves with wooden walls." As no one understood to what this answer
          tended, Themistocles suggested that it was Apollo's recommendation that they
          should put themselves and their property on board their ships, for that such
          were the wooden walls intended by the god. This plan being approved, they added
          to their former vessels as many more with three banks of oars, and carried off
          all their goods that could be moved, partly to Salamis and partly to Troezen. The citadel, and sacred
          things, they committed to the priests, and a few old men, to be taken care of;
          the rest of the town they abandoned.
           This measure of Themistocles was unsatisfactory
          to most of the states, and they preferred to fight on land. A select force was
          accordingly sent with Leonidas, king of the
          Lacedaemonians, to secure the pass of Thermopylae, and prevent the barbarians
          from advancing further. This body could not withstand the force of the enemy, and
          were all slain on the spot. But the combined fleet of Greece, consisting of
          three hundred ships, of which two hundred belonged to the Athenians, engaged
          the king's fleet for the first time at Artemisium, between Euboea and the main land; for
          Themistocles had betaken himself to the straits, that he might not be
          surrounded by numbers. Though they came off here with success equally balanced,
          yet they did not dare to remain in the same place, because there was
          apprehension, lest, if part of the enemy's fleet should get round Euboea, they
          should be assailed by danger on both sides. Hence it came to past that they
          left Artemisium, and
          drew up their fleet on the coast of Salamis, over against Athens.
           Xerxes, having forced a passage through
          Thermopylae marched at once to the city, and as none defended it, destroyed it
          by fire, putting to death the priests that he found in the citadel. As those on
          board the fleet, alarmed at the report of this catastrophe, did not dare to
          remain where they were, and most of them gave their opinion that they should
          return to their respective homes, and defend themselves within their walls,
          Themistocles alone opposed it, saying that united they would be a match for the
          enemy, but declaring that if they separated they would be destroyed. That this
          would be the case he assured Eurybiades,
          king of the Lacedaemonians, who then held the chief command, but making less
          impression on him than he wished, he sent one of his slaves, the most
          trustworthy that he had, to Xerxes in the night, to tell him in his own precise
          words, that "his enemies were retreating, and that, if they should make
          off, he would require more labour and
          longer time to finish the war, as he would have to pursue those singly, whom,
          if he attacked them immediately, he might destroy in a body and at once."
          The object of this communication was, that all the Greeks should be forced to
          fight even against their will. The barbarian, receiving this intimation, and
          not suspecting any guile to be hidden under it, engaged, the day after, in a
          place most unfavourable for
          himself, and most advantageous for the enemy, the strait being so confined that
          the body of his fleet could not be brought into action. He was defeated in
          consequence rather by the stratagem of Themistocles than by the arms of Greece.
           Though Xerxes had thus mismanaged his affairs, he
          had yet so vast a force left, that even with this he might have overpowered his
          enemies. But in the meanwhile he was driven from his position by the same
          leader. For Themistocles, fearing that he would persist in protracting the
          contest, sent him notice that it was in contemplation that the bridge, which he
          had made over the Hellespont, should be broken up, and that he should thus be
          prevented from returning into Asia; and he convinced him that such was the
          fact. In consequence Xerxes returned into Asia in less than thirty days, by the
          same way by which he had spent six months in coming, and considered himself not
          conquered, but saved, by Themistocles. Thus Greece was delivered by the policy
          of one man, and Asia succumbed to Europe. This is a second victory that may be
          compared with the triumph at Marathon; for the greatest fleet in the memory of
          man was conquered in like manner at Salamis by a small number of ships
 Themistocles was great in this war, and was not
          less distinguished in peace; for as the Athenians used the harbour of Phalerum, which was neither large nor convenient,
          the triple port of the Piraeeus was constructed by
          his advice, and enclosed with walls, so that it equalled the city in magnificence, and excelled it in utility. He also rebuilt the walls
          of Athens at his own individual risk , for the Lacedaemonians, having found a
          fair pretext, in consequence of the inroads of the barbarians, for saying that
          no walled town should be kept up without the Peloponnesus, in order that there
          might be no fortified places of which the enemy might take possession,
          attempted to prevent the Athenians from building them. This attempt had a far
          different object from that which they wished to be apparent; for the Athenians,
          by their two victories at Marathon and Salamis, had gained so much renown among
          all people, that the Lacedaemonians became aware that they should have a
          struggle with them for the supremacy. They therefore wished the Athenians to be
          as weak as possible.
           After they heard, however, that the erection of the
          wall was begun, they sent ambassadors to Athens to prevent it from being
          continued. While the ambassadors were present, they desisted, and said that
          they would send an embassy to them respecting the matter. This embassy Themistocles
          undertook, and set out first by himself, desiring that the rest of the
          ambassadors should follow when the height of the wall should seem sufficiently
          advanced; and that, in the meantime, all the people, slaves as well as freemen,
          should carry on the work, sparing no place, whether sacred or profane, public
          or private, but collecting from all quarters whatever they thought suitable for
          building. Hence it happened that the walls of the Athenians were constructed of
          materials from temples and tombs.
           Themistocles, when he arrived at Lacedaemon,
          would not go to the authorities at once, but endeavoured to make as much delay as possible,
          alleging, as a reason, that he was waiting for his colleagues. While the
          Lacedaemonians were complaining that the work was nevertheless continued, and
          that he was trying to deceive them in the matter, the rest of the ambassadors
          in the meantime arrived; and, as he learned from them that but little of the
          wall remained to be done, he proceeded to the Lacedaemonian Ephori, in whom the supreme
          power was vested, and assured them positively that "false accounts had
          been given them," adding "that it would be proper for them to send
          persons of character and respectability, in whom trust might be placed, to
          inquire into the affair; and that in the meantime they might detain himself as
          a hostage.' His suggestion was complied with, and three deputies, men who had
          filled the highest offices, were despatched to Athens.
           When Themistocles thought that they had reached the
          city, he went to the Ephori and
          senate of the Lacedaemonians, and boldly stated that "the Athenians, by
          his advice, had enclosed their public gods, and their national and household
          gods, with walls, that they might more easily defend them from the enemy, a
          step which they were at liberty to take by the common law of nations; nor had
          they, in acting thus, done what was useless to Greece; for their city stood as
          a bulwark against the barbarians, at which the king's fleets had already twice
          suffered shipwreck; and that the Lacedaemonians acted unreasonably and
          unjustly, in regarding rather what was conducive to their own dominion, than
          what would be of advantage to the whole of Greece. If, therefore, they wished
          to receive back the deputies whom they had sent to Athens, they must permit him
          to return; otherwise they would never receive them into their country again."
           Yet he did not escape jealousy on the part of
          his own countrymen; for being expelled from the city by the ostracism, through
          the same apprehension from which Miltiades had been condemned, he went to dwell
          at Argos. While he was living there in great honour, on account of his many excellent qualities,
          the Lacedaemonians sent ambassadors to Athens to accuse him in his absence of
          having made a league with the king of Persia to subjugate Greece. On this
          charge he was condemned, while absent, of treason to his country. As soon as he
          heard of this sentence, he removed, as he did not think himself safe at Argos,
          to Corcyra. But perceiving that the leading men of that state were afraid lest
          the Lacedaemonians and Athenians should declare war against them on his
          account, he fled to Admetus, king of the Molossi, with whom he had had a great friendship. Having
          arrived here, and the king being absent at the time, he, in order that he might
          secure himself, if received, with the stronger safeguard of religion, took up
          the king's little daughter, and ran with her into a certain temple, which was
          regarded with the utmost veneration, and from which he did not come out till
          the king having given him his right hand, took him under his protection; an
          engagement which he strictly observed. For when his surrender was publicly
          demanded by the Athenians and Lacedaemonians, he did not betray his dependant, but warned him to consult for his safety, as it
          would be difficult for him to live in security in a place so near to Greece. He
          in consequence caused him to be conducted to Pydna, appointing him a sufficient guard. Here he
          went on board a ship, to all the sailors in which he was personally unknown.
          The vessel being driven by a violent storm towards Naxos, where the army of the
          Athenians then lay, Themistocles felt assured that, if he put in there, he must
          lose his life. Being thus compelled by necessity, he disclosed to the captain
          of the ship who he was, promising him a large reward if he would save him. The
          captain, moved with concern for so illustrious a man, kept the ship at anchor
          in the open sea, at some distance from the island, for a day and a night,
          allowing no person to quit it. Thence he went to Ephesus, where he set
          Themistocles on shore, who afterwards liberally rewarded him for his services.
           I know most historians have related that
          Themistocles went over into Asia in the reign of Xerxes, but I give credence to
          Thucydides in preference to others, because he, of all who have left records of
          that period, was nearest in point of time to Themistocles, and was of the same
          city. Thucydides says that he went to Artaxerxes, and sent him a letter in
          these words: "I, Themistocles, am come to you, a man, who, of all the
          Greeks, brought most evil upon your house, when. I was obliged to war against
          your father, and to defend my own country. I also did your father still greater
          service, after I myself was in safety, and he began to be in danger; for when
          he wished, after the battle fought at Salamis, to return into Asia, I informed
          him by letter that it was in contemplation that the bridge, which he had
          constructed over the Hellespont, should be broken up, and that he should be
          surrounded by enemies; by which information he was rescued from danger. But
          now, pursued by all Greece, I have fled to you, soliciting your favour, and if I shall obtain
          it, you will find me no less deserving as a friend than your father found me
          resolute as an enemy. I make this request, however, that with regard to the
          subjects on which I wish to discourse with you, you would grant me a year's
          delay, and when that time is past, permit me to approach you."
           The king, admiring his greatness of mind, and
          wishing to have such a man attached to him, granted his request. Themistocles
          devoted all that time to the writings and language of the Persians, in which he
          acquired such knowledge, that he is said to have spoken before the king with
          much more propriety than those could who were born in Persia. After he had made
          the king many promises, and what was most agreeable of them all, that if he
          would follow his advice, he might conquer Greece in war, he was honoured with rich presents
          by Artaxerxes, and returning into Asia Minor, fixed his habitation at Magnesia.
          For the king had bestowed upon him this city, expressing himself in these
          words, that "it was to supply him with bread;" (from the land about
          this place fifty talents came into him annually;) and he had also given
          him Lampsacus,
          "whence he might get his wine," and Myus, "from which he might have meats for his
          table."
           Two memorials of Themistocles have remained to our
  times; his sepulchre near
  the city,in which he was buried, and his statues in
  the forum of Magnesia. Concerning his death various accounts have been given by
  several writers; we prefer, to all others, the authority of Thucydides, who
  says that he died of some disease at Magnesia, though he admits that there was
  a report that he voluntarily took poison, because he despaired of being able to
  perform what he had promised the king about subjugating Greece. Thucydides has
  also recorded that his bones were buried by his friends in Attica privately, it
  not being permitted by law to bury them, as he had been pronounced guilty of
  treason.
   
           
 
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