READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
THE HISTORY OF PYRRHUS OF EPIRUS
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Pyrrhus, King of Epirus,
entered at the very beginning of his life upon the extraordinary series of
romantic adventures which so strikingly marked his career. He became an exile
and a fugitive from his father’s house when he was only two years old, having
been suddenly borne away at that period by the attendants of the household, to
avoid a most imminent personal danger that threatened him. The circumstances
which gave occasion for this extraordinary ereption were as follows:
The
country of Epirus, as will be seen by the accompanying map, was situated on the
eastern shore of the Adriatic Sea, and on the southwestern confines of
Macedonia. The kingdom of Epirus was thus very near to, and in some respects
dependent upon, the kingdom of Macedon. In fact, the public affairs of the two
countries, through the personal relations and connections which subsisted from
time to time between the royal families that reigned over them respectively,
were often intimately intermingled, so that there could scarcely be any
important war, or even any great civil dissention in Macedon, which did not
sooner or later draw the king or the people of Epirus to take part in the
dispute, either on one side or on the other. And as it sometimes happened that
in these questions of Macedonian politics the king and the people of Epirus
took opposite sides, the affairs of the great kingdom were often the means of
bringing into the smaller one an infinite degree of trouble and confusion.
The
period of Pyrrhus’s career was immediately subsequent to that of Alexander the
Great, the birth of Pyrrhus having taken place about four years after the death
of Alexander At this time it happened that the relations which subsisted
between the royal families of the two kingdoms were very intimate. This
intimacy arose from an extremely important intermarriage which had taken place
between the two families in the preceding generation—namely, the marriage of
Philip of Macedon with Olympias, the daughter of a king of Epirus. Philip and
Olympias were the father and mother of Alexander the Great. Of course, during
the whole period of the great conqueror’s history, the people of Epirus, as
well as those of Macedon, felt a special interest in his career. They
considered him as a descendant of their own royal line, as well as of that of
Macedon, and so, very naturally, appropriated to themselves some portion of
the glory which he acquired. Olympias, too, who sometimes, after her marriage
with Philip, resided at Epirus, and sometimes at Macedon, maintained an
intimate and close connection, both with her own and with Philip’s family; and
thus, through various results of her agency, as well as through the fame of
Alexander’s exploits, the governments of the two countries were continually
commingled.
It
must not, however, by any means be supposed that the relations which were
established through the influence of Olympias, between the courts of Epirus
and of Macedon, were always of a friendly character. They were, in fact, often
the very reverse. Olympias was a woman of a very passionate and ungovernable
temper, and of a very determined will; and as Philip was himself as impetuous
and as resolute as she, the domestic life of this distinguished pair was a
constant succession of storms. At the commencement of her married life,
Olympias was, of course, generally successful in accomplishing her purpose.
Among other measures, she induced Philip to establish her brother upon the
throne of Epirus, in the place of another prince who was more directly in the
line of succession. As, however, the true heir did not, on this account,
relinquish his claims, two parties were formed in the country, adhering
respectively to the two branches of the family that claimed the throne, and a
division ensued, which, in the end, involved the kingdom of Epirus in protracted
civil wars. While, therefore, Olympias continued to hold an influence over her
husband’s mind, she exercised it in such a way as to open sources of serious
calamity and trouble for her own native land.
After
a time, however, she lost this influence entirely. Her disputes with Philip
ended at length in a bitter and implacable quarrel. Philip married another
woman, named Cleopatra, partly, indeed, as a measure of political alliance,
and partly as an act of hostility and hatred against Olympias, whom he accused
of the most disgraceful crimes. Olympias went home to Epirus in a rage, and
sought refuge in the court of her brother.
Alexander,
her son, was left behind at Macedon at this separation between his father and
mother. He was then about nineteen years of age. He took part with his mother
in the contest. It is true, he remained for a time at the court of Philip after
his mother’s departure, but his mind was in a very irritable and sullen mood;
and at length, on the occasion of a great public festival, an angry conversation
between Alexander and Philip occurred, growing out of some allusions which
were made to Olympias by some of the guests, in the course of which Alexander
openly denounced and defied the king, and then abruptly left the court, and
went off to Epirus to join his mother. Of course the attention of the people of
Epirus was strongly attracted to this quarrel, and they took sides, some with
Philip, and some with Olympias and Alexander.
Not
very long after this Philip was assassinated in the most mysterious and
extraordinary manner. Olympias was generally accused of having been the
instigator of this deed.
There
was no positive evidence of her guilt; nor, on the other hand, had there ever
been in her character and conduct any such indications of the presence of even
the ordinary sentiments of justice and humanity in her heart as could form a
presumption of her innocence. In a word, she was such a woman that it was more
easy and natural, as it seemed, for mankind to believe her guilty than
innocent; and she has accordingly been very generally condemned, though on
very slender evidence, as accessory to the crime.
Of
course, the death of Philip, whether Olympias was the procurer of it or not,
was of the greatest conceivable advantage to her in respect to its effect upon
her position, and upon the promotion of her ambitious schemes. The way was at
once opened again for her return to Macedon. Alexander, her son, succeeded
immediately to the throne. He was very young, and would submit, as she supposed,
very readily to the influence of his mother. This proved, in fact, in some
sense to be true. Alexander, whatever may have been his faults in other
respects, was a very dutiful son. He treated his mother, as long as he lived,
with the utmost consideration and respect, while yet he would not in any sense subject
himself to her authority and influence in his political career. He formed his
own plans, and executed them in his own way; and if there was ever at any time
any dispute or disagreement between him and Olympias in respect to his
measures, she soon learned that he was not to be controlled in these things,
and gave up the struggle. Nor was this a very extraordinary result; for we
often see that a refractory woman, who can not by any
process be made to submit to her husband, is easily and completely managed by a
son.
Things
went on thus tolerably smoothly while Alexander lived. It was only tolerably,
however; for Olympias, though she always continued on friendly terms with
Alexander himself, quarreled incessantly with the commanders and ministers of
state whom he left with her at Macedon while he was absent on his Asiatic
campaigns. These contentions caused no very serious difficulty so long as
Alexander himself was alive to interpose, when occasion required, and settle
the difficulties and disputes which originated in them before they became
unmanageable. Alexander was always adroit enough to do this in a manner that
was respectful and considerate toward his mother, and which yet preserved the
actual administrative power of the kingdom in the hands to which he had intrusted it.
He
thus amused his mother’s mind, and soothed her irritable temper by marks of consideration
and regard, and sustained her in a very dignified and lofty position in the
royal household, while yet he confided to her very little substantial power.
The
officer whom Alexander had left in chief command at Macedon, while absent on
his Asiatic expedition, was Antipater. Antipater was a very venerable man,
then nearly seventy years of age. He had been the principal minister of state
in Macedonia for a long period of time, having served Philip in that capacity
with great fidelity and success for many years before Alexander’s accession.
During the whole term of his public office, he had maintained a most exalted
reputation for wisdom and virtue. Philip placed the most absolute and entire
confidence in him, and often committed the most momentous affairs to his
direction. And yet, notwithstanding the illustrious position which Antipater
thus occupied, and the great influence and control which he exercised in the
public affairs of Macedon, he was simple and unpretending in his manners, and
kind and considerate to all around him, as if he were entirely devoid of all
feelings of personal ambition, and were actuated only by an honest and sincere
devotedness to the cause of those whom he served. Various anecdotes were
related of him in the Macedonian court, which showed the estimation in which he
was held. For example, Philip one day, at a time when placed in circumstances
which required special caution and vigilance on his part, made his appearance
at a late hour in the morning and he apologized for it by saying to the
officers, “I have slept rather late this morning, but then I knew that
Antipater was awake.” Alexander, too, felt the highest respect and veneration
for Antipater’s character. At one time some person expressed surprise that
Antipater did not clothe himself in a purple robe—the badge of nobility and
greatness—as the other great commanders and ministers of state were accustomed
to do. “Those men,” said Alexander, “wear purple on the outside, but Antipater
is purple within.”
The
whole country, in a word, felt so much confidence in the wisdom, the justice,
and the moderation of Antipater, that they submitted very readily to his sway
during the absence of Alexander. Olympias, however, caused him continual
trouble. In the exercise of his regency, he governed the country as he thought
his duty to the people of the realm and to Alexander required, without yielding
at all to the demands or expectations of Olympias. She, consequently, finding
that he was unmanageable, did all in her power to embarrass him in his plans,
and to thwart and circumvent him. She wrote letters continually to Alexander,
complaining incessantly of his conduct, sometimes misrepresenting occurrences
which had actually taken place, and sometimes making accusations wholly
groundless and untrue. Antipater, in the same manner, in his letters to
Alexander, complained of the interference of Olympias, and of the trouble and
embarrassment which her conduct occasioned him. Alexander succeeded for a
season in settling these difficulties more or less perfectly, from time to
time, as they arose; but at last he concluded to make a change in the regency.
Accordingly, on an occasion when a considerable body of new recruits from
Macedon was to be marched into Asia, Alexander ordered Antipater to accompany
them, and, at the same time, he sent home another general named Craterus, in
charge of a body of troops from Asia, whose term of service had expired. His
plan was to retain Antipater in his service in Asia, and to give to Craterus
the government of Macedon, thinking it possible, perhaps, that Craterus might
agree better with Olympias than Antipater had done.
Antipater
was not to leave Macedon until Craterus should arrive there; and while Craterus
was on his journey, Alexander suddenly died. This event changed the whole
aspect of affairs throughout the empire, and led to a series of very important
events, which followed each other in rapid succession, and which were the means
of affecting the conditions and the fortunes of Olympias in a very material
manner. The state of the case was substantially thus. The story forms quite a
complicated plot, which it will require close attention on the part of the
reader clearly to comprehend.
The
question which rose first to the mind of every one, as soon as Alexander’s
death became known, was that of the succession. There was, as it happened, no
member of Alexander’s own family who could be considered as clearly and
unquestionably his heir. At the time of his death he had no child. He had a wife,
however, whose name was Roxana, and a child was born to her a few months after
Alexander’s death. Roxana was the daughter of an Asiatic prince. Alexander had
taken her prisoner, with some other ladies, at a fort on a rock, where her
father had placed her for safety. Roxana was extremely beautiful, and
Alexander, as soon as he saw her, determined to make her his wife. Among the
thousands of captives that he made in his Asiatic campaign, Roxana, it was
said, was the most lovely of all; and as it was only about four years after
her marriage that Alexander died, she was still in the full bloom of youth and
beauty when her son was born.
But
besides this son, born thus a few months after Alexander’s death, there was a
brother of Alexander, or, rather, a half-brother, whose claims to the
succession seemed to be more direct, for he was living at the time that
Alexander died. The name of his brother was Aridaeus. He was imbecile in intellect,
and wholly insignificant as a political personage, except so far as he was by
birth the next heir to Alexander in the Macedonian line. He was not the son of
Olympias, but of another mother, and his imbecility was caused, it was said, by
an attempt of Olympias to poison him in his youth. She was prompted to do this
by her rage and jealousy against his mother, for whose sake Philip had
abandoned her. The poison had ruined the poor child’s intellect, though it had failed
to destroy his life. Alexander, when he succeeded to the throne, adopted
measures to protect Aridaeus from any future attempt which his mother might
make to destroy him, and for this, as well as perhaps for other reasons, took
Aridaeus with him on his Asiatic campaign. Aridaeus and Roxana were both at
Babylon when Alexander died.
Whatever
might be thought of the comparative claims of Aridaeus and of Roxana’s babe in
respect to the inheritance of the Macedonian crown, it was plain that neither
of them was capable of exercising any actual power— Alexander’s son being
incapacitated by his youthfulness, and his brother by his imbecility. The real
power fell immediately into the hands of Alexander’s great generals and counselors
of state. These generals, on consultation with each other, determined not to
decide the question of succession in favor of either of the two heirs, but to
invest the sovereignty of the empire jointly in them both. So they gave to
Aridaeus the name of Philip, and to Roxana’s babe that of Alexander. They made
these two princes jointly the nominal sovereigns, and then proceeded, in their
name, to divide all the actual power among themselves.
In
this division, Egypt, and the African countries adjoining it, were assigned to
a very distinguished general of the name of Ptolemy, who became the founder of
a long line of Egyptian sovereigns, known as the Ptolemaic dynasty—the line
from which, some centuries later, the renowned Cleopatra sprang. Macedon and
Greece, with the other European provinces, were allotted to Antipater and
Craterus—Craterus himself being then on the way to Macedon with the invalid and
disbanded troops whom Alexander had sent home. Craterus was in feeble health
at this time, and was returning to Macedon partly on this account. In fact, he
was not fully able to take the active command of the detachment committed to
him, and Alexander had accordingly sent an officer with him, named
Polysperchon. who was to assist him in the performance of his duties on the
march. This Polysperchon, as will appear in the sequel, took a very important
part in the events which occurred in Macedonia after he and Craterus had
arrived there.
In
addition to these great and important provinces—that of Egypt in Africa, and
Macedon and Greece in Europe—there were various other smaller ones in Asia
Minor and in Syria, which were assigned to different generals and ministers of
state who had been attached to the service of Alexander, and who all now
claimed their several portions in the general distribution of power which took
place after his death. The distribution gave at first a tolerable degree of
satisfaction. It was made in the name of Philip the king, though the personage
who really controlled the arrangement was Perdiccas, the general who was
nearest to the person of Alexander, and highest in rank at the time of the
great conqueror’s decease. In fact, as soon as Alexander died, Perdiccas
assumed the command of the army, and the general direction of affairs. He
intended, as was supposed, to make himself emperor in the place of Alexander.
At first he had strongly urged that Roxana’s child should be declared heir to the
throne, to the exclusion of Aridaeus. His secret motive in this was that by
governing as regent during the long minority of the infant, he might prepare
the way for finally seizing the kingdom himself. The other generals of the
army, however, would not consent to this; they were inclined to insist that
Aridaeus should be king. The army was divided on this question for some days,
and the dispute ran very high. It seemed, in fact, for a time, that there was
no hope that it could be accommodated. There was every indication that a civil
war must ensue—to break out first under the very walls of Babylon. At length,
however, as has already been stated, the question was compromised, and it was
agreed that the crown of Alexander should become the joint inheritance of
Aridaeus and of the infant child, and that Perdiccas should exercise at Babylon
the functions of regent. Of course, when the division of the empire was made,
it was made in the name of Philip; for the child of Roxana, at the time of the
division, was not yet born. But, though made in King Philip’s name, it was
really the work of Perdiccas. His plan, it was supposed, in the assignment of
provinces to the various generals, was to remove them from Babylon, and give them
employment in distant fields, where they would not interfere with him in the
execution of his plans for making himself master of the supreme power.
After
these arrangements had been made, and the affairs of the empire had been tolerably
well settled for the time being by this distribution of power, and Perdiccas
began to consider what ulterior measures he should adopt for the widening and
extending of his power, a question arose which for a season greatly perplexed
him: it was the question of his marriage. Two proposals were made to him—one by
Olympias, and one by Antipater. Each of these personages had a daughter whom
they were desirous that Perdiccas should make his wife. The daughter of Olympias
was named Cleopatra—that of Antipater was Nicaea. Cleopatra was a young widow.
She was residing at this time in Syria. She had been married to a king of
Epirus named Alexander, but was now residing in Sardis, in Asia Minor. Some of
the counselors of Perdiccas represented to him very strongly that a marriage
with her would strengthen his position more than any other alliance that he
could form, as she was the sister of Alexander the Great, and by his marriage
with her he would secure to his side the influence of Olympias and all of
Alexander’s family. Perdiccas so far acceded to these views that he sent a
messenger to Sardis to visit Cleopatra in his name, and to make her a present.
Olympias and Cleopatra accordingly considered the arrangement a settled
affair.
In
the mean time, however, Antipater, who seems to have
been more in earnest in his plans, sent off his daughter Nicaea herself to
Babylon, to be offered directly to Perdiccas there. She arrived at Babylon
after the messenger of Perdiccas had gone to visit Cleopatra. The arrival of
Nicaea brought up very distinctly to the mind of Perdiccas the advantages of an
alliance with Antipater. Olympias, it is true, had a great name, but she
possessed no real power. Antipater, on the other hand, held sway over a
widely-extended region, which comprised some of the most wealthy and populous
countries on the globe. He had a large army under his command, too, consisting
of the bravest and best-disciplined troops in the world; and he himself, though
advanced in age, was a very able and effective commander. In a word, Perdiccas
was persuaded, by these and similar considerations, that the alliance of
Antipater would be more serviceable to him than that of Olympias, and he
accordingly married Nicaea. Olympias, who had always hated Antipater before,
was now, when she found herself thus supplanted by him in her plans for allying
herself with Perdiccas, aroused to the highest pitch of indignation and rage.
Besides
the marriage of Perdiccas, another matrimonial question arose about
this time, which led to a great deal of difficulty. There was a lady of the
royal family of Macedon named Cynane—a daughter of
Philip of Macedon, and half-sister of Alexander the Great—who had a daughter
named Ada. Cynane conceived the design of marrying
her daughter to King Philip, who was now, as well as Roxana and her babe, in
the hands of Perdiccas as their guardian. Cynane set
out from Mace don with her daughter, on the journey to Asia, in order to carry
this arrangement into effect. This was considered as a very bold undertaking
on the part of Cynane and her daughter; for Perdiccas
would, of course, be implacably hostile to any plan for the marriage of Philip,
and especially so to his marrying a princess of the royal family of Macedon. In
fact, as soon as Perdiccas heard of the movement which Cynane was making, he was enraged at the audacity of it, and sent messengers to
intercept Cynane and murder her on the way. This
transaction, however, as soon as it was known, produced a great excitement
throughout the whole of the Macedonian army. The army, in fact, felt so strong
an attachment for every branch and every member of the family of Alexander,
that they would not tolerate any violence or wrong against any one of them.
Perdiccas was quite terrified at the storm which he had raised. He immediately
countermanded the orders which he had given to the assassins; and, to atone
for his error and allay the excitement, he received Ada, when she arrived at
Babylon, with great apparent kindness, and finally consented to the plan of her
being married to Philip. She was accordingly married to him, and the army was
appeased. Ada received at this time the name of Eurydice, and she became
subsequently, under that name, quite renowned in history.
During
the time in which these several transactions were taking place, various intrigues
and contentions were going on among the governors of the different provinces in
Europe and Asia, which, as the results of them did not particularly affect the
affairs of Epirus, we need not here particularly describe.
During
all this period, however, Perdiccas was extending and maturing his arrangements,
and laying his plans for securing the whole empire to himself; while Antipater
and Ptolemy, in Macedon and Egypt, were all the time holding secret
communications with each other, and endeavoring to devise means by which they
might thwart and circumvent him. The quarrel was an example of what very often
occurs in such political systems as the Macedonian empire presented at this
time—namely, a combining of the extremities against the centre.
For some time the efforts of the hostile parties were confined to the maneuvers
and counter-maneuvers which they devised against each other. Antipater was, in
fact, restrained from open hostility against Perdiccas from a regard to his
daughter Nicaea, who as has been already mentioned, was Perdiccas’ wife. At
length, however, under the influence of the increasing hostility which prevailed
between the two families, Perdiccas determined to divorce Nicaea, and marry
Cleopatra after all. As soon as Antipater learned this, he resolved at once
upon open war. The campaign commenced with a double operation. Perdiccas
himself raised an army; and, taking Philip and Eurydice, and also Roxana and
her babe in his train, he marched into Egypt to make war against Ptolemy. At
the same time, Antipater and Craterus, at the head of a large Macedonian force,
passed across the Hellespont into Asia Minor, on their way to attack Perdiccas
in Babylon. Perdiccas sent a large detachment of troops,
under the command of a distinguished general, to meet and encounter Antipater
and Craterus in Asia Minor, while he was himself engaged in the Egyptian
campaign.
The
result of the contest was fatal to the cause of Perdiccas. Antipater advanced
triumphantly through Asia Minor, though in one of the battles which took place
there Craterus was slain. But while Craterus himself fell, his troops were
victorious. Thus the fortunes of war in this quarter went against Perdiccas.
The result of his own operations in Egypt was still more disastrous to him. As
he approached the Egyptian frontier, he found his soldiers very averse to
fighting against Ptolemy, a general whom they had always regarded with extreme
respect and veneration, and who, as was well known, had governed his province
in Egypt with the greatest wisdom, justice, and moderation. Perdiccas treated
this disaffection in a very haughty and domineering manner. He called his
soldiers rebels, and threatened to punish them as such. This aroused their
indignation, and from secret murmurings they proceeded to loud and angry
complaints. Perdiccas was not their king, they said, to lord it over them in
that imperious manner. He was nothing but the tutor of their kings, and they
would not submit to any insolence from him. Perdiccas was soon quite alarmed to
observe the degree of dissatisfaction which he had awakened, and the violence
of the form which it seemed to be assuming. He changed his tone, and attempted
to soothe and conciliate the minds of his men. He at length succeeded so far as
to restore some degree of order and discipline to the army, and in that
condition the expedition entered Egypt.
Perdiccas
crossed one of the branches of the Nile, and then led his army forward to
attack Ptolemy in a strong fortress, where he had intrenched himself with his
troops. The forces of Perdiccas, though much more numerous than those of
Ptolemy, fought with very little spirit; while those of Ptolemy exerted
themselves to the utmost, under the influence of the strong attachment which
they felt for their commander. Perdiccas was beaten in the engagement; and he
was so much weakened by the defeat, that he determined to retreat back across
the river. When the army arrived at the bank of the stream, the troops began to
pass over; but after about half the army had crossed, they found, to their
surprise, that the water, which had been growing gradually deeper all the time,
became impassable. The cause of this deepening of the stream was at first a
great mystery, since the surface of the water, as was evident by marks along
the shore, remained all the time at the same level. It was at length
ascertained that the cause of this extraordinary phenomenon was, that the sands
in the bottom of the river were trampled up by the feet of the men and horses
in crossing, so that the current of the water could wash them away; and such
was the immense number of footsteps made by the successive bodies of troops,
that, by the time the transportation had been half accomplished, the water had
become too deep to be forded. Perdiccas was thus, as it were, caught in a
trap—half his army being on one side of the river, and himself, with the remainder,
on the other.
He
was seriously alarmed at the dangerous situation in which he thus found himself
placed, and immediately resorted to a variety of expedients to remedy the
unexpected difficulty. All his efforts were, however, vain. Finally, as it
seemed imperiously necessary to effect a junction between the two divisions of
his army, he ordered those who had gone over to make an attempt, at all
hazards, to return. They did so; but in the attempt, vast numbers of men got
beyond their depth, and were swept down by the current and drowned. Multitudes
of the bodies, both of the dead and of the dying, were seized and devoured by
the crocodiles which lined the shores of the river below. There were about two
thousand men thus lost in the attempt to recross the stream.
In
all military operations, the criterion of merit, in the opinion of an army, is
success; and, of course, the discontent and disaffection which prevailed in the
camp of Perdiccas broke out anew in consequence of these misfortunes. There
was a general mutiny. The officers themselves took the lead in it, and one
hundred of them went over in a body to Ptolemy’s side, taking with them a
considerable portion of the army; while those that were left remained with
Perdiccas, not to defend, but to destroy him. A troop of horse gathered around
his tent, guarding it on all sides, to prevent the escape of their victim, and
then a certain number of the men rushed in and kill ed him in the midst of his
terror and despair.
Ptolemy
now advanced to the camp of Perdiccas, and was received there with acclamation.
The whole army submitted themselves at once to his command. An arrangement was
made for the return of the army to Babylon, with the kings and their train. Pithon, one of the generals of Perdiccas, took the command
of the army, and the charge of the royal family, on the return. In the mean time, Antipater had passed into Asia, victorious over
the forces that Perdiccas had sent against him. A new congress of generals was
held, and a new distribution of power was made. By the new arrangement,
Antipater was to retain his command in Macedon and Greece, and to have the
custody of the kings. Accordingly, when every thing had thus been settled, Antipater set out on his return to Macedon, with
Philip and Eurydice, and also Roxana and the infant Alexander, in his train.
The venerable soldier—for he was now about eighty years of age—was received in
Macedon, on his return, with universal honor and applause. There were several
considerations, in fact, which conspired to exalt Antipater in the estimation
of his countrymen on this occasion. He had performed a great military exploit
in conducting the expedition into Asia, from which he was now triumphantly
returning. He was bringing back to Macedon, too, the royal family of
Alexander, the representatives of the ancient Macedonian line; and by being
made the custodian of these princes, and regent of the empire in their name, he
had been raised to the most exalted position which the whole world at that
period could afford. The Macedonians received him, accordingly, on his return,
with loud and universal acclamations.
Although Antipater, on his
return to Macedon, came back loaded with honors, and in the full and triumphant
possession of power, his situation was still not without its difficulties. He
had for enemies, in Macedon, two of the most violent and unmanageable women
that ever lived—Olympias and Eurydice—who quarreled with him incessantly, and
who hated each other even more than they hated him.
Olympias
was at this time in Epirus. She remained there, because she did not choose to
put herself under Antipater’s power by residing in Macedon. She succeeded,
however, by her maneuvers and intrigues, in giving Antipater a great deal of
trouble. Her ancient animosity against him had been very much increased and
aggravated by the failure of her plan for marrying her daughter Cleopatra to
Perdiccas, through the advances which Antipater made in behalf of his daughter
Nicaea; and though Nicaea and Perdiccas were now dead, yet the transaction was
an offense which such a woman as Olympias never could forgive.
Eurydice
was a still greater source of annoyance and embarrassment to Antipater than
Olympias herself. She was a woman of very masculine turn of mind, and she had
been brought up by her mother, Cynane, to martial
exercises, such as those to which young men in those days were customarily
trained. She could shoot arrows, and throw the javelin, and ride on horseback
at the head of a troop of armed men. As soon as she was married to Philip she
began at once to assume an air of authority, thinking, apparently, that she
herself, being the wife of the king, was entitled to a much greater share of
the regal authority than the generals, who, as she considered them, were
merely his tutors and guardians, or, at most, only military agents, appointed
to execute his will. During the memorable expedition into Egypt, Perdiccas had found
it very difficult to exercise any control over her; and after the death of
Perdiccas, she assumed a more lofty and imperious tone than ever. She
quarreled incessantly with Pithon, the commander of
the army, on the return from Egypt; and she made the most resolute and
determined opposition to the appointment of Antipater as the custodian of the
persons of the kings.
The
place where the consultation was held, at which this appointment was made, was Triparadeisus, in Syria. This was the place where the
expedition of Antipater, coming from Asia Minor, met the army of Egypt on its
return. As soon as the junction of the two armies was effected, and the grand
council was convened, Eurydice made the most violent opposition to the
proceedings. Antipater reproved her for evincing such turbulence and
insubordination of spirit. This made her more angry than ever; and when at
length Antipater was appointed to the regency, she went out and made a formal
harangue to the army, in which she denounced Antipater in the severest terms,
and loaded him with criminations and reproaches, and endeavored to incite the
soldiers to revolt. Antipater endeavored to defend himself against these
accusations by a calm reply; but the influence which Eurdyice’s tempestuous eloquence exerted on the minds of the soldiery was too much for
him. A very serious riot ensued, which threatened to lead to the most
disastrous results. For a time Antipater’s life was in most imminent danger,
and he was saved only by the interposition of some of the other generals, who
hazarded their own lives to rescue him from the enraged soldiery.
The
excitement of this scene gradually subsided, and, as the generals persisted in
the arrangement which they had made, Eurydice found herself forced to submit
to it. She had, in fact, no real power in her hands except that of making
temporary mischief and disturbance; and, as is usually the case with characters
like hers, when she found that those around her could not be driven from their
ground by her fractiousness and obstinacy, she submitted herself to the
necessity of the case, though in a moody and sullen manner. Such were the
relations which Antipater and Eurydice bore to each other on the return of
Antipater to Macedon.
The
troubles, however, in his government, which Antipater might have reasonably expected
to arise from his connection with Olympias and Eurydice, were destined to a
very short continuance, so far as he personally was concerned; for, not long
after his return to Macedon, he fell sick of a dangerous disease, under which
it was soon evident that the vital principle, at the advanced age to which he
had attained, must soon succumb. In fact, Antipater himself soon gave up all
hopes of recovery, and began at once to make arrangements for the final
surrender of his power.
It
will be recollected that when Craterus came from Asia to Macedon, about the
time of Alexander’s death, he brought with him a general named Polysperchon,
who, though nominally second in command, really had charge of the army on the
march, Craterus himself being at the time an invalid. When, some
time afterward, Antipater and Craterus set out on their expedition to
Asia, in the war against Perdiccas, Polysperchon was left in charge of the
kingdom of Macedon, to govern it as regent until Antipater should return.
Antipater had a son named Cassander, who was a general in his army. Cassander
naturally expected that, during the absence of his father, the kingdom would
be committed to his charge. For some reason or other, however, Antipater had
preferred Polysperchon, and had intrusted the
government to him. Polysperchon had, of course, become acquainted with the
duties of government, and had acquired an extensive knowledge of Macedonian
affairs. He had governed well, too, and the people were accustomed to his sway.
Antipater concluded, therefore, that it would be better to continue Polysperchon
in power after his death, rather than to displace Polysperchon for the sake of
advancing his son Cassander. He therefore made provision for giving to
Cassander a very high command in the army, but he gave Polysperchon the kingdom.
This act, though Cassander himself never forgave it, raised Antipater to a
higher place than ever in the estimation of mankind. They said that he did what
no monarch ever did before; in determining the great question of the
succession, he made the aggrandizement of his own family give place to the welfare
of the realm.
Antipater
on his death-bed, among other councils which he gave to Polysperchon, warned
him very earnestly against the danger of yielding to any woman whatever a share
in the control of public affairs. Woman, he said, was, from her very nature,
the creature of impulse, and was swayed in all her conduct by the emotions and
passions of her heart. She possessed none of the calm, considerate, and
self-controlling principles of wisdom and prudence, so essential for the proper
administration of the affairs of states and nations. These cautions, as
Antipater uttered them, were expressed in general terms, but they were understood
to refer to Olympias and Eurydice, whom it had always been very difficult to
control, and who, of course, when Antipater should be removed from the scene,
might be expected to come forward with a spirit more obtrusive and unmanageable
than ever.
These
councils, however, of the dying king seemed to have had very little effect upon
Polysperchon; for one of the first measures of his government, after Antipater
was dead, was to send to Epirus to invite Olympias to return to Macedon. This
measure was decided upon in a grand council which Polysperchon convened to
deliberate on the state of public affairs as soon as the government came into
his hands. Polysperchon thought that he should greatly strengthen his administration
by enlisting Olympias on his side. She was held in great veneration by all the
people of Macedon; not on account of any personal qualities which she possessed
to entitle her to such regard, but because she was the mother of Alexander.
Polysperchon, therefore, considered it very important to secure her influence,
and the prestige of her .name in his favor. At the same time, while he thus
sought to propitiate Olympias, he neglected Cassander and all the other
members of Antipater’s family. He considered them, doubtless, as rivals and
antagonists, whom he was to keep down by every means in his power.
Cassander,
who was a man of a very bold, determined, and ambitious spirit, remained
quietly in Polysperchon’s court for a little time, watching attentively all
that was done, and revolving silently in his mind the question what course he
himself should pursue. At length he formed a small party of his friends to go
away on a hunting excursion. When he reached a safe distance from the court of
Polysperchon, he called his friends around him, and informed them that he had
resolved not to submit to the usurpation of Polysperchon, who, in assuming the
throne of Macedon, had-seized what rightfully belonged, he said, to him,
Cassander, as his father’s son and heir. He invited his friends to join him in
the enterprise of deposing Polysperchon, and assuming the crown.
He
urged this undertaking upon them with very specious arguments. It was the only course
of safety for them, as well as for him, since they—that is, the friends to whom
Cassander was making these proposals—had all been friends of Antipater; and
Olympias, whom Polysperchon was about to take into his counsels, hated the very
name of Antipater, and would evince, undoubtedly, the most unrelenting
hostility to all whom she should consider as having been his friends. He was confident,
he said, that the Asiatic princes and generals would espouse his cause. They
had been warmly attached to Antipater, and would not willingly see his son and
rightful successor deprived of his legitimate rights. Besides, Philip and
Eurydice would join him. They had everything to fear from Olympias, and would,
of course, oppose the power of Polysperchon, now that he had determined to ally
himself to her.
The
friends of Cassander very readily agreed to his proposal, and the result proved
the truth of his predictions. The Asiatic princes furnished Cassander with
very efficient aid in his attempt to depose his rival. Olympias adhered to
Polysperchon, while Eurydice favored Cassander’s cause. A terrible conflict ensued. It was waged for some time in Greece, and
in other countries more or less remote from Macedon, the advantage in the
combats being sometimes on one side and sometimes on the other. It is not
necessary to detail here the events wliich occurred
in the contest so long as the theatre of war was beyond the frontiers of
Macedon, for the parties with whom we are now particularly dealing were not
directly affected by the conflict until it came nearer home.
It
ought here to be stated that Olympias did not at first accept the invitation to
return to Macedon which Polysperchon sent to her. She hesitated. She consulted
with her friends, and they were not decided in respect to the course which it
would be best for her to pursue. She had made a great many enemies in Macedon
during her former residence there, and she knew well that she would have a
great deal to fear from their hostility in case she should return, and thus put
herself again, as it were, into their power. Then, besides, it was quite
uncertain what course affairs in Macedon would finally take. Antipater had
bequeathed the kingdom to Polysperchon, it was true; but there might be great
doubt whether the people would acquiesce in this decision, and allow the
supreme power to remain quietly in Polysperchon’s hands. She concluded,
therefore, to remain a short time where she was, till she could see how the
case would finally turn. She accordingly continued to reside in Epirus,
keeping up, however, a continual correspondence with Polysperchon in respect
to the measures of his government, and watching the progress of the war between
him and Cassander in Greece, when that war broke out, with the utmost
solicitude and anxiety.
Cassander
proved to be too strong for Polysperchon in Greece. He had obtained large bodies
of troops from his Asiatic allies, and he maneuvered and managed these forces
with so much bravery and skill, that Polysperchon could not dislodge him from
the country. A somewhat curious incident occurred on one occasion during the
campaign, which illustrates the modes of warfare practiced in those days. It
seems that one of the cities of Peloponnesus, named Megalopolis, was on the
side of Cassander, and when Polysperchon sent them a summons to surrender to
him and acknowledge his authority, they withdrew all their property and the
whole of their population within the walls, and bid him defiance. Polysperchon
then advanced and laid siege to the city.
After
fully investing the city and commencing operations on various sides, to occupy
the attention of the garrison, he employed a corps of sappers and miners in
secretly undermining a portion of the wall. The mode of procedure, in
operations like this, was to dig a subterranean passage leading to the
foundations of the wall, and then, as fast as these foundations were removed,
to substitute props to support the superincumbent mass until all was ready for
the springing of the mine. When the excavations were completed, the props were
suddenly pulled away, and the wall would cave in, to the great astonishment of
the besieged, who, if the operation had been skillfully performed, knew nothing
of the danger until the final consummation of it opened suddenly before their
eyes a great breach in their defenses. Polysperchon’s mine was so successful,
that three towers fell into it, with all the wall connecting them. These towers
came down with a terrific crash, the materials of which they had been composed
lying, after the fall, half buried in the ground, a mass of ruins.
The
garrison of the city immediately repaired in great numbers to the spot, to prevent
the ingress of the enemy; while, on the other hand, a strong detachment of
troops rushed forward from the camp of Polysperchon to force their way through
the breach into the city. A very desperate conflict ensued, and while the men
of the city were thus engaged in keeping back the invaders, the women and
children were employed in throwing up a line of intrenchments further within,
to cover the opening which had been made in the wall. The people of the city
gained the victory in the combat. The storming party were driven back, and the
besieged were beginning to congratulate themselves on their escape from the
danger which had threatened them, when they were suddenly terrified beyond
measure by the tidings that the besiegers were arranging a train of elephants
to bring in through the breach, Elephants were often used for war in those days
in Asiatic countries, but they had seldom appeared in Greece. Polysperchon,
however, had a number of them in the train of his army, and the soldiers of
Megalopolis were overwhelmed with consternation at the prospect of being
trampled under foot by these huge beasts, wholly
ignorant as they were of the means of contending against them.
It
happened, however, that there was in the city of Megalopolis at this time a
soldier named Damides, who had served in former years
under Alexander the Great, in Asia. He went to the officers who had command
within the city and offered his aid. “Fear nothing,” said he, “but go on with
your preparations of defense, and leave the elephants to me. I will answer for
them, if you will do as I say.” The officers agreed to follow his instructions.
He immediately caused a great number of sharp iron spikes to be made. These
spikes he set firmly in the ends of short stakes of wood, and then planted the
stakes in the ground all about the intrenchments and in the breach, in such a
manner that the spikes themselves, points upward, protruded from the ground. The
spikes were then concealed from view by covering the ground with straw and
other similar rubbish.
The
consequence of this arrangement was, that when the elephants advanced to enter
the breach, they trod upon these spikes, and the whole column of them was soon
disabled and thrown into confusion. Some of the elephants were wounded so
severely that they fell where they stood, and were unable to rise. Others,
maddened with the pain which they endured, turned back and trampled their own
keepers under foot in their attempts to escape from the scene. The breach, in
short, soon became so choked up with the bodies of beasts and men, that the
assailants were compelled to give up the contest and withdraw. A short time
afterward, Polysperchon raised the siege and abandoned the city altogether.
In
fact, the party of Cassander was in the end triumphant in Greece, and
Polysperchon determined to return to Macedon.
In
the meantime, Olympias had determined to come to Macedon, and aid Polysperchon
in his contest with Cassander. She accordingly left Epirus, and with a small
body of troops, with which her brother Alexander, who was then King of Epirus,
furnished her, went on and joined Polysperchon on his return. Eurydice was
alarmed at this; for, since she considered Olympias as her great political
rival and enemy, she knew very well that there could be no safety for her or
her husband if Olympias should obtain the ascendency in the court of
Polysperchon. She accordingly began to call upon those around her, in the city
where she was then residing, to arm themselves for her defense. They did so,
and a considerable force was thus collected. Eurydice placed herself at the
head of it.
She
sent messengers off to Cassander, urging him to come immediately and join her.
She also sent an embassage to Polysperchon, commanding him, in the name of
Philip the king, to deliver up his army to Cassander. Of course this was only a
form, as she could not have expected that such a command would have been
obeyed; and, accordingly, after having sent off these orders, she placed her- jself at the head of the troops that she had raised, and
marched out to meet Polysperchon on his return, intending, if he would not submit,
to give him battle.
Her
designs, however, were all frustrated in the end in a very unexpected manner.
For when the two armies approached each other, the soldiers who were on
Eurydice’s side, instead of fighting in her cause as she expected, failed her
entirely at the time of trial. For when they saw Olympias, whom they had long
been accustomed almost to adore as the wife of old King Philip, and the mother
of Alexander, and who was now advancing to meet them on her return to Macedon,
splendidly attended, and riding in her chariot, at the head of Polysperchon’s
army, with the air and majesty of a queen, they were so overpowered with the
excitement of the spectacle, that they abandoned Eurydice in a body, and went
over, by common consent, to Polysperchon’s side.
Of
course Eurydice herself and her husband Philip, who was with her at this time,
fell into Polysperchon’s hands as prisoners. Olympias was almost beside herself
with exultation and joy at having her hated rival thus put into her power. She
imprisoned Eurydice and her husband in a dungeon, so small that there was
scarcely room for them to turn themselves in it; and while they were thus
confined, the only attention which the wretched prisoners received was to be
fed, from time to time, with coarse provisions, thrust in to them through a
hole in the wall. Having thus made Eurydice secure, Olympias proceeded to
wreak her vengeance on all the members of the family of Antipater whom she
could get within her power. Cassander, it is true, was beyond 'her reach for
the present; he was gradually advancing through Thessaly into Macedonia, at
the head of a powerful and victorious army. There was another son of
Antipater, however, named Nica nor, who was then in Macedon. Him she seized and
put to death, together with about a hundred of his relatives and friends. In fact,
so violent and insane was her rage against the house of Antipater, that she
opened a tomb where the body of another of his sons had been interred, and
caused the remains to be brought out and thrown into the street. The people
around her began to remonstrate against such atrocities; but these
remonstrances, instead of moderating her rage, only excited it still more. She
sent to the dungeon where her prisoners, Philip and Eurydice, were confined,
and caused Philip to be stabbed to death with daggers; and then, when this
horrid scene was scarcely over, an executioner came in to Eurydice with a dagger,
a rope, and a cup of poison, saying that Olympias sent them to her, that she
might choose herself by what she would die. Eurydice, on receiving this
message, replied, saying, “I pray Heaven that Olympias herself may one day
have the like alternative presented to her.” She then proceeded to tear the
linen dress which she wore into bandages, and to bind up with these bandages
the wounds in the dead body of her husband. This dreadful though useless duty
being performed, she then, rejecting all of the means of self-destruction
which Olympias had offered her, strangled herself by tying tight about her
neck a band which she obtained from her own attire.
Of
course, the tidings of these proceedings were not long in reaching Cassander.
He was at this time in Greece, advancing, however, slowly to the northward,
toward Macedon. In coming from Greece into Thessaly, his route lay through the
celebrated Pass of Thermopylae. He found this pass guarded by a large body of
troops, which had been posted there to oppose his passage. He immediately got
together all the ships, boats, galleys and vessels of every kind which he could
procure, and, embarking his army on board of them, he sailed past the defile,
and landed in Thesally. Thence he marched into
Macedon.
While
Cassander has thus been slowly approaching, Polysperchon and Olympias had been
very vigorously employed in making preparations to receive him. Olympias, with
Roxana and the young Alexander, who was now about five years old, in her train,
traveled to and fro among the cities of Macedonia,
summoning the people to arms, enlisting all who would enter her service, and
collecting money and military stores. She also sent to Epirus, to Eakides the
king, the father of Pyrrhus, imploring him to come to her aid with all the
force he could bring. Polysperchon, too, though separate from Olympias, made
every effort to strengthen himself against his coming enemy. Things were in
this state when Cassander entered Macedon.
Cassander
immediately divided his troops into two distinct bodies, and sending one, under
the command of an able general, to attack Polysperchon, he himself went in pursuit
of Olympias. Olympias retreated before him, until at length she reached the
city of Pydna, a city situated in the southeastern part of Macedon, on the shore
of the Aegean Sea. She knew that the force under her command was not sufficient
to enable her to offer her enemy battle, and she accordingly went into the
city, and fortified herself there. Cassander advanced immediately to the place,
and, finding the city too strongly fortified to be carried by assault, he
surrounded it with his army, and invested it closely both by land and sea. .
The
city was not well provided for a siege, and the people within very soon began
to suffer for want of provisions. Olympias, however, urged them to hold out,
representing to them that she had sent to Epirus for assistance, and that Eakides,
the king, was already on his way, with a large force, to succor her. This was
very true; but, unfortunately for Olympias, Cassander was aware of this fact as
well as she, and, instead of waiting for the troops of Eakides to come and
attack him, he had sent a large armed force to the confines between Epirus and
Macedon, to intercept these expected allies in the passes of the mountains.
This movement was successful. The army of 2Eacides found, when they reached the
frontier, that the passages leading into Macedonia were all blocked up by the
troops of the enemy. They made some ineffectual attempts to break through; and
then the leading officers of the army, who had never been really willing to
embark in the war, revolted against Eakides, and returned home. And as, in the
case of deeds of violence and revolution, it is always safest to go through
and finish the work when it is once begun, they deposed 2Eacides entirely, and
raised the other branch of the royal family to the throne in his stead. It was
on this occasion that the infant Pyrrhus was seized and carried away by his
friends, to save his life, as mentioned in the opening paragraphs of this
history. The particulars of this revolution, and of the flight of Pyrrhus, will
be given more fully in the next chapter. It is sufficient here to say, that
the attempt of Eakides to come to the rescue of Olympias in her peril wholly
failed, and there was nothing now left but the wall of the city to defend her
from her terrible foe.
In
the meantime, the distress in the city for want of food had become horrible.
Olympias herself, with Roxana and the boy, and the other ladies of the court,
lived on the flesh of horses. The soldiers devoured the bodies of their
comrades as they were slain upon the wall. They fed the elephants, it was said,
on saw-dust. The soldiers and the people of the city, who found this state of
things intolerable, deserted continually to Cassander, letting themselves
down by stealth in the night from the wall. Still Olympias would not surrender;
there was one more hope remaining for her. She contrived to dispatch a messenger
to Polysperchon with a letter, asking him to send a galley round into the
harbor at a certain time in the night, in order that she might get on board of
it, and thus escape. Cassander intercepted this messenger. After reading the
letter, he returned it to the messenger again, and directed him to go on and
deliver it. The messenger did so, and Polysperchon sent the galley. Cassander,
of course, watched for it, and seized it himself when it came. The last hope of
the unhappy Olympias was thus extinguished, and she opened the gates and gave
herself up to Cassander. The whole country immediately afterward fell into Cassander’s hands.
The
friends of the family of Antipater were now clamorous in their demands that
Olympias should be brought to punishment for having so atrociously murdered
the sons and relatives of Antipater while she was in power. Olympias professed
herself willing to be tried, and appealed to the Macedonian senate to be her
judges. She relied on the ascendency which she had so long exercised over the
minds of the Macedonians, and did not believe that they would condemn her.
Cassander himself feared that they would not; and although he was unwilling to
murder her while she was a defenseless prisoner in his hands, he determined
that she should die. He recommended to her secretly not to take the hazard of
a trial, but to make her escape and go to Athens, and offered to give her an
opportunity to do so. He intended, it was said, if she made the attempt, to
intercept and slay her on the way as a fugitive from justice. She refused to
accede to this proposal, suspecting, perhaps, Cassander’s treachery in making it. Cassander then sent a band of two hundred soldiers to
put her to death.
These
soldiers, when they came into the prison, were so impressed by the presence of
the queen, to whom, in former years, they had been accustomed to look up with
so much awe, that they shrank back from their duty, and for a time it seemed
that no one would strike the blow. At length, however, some among the number,
who were relatives of those that Olympias had murdered, succeeding in nerving
their arms with the resolution of revenge, fell upon her and killed her with
their swords.
As
for Roxana and the boy, Cassander kept them close prisoners for many yearjs; and finally, feeling more and more that his possession
of the throne of Alexander was constantly endangered by the existence of a son
of Alexander, caused them to be assassinated too.
CHAPTER
III.
EARLY
LIFE OF PYRRHUS.
In the two preceding chapters we
have related that portion of the history of Macedonia which it is necessary to
understand in order rightly to appreciate the nature of the difficulties in
which the royal family of Epirus was involved at the time when Pyrrhus first appeared
upon the stage. The sources of these difficulties were two: first, the
uncertainty of the line of succession, there being two branches of the royal
family, each claiming the throne, which state of things was produced, in a
great measure, by the interposition of Olympias in the affairs of Epirus some
years before; and, secondly, the act of Olympias in inducing Eakides to come to
Macedonia, to embark in her quarrel against Cassander there. Of course, since
there were two lines of princes, both claiming the throne, no sovereign of
either line could hold any thing more than a divided
empire over the hearts of his subjects; and consequently, when Eakides left the
kingdom to fight the battles of Olympias in Macedon, it was comparatively easy
for the party opposed to him to effect a revolution and raise their own prince
to the throne.
The
prince whom Olympias had originally made king of Epirus, to the exclusion of
the claimant belonging to the other branch of the family, was her own brother.
His name was Alexander. He was the son of Neoptolemus. The rival branch of the
family were the children of Arymbas, the brother of
Neoptolemus. This Alexander flourished at the same time as Alexander the Great,
and in his character very much resembled his distinguished namesake. He
commenced a career of conquest in Italy at the same time that his nephew
embarked in his in Asia, and commenced it, too, under very similar circumstances.
One went to the East, and another to the West, each determined to make himself
master of the world. The Alexander of Macedon succeeded. The Alexander of
Epirus failed. The one acquired, consequently, universal and perpetual renown,
while the memory of the other has been almost entirely neglected and
forgotten.
One
reason, unquestionably, for the difference in these results was the difference
in the character of the enemies respectively against whom the two adventurers
had to contend. Alexander of Epirus went westward into Italy, where he had to
encounter the soldiery of the Romans—a soldiery of the most rugged,
determined, and indomitable character. Alexander of Macedon, on the other hand,
went to the East, where he found only Asiatic races to contend with, whose
troops, though countless in numbers and magnificently appointed in respect to
all the purposes of parade and display, were yet enervated with luxury, and
wholly unable to stand against any energetic and determined foe. In fact, Alexander
of Epirus used to say that the reason why his nephew, Alexander of Macedon, had
succeeded, while he himself had failed, was because he himself had invaded
countries peopled by men, while the Macedonian, in his Asiatic campaign, had encountered
only women.
However
this may be, the campaign of Alexander of Epirus in Italy had a very disastrous
termination. The occasion of his going there was a request which he had
received from the inhabitants of Tarentum that he would come over and assist
them in a war in which they were engaged with some neighboring tribes.
Tarentum was a city situated toward the western shore of Italy. It was at the
head of the deep bay called the Gulf of Tarentum, which bay occupies the hollow
of the foot that the form of Italy presents to the eye as seen upon a map.*
Tarentum was, accordingly, across the Adriatic Sea from Epirus. The distance
was about two hundred miles. By taking a southerly route, and going up the
Gulf of Tarentum, this distance might be traversed wholly by sea. A little to
the north the Adriatic is narrow, the passage there being only about fifty
miles across. To an expedition, however, taking this course, there would
remain, after arriving on the Italian shore, fifty miles or more to be accomplished
by land in order to reach Tarentum.
Before
deciding to comply with the request of the Tarentines that he would come to
their aid, Alexander sent to a celebrated oracle in Epirus, called the oracle
of Dodona, to inquire whether it would be safe for him to undertake the
expedition. To his inquiries the oracle gave him this for an answer:
“The
waters of Acheron will be the cause of your death, and Pandosia is the place where you will die.”
Alexander
was greatly rejoiced at receiving this answer. Acheron was a stream of Epirus,
and Pandosia was a town upon the banks of it. He
understood the response to mean that he was fated to die quietly in his own
country at some future period, probably a remote one, and that there was no
danger in his undertaking the expedition to Which he had been called. He
accordingly set sail from Epirus, and landed in Italy; and there, believing
that he was fated to die in Epirus, and not in Italy, he fought in every battle
with the most desperate and reckless bravery, and achieved prodigies of valor.
The possibility that there might be an Acheron and a Pandosia in Italy, as well as in Epirus, did not occur to his mind.
For
a time he was very successful in his career. He fought battles, gained
victories, conquered cities, and established his dominion over quite an
extended region. In order to hold what he had gained, he sent over a great
number of hostages to Epirus, to be kept there as security for the continued
submission of those whom he had subdued. These hostages consisted chiefly, as
was usual in such cases, of children. At length, in the course of the war, an
occasion arose in which it was necessary, for the protection of his troops, to
encamp them on three hills which were situated very near to each other. These
hills were separated by low interval lands and a small stream; but at the time
when Alexander established his encampment, the stream constituted no
impediment to free intercommunication between the different divisions of his
army. There came on, however, a powerful rain; the stream overflowed its
banks; the intervals were inundated. This enabled the enemy to attack two of
Alexander’s encampments, while it was utterly impossible for Alexander himself
to render them any aid. The enemy made the attack, and were successful in it.
The two camps were broken up, and the troops stationed in them were put to
flight. Those that remained with Alexander, becoming discouraged by the
hopeless condition in which they found themselves placed, mutinied, and sent
to the camp of the enemy, offering to deliver up Alexander to them, dead or
alive, as they should choose, on condition that they themselves might be
allowed to return to their native land in peace. This proposal was accepted;
but, before it was put in execution, Alexander, having discovered the plot,
placed himself at the head of a determined and desperate band of followers,
broke through the ranks of the enemies that surrounded him, and made his escape
to a neighboring wood. From this wood he took a route which led him to a
river, intending to pass the river by a bridge which he expected to find there,
and then to destroy the bridge as soon as he had crossed it, so as to prevent
his enemies from following him. By this means he hoped to make his way to some
place of safety. He found, on arriving at the brink of the stream, that the
bridge had been carried away by the inundation. He, however, pressed forward
into the water on horseback, intending to ford the stream. The torrent was
wild, and the danger was imminent, but Alexander pressed on. At length one of
the attendants, seeing his master in imminent danger of being drowned,
exclaimed aloud, “This cursed river! well is it named Acheron. ” The word
Acheron, in the original language, signifies River of Sorrow.
By
this exclamation Alexander learned, for the first time, that the river he was
crossing bore the same name with the one in Epirus, which he supposed had been
referred to in the warning of the oracle. He was at once overwhelmed with
consternation. He did not know whether to go forward or to return. The moment
of indecision was suddenly ended by a loud outcry from his attendants, giving
the alarm that the traitors were close upon him. Alexander then pushed forward
across the water. He succeeded in gaining the bank; but as soon as he did so, a
dart from one of his enemies reached him and killed him on the spot. His
lifeless body fell back into the river, and was floated down the stream, until
at length it reached the camp of the enemy, which happened to be on the bank of
the stream below. Here it was drawn out of the water, and subjected to every
possible indignity. The soldiers cut the body in two, and, sending one part to
one of the cities as a trophy of their victory, they set up the other part in
the camp as a target for the soldiers to shoot at with darts and javelins.
At
length a woman came into the camp, and, with earnest entreaties and many tears,
begged the soldiers to give the mutilated corpse to her. Her object in wishing
to obtain possession of it was, that she might send it home to Epirus, to the
family of Alexander, and buy with it the liberty of her husband and her
children, who were among the hostages which had been sent there. The soldiers
acceded to this request, and the parts of the body having been brought together
again, were taken to Epirus, and delivered to Olympias, by whom the remains
were honorably interred. We must presume that the woman who sent them obtained
the expected reward, in the return of her husband and children, though of this
we are not expressly informed.
Of
course, the disastrous result of this most unfortunate expedition had the
effect, in Epirus, of diminishing very much the popularity and the strength of
that branch of the royal family—namely, the line of Neoptolemus—to which
Alexander had belonged. Accordingly, instead of being succeeded by one of his
brothers, Eakides, the father of Pyrrhus, who was the representative of the
other line, was permitted quietly to assume the crown. It might have been
expected that Olympias would have opposed his accession, as she was herself a
princess of the rival line. She did not, however, do so. On the contrary, she
gave him her support, and allied herself to him very closely; and he, on his
part, became in subsequent years one of her most devoted adherents and friends.
When
Olympias was shut up in Pydna by the army of Cassander, as was related in the last
chapter, and sent for Eakides to come to her aid, he immediately raised an army
and marched to the frontier. He found the passes in the mountains which led
from Epirus to Macedonia all strongly guarded, but he still determined to force
his way through. He soon, however, began to observe marks of discontent and
dissatisfaction among the officers of his army. These indications increased,
until at length the disaffection broke out into open mutiny, as stated in the
last chapter. 2Eacides then called his forces together, and gave orders that
all who were unwilling to follow him into Macedon should be allowed freely to
return. He did not wish, he said, that any should accompany him on such an
expedition excepting those who went of their own free will. A considerable part
of the army then returned, but, instead of repairing peaceably to their homes,
they raised a general insurrection in Epirus, and brought the family of
Neoptolemus again to the throne. A solemn decree of the state was passed,
declaring that Eakides, in withdrawing from the kingdom, had forfeited his
crown, and banishing him forever from the country. And as this revolution was
intended to operate, not merely against Eakides personally, but against the
branch of the royal family to which he belonged, the new government deemed it
necessary, in order to finish their work and make it sure, that many of his
relatives and friends, and especially his infant son and heir, should die.
Several of the members of Eakides’ family were accordingly killed, though the
attendants in charge succeeded in saving the life of the child by a sudden
flight.
The
escape was effected by the instrumentality of two of the officers of Eakides’
household, named Androclides and Angelus. These men,
as soon as the alarm was given, hurried the babe away, with only such nurses
and other attendants as it was necessary to take with them. The child was still unweaned; and though those in charge made the number
of attendants as small as possible, still the party were necessarily of such a
character as to forbid any great rapidity of flight. A troop was sent in
pursuit of them, and soon began to draw near. When Androclides found that his party would be overtaken by the troop, he committed the child to
the care of three young men, bidding them to ride on with him, at their utmost
speed, to a certain town in Macedon, called Megarae,
where they thought he would be safe; and then he himself, and the rest of his
company, turned back to meet the pursuers. They succeeded, partly by their
representations and entreaties, and partly by such resistance and obstruction
as it was in their power to make, in stopping the soldiers where they were. At
length, having, though with some difficulty, succeeded in getting away from
the soldiers, Androclides and Angelus rode on by
secret ways till they overtook the three young men. They now began to think
that the danger was over. At length, a little after sunset, they approached the
town of Megarae. There was a river just before the
town, which looked too rough and dreadful to be crossed. The party, however,
advanced to the brink, and attempted to ford the stream, but they found it imposssible. It was growing dark; the water of the river,
having been swelled by rains, was very high and boisterous, and they found
that they could not get over. At length they saw some of the people of the town
coming down to the bank on the opposite side. They were in hopes that these
people could render them some assistance in crossing the stream, and they began
to call out to them for this purpose; but the stream ran so rapidly, and the
roaring of the torrent was so great, that they could not make themselves heard.
The distance was very inconsiderable, for the stream was not wide; but, though
the party with Pyrrhus called aloud and earnestly, and made signs, holding up
the child in their arms to let the people see him. they could not make themselves
understood.
At
last, after spending some time in these fruitless efforts, one of the party who
were with Pyrrhus thought of the plan of writing what they wished to say upon
a piece of bark, and throwing it across the stream to those on the other side.
They accordingly pulled off some bark from a young oak which was growing on a
bank of the river, and succeeded in making characters upon it by means of the
tongue of a buckle, sufficient to say that they had with them Pyrrhus, the
young prince of Epirus, and that they were flying with him to save his life,
and to implore the people on the other side to contrive some way to get them
over the river. This piece of bark they then managed to throw across the
stream. Some say that they rolled it around a javelin, and then gave the
javelin to the strongest of their party to throw; others say that they attached
it to a stone. In some way or other they contrived to give it a sufficient
momentum to carry it 6—Pyrrhus across the water; and the people on the other
side, when they obtained it, and read what was written upon it, were greatly
excited by the tidings, and engaged at once with ardor and enthusiasm in
efforts to save the child.
They
brought axes and began to cut down trees to make a raft. In due time the raft
was completed; and, notwithstanding the darkness of the night, and the force
and swiftness of the current of the stream, the party of fugitives succeeded
in crossing upon it, and thus brought the child and all the attendants accompanying
him safely over.
The
party with Pyrrhus did not intend to stop at Megarae.
They did not consider it safe, in fact, for them to remain in any part of
Macedon, not knowing what course the war between Polysperchon and Cassander
would take there, or how the parties engaged in the contest might stand
affected toward Pyrrhus. They determined, therefore, to press forward in their
flight till they had passed through Macedon, and reached the country beyond.
The
country north of Macedon, on the western coast, the one in which they
determined to seek refuge, was Illyria. The name of the king of Illyria was Glaucias. They had reason to believe that Glaucias would receive and protect the child, for he was
connected by marriage with the royal family of Epirus, his wife, Beroa, being a princess of the line of 2Eaci- des. When the
fugitives arrived at the court of Glaucias, they went
to the palace, where they found Glaucias and Beroa; and, after telling the story of their danger and
escape, they laid the child down as a suppliant at the feet of the king.
Glaucias felt not a little embarrassed
at the situation in which he was placed, and did not know what to do. He
remained for a long time silent. At length, little Pyrrhus, who was all the
while lying at his feet, began to creep closer toward him; and, finally, taking
hold of the king’s robe, he began to climb up by it, and attempted to get into
his lap, looking up into the king’s face, at the same time, with a countenance
in which the expression of confidence and hope was mingled with a certain
instinctive infantile fear. The heart of the king was so touched by this mute
appeal, that he took the child up in his arms, dismissed at once all prudential
considerations from his mind, and, in the end, delivered the boy to the queen, Beroa, directing her to bring him up with her own children.
Cassander
soon discovered the place of Pyrrhus’s retreat, and he made great efforts to
induce Glaucias to give him up. He offered Glaucias a very large sum of money if he would deliver
Pyrrhus into his hands; but Glaucias refused to do
it. Cassander would, perhaps, have made war upon Glaucias to compel him to comply with this requisition, but he was then fully occupied
with the enemies that threatened him in Greece and Macedon. He did,
subsequently, make an attempt to invade the dominions of Glaucias,
and to get possession of the person of Pyrrhus, but the expedition failed,
and after that the boy was allowed to remain in Illyria without any further molestation.
Time
passed on, until at length Pyrrhus was twelve years old. During this interval
great changes took place in the affairs of Cassander in Macedon. At first he
was very successful in his plans. He succeeded in expelling Polysperchon from
the country, and in establishing himself as king. He caused Roxana and the
young Alexander to be assassinated, as was stated in the last chapter, so as
to remove out of the way the only persons who he supposed could ever advance
any rival claims to the throne. For a time every thing went well and prosperously with him, but at length the tide of his affairs
seemed to turn. A new enemy appeared against him in Asia—a certain
distinguished commander, named Demetrius, who afterward became one of the most
illustrious personages of his age. Just at this time, too, the king of Epirus, Alcetus, the prince of the family of Neoptolemus, who had
reigned during Pyrrhus’s exile in Illyria, died. Glaucias deemed this a favorable opportunity for restoring Pyrrhus to the throne. He
accordingly placed himself at the head of an army, and marched into Epirus,
taking the young prince with him. No effectual resistance was made, and
Pyrrhus was crowned king. He was, of course, too young actually to reign, and a
sort of regent was accordingly established in power, with authority to govern
the country in the young king’s name until he should come of age.
This
state of things could not be very stable. It endured about five years; and
during this time Pyrrhus seemed to be very firmly established in power. The
strength of his position, however, was more apparent than real; for the
princes of the other branch of the family, who had been displaced by Pyrrhus’s
return to power, were of course discontented and restless all the time. They
were continually forming plots and conspiracies, and were only waiting for an
opportunity to effect another revolution. The opportunity at length came. One
of the sons of Glaucias was to be married. Pyrrhus
had been the companion and playmate of this prince, during his residence in
Illyria, and was, of course, invited to the wedding. Supposing that all was
safe in his dominions, he accepted the invitation and went to Illyria. While
he was there, amusing himself in the festivities and rejoicings connected with
the wedding, his rivals raised a rebellion, took possession of the government,
and of all of Pyrrhus’s treasures, killed or put to flight his partisans and
friends, and raised a prince of the family of Neoptolemus to the throne.
Pyrrhus found himself once more an exile.
The
revolution in Epirus was so complete, that, after careful consideration and
inquiry, Pyrrhus could see, with the resources he had at his command, no hope
of recovering his throne. But, being of an ambitious and restless spirit, he
determined not to remain idle; and he concluded, therefore, to enter into the
service of Demetrius in his war against Cas- sander. There were two
considerations which led him to do this. In the first place, Cassander was his
most formidable enemy, and the prospect of his being ultimately restored again
to his throne would depend almost entirely, he well knew, upon the possibility
of destroying, or at least curtailing, Cassander’s power. Then, besides, Demetrius was especially his friend. The wife of
Demetrius was Deidamia, the sister of Pyrrhus, so that Pyrrhus looked upon
Demetrius as his natural ally. He accordingly offered to enter the service of
Demetrius, and was readily received. In fact, notwithstanding his youth—for he
was now only seventeen or eighteen years of age—Demetrius gave him a very
important command in his army, and took great pains to instruct him in the art
of war. It was not long before an opportunity was afforded to make trial o(
Pyrrhus’s capacity as a soldier. A great battle was fought at Ipsus, in Asia Minor, between Demetrius on one side and
Cassander on the other. Besides these two commanders, there were many princes
and generals of the highest rank who took part in the contest as allies of the
principal combatants, which had the effect of making the battle a very
celebrated one, and of causing it to attract very strongly the attention of all
mankind at the time when it occurred. The result of the contest was, on the whole,
unfavorable to the cause of Demetrius. His troops, generally, were compelled to
give way, though the division which Pyrrhus commanded retained their ground.
Pyrrhus, in fact, acquired great renown by his courage and energy, and perhaps
still more by his success on this occasion. Young as he was, Demetrius
immediately gave him a new and very responsible command, and intrusted to him the charge of several very important
expeditions and campaigns, in all of which the young soldier evinced such a
degree of energy and courage, combined, too, with so much forethought,
prudence, and military skill, as presaged very clearly his subsequent renown.
At
length an alliance was formed between Demetrius and Ptolemy, king of Egypt, and
as security for the due execution of the obligations assumed by Demetrius in
the treaty which they made, Ptolemy demanded a hostage. Pyrrhus offered to go
himself to Egypt in this capacity. Ptolemy accepted him, and Pyrrhus was accordingly
taken in one of Ptolemy’s ships across the Mediterranean to Alexandria.
In
Egypt the young prince was, of course, an object of universal attention and
regard. He was tall and handsome in person, agreeable in manners, and amiable
and gentle in disposition. His royal rank, the fame of the exploits which he
had performed, the misfortunes of his early years, and the strange and
romantic adventures through which he had passed, all conspired to awaken a deep
interest in his favor at the court of Ptolemy. The situation of a hostage, too,
is always one which strongly attracts the sympathy and kind feelings of those
who hold him in custody. A captive is regarded in some sense as an enemy; and
though his hard lot may awaken a certain degree of pity and commiseration,
still the kind feeling is always modified by the fact that the object of it,
after all, though disarmed and helpless, is still a foe. A hostage, however,
is a friend. He comes as security for the faithfulness of a friend and an
ally, so that the sympathy and interest which are felt for him as an exile from
his native land, are heightened by the circumstance that his position makes him
naturally an object of friendly regard.
The
attachment which soon began to be felt for Pyrrhus in the court of Ptolemy was
increased by the excellent conduct and demeanor which he exhibited while he
was there. He was very temperate and moderate in his pleasures, and upright and
honorable in all his doings. In a word, he made himself a general favorite;
and after a year or two he married Antigone, a princess of the royal family.
From being a hostage he now became a guest, and shortly afterward Ptolemy
fitted out an expedition to proceed to Epirus and restore him to his throne. On
arriving in Epirus, Pyrrhus found every thing favorable to the success of his plans. The people of the country had become
discontented with the government of the reigning king, and were very willing
to receive Pyrrhus in his place. The revolution was easily effected, and
Pyrrhus was thus once more restored to his throne.
CHAPTER
IV.
WARS
IN MACEDON.
The prince whom Pyrrhus displaced
from the throne of Epirus on his return from Egypt, as .narrated in the last
chapter, was, of course, of the family of Neoptolemus. His own name was
Neoptolemus, and he was the second son of the Neoptolemus who gave his name to
the line.
Pyrrhus
exercised an uncommon degree of moderation in his victory over his rival; for,
instead of taking his life, or even banishing him from the kingdom, he treated
him with respectful consideration, and offered, very generously, as it would
seem, to admit him to a share of the regal power. Neoptolemus accepted this
proposal, and the two kings reigned conjointly for a considerable time. A
difficulty, however, before long occurred, which led to an open quarrel, the
result of which was that Neoptolemus was slain. The circumstances, as related
by the historians of the time, were as follows:
It
seems that it was the custom of the people of Epirus to celebrate an annual
festival at a certain city in the kingdom, for the purpose chiefly of renewing
the oaths of allegiance on the one part, and of fealty on the other, between
the people and the king. Of course, there were a great many games and
spectacles, as well as various religious rites and ceremonies, connected with
this celebration; and among other usages which prevailed, it was the custom for
the people to bring presents to the king on the occasion. When the period for
this celebration recurred, after Pyrrhus's restoration to the throne, both
Pyrrhus and Neoptolemus, each attended by his own particular followers and
friends, repaired to the city where the celebration was to be held, and
commenced the festivities.
Among
other donations which were made to Pyrrhus at this festival, he received a present
of two yoke of oxen from a certain man named Gelon, who was a particular friend
of Neoptolemus. It appears that it was the custom for the kings to dispose of
many of the presents which they received on these occasions from the people of
the country, by giving them to their attendants and the officers of their
households; and a certain cup-bearer, named Myrtilus,
begged Pyrrhus to give these oxen to him. Pyrrhus declined this request, but
afterward gave the oxen to another man. Myrtilus was
offended at this, and uttered privately many murmurings and complaints. Gelon,
perceiving this, invited Myrtilus to sup with him. In
the course of the supper, he attempted to excite still more the ill-will which Myrtilus felt toward Pyrrhus; and finding that he appeared
to succeed in doing this, he fin ally proposed to Myrtilus to espouse the cause of Neoptolemus, and join in a plot for poisoning Pyrrhus.
His office as cup-bearer would enable him, Gelon said, to execute such a design
without difficulty or danger, and, by doing it, he would so commend himself to
the regard of Neoptolemus, that he might rely on the most ample and abundant
rewards. Myrtilus appeared to receive these
proposals with great favor; he readily promised to embark in the plot, and
promised to fulfill the part assigned him in the execution of it. When the
proper time arrived, after the conclusion of the supper, Myrtilus took leave of Gelon, and, proceeding directly to Pyrrhus, he related to him all
that had occurred.
Pyrrhus
did not take any rash or hasty measures in the emergency, for he knew very well
that if Gelon were to be then charged with the crime which he had proposed to
commit, he would deny having ever proposed it, and that then there would be
only the word of Myrtilus against that of Gelon, and
that impartial men would have no positive means of deciding between them. He
thought, therefore, very wisely, that, before taking any decided steps, it
would be necessary to obtain additional proof that Gelon had really made the
proposal. He accordingly directed Myrtilus to
continue to pretend that he favored the plan, and to propose to Gelon to invite
another cup-bearer, named Alexicrates, to join the
plot. Alexicrates was to be secretly instructed to
appear ready to enter into the conspiracy when he should be called upon, and
thus, as Pyrrhus expected, the testimony of two witnesses would be obtained to Gelon’s guilt.
It
happened, however, that the necessary evidence against Gelon was furnished
without a resort to this measure; for when Gelon reported to Neoptolemus that Myrtilus had acceded to his proposal to join him in a plan
for removing Pyrrhus out of the way, Neoptolemus was so much overjoyed at the
prospect of recovering the throne to his own family again, that he could not
refrain from revealing the plan to certain members of the family, and, among
others, to his sister Cadmia. At the time when he
thus discovered the design to Cadmia, he supposed
that nobody was within hearing. The conversation took place in an apartment
where he had been supping with Cadmia, and it
happened that there was a servant-woman lying upon a couch in the corner of
the room at the time, with her face to the wall, apparently asleep. She was, in
reality, not asleep, and she overheard all the conversation. She lay still,
however, and did not speak a word; but the next day she went to Antigone, the
wife of Pyrrhus, and communicated to her all that she had heard. Pyrrhus now
considered the evidence that Neoptolemus was plotting his destruction as
complete, and he determined to take decisive measures to prevent it. He
accordingly invited Neoptolemus to a banquet. Neoptolemus, suspecting nothing,
came, and Pyrrhus slew him at the table. Henceforward Pyrrhus reigned in Epirus
alone.
Pyrrhus
was now about twenty-three years of age, and inasmuch as, with all his moderation
in respect to the pursuit of youthful pleasures, he was of a very ambitious
and aspiring disposition, he began to form schemes and plans for the
enlargement of his power. An opportunity was soon afforded him to enter upon a
military career. Cassander, who had made himself King of Macedon in the manner
already described, died about the time that Pyrrhus established himself on his
throne in Epirus. He left two sons, Alexander and Antipater. These brothers
immediately quarreled, each claiming the inheritance of theii father’s crown. Antipater proved to be the strongest in the struggle; and
Alexander, finding that he could not stand his ground against his brother
without aid, sent messengers at the same time to Pyrrhus, and also to
Demetrius, in Thessaly, calling upon both to come to his assistance. They both
determined to do so. Demetrius, however, was engaged in some enterprises which
detained him for a time, but Pyrrhus immediately put himself at the head of his
army, and prepared to cross the frontier.
The
commencement of this march marks an important era in the life of Pyrrhus, for
it was now for the first time that be had an army wholly under his command. In
all the former military operations in which he had been engaged, he had been
only a general, acting under the orders of his superiors. Now he was an
independent sovereign, leading forth his own troops to battle, and responsible
to no one for the manner in which he exercised his power. The character which
he displayed in this new capacity was such as very soon to awaken the
admiration of all his troops, and to win their affection in a very strong
degree. His fine personal appearance, his great strength and dexterity in all
martial exercises, his kind consideration for his soldiers, the systematic and
skillful manner in which all his arrangements were made, and a certain
nobleness and generosity of character which he displayed on many occasions, all
combined to make him an object of universal favor and regard.
Various
anecdotes were related of him in camp, which evinced the superiority of his
mind, and that peculiar sense of confidence and strength which so often
accompanies greatness. At one time a person was accused of being disaffected
toward him, and of being in the habit of speaking evil of him on all occasions
; and some of his counselors proposed that the offender should be banished.
“No,” said Pyrrhus; “let him stay here, and speak evil of me only to a few,
instead of being sent away to ramble about and give me a bad character to all
the world.” At another time, some persons, when half intoxicated, at a
convivial entertainment, had talked very freely in censure of something which
Pyrrhus had done. They were called to account for it; and when asked by Pyrrhus
whether it was true that they had really said such things, they replied that it
was true. “And there is no doubt,” they added, “that we should have said things
a great deal worse if we had had more wine? Pyrrhus laughed at this reply, and
dismissed the culprits without any punishment. These, and other similar
indications of the magnanimity which marked the general’s character made a great
and very favorable impression upon the minds of all under his command.
Possessing
thus, in a very high degree, the confidence and affection of his troops,
Pyrrhus was able to inspire them with his own ardor and impetuosity when they
came to engage in battle, and his troops were victorious in almost every
conflict. Wherever he went, he reduced the country into subjection to Alexander,
and drove Antipater before him. He left garrisons of his own in the towns which
he captured, so as to make his conquests se cure, and in a short time the
prospect seemed certain that Antipater would be expelled from the country, and
Alexander placed upon the throne.
In
this crisis of their affairs, some of the allies of Antipater conceived the
design of circumventing their enemy by artifice, since it appeared that he was
so superior to them in force. They knew how strong was his feeling of
reverence and regard for Ptolemy, the King of Egypt, his father-in-law, and
they accordingly forged a letter to him in Ptolemy’s name, enjoining him to
make peace with Antipater, and withdrew from Macedon, Antipater, the letter
said, was willing to pay him three hundred talents of silver in consideration
of his doing so, and the letter strongly urged him to accede to this offer, and
evacuate the kingdom.
It
was much less difficult to practice a successful deception of this kind in
ancient days than it is now, for then writing was usually performed by scribes
trained for the purpose, and there was therefore seldom any
thing in the handwriting of a communication to determine the question
of its authenticity. Pyrrhus, however, detected the imposition which was
attempted in this case the moment that he opened the epistle. It began with the
words, “King Ptolemy to King Pyrrhus, greeting;” whereas the genuine letters of
Ptolemy to his son-in-law were always commenced thus: “The father to his son,
greeting.”
Pyrrhus
upbraided the contrivers of this fraud in severe terms for their attempt to deceive
him. Still, he entertained the proposition that they made, and some
negotiations were entered into, with a view to an amicable settlement of the
dispute. In the end, however, the negotiations failed, and the war was
continued until Alexander was established on his throne. Pyrrhus then returned
to his own kingdom. He received, in reward for his services in behalf of
Alexander, a grant of that part of the Macedonian territory which lies upon the
coast of the Adriatic Sea, north of Epirus; and thus peace was restored, and
all things seemed permanently settled.
It
will be recollected, perhaps, by the reader, that at the time that Alexander
sent for Pyrrhus to assist him, he had also sent for Demetrius, who had been
in former years the ally and friend of Pyrrhus. In fact, Deidamia, the sister
of Pyrrhus, was Demetrius’s wife. Demetrius had been engaged with the affairs
of his own government at the time that he received this message, and was not
then ready to grant the desired aid. But after a time, when he had settled his
own affairs, he placed himself at the head of an army and went to Macedon. It
was now, however, too late, and Alexander was sorry to learn that he was coming.
He had already parted with a considerable portion of his kingdom to repay
Pyrrhus for his aid, and he feared that Demetrius, if he were allowed to enter
the kingdom, would not be satisfied without a good part of the remainder.
He
accordingly advanced to meet Demetrius at the frontier. Here, at an interview
which he held with him, he thanked him for his kindness in coming to his aid,
but said that his assistance would now no>t be required. Demetrius said
that it was very well, and so prepared to return. Alexander, however, as Demetrius
afterward alleged, did not intend to allow him to withdraw, but formed a plan
to murder him at supper to which he designed to invite him. Demetrius avoided
the fate which was intended for him by going away unexpectedly from the supper
before Alexander had time to execute his plan. Afterward, Demetrius invited
Alexander to a supper. Alexander came unarmed and unprotected, in order to set
his guest an example of unconcern, in hopes that Demetrius would come equally
defenseless to a second entertainment which he had prepared for him the next
day, and at which he intended to adopt such measures that his guest should not
be able by any possibility to escape. Demetrius, however, did not wait for the
second attempt, but ordered his servants to kill Alexander, and all who were
with him, while they were at his table. One of Alexander’s men, when the attack
was made upon them, said, as the soldiers of Demetrius were stabbing him, “You
arc too quick for us by just one day.”
The
Macedonian troops, whom Alexander had brought with him to the frontier, when
they heard of the murder of their king, expected that Demetrius would come
upon them at once, with all his army, and cut them to pieces. But instead of
this, Demetrius sent them word that he did not intend them any harm, but
wished, on the contrary, for an opportunity to explain and justify to them
what he had done. He accordingly met them, and made a set harangue, in which he
related the circumstances which led him to take the life of Alexander, and
justified it as an act of self- defense. This discourse was received with great
applause, and the Macedonian soldiers immediately hailed Demetrius king.
How
far there was any truth in the charge which Demetrius brought against Alexander
of intending to kill him, it is, of course, impossible to say. There was no
evidence of the fact, nor could there be any evidence but such as Demetrius
might easily fabricate. It is the universal justification that is offered in
every age by the perpetrators of political crimes, that they were compelled to
perform themselves the deeds of violence and cruelty for which they are
condemned, in order to anticipate and preclude the performance of similar deeds
on the part of their enemies.
Demetrius
and Pyrrhus were now neighboring kings, and, from the friendly relations which
had subsisted between them for so many years, it might, perhaps, be supposed
that the two kingdoms which they respectively ruled would enjoy, from this
time, a permanent and settled peace, and maintain the most amicable intercourse
with each other. But the reverse was the fact. Contentions and quarrels arose
on the frontiers. Each nation complained that the borderers of the other made
inroads over the frontier. Demetrius and Pyrrhus gradually got drawn into these
disputes. Un fortunately for the peace of the two countries, Deidamia died, and
the strong band of union which she had formed between the two reigning
families was sundered. In a word, it was net long before Pyrrhus and Demetrius
came to open war.
The
war, however, which thus broke out between Demetrius and Pyrrhus did not arise
wholly from accidental collisions occurring on the frontiers. Demetrius was a
man of the most violent and insatiable ambition, and wholly unscrupulous in
respect to the means of gratifying the passion. Before his difficulties with
Pyrrhus began, he had made expeditions southwardly into Greece, and had
finally succeeded in reducing a large portion of that country to his sway. He,
however, at one time, in the course of his campaigns in Greece, narrowly
escaped a very sudden termination of his career. He was besieging Thebes, one
of the principal cities of Greece, and one which was obstinately determined not
to submit to him. In fact, the inhabitants cf the
city had given him some special cause of offense, so that he was excessively
angry with them, and though for a long time he made very little progress in
prosecuting the siege, he was determined not to give up the attempt. At one
period, he was himself called away from the place for a time, to engage in some
military
duty
demanding his attention in Thessaly, and during his absence he left his son to
conduct the siege. On his return to Thebes, he found that, through the
energetic and obstinate resistance which was made by the people of Thebes,
great numbers of his men were continually falling—so much so, that his son began
to remonstrate with him against allowing so great and so useless a slaughter to
go on. “Consider,” said he, “why you should expose so many of your valiant
soldiers to such sure destruction, when—”
Here
Demetrius, in a passion, interrupted him, saying, “Give yourself no concern
about how many of the soldiers are killed. The more there are killed, the fewer
you will have to provide subsistence for!”
The
brutal recklessness, however, which Demetrius thus evinced in respect to the
slaughter of his troops was not attended, as such a feeling often is, with any
cowardly unwillingness to expose himself to danger. He mingled personally in
the contests that took place about the walls of the city, and hazarded his own
life as freely as he required his soldiers to hazard theirs. At length, on one
occasion, a javelin thrown from the wall struck him in the neck, and, passing
directly through, felled him to the ground. He was taken up for dead, and borne
to his tent. It was then found, on examination, that no great artery or other
vital part had been wounded, and yet in a very short time a burning fever
supervened, and for some time the life of Demetrius was in imminent danger. He
still, however, refused to abandon the siege. At length, he recovered from
the effects of his wound, and, in the end, the city surrendered.
It
was on the return of Demetrius to Macedon, after the close of his successful
campaign in Greece, that the war between him and Pyrrhus broke out. As soon as
it appeared that actual hostilities were inevitable, both parties collected an
army and prepared for the conflict.
They
marched to meet each other, Pyrrhus from Epirus, and Demetrius from Macedon. It
happened, however, that they took different routes, and thus passed each other
on the frontier. Demetrius entered Epirus, and found the whole country open and
defenseless before him, for the military force of the country was all with
Pyrrhus, and had passed into Macedon by another way. Demetrius advanced
accordingly, as far as he chose, into Pyrrhus’s territories, capturing and
plundering every thing that came in his way.
Pyrrhus
himself, on the other hand, met with quite a different reception. Demetrius had
not taken all his army with him, but had left a large detachment under the
command of a general named Pantauchus, to defend the
country during his absence. Pyrrhus encountered Pantauchus as he entered Macedon, and gave him battle. A very hard-fought and obstinate
conflict ensued. In the course of it, Pantauchus challenged Pyrrhus to single combat. He was one of the most distinguished of
Demetrius’s generals, being celebrated above all the officers of the army for
his dexterity, strength, and courage; and, as he was a man of very high and
ambitious spirit, he was greatly pleased with the opportunity of distinguishing
himself that was now before him. He conceived that a personal rencounter with
so great a commander as Pyrrhus would add very much to his renown.
Pyrrhus
accepted the challenge. The preliminary arrangements were made. The combatants
came out into the field, and, as they advanced to the encounter, they hurled
their javelins at each other before they met, and then rushed forward to a
close and mortal combat with swords. The fight continued for a long time.
Pyrrhus himself received a wound; but, notwithstanding this, he succeeded in
bringing his antagonist to the ground, and would have killed him, had not the
friends of Pantauchus rushed on and rescued him from
the danger. A general battle between the two armies ensued, in which Pyrrhus
was victorious. The army of Pantauchus was totally
routed, and five thousand men were taken prisoners.
The
Macedonian troops whom Pyrrhus thus defeated, instead of being maddened with resentment
and anger against their conqueror, as it might have been expected they would
be, were struck with a sentiment of admiration for him. They applauded his
noble appearance and bearing on the field, and the feats of courage and
strength which he performed. There was a certain stern and lofty simplicity in
his air and demeanor which reminded them, as they said, of Alexander the great,
whom many of the old soldiers remembered. They compared Pyrrhus in these
respects with Demetrius, their own sovereign, greatly to the disadvantage of
the latter; and so strong was the feeling which was thus excited in Pyrrhus’s
favor, that it was thought at the time that, if Pyrrhus had advanced toward the
capital with a view to the conquest of the country, the whole army would have
gone over at once to his side, and that he might have made himself king of
Macedon without any further difficulty or trouble. He did not do this,
however, but withdrew again to Epirus when Demetrius came back into Macedonia.
The Macedonians were by no means pleased to see Demetrius return.
In
fact, Demetrius was beginning to be generally hated by all his subjects, being
regarded by them all as a conceited and cruel tyrant. He was not only
unscrupulously ambitious in respect to the dominions of his neighbors, but he
was unjust and overbearing in his treatment of his own friends. Pyrrhus, on
the other hand, was kind and courteous to his army, both to the officers and
soldiers. He lived in habits of great simplicity, and shared the hardships as
well as the toils of those who were under his command. He gave them, too, their
share of the glory which he acquired, by attributing his success to their
courage and fidelity. At one time, after some brilliant campaign in Macedon,
some persons in his army compared his progress to the flight of an eagle. “If I
am an eagle,” said he in reply,
“I
owe it to you, for you are the wings by means of which I have risen so high.”
Demetrius,
on the other hand, treated the officers and men under his command with a
species of haughtiness and disdain. He seemed to regard them as very far
beneath him, and to take pleasure in making them feel his vast superiority. He
was vain and foppish in his dress, expended great sums in the adornment of his
person, decorating his robes and vestments, and even his shoes, with gold and
precious stones. In fact, he caused the manufacture of a garment to be commenced
which he intended should outvie in magnificence and in costly adornments all
that had ever before been fabricated. This garment was left unfinished at the
time of his death, and his successors did not attempt to complete it. They
preserved it, however, for a very long time as a curiosity, and as a memorial
of vanity and folly.
Demetrius,
too, was addicted to many vices, being accustomed to the unrestrained indulgence
of his appetites and propensities in every form. It was in part owing to these
excesses that he became so hateful in manners and character, the habitual
indulgence of his animal appetites and propensities having had the effect of
making him morose and capricious in mind.
The
hostility between Pyrrhus and Demetrius was very much increased and aggravated
at one time by a difficulty in which a lady was concerned. Antigone, the first
wife of Pyrrhus, died, and after her death Pyrrhus married two or three other
wives, according to the custom which prevailed in those days among the Asiatic
kings. Among these wives was Lanassa, the daughter of
Agathocles, the king of Syracuse. The marriage of Pyrrhus with Antigone was
apparently prompted by affection ; but his subsequent alliances seem to have
been simply measures of governmental policy, designed only to aid him in
extending his dominions or strengthening his power. His inducement for
marrying Lanassa was to obtain the island of
Corcyra, which the King of Syracuse, who held that island at that time under
his dominion, was willing to give to his daughter as her dowry. Now the island
of Corcyra, as will be seen from the map, was off the coast of Epirus, and very
near, so that the possession of it would add very considerably to the value of
Pyrrhus’s dominion.
Lanassa was not happy as Pyrrhus’s
bride. In fact, to have been married for the sake of an island brought as
dowry, and to be only one of several wives after all, would not seem to be circumstances
particularly encouraging in respect to the promise of conjugal bliss. Lanassa complained that she was neglected; that the other
wives received attentions which were not accorded to her. At last, when she
found that she could endure the vexations and trials of her condition no
longer, she left her husband and went back to Corcyra, and then sent an
invitation to Demetrius to come and take possession of the island, and marry
her. In a word, she divorced herself and resumed possession of her dowry, and
considered her- herself at liberty to dispose of both her person and property
anew.
Demetrius
accepted the offer which was made him. He went to Corcyra, married Lanassa, and then, leaving a garrison to protect the
island from any attempt which Pyrrhus might make to recover it, he went back to
Macedon. Of course, after this transaction, Pyrrhus was more incensed against
Demetrius than ever.
Very
soon after this Pyrrhus had an opportunity to revenge himself for the injury
which Demetrius had done him. Demetrius was sick; he had brought on a fever by
excessive drinking. Pyrrhus determined to take advantage of the occasion to
make a new invasion of Macedonia. He accordingly crossed the frontier at the
head of a numerous army. Demetrius, sick as he was, mounted on horseback, and
put himself at the head of his forces to go out to meet his enemy. Nothing
important resulted from this campaign; but, after some ineffectual attempts at
conquest, Pyrrhus returned to his own country.
In
this way the war between Pyrrhus and Demetrius was protracted for many years,
with varying success, one party being sometimes triumphant, and sometimes the
other. At last, at a time when the tide of fortune seemed inclined to turn
against Pyrrhus, some circumstances occurred which were the means of attracting
his attention strongly in another direction, and ended in introducing him to a
new and very brilliant career in an altogether different region. These
circumstances, and the train of events to which they led, will form the subject
of the following chapter.
CHAPTER
V.
WAR
IN ITALY.
The grand undertaking in which
Pyrrhus now engaged, as indicated in the last chapter, the one in which he
acquired such great renown, was an expedition into Italy against the Romans.
The immediate occasion of his embarking in this enterprise was an invitation
he received from the inhabitants of Tarentum to come to their aid.* His
predecessor, Alexander, had been drawn into Italy precisely in the same way;
and we might have supposed that Pyrrhus would have been warned by the terrible
fate which Alexander met with not to follow in his steps. But military men arc
never deterred from dangerous undertakings by the disasters which others have
encountered in attempting them before. In fact, perhaps Pyrrhus was the more
eager to try his fortune in this field on account of the calamitous result of
his uncle’s campaign. He was unwilling that his kingdom of Epirus should rest
under the discredit of a defeat, and he was fired with a special ambition to
show that he could overcome and triumph where others had been overborne and
destroyed.
The
dominion of the Romans had extended itself before this time over a considerable
portion of Italy, though Tarentum, and the region of country dependent upon
it, had not yet been subdued. The Romans were, however, now gradually making
their way toward the eastern and southern part of Italy, and they had at
length advanced to the frontiers of the Tarentine territory; and having been
met and resisted there by the Tarentine troops, a collision ensued, which was
followed by an open and general war. In the struggle, the Taren- tines found
that they could not maintain their ground against the Roman soldiery. They were
gradually driven back; and now the city itself was in very imminent danger.
The
difficulties in which the Tarentines were placed were greatly increased by the
fact that there was no well-organized and stable government ruling in the
city. The government was a sort of democracy in its form, and in its actions it
seems to have been a democracy of a very turbulent character—the questions of
public policy being debated and decided in assemblies of the people, where it
would seem that there was very little of parliamentary law to regulate the
proceedings; and now the dangers which threatened them on the approach of the
Romans distracted their councils more than ever, and produced, in fact,
universal disorder and confusion throughout the city.
Various
parties were formed, each of which had its own set of measures to urge and
insist upon. Some were for submitting to the Romans, and thus allowing
themselves to be incorporated in the Roman commonwealth; others were for
persevering in their resistance to the last extremity. In the midst of these
disputes, it was suggested by some of the counselors that the reason why they
had not been able to maintain their ground against their enemies was, that they
had no commander of sufficient predominance in rank and authority to
concentrate their forces, and employ them in an efficient and advantageous
manner; and they proposed that, in order to supply this very essential
deficiency, Pyrrhus should be invited to come and take the command of their forces.
This plan was strongly opposed by the more considerate and far-sighted of the
people; for they well knew that when a foreign power was called in, in such a
manner, as a temporary friend and ally, it almost always became, in the end, a
permanent master. The mass of the people of the city, however, were so excited
by the imminence of the immediate peril, that it was impossible to impress
them with any concern for so remote and uncertain a danger, and it was
determined that Pyrrhus should be called.
It
was said that the meetings which were held by the Tarentines while these
proceedings were in progress, were so boisterous and disorderly that, as often
happens in democratic assemblies, the voices of those who were in the minority
could not be heard; and that at last one of the public men, who was opposed to
the plan of sending the invitation to Pyrrhus, resorted to a singular device
in order to express his opinion. The name of this personage was Meton. The artifice which he adopted was this: he disguised
himself as a strolling mountebank and musician, and then, pretending to be half
intoxicated, he came into the assembly with a garland upon his head, a torch in
his hand, and with a woman playing on a sort of flute to accompany him. On seeing
him enter the assembly, the people all turned their attention toward him. Some
laughed, some clapped their hands, and others called out to him to give them a
song. Meton prepared to do so; and when, after much
difficulty, silence was at length obtained, Meton came forward into the space that had been made for him, and, throwing off his
disguise, he called out aloud,
“Men
of Tarentium! You do well in calling for a song, and
in enjoying the pleasures of mirth and merriment while you may; for I warn you
that you will see very little like mirth or merriment in Tarentum after Pyrrhus
comes.”
The
astonishment which this sudden turn in the affair occasioned, was succeeded for
a moment by a murmur of assent, which seemed to pass through the assembly; the
good sense of many of the spectators being surprised, as it were, into an
admission that the sentiment which Meton had so
surreptitiously found means to express to them was true. This pause was,
however, but momentary. A scene of violent excitement and confusion ensued, and Meton and the woman were expelled from the meeting
without any ceremony.
The
resolution of sending for Pyrrhus was confirmed, and ambassadors were soon
afterward dispatched to Epirus. The message which they communicated to Pyrrhus
on their arrival was, that the Tarentines, being engaged in a war with the
Romans, invited Pyrrhus to come and take command of their armies. They had
troops enough, they said, and all necessary provisions and munitions of war.
All that they now required was an able and efficient general; and if Pyrrhus
would come over to them and assume the command, they would at once put him at
the head of an army of twenty thousand horse and three hundred and fifty
thousand foot soldiers.
It
seems incredible that a state should have attained to such a degree of
prosperity and power as to be able to bring such a force as this into the
field, while under the government of men who, when convened for the consideration
of questions of public policy in a most momentous crisis, were capable of having
their attention drawn off entirely from the business before them by the coming
in of a party of strolling mountebanks and players. Yet such is the account
recorded by one of the greatest historians of ancient times.
Pyrrhus
was, of course, very much elated at receiving this communication. The tidings,
too, produced great excitement among all the people of Epirus. Great numbers
immediately began to offer themselves as volunteers to accompany the
expedition. Pyrrhus determined at once to embark in the enterprise, and he
commenced making preparations for it on a very magnificent scale; for,
notwithstanding the assurance which the Tarentines had given him that they had
a very large body of men already assembled, Pyrrhus seems to have thought it
best to take with him a force of his own.
As
soon as a part of his army was ready, he sent them forward under the command of
a distinguished general and minister of state, named Cineas. Cineas occupied a very high position in Pyrrhus’s
court. He was a Thessalian by birth. He had been educated in Greece, under
Demosthenes, and he was a very accomplished scholar and orator as well as
statesman. Pyrrhus had employed him in embassies and negotiations of various
kinds from time to time, and Cineas had always discharged
these trusts in a very able and satisfactory manner. In fact, Pyrrhus, with
his customary courtesy in acknowledging his obligations to those whom he
employed, used to say that Cineas had gained him more
cities by his address than he had ever conquered for himself by his arms.
Cineas, it was said, was, in the
outset, not much in favor of this expedition into Italy. The point of view in
which he regarded such an enterprise was shown in a remarkable conversation
which he held with Pyrrhus while the preparations were going on. He took occasion
to introduce the subject one day, when Pyrrhus was for a short period at
leisure in the midst of his work, by saying,
“The
Romans are famed as excellent soldiers, and they have many warlike nations in
alliance with them. But suppose we succeed in our enterprise and conquer them,
what use shall we make of our victory?”
“Your
question answers itself,” replied the king. “The Romans are the predominant
power in Italy. If they are once subdued, there will be nothing in Italy that
can withstand us; we can go on immediately and make ourselves masters of the
whole country.”
After
a short pause, during which he seemed to be reflecting on the career of victory
which Pyrrhus was thus opening to view, Cineas added,
“And
after we have conquered Italy, what shall we do next?”
“Why,
there is Sicily very near,” replied Pyrrhus, “a very fruitful and populous
island, and one which we shall then very easily be able to subdue. It is now in
a very unsettled state, and could do nothing effectual to resist us.”
“I
think that is very true,” said Cineas; "‘and
after we make ourselves masters of Sicily, what shall we do then,”
“Then,”
replied Pyrrhus, “we can cross the Mediterranean to Lybia and Carthage. The distance is not very great, and we shall be able to land on
the African coast at the head of such a force that we shall easily make
ourselves masters of the whole country. We shall then have so extended and
established our power, that no enemy can be found in any quarter who will think
of opposing us.”
“That
is very true,” said Cineas; “and so you will then be
able to put down effectually all your old enemies in Thessaly, Macedon, and
Greece, and make yourself master of all those countries. And when all this is
accomplished, what shall we do then?”
“Why,
then,” said Pyrrus, “we can sit down and take our
ease, and eat, drink, and be merry.”
“And
why,” rejoined Cineas, “cannot we sit down and take
our ease, and enjoy ourselves now, instead of taking all this trouble
beforehand? You have already at your command every possible means of enjoyment;
why not make yourself happy with them now, instead of entering on a course
which will lead to such dreadful toils and dangers, such innumerable
calamities, and through such seas of blood, and yet bring you after all, at the
end, nothing more than you have at the beginning?”
It
may, perhaps, be a matter of doubt whether Cineas intended this as a serious remonstrance against the execution of Pyrrhus’s
designs, or only as an ingenious and good-humored satire on the folly of
ambition, to amuse the mind of his sovereign in some momentary interval of
leisure that came in the midst of his cares. However it may have been intended,
it made no serious impression on the mind of Pyrrhus, and produced no change in
his plans. The work of preparation went vigorously on; and as soon as a portion
of the troops were ready to embark, Cineas was put in
command of them, and they crossed the Adriatic Sea. After this, Pyrrhus
completed the organization of the remaining force. It consisted of twenty
elephants, three thousand horse, and twenty thousand foot, with two thousand
archers, and twenty thousand slingers. When all was ready, Pyrrhus put these
troops on board a large fleet of galleys, transports, and flat-bottomed boats,
which had been sent over to him from Tarentum by Cineas for the purpose, and at length set sail. He left Ptolemy, his eldest son, then
about fifteen years old, regent of the kingdom, and took two younger sons,
Alexander and Helenas, with him. The expedition was
destined, it seems, to begin in disaster; for no sooner had Pyrrhus set sail
than a terrible storm arose, which, for a time, threatened the total
destruction of the fleet, and of all who were on board of it. The ship which
conveyed Pyrrhus himself was, of course, larger and better manned than the
others, and it succeeded at length, a little after midnight in reaching the
Italian shore, while the rest of the fleet were driven at the mercy of the
winds, and dispersed in every direction over the sea, far and wide. But, though
Pyrrhus’s ship approached the shore, the violence of the winds and waves was
so great, that for a long time it was impossible for those on board to land. At
length the wind suddenly changed its direction, and began to blow very
violently off the shore, so that there seemed to be great probability that the
ship would be driven to sea again. In fact, so imminent was the danger, that
Pyrrhus determined to throw himself into the sea and attempt to swim to the
shore. He accordingly did so, and was immediately followed by his attendants
and guards, who leaped into the water after him. and did every
thing in their power to assist him in gaining the land. The danger, however,
was extreme; for the darkness of the night, the roaring of the winds and waves,
and the violence with which the surf regurgitated from the shore, rendered the
scene terrific beyond description. At last, however, about daybreak, the
shipwrecked company succeeded in gaining the land.
Pyrrhus
was almost completely exhausted in body by the fatigues and exposures which he
had endured, but he appeared to be by no means depressed in mind. The people of
the country flocked down to the coast to render aid. Several other vessels
afterward succeeded in reaching the shore; and as the wind now* rapidly
subsided, the men on board of them found comparatively little difficulty in
effecting a landing. Pyrrhus collected the remnant thus saved, and marshaled
them on the shore. He found that he had about two thousand foot, a small body
of horse, and two elephants. With this force he immediately set out on his
march to Tarentum. As he approached the city, Cineas came out to meet him at the head of the forces which had been placed at his
command, and which had made the passage in safety.
As
soon as Pyrrhus found himself established in Tarentum, he immediately assumed
the command of every thing there, as if he were
already the acknowledged sovereign of the city. In fact, he found the city in
so disorganized and defenseless a condition, that this assumption of power on
his part seemed to be justified by the necessity of the case. The inhabitants,
as is often the fact with men when their affairs are in an extreme and
desperate condition, had become reckless. Every where throughout the city disorder and idleness reigned supreme. The men spent their
time in strolling about from place to place, or sitting idly at home, or
gathering in crowds at places of public diversion. They had abandoned all care
or concern about public affairs, trusting to Pyrrhus to save them from the
impending danger. Pyrrhus perceived, accordingly, that an entire revolution in
the internal condition of the city was indispensably required, and he
immediately took most efficient measures for effecting it. He shut up all the
places of public amusement, and even the public walks and promenades, and put
an end to all feastings, revels and entertainments. Every man capable of
bearing arms was enrolled in the army, and the troops thus formed were brought
out daily for severe and long-protracted drillings and reviews. The people complained
loudly of these exactions; but Pyrrhus had the power in his hands, and they
were compelled to submit. Many of the inhabitants, however, were so
dissatisfied with these proceedings, that they went away and left the city
altogether. Of course it was those who were the most hopelessly idle,
dissolute, and reckless that thus withdrew, while the more hardy and resolute
remained. While these changes were going on, Pyrrhus set up and repaired the
defenses of the city. He secured the walls, and strengthened the gates, and
organized a complete system of guards and sentries. In a word, the condition of
Tarentum was soon entirely changed. From being an exposed and defenseless
town, filled with devotees of idleness and pleasure, it became a fortress,
well secured at all points, with material defenses, and occupied by a
well-disciplined and resolute garrison.
The
inhabitants of the southeastern part of Italy, where Tarentum was situated,
were of Greek origin, the country having been settled, as it would seem, by
emigrants from the opposite shores of the Adriatic Sea. Their language,
therefore, as well as their customs and usages of life, were different from
those of the Roman communities that occupied the western parts of the peninsula.
Now the Greeks at this period regarded themselves as the only truly civilized
people in the world; all other nations they called barbarians. The people of
Tarentum, therefore, in sending for Pyrrhus to come to their aid against the
Romans, did not consider him as a foreigner brought in to help them in a civil
war against their own countrymen, but rather as a fellow-countryman coming to
aid them in a war against foreigners. They regarded him as belonging to the
same race and lineage with themselves, while the enemies who were coming from
beyond the Appenines to assail them they looked upon
as a foreign and barbarous horde, against whom it was for the common interest
of all nations of Greek descent to combine. It was this identity of interest
between Pyrrhus and the people whom he came to aid, in respect both to their
national origin and the cause in which they were engaged, which made it
possible for him to assume so supreme an authority over all their affairs when
he arrived at Tarentum.
The
people of the neighboring cities were slow in sending in to Pyrrhus the quotas
of troops which the Tarentines had promised him; and before his force was
collected, the tidings arrived that the Romans were coming on at the head of a
great army, under the command of the consul Laevinus.
Pyrrhus immediately prepared to go forth to meet them. He marshaled the troops
that were already assembled, and leaving the city, he advanced to meet the
consul. After proceeding some way, he sent forward an embassador to the camp of Laevinus to propose to that general
that, before coming to extremities, an effort should be made to settle the
dispute between the Romans and Tarentines in some amicable manner, and offering
his services as an umpire and mediator for this purpose. To this embassage Laevinus coolly replied “that he did not choose to accept
Pyrrhus as a mediator, and that he did not fear him as an enemy.” Of course,
after receiving such a message as this, there was nothing left to Pyrrhus but
to prepare for war.
He
advanced, accordingly, at the head of his troops, until at length, he reached a
plain, where he encamped with all his forces. There was a river before him, a
small stream called the River Siris. The Romans came up and encamped on the
opposite side of the bank of this stream. Pyrrhus mounted his horse and rode to
an eminence near the river to take a view of them.
He
was much surprised at what he saw. The order of the troops, the systematic and
regular arrangement of guards and sentinels, and the regularity of the whole
encampment, excited his admiration.
“Barbarians!”
said he. “There is certainly nothing of the barbarian in their manner of
arranging their encampment, and we shall soon see how it is with them in other
respects.”
So
saying, he turned away, and rode to his own camp. He, however, now began to be
very seriously concerned in respect to the result of the approaching contest.
The enemy with whom he was about to engage was obviously a far more formidable
one than he had anticipated. He resolved to remain where he was until the
allies whom he was expecting from the other Grecian cities should arrive. He
accordingly took measures for fortifying himself as strongly as possible in his
position, and he sent down a strong detachment from his main body to the river,
to guard the bank and prevent the Romans from crossing to attack him. Laevinus, on the other hand, knowing that Pyrrhus was
expecting strong reenforcements, determined not to
wait till they should come, but resolved to cross the river at once,
notwithstanding the guard which Pyrrhus had placed on the bank to dispute the
passage.
The
Romans did not attempt to cross the stream in one body. The troops were divided
and the several columns advanced to the river and entered the water at
different points up and down the stream, the foot-soldiers at the fords, where
the water was most shallow, and the horsemen at other places—the most favorable
that they could find. In this manner the whole river was soon filled with
soldiers. The guard which Pyrrhus had posted on the bank found that they were
wholly unable to withstand such multitudes; in fact, they began to fear that
they might be surrounded. They accordingly abandoned the bank of the river, and
retreated to the main body of the army.
Pyrrhus
was greatly concerned at this event, and began to consider himself in imminent
danger. He drew up his foot-soldiers in battle array, and ordered them to stand
by their arms, while he himself advanced, at the head of the horsemen, toward
the river. As soon as he came to the bank, an extraordinary spectacle
presented itself to view. The surface of the stream seemed covered in every
part with shields, rising a little above the water, as they were held up by the
arms of the horsemen and footmen who were coming over. As fast as the Romans
landed, they formed an array on the shore, and Pyrrhus, advancing to them, gave
them battle.
The
contest was maintained, with the utmost determination and fury on both sides,
for a long time. Pyrrhus himself was very conspicuous in the fight, for he wore
a very costly and magnificent armor, and so resplendent in lustre withal as to be an object of universal attention. Notwithstanding this, he
exposed himself in the hottest parts of the engagement, charging upon the
enemy with the most dauntless intrepidity whenever there was occasion, and
moving up and down the lines, wherever his aid or the encouragement of his
presence was most required. At length one of his generals, named Leonatus, rode up to him and said,
“Do
you see, sire, that barbarian trooper, on the black horse with the white feet?
I counsel you to beware of him. He seems to be meditating some deep design
against you; he singles you out, and keeps his eye constantly upon you, and
follows you wherever you go. He is watching an opportunity to execute some
terrible design, and you will do well to be on your guard against him.”
“Leonatus,” said Pyrrhus, in reply, “we can
not contend against our destiny, I know very well; but it is my opinion
that neither that man, nor any other man in the Roman army that seeks an
encounter with me, will have any reason to congratulate himself on the result
of it.”
He
had scarcely spoken these words when he saw the horsemen whom Leonatus had pointed out coming down upon him at full
speed, with his spear grasped firmly in his hands, and the iron point of it
aimed directly at Pyrrhus. Pyrrhus sprang immediately to meet his antagonist,
bringing his own spear into aim at the same time. The horses met, and were both
thrown down by the shock of the encounter. The friends of Pyrrhus rushed to
the spot. They found both horses had been thrust through by the spears, and
they both lay now upon the ground, dying. Some of the men drew Pyrrhus out from
under his horse and bore him off the field, while others stabbed and killed the
Roman where he lay.
Pyrrhus,
having escaped this terrible danger, determined now to be more upon his guard.
He supposed, in fact, that the Roman officers would be made furious by the
death of their comrade, and would make the most desperate efforts to avenge
him. He accordingly contrived to find an opportunity, in the midst of the
confusion of the battle, to put off the armor which made him so conspicuous,
by exchanging with one of his officers, named Meg- acles. Having thus
disguised 'himself, he returned to the battle. He brought up the foodsoldiers and the elephants; and, instead of employing
himself, as heretofore, in performing single feats of personal valor, he
devoted all his powers to directing the arrangements of the battle, encouraging
the men, and rallying them when they were for a time driven away from their
ground.
By
the exchange of armor which Pyrrhus thus made he probably saved his life; for
Meg- acles, wherever he appeared after he had assumed the dress of Pyrrhus,
found himself always surrounded by enemies, who pressed upon him incessantly
and everywhere in great numbers, and was finally killed. When he fell, the men
who slew him seized the glittering helmet and the resplendent cloak that he
wore, and bore them off in triumph into the Roman lines, as proof that Pyrrhus
was slain. The tidings, as it passed along from rank to rank of the army,
awakened a long and loud shout of acclamation and triumph, which greatly excited
and animated the Romans, while it awakened in the army of Pyrrhus a
correspondent emotion of discouragement and fear. In fact, for a short time it
was universally believed in both armies that threatened for a season to produce
the most fatal effects, Pyrrhus rode along the ranks with his head uncovered,
showing himself to his men, and shouting to them that he was yet alive.
At
length, after a long and very obstinate conflict, the Greeks gained the
victory. This result was due in the end, in a great measure, to the elephants
which Pyrrhus brought into the battle. The Roman horses, being wholly unused to
the sight of such huge beasts, were terrified beyond measure at the spectacle,
and fled in dismay whenever they saw the monsters coming. In fact, in some
cases, the riders lost all command of their horses, and the troop turned and
fled, bearing down and overwhelming the ranks of their friends behind them. In
the end the Romans were wholly driven from the field. They did not even return
to their camp, but, after recrossing the river in confusion, they fled in all
directions, abandoning the whole country to their conqueror. Pyrrhus then
advanced across the river and took possession of the Roman camp.
CHAPTER
VI.
NEGOTIATIONS.
The result of the battle on the
banks of the Siris, decisive and complete as the victory was on the part of
the Greeks, produced, of course, a very profound sensation at Rome. Instead,
however, of discouraging and disheartening the Roman senate and people, it
only aroused them to fresh energy and determination. The victory was
considered as wholly due to the extraordinary military energy and skill of
Pyrrhus, and not to any superiority of the Greek troops over those of the
Romans in courage, in discipline, or in efficiency in the field. In fact, it
was a saying at Rome at the time, that it was Laevinus that had been conquered by Pyrrhus in the batfic, and
not the Romans by the Greeks. The Roman government, accordingly, began immediately
to enlist new recruits, and to make preparations for a new campaign, more ample
and complete, and on a far greater scale than before.
Pyrrhus
was much surprised when he heard these things. He had supposed that the Romans
would have been disheartened by the defeat which they had sustained, and would
now think only of proposals and negotiations for peace. He seems to have been
but very imperfectly informed in respect to the condition of the Roman
commonwealth at this period, and to the degree of power to which it had attained.
He supposed that, after suffering so signal and decisive a defeat, the Romans
would regard themselves as conquered, and that nothing remained to them now but
to consider how they could make the best terms with their conqueror. The Roman
troops had, indeed, withdrawn from the neighborhood of the place where the
battle had Keen fought, and had left Pyrrhus to take possession of the ground
without' molestation. Pyrrhus was even allowed to advance some considerable
distance toward Rome; but he soon learned that, notwithstanding their temporary
reverses, his enemies had not the most remote intention of submitting to him,
but were making preparations to take the field again with a greater force than
ever.
Under
these circumstances, Pyrrhus was for a time somewhat at a loss what to do.
Should he follow up his victory, and advance boldly toward the capital, with a
view of overcoming the Roman power entirely, or should he be satisfied with
the advantage which he had already gained, and be content, for the present,
with being master of Western Italy? After much hesitation, he concluded on the
latter course. He accordingly suspended his hostile operations, and prepared
to send an embassador to Rome to propose peace. Cineas was, of course, the embassador commissioned to act on this occasion.
Cineas accordingly proceeded to
Rome. H® was accompanied by a train of attendants suitable to his rank as a
royal embassador, and he took with him a great number
of costly presents to be offered to the leading men in Rome, by way, as it
would seem, of facilitating his negotiations. The nature of the means which he
thus appears to have relied upon in his embassy to Rome may, perhaps, indicate
the secret of his success in the diplomatic duties which he had performed in
Greece and in Asia, where he had acquired so much distinction for his
dexterity in negotiating treaties favorable to the interests of his master.
However this may be, Cineas found that the policy
which he contemplated would not answer in Rome. Soon after his arrival in the city,
and in an early stage of the negotiations, he began to offer his presents to
the public men with whom he had to deal; but they refused to accept them. The
Roman senators to whom the gifts were offered returned them all, saying that,
in case a treaty should be concluded, and peace made between the two nations,
they should then have no objections to an interchange of such civilities; but,
while the negotiations were pending, they conceived it improper for them to
receive any such offerings. It may, perhaps, be taken as an additional proof
of the nature of the influences which Cineas was
accustomed to rely upon in his diplomatic undertakings, that he offered many of
his gifts on this occasion to the ladies of the Roman senators as well as to
the senators themselves; but the wives were found as incorruptible as the
husbands. The gifts were all alike returned.
Not
discouraged by the failure of this attempt, Cineas obtained permission of the Roman senate to appear before them, and to address
them on the subject of the views which Pyrrhus entertained in respect to the
basis of the peace which he proposed. On the appointed day Cineas went to the senate-chamber, and there made a long and very able and eloquent
address, in the presence of the senate and of the principal inhabitants of the
city. He was very much impressed on this occasion with the spectacle which the
august assembly presented to his view. He said afterward, in fact, that the
Roman senate seemed to him like a congress of kings, so dignified and imposing
was the appearance of the body, and so impressive was the air of calmness and
gravity which reigned in their deliberations. Cineas made a very able and effective speech. He explained the views and proposals of
Pyrrhus, presenting them in a light as favorable and attractive as possible.
Pyrrhus was willing, he said, to make peace on equal terms. He proposed that
he should give up all his prisoners without ransom, and that the Romans should
give up theirs. He would then form an alliance with the Romans, and aid them
in the future conquests that they meditated. All he asked was that he might
have the sanction of the Roman government to his retaining Tarentum and the
countries connected with and dependent upon it; and that, in maintaining his
dominion over these lands, he might look upon the Roman people as his allies
and friends.
After Cineas had concluded his speech and had withdrawn
from the senate-chamber, a debate arose among the senators on the propositions
which he had made to them. There was a difference of opinion; some were for
rejecting the proposals at once; others thought that they ought to be accepted.
Those who were inclined to peace urged the wisdom of acceding to Pyrrhus’s
proposals by representing the great danger of continuing the war. “ We have
already,” said they, “lost one great and decisive battle; and, in case of the
renewal of the struggle, we must expect to find our enemy still more formidable
than he was before; for many of the Italian nations of the eastern coast have
joined his standard since hearing of the victory which he has obtained, and
more are coming in. His strength, in fact, is growing greater and greater every
day; and it is better for us to make peace with him now, on the honorable terms
which he proposes to us, rather than to risk another battle, which may lead to
the most disastrous consequences.”
In
the midst of this discussion, an aged senator, who had been for a long time
incapacitated by his years and infirmities from appearing in his seat, was
seen coming to the assembly, supported and led by his sons and sons-in-law, who
were making way for him in the passages and conducting him in. His name was
Appius Claudius. He was blind and almost helpless through age and infirmnity. He had heard in his chamber of the irresolution
of the senate in respect to the further prosecution of the war with Pyrrhus,
and had caused himself to be taken from his bed and borne through the streets
by servants on a chair to the senate-house, that he might there once more raise
his voice to save, if possible, the honor and dignity of his country. As he
entered the chamber, he became at once the object of universal attention. As
soon as he reached his seat, a respectful silence began to prevail throughout
the assembly, all listening to hear what he had to say. He expressed himself
as follows:
“Senators
of Rome,—I am blind, and I have been accustomed to consider my blindness as a
calamity; but now I could wish that I had been deaf as well as blind, and then
I might never have heard of the disgrace which seems to impend over my country.
Where are now the boastings that we made when Alexander the Great commenced his
career, that if he had turned his arms toward Italy and Rome, instead of Persia
and the East, we would never have submitted to him; that he never would have
gained the renown of being invincible if he had only attacked us, but would, on
the other hand, if he invaded our dominions, only have contributed to the glory
of the Roman name by his flight or his fall? These boasts we made so loudly
that the echo of them spread throughout the world. And yet now, here is an
obscure adventurer who has landed on our shores as an enemy and an invader, and
because he has met with a partial and temporary success, you are debating
whether you shall not make an ignominious peace with him, and allow him to
remain. How vain and foolish does all our boastful defiance of Alexander
appear when we now tremble at the name of* Pyrrhus—a man who has been all his
life a follower and dependent of one of Alexander’s inferior generals—a man who
has scarcely been able to maintain himself in his own dominions—who could not
retain even a small and insignificant part of Macedon which he had conquered,
but was driven ignominiously from it; and who comes into Italy now rather as a
refugee than a conqueror—an adventurer who seeks power here because he can not sustain himself at home. I warn you not to expect
that you can gain any thing by making such a peace with him as he proposes.
Such a peace makes no atonement for the past, and it offers no security for
the future. On the contrary, it will open the door to other invaders, who will
come, encouraged by Pyrrhus’s success, and emboldened by the contempt which
they will feel for you in allowing yourselves to be thus braved and insulted
with impunity.”
The
effect of this speech on the senate was to produce a unanimous determination to
carry on the war. Cineas was accordingly dismissed
with this answer: that the Romans would listen to no propositions for peace
while Pyrrhus remained in Italy. If he would withdraw from the country
altogether, and retire to his own proper dominions, they would then listen to
any proposals that he might make for a treaty of alliance and amity. So long,
however, as he remained on Italian ground, they would make no terms with him
whatever, though he should gain a thousand victories, but would wage war upon
him to the last extremity.
Cineas returned to the camp of
Pyrrhus, bearing this reply. He communicated also to Pyrrhus a great deal of
information in respect to the government and the people of Rome, the extent of
the population, and the wealth and resources of the city; for while he had been
engaged in conducting his negotiations, he had made every exertion to obtain
intelligence on all these points, and he had been a very attentive and
sagacious observer of all that he had seen. The account which he gave was very
little calculated to encourage Pyrrhus in his future hopes and expectations.
The people of Rome, Cineas said, were far more
numerous than he had before supposed. They had now already on foot an army
twice as large as the one which Pyrrhus had defeated, and multitudes besides
were still left in the city, of a suitable age for enlisting, sufficient to
form even larger armies still. The prospect, in a word, was very far from such
as to promise Pyrrhus an easy victory.
Of
course, both parties began now to prepare vigorously for war. Before
hostilities were resumed, however, the Romans sent a messenger to the camp of
Pyrrhus to negotiate an exchange of prisoners. The name of this embassador was Fabricius. Fabricius, as Pyrrhus was informed by Cineas,
was very highly esteemed at Rome for his integrity and for his military
abilities, but he was without property, being dependent wholly on his pay as
an officer of the army. Pyrrhus received Fabricius in the most respectful manner, and treated him with every mark of consideration
and honor. He, moreover, offered him privately a large sum of money in gold. He
told Fabricius that, in asking his acceptance of
such a gift, he did not do it for any base purpose, but intended it only as a
token of friendship and hospitality. Fabricius, however,
refused to accept the present, and Pyrrhus pressed him no further.
The
next day Pyrrhus formed a plan for giving his guest a little surprise. He supposed
that he had never seen an elephant, and he accordingly directed that one of the
largest of these animals should be placed secretly behind a curtain, in an
apartment where Fabricius was to be received. The
elephant was covered with his armor, and splendidly caparisoned. After Fabricius had come in, and while he was sitting in the
apartment wholly unconscious of what was before him, all at once the curtain
was raised, and the elephant was suddenly brought to view; and, at the same
instant, the huge animal, raising his trunk, flourished it in a threatening
manner over Fabricius’s head, making at the same time
a frightful cry, such as he had been trained to utter for the purpose of
striking terror into the enemy, in charging upon them on the field of battle. Fabricius, instead of appearing terrified, or even
astonished at the spectacle, sat quietly in his seat, to all appearance
entirely unmoved, and, turning to Pyrrhus with an air of the utmost composure,
said coolly, “You see that you make no impression upon me, either by your gold
yesterday or by your beast today.”
Pyrrhus
was not at all displeased with this answer, blunt as it may seem. On the contrary,
he seems to have been very deeply impressed with a sense of the stern and
incorruptible virtue of Fabricius’s character, and he
felt a strong desire to obtain the services of such an officer in his own court
and army. He accordingly made new proposals to Fabricius,
urging him to use his influence to induce the Romans to make peace, and then
to go with him to Epirus, and enter into his service there.
“If
you will do so,” said Pyrrhus, “I will make you the chief of my generals, and
my own most intimate friend and companion, and you shall enjoy abundant honors
and rewards.”
“No,”
replied Fabricius, “I can not accept those offers, nor is it for your interest that I should accept them;
for, were I to go with you to Epirus, your people, as soon as they came to know
me well, would lose all their respect for you, and would wish to have me,
instead of you, for their king.”
We
are, perhaps, to understand this rejoinder, as well as the one which Fabricius made to Pyrrhus in respect to the elephant, as
intended in a somewhat jocose and playful sense; since, if we suppose them to
have been gravely and seriously uttered, they would indicate a spirit of vanity
and of empty boasting which would seem to be wholly inconsistent with what we
know of Fabricius’s character. However this may be,
Pyrrhus was pleased with both; and the more that he saw and learned of the Romans,
the more desirous he became of terminating the war and forming an alliance
with them. But the Romans firmly persisted in refusing to treat with him,
except on the condition of his withdrawing first entirely from Italy, and this
was a condition with which he deemed it impossible to comply. It would be
equivalent, in fact, to an acknowledgement that he had been entirely defeated.
Accordingly, both sides began again to prepare vigorously for war.
The
Romans marched southward from the city with a large army, under the command of
their two consuls. The names of the consuls at this time were Sulpicius Saverrio and Deems Mus. These generals advanced into
Apulia, a country on the western coast of Italy, north of Tarentum. Here they
encamp ed on a plain at the foot of the Apennines, near a place called Asculum.
There was a stream in front of their camp, and the mountains were behind it.
The stream was large and deep, and of course it greatly protected their
position. On hearing of the approach of the Romans, Pyrrhus himself took the
field at the head of all his forces, and advanced to meet them. He came to the
plain on which the Roman army was encamped, and posted himself on the opposite
bank of the stream. The armies were thus placed in close vicinity to each
other, being separated only by the stream. The question was, which should attempt
to cross the stream and make the attack upon the other. They remained in this
position for a considerable time, neither party venturing to attempt the
passage.
While
things were in this condition—the troops on each side waiting for an opportunity
of attacking their enemies, and probably without any fear whatever of the
physical dangers which they were to encounter in the conflict—the feeling of
composure and confidence among the men in Pyrrhus’s army was greatly disturbed
by a singular superstition. It was rumored in the army that Decius Mus, the
Roman commander, was endowed with a species of magical and supernatural power,
which would, under certain circumstances, be fatal to all who opposed him. And
though the Greeks seem to have had no fear of the material steel of the Roman
legions, this mysterious and divine virtue, which they imagined to reside in
the commander, struck them with an invincible terror.
The
story was, that the supernatural power in question originated in one of the
ancestors of the present Decius, a brave Roman general, who lived and
flourished in the century preceding the time of Pyrrhus. His name, too, was
Decius Mus. In the early part of his life, when he was a subordinate officer,
he was the means of saving the whole army from most imminent danger, by taking
possession of an eminence among the mountains, with the companies that were under
his command, and holding it against the enemy until the Roman troops could be
drawn out of a dangerous defile where they would otherwise have been
overwhelmed and destroyed. He was greatly honored for this exploit. The consul
who commanded on the occasion rewarded him with a golden crown, a hundred
oxen, and a magnificent white bull, with gilded horns. The common soldiers,
too, held a grand festival and celebration in honor of him, in which they
crowned him with a wreath made of dried grasses on the field, according to an
ancient custom ;vhich prevailed among the Romans of
rewarding in this way any man who should be the means of saving an army. Of
course, such an event as saving an army was of very rare occurrence; and,
accordingly, the crowning of a soldier by his comrades on the field was a very
distinguished honor, although the decoration itself was made of materials so
insignificant and worthless.
Decius
rose rapidly after this time from rank to rank, until at length he was chosen
consul. In the course of his consulship, he took the field with one of his
colleagues, whose name was Torquatus, at the head of
a large army, in the prosecution of a very important war in the interior of
the country. The time arrived at length for a decisive battle to be fought.
Both armies were drawn up on the field, the preparations were all made, and the
battle was to be fought on the following day. In the night, however, a vision
appeared to each consul, informing him that it had been decreed by fate that a
general on one side and the army on the other were to be destroyed on1 the following day; and* that, consequently, either of the consuls, by sacrificing
himself, might secure the destruction of the enemy. On the other hand, if they
were to take measures to save themselves, the general on the other side would
be killed, and on their side the army would be defeated and cut to pieces.
The
two consuls, on conferring together upon the following morning, immediately decided
that either one or the other of them should die, in order to secure victory to
the arms of their country; and the question at once arose, what method they
should adopt to determine which of them should be the sacrifice. At last it was
agreed that they would go into battle as usual, each in command of his own
wing of the army, and that the one whose wing should first begin to give way
should offer himself as the victim. The arrangements were made accordingly, and
the result proved that Decius was the one on whom the dire duty of
self-immolation was to devolve. The wing under his command began to give way.
He immediately resolved to fulfill his vow. He summoned the high priest. He
clothed himself in the garb of a victim about to be offered in sacrifice. Then,
with his military cloak wrapped about his head, and standing upon a spear that
had been previously laid down upon the ground, he repeated in the proper form
words by which he devoted himself and the army of the enemy to the God of
Death, and then finally mounted upon his horse and drove furiously in among the
thickest of the enemy. Of course he was at once thrust through with a hundred
spears and javelins; and immediately afterward the army of the enemy gave way
on all hands, and the Romans swept the field, completely victorius.
The
power which was in this instance supernaturally granted to Decius to secure the
victory to the Roman arms, by sacrificing his own life on the field of battle,
afterward descended, it was supposed, as an inheritance, from father to son.
Decius Mus, the commander opposed to Pyrrhus, was the grandson of his namesake
referred to above; and now it was rumored among the Greeks that he intended, as
soon as the armies came into action, to make the destruction of his enemies
sure by sacrificing himself, as his grandfather had done. The soldiers of Pyrrhus
were willing to meet any of the ordinary and natural chances and hazards of
war; but, where the awful and irresistible decrees of the spiritual world were
to be against them, it is not strange that they dreaded the encounter.
Under
these circumstances, Pyrrhus sent a party of messengers to the Roman camp to say
to Decius, that if in the approaching battle he attempted to resort to any such
arts of necromancy to secure the victory to the Roman side, he would find
himself wholly unsuccessful in the attempt; for the Greek soldiers had all
been instructed not to kill him if he should throw himself among them, but to
take him alive and bring him a prisoner to Pyrrhus’s camp; and that then, after
the battle was over, he should be subjected, they declared, to the most cruel
and ignominious punishments, as a magician and an impostor. Decius sent back
word, in reply, that Pyrrhus had no occasion to give himself any uneasiness in
respect to the course which the Roman general would pursue in the approaching
battle. The measure that he had referred to was one to which the Romans were
not accustomed to resort except in emergencies of the most extreme and
dangerous character, and Pyrrhus ought not to flatter himself with the idea
that the Romans regarded his invasion as of sufficient consequence to require
them to have recourse to any unusual means of defense. They were fully
convinced of their ability to meet and conquer him by ordinary modes of
warfare. To prove that they were honest in this opinion, they offered to waive
the advantage which the river afforded them as a means of defense, and allow
Pyrrhus to cross it without molestation, with a view to fighting the battle
afterward upon the open field; or they would themselves cross the river, and
fight the battle on Pyrrhus’s side of it— whichever Pyrrhus himself preferred.
They asked for no advantage, but were willing to meet their adversaries on equal
terms, and abide by the result.
Pyrrhus
could not with honor decline to accept this challenge. He decided to remain
where he was, and allow the Romans to cross the stream. This they accordingly
did; and when all the troops had effected the passage, they were drawn up in
battle array on the plain. Pyrrhus marshaled his forces also, and both parties
prepared for the contest.
The
Romans stood most in awe of the elephants, and they resorted to some peculiar
and extraordinary means of resisting them. They prepared a great number of
chariots, each of which was armed with a long pointed spear, projecting forward
in such a manner that when the chariots should be driven on toward the
elephants, these spears or beaks should pierce the bodies of the beasts and destroy
them. The chariots, too, were filled with men, who were all provided with firebrands,
which they were to throw at the elephants, and frighten them, as they came on.
These chariots were all carefully posted in front of that part of Pyrrhus’s
army where the elephants were stationed, and the charioteers were strictly
ordered not to move until they should see the elephants advancing.
The
battle, as might have been expected from the circumstances which preceded it,
and from the character of the combatants, was fought with the most furious and
persevering desperation. It continued through the whole day; and in the
various parts of the field, and during the different hours of the day, the
advantage was sometimes strongly on one side, and sometimes on the other, so
that it was wholly uncertain, for a long time, what the ultimate result would
be. The elephants succeeded in getting round the chariots which had been
posted to intercept them, and effected a great destruction of the Roman troops.
On the other hand, a detachment of the Roman army made their way to the camp of
Pyrrhus, and attacked it desperately. Pyrrhus withdrew a part of his forces to
protect his camp, and that turned the tide against him on the field. By means
of the most Herculean exertions, Pyrrhus rallied his men, and restored their
confidence; and then, for a time, the fortune of war seemed to incline in his
favor. In the course of the day Decius was killed, and the whole command of the
Roman army then devolved upon Sulpicius, his colleague. Pyrrhus himself was
seriously wounded. When, at last, the sun went down, and the approaching
darkness of the night prevented a continuance of the combat, both parties drew
off such as remained alive of their respective armies, leaving the field covered
with the dead and dying. One of Pyrrhus’s generals congratulated him on his
victory. “Yes,” said Pyrrhus; “another such victory, and I shall be undone.”
In
fact, after trying their strength against each other in this battle, neither
party seemed to be in haste to bring on another contest. They both drew away to
places of security, and began to send for re-enforcements, and to take measures
to strengthen themselves for future operations. They remained in this state of
inaction until at length the season passed away, and they then went into winterquarters, each watching the other, but postponing,
by common consent, all active hostilities until spring. In the spring they
took the field again, and the two armies approached each other once more. The
Roman army had now two new commanders, one of whom was the celebrated Fabricius, whom Pyrrhus had negotiated with on former
occasions. The two commanders were thus well acquainted with each other; and
though, as public men, they were enemies, in private and personally they were
very good friends.
Pyrrhus
had a physician in his service named Nicias. This man conceived the design of
offering to the Romans to poison his master on condition of receiving a
suitable reward. He accordingly wrote a letter to Fabricius making the proposal. Fabricius immediately
communicated the letter to his colleague, and they both concurred in the
decision to inform Pyrrhus himself of the offer which had been made them, and put
him on his guard against the domestic traitor. They accordingly sent him the
letter which they had received, accompanied by one from themselves, of the
following tenor:
“Caius Fabricius and Quintus Aemilius to King Pyrrhus, greeting:
“You
seem to be as unfortunate in the choice of your friends as you are in that of your
enemies. The letter which we send herewith will satisfy you that those around
you, on whom you rely, are wholly unworthy of your confidence. You are
betrayed; your very physician, the man who ought to be most faithful to you,
offers to poison you. We give you this information, not out of any particular
friendship for you, but because we do not wish to be suspected of conniving at
an assassination—a crime which we detest and abhor. Besides, we do not wish
to be deprived of the opportunity of showing the world that we are able to meet
and conquer you in open war.”
Pyrrhus
was very much struck with what he considered the extraordinary generosity of
his enemies. He immediately collected together all the prisoners that he had
taken from the Romans, and sent them home to the Roman camp, as a token of
acknowledgement and gratitude on his part for the high and honorable course of
action which his adversaries had adopted. They, however, Romanlike,
would not accept such a token without making a corresponding return, and they
accordingly sent home to Pyrrhus a body of Greek prisoners equal in number and
rank to those whom Pyrrhus had set free.
All
these things tended to increase the disinclination of Pyrrhus to press the
further prosecution of the war. He became more and more desirous every day to
make peace with the Romans, preferring very much that such a people should be
his allies rather than his enemies. They, however, firmly and pertinaciously
refused to treat with him on any terms, unless, as a preliminary step, he would
go back to his own dominions. This he thought he could not do with honor. He
was accordingly much perplexed, and began earnestly to wish that something
would occur to furnish him with a plausible pretext for retiring from Italy.
CHAPTER
VII.
THE
SICILIAN CAMPAIGN.
The fact has already been
mentioned that one of the wives whom Pyrrhus had married after the death of
Antigone, the Egyptian princess, was Lanassa, the
daughter of Agathocles, the King of Sicily. Agathocles was a tyrannical monster
of the worst description. His army was little better than an organized band of
robbers, at the head of which he went forth on marauding and plundering
expeditions among all the nations that were within his reach. He made these
predatory excursions sometimes into Italy, sometimes into the Carthaginian
territories on the African coast, and sometimes among the Islands of the
Mediterranean Sea. In these campaigns he met with a great variety of
adventures, and experienced every possible fate that the fortune of war could
bring. Sometimes he was triumphant over all who opposed him, and became
intoxicated with prosperity and success. At other times, through his insane and
reckless folly, he would involve himself in the most desperate difficulties,
and was frequently compelled to give up every thing,
and to fly alone in absolute destitution from the field of his attempted exploits
to save his life.
On
one such occasion, he abandoned an army in Africa, which he had taken there on
one of his predatory enterprises, and, flying secretly from the camp, he made
his escape with a small number of attendants, leaving the army to its fate. His
flight was so sudden on this occasion that he left bis two sons behind him in
the hands and at the mercy of the soldiers. The soldiers, as soon as they found
that Agathocles had gone and left them, were so enraged against him that they
put his sons to death on the spot, and then surrendered in a body to the enemy.
Agathocles, when the tidings of this transaction came to him in Sicily, was
enraged against the soldiers in his turn, and, in order to revenge himself upon
them, he immediately sought out from among the population of the country their
wives and children, their brothers and sisters, and all who were in any way
related to them. These innocent representatives of the absent offenders he
ordered to be seized and slain, and -their bodies to be cast into the sea
toward Africa as an expression of revengeful triumph and defiance. So great was
the slaughter on this occasion, that the waters of the sea were dyed with blood
to a great distance from ‘the shore.
Of
course, such cruelty as this could not be practiced without awakening, on the
part of those who suffered from it, a spirit of hatred and revenge. Plots and
conspiracies without number were formed against the tyrant's life, and in his
later years he lived in continual apprehension and distress. His fate,
however, was still more striking as .an illustration of the manner in which the
old age of ambitious and unprincipled men is often embittered by the
ingratitude and wickedness of their children. Agathocles had a grandson named Archagathus, who, if all the accounts are true, brought the
old king's gray hairs in sorrow to the grave. The story is too shocking to be
fully believed, but it is said that this grandson first murdered Agathocles’s
son and heir, his own uncle, in order that he might himself succeed to the
throne—his own father, who would have been the next heir, being dead. Then, not
being willing to wait until the old king himself should die, he ’began to form
plots against his life, and against the lives of the remaining members of the
family. Although several of Agathocles’s sons were dead, having been destroyed
by violence, or having fallen in war, he had a wife, named Texina,
and two children still remaining alive. The king was so anxious in respect to
these children, on account of Archagathus, that he
determined to send them with their mother to Egypt, in order to place them
beyond the reach of their merciless nephew. Texina was very unwilling to consent to such a measure,. For herself and her sons the
proposed retiring into Egypt was little better than going into exile, and she
was, moreover, extremely reluctant to leave her husband alone in Syracuse,
exposed to the machinations and plots which his unnatural grandson might form
against him. She, however, finally submitted to the hard necessity and went
away, bidding her husband farewell with many tears. Very soon after ’her
departure her husband died.
The
story that is told of the manner of his death is this: There was in his court a
man named Maenon, whom Agathocles had taken captive
when a youth, and ever since retained in his court. Though originally a
captive, taken in war, Maenon had been made a favorite
with Agathocles, and had 'been raised to a high position in his service. The
indulgence, however, and the favoritism with which he had been regarded, were
not such as to awaken any sentiments of gratitude in Maenon’s mind, or to establish any true and faithful friendship between him and his
master; and Archagathus, the grandson, found means of
inducing 'him to undertake to poison the king. As all the ordinary modes of
administering poison were precluded by the vigilance and strictness with which
the usual avenues of approach to the king were guarded, Maenon contrived to accomplish his end by poisoning a quill which the king was
subsequently to use as a tooth-pick. The poison was insinuated thus into the
teeth and gums of the victim, where it soon took effect, producing dreadful
ulceration and intolerable pain. The infection of the venom after a short time
pervaded the whole system of the sufferer, and brought him to the brink of the
grave; and at last, finding that he was speechless, and apparently insensible,
'his ruthless murderers, fearing, perhaps, that he might revive again, hurried
him to the funeral pile before life was extinct, and the fire finished the work
that the poison had begun.
The
declaration of Scripture, “They that take the sword shall perish by the sword,”
is illustrated and confirmed by the history of almost every ancient tyrant. We
find that .they almost all come at last to some terrible end. The man who
usurps a throne by violence seems, in all ages and among all nations, very sure
to be expelled from it by greater violence, after a brief period of power; and
he who poisons or assassinates a precedent rival when he wishes to supplant,
is almost invariably cut off by the poison or the dagger of a following one,
who wishes to supplant him.
The
death of Agathocles took place about nine years before the campaign of Pyrrhus
in Italy, as described in the last chapter, and during that period the kingdom
of Sicily had been in a very distracted state. Maenon,
immediately after the poisoning of the king, fled to the camp of Archagathus, who was at that time in command of an army at
a distance from the city. Here, in a short time, he contrived to assassinate Archagathus, and to seize the supreme power. It was not
long, however, before new claimants and competitors for possession of the
throne appeared, and new wars broke out, in the course of which Maenon was deposed. At length, in the midst of the contests
and commotions that prevailed two of the leading generals of the Sicilian army
conceived the idea of bringing forward Pyrrhus’s son by Lanassa as the heir to the crown. This prince was, of course, the grandson of the old
King Agathocles, and, as there was no other descendant of the royal line at
hand who could be made the representative of the ancient monarchy, it was
thought, by the generals above referred to, that the only measure which afforded
any hope of restoring peace to the country was to send an embassy to Pyrrhus,
and invite him to come and place his young son upon the throne. The name of Lanassa’s son was Alexander. He was a boy, perhaps at this
time about twelve years old.
At
'the same time that Pyrrhus received the invitation to go to Sicily, a message
came to him from certain parties in Greece, informing him that, on account of
some revolutions which had taken place there, a very favorable opportunity was
afforded him to secure for himself the throne of that country, and urging him
to come and make the attempt. Pyrrhus was for some time quite undecided which
of these two proposals to accept. The prize offered him in Greece was more
tempting, but the expedition into Sicily seemed to promise more certain success.
While revolving the question in his mind which conquest he should first
undertake, he complained of the tantalizing cruelty of for tune, in offering
him two such tempting prizes at the same time, so as to compel him to forego
either the one or the other. At length he decided to go first to Sicily.
It
was said that one reason which influenced his mind very strongly in making this
decision was the fact that Sicily was so near the coast of Africa; and the
Sicilians being involved in wars with the Carthaginians, he thought that, if
successful in his operations in Sicily, the way would be open for him to make
an expedition into Africa, in which case he did- not doubt 'but that he should
be able soon to overturn the Carthaginian power, and add all the northern
coasts of Africa to his dominions. His empire would thus embrace Epirus, the
whole southern part of Italy, Sicily, and the coasts of Africa. He could
afterward, he thought, easily add Greece, and then his dominions would include
all the wealthy and populous countries surrounding the most important part of
the Mediterranean Sea. His government would thus become a naval power of the
first class, and any further extension of his sway which he might subsequently
desire could easily be accomplished.
In
a word, Pyrrhus decided first to proceed to Sicily, and to postpone for a brief
period his designs on Greece.
He
accordingly proceeded to withdraw his troops from the interior of the country
in Italy, and concentrate them in and around Tarentum. He began to make naval
preparations, too, on a very extensive scale. The port of Tarentum soon
presented a very busy scene. The work of building and repairing ships—of
fabricating sails and rigging—of constructing and arming galleys—of
disciplining and training crews— of laying in stores of food and of implements
of war, went on with great activity, and engaged universal attention. The
Tarentines themselves stood by, while all these preparations were going on,
rather as spectators of the scene than as active participants. Pyrrhus had
taken the absolute command of their city and government, and was exercising
supreme power, as if he were the acknowledged sovereign of the country. He had
been invited to come over from his own kingdom to help the Tarentines, not to
govern them; but he had seized the sovereign power, justifying the seizure, as
is usual with military men under similar circumstances, by the necessity of the
case. “There must be order and submission to authority in the city,” he said,
“or we can make no progress in subduing our enemies.” The Tarentines 'had thus
been induced to submit to his assumption of power, convinced, perhaps, partly
by his reasoning, and, at all events, silenced by the display of force by which
it was accompanied; and they had consoled themselves under a condition of
things which they could not prevent, by considering that it was better to yield
to a temporary foreign domination, than to be Wholly overwhelmed, as-there
was every probability, before Pyrrhus came to them, that they would be, by
their domestic foes.
When,
however, they found 'that Pyrrhus intended to withdraw from them, and to go to
Sicily, without having really effected their deliverance from the danger which
threatened them, they at first remonstrated against the design. They wished
him to remain and finish the work which he had begun. The Romans had been
checked, but they had not been subdued. Pyrrhus ought not, ’they said, to go
away and leave them until their independence and freedom had been fully established.
They remonstrated with him against his design, but their remonstrances proved
wholly unavailing.
When
at length the Tarentines found that Pyrrhus was determined to go to Sicily,
they then desired that he should withdraw his troops from their country
'altogether, and leave them to themselves. This, however, Pyrrhus refused to
do. He had no intention of relinquishing the power which he had acquired in
Italy, and he accordingly began to make preparations for leaving a strong
garrison in Tarentum to maintain his government there. He organized a sort of
regency in the city, and set apart a sufficient force from his army to maintain
it in power during his absence. When this was done, he began to make
preparations for transporting the rest of his force to Sicily by sea.
He
determined to send Cineas forward first, according to
his usual custom, to make the preliminary arrangements in Sicily. Cineas consequently left Tarentum with a small squadron of
ships and galleys, and, after a short voyage, arrived safely at Syracuse. He
found the leading powers in that city ready to welcome Pyrrhus as soon as he
should arrive, and make the young Alexander king. Cineas completed and closed the arrangements for this purpose, and then sent messengers
to various other cities on the northern side of the island, making known to them
the design which had been formed of raising an heir of King Agathocles to the
throne, and asking 'their co-operation in it. He managed these negotiations
with so much prudence and skill, that nearly all that part of the island which
was in the ’hands of the Sicilians readily acceded to the plan, and the people
were every whore prepared to welcome Pyrrhus and the young prince as soon as
they should arrive.
Sicily,
as will be seen by referring to the map, is of a triangular form. It was only
the southern portion which was at this time in the hands of the-Sicilians.
There were two foreign and hostile powers in possession, respectively, of the
northeastern and northwestern portions. In the northeastern corner of the
island was the city of Messana—the Messina of modern
days. In the time of Pyrrhus’s expedition, Messana was the seat and stronghold of a warlike nation, called the Mamertines, who had
come over from Italy across the Straits of Messana some years before, and, having made themselves masters of that portion of the
island, had since held their ground there, notwithstanding all the efforts of
the Sicilians to expel them. The Mamertines had originally come into Sicily, it
was said, as Pyrrhus had gone into Italy—by invitation. Agathocles sent for
them to come and aid him in some of his wars. After the object for which they
had been sent for had been accomplished, Aga- k thocles dismissed his auxiliaries, and they set out on their return. They proceeded
through the northeastern part of the island to Messana,
where they were to embark for Italy. Though they had rendered Agathocles very
efficient aid in his campaigns, they had also occasioned him an infinite deal
of trouble by their turbulent' and ungovernable spirit; and now, as they were
withdrawing from the island, the inhabitants of the country through which they
passed on the way regarded them every where with terror
and dread. The people of Messana, anxious to avoid a
quarrel with them, and disposed to facilitate their peaceable departure from
the land by every means in their power, received them into the city, and
hospitably entertained them there. Instead, however, of quietly withdrawing
from the city in proper time, as the Messanians had
expected them to do, they rose suddenly and unexpectedly upon the people, at a
concerted signal, took possession of the city, massacred without mercy all the
men, seized the women and children, and then, each one establishing himself in
the household that choice or chance assigned him, married the wife and adopted
the children whose husband and father he had murdered.
The
result was the most complete and extraordinary overturning that the ‘history
of the world can afford. It was a political, a social, and a domestic
revolution all in one.
This
event took place many years before the time of Pyrrhus’s expedition; and though
during the interval the Sicilians had made many efforts to dispossess the
intruders and to recover possession of Messana, they
had not been able to accomplish the work. The Mamer-tines
maintained their ground in Messana, and from that
city, as their fortress and stronghold, they extended their power -over a
considerable portion of the surrounding country.
This
territory of the Mamertines was in the northeastern part of the Island. In the
northwestern part, on the other hand, there was a large province in the hands
of the Carthaginians. Their chief city was Eryx;
though there was another important city and port, called Lilybaeum, which was
situated to the southward of Eryx, on the sea-shore.
Here the Carthaginians were accustomed to land their reenforcements and stores; and by means of the ready and direct communication which they could
thus keep up with Carthage itself, they were enabled to resist all the efforts
which the Sicilians had made to dispossess them.
There
were thus three objects to be accomplished by Pyrrhus in Sicily before his
dominion over the island could be complete—namely, the Sicilians themselves,
in the southern and central parts of the island, were to be conciliated and
combined, and induced to give up their intestine quarrels, and to acknowledge
the young Alexander as the king of the island; and then the Mamertines on the
northeast part, and the Carthaginians in the northwest, were to be conquered
and expelled.
The
work was done, so far as related to the Sicilians themselves, mainly by Cineas. His dexterous negotiations healed, in a great measure,
the quarrels which prevailed among the people, and prepared the way for
welcoming Pyrrhus and the young prince, as soon as they should appear. In
respect to the Carthaginians and the Mamertines, nothing, of course, could be
attempted until the fleets and armies should arrive.
At
length the preparations for the sailing of the expedition from Tarentum were
completed. The fleet consisted of two hundred sail. The immense squadron,
every vessel of which was crowded with armed men, left the harbor of Tarentum,
watched by a hundred thousand spectators who had assembled to witness its
departure, and slowly made its way along the Italian shores, while its arrival
at Syracuse was the object of universal expectation and interest in that city.
When at length the fleet appeared in view, entering its port of destination,
the whole population of the city and of the surrounding country flocked to the
shores to witness the spectacle. Through the efforts which had been made by Cineas, and in consequence of the measures Which he had
adopted, all ranks and classes of men were ready to welcome Pyrrhus as an
expected deliverer. In the name of the young prince, his son, he was to
re-establish the ancient mon archy,
restore peace and harmony to the land, and expel the hated foreign enemies that
infested the confines of it. Accordingly, when the fleet arrived, and Pyrrhus
and his troops landed from it, they were received by the whole population with
loud and tumultuous acclamations.
After
the festivities and rejoicings which were instituted to celebrate Pyrrhus’s
arrival were concluded, the young Alexander was proclaimed king, and a
government was instituted in his name—Pyrrhus himself, of course, being
invested with all actual power. Pyrrhus then took the field; and, on mustering
h:s forces, he found himself at the head of thirty or forty thousand
men. He first proceeded to attack the Carthaginians. He marched to the part of
the island which they held, and gave them battle in the most vigorous and
determined manner. They retreated to their cities, and shut themselves up
closely within the walls. Pyrrhus advanced to attack them. He determined to
carry Eryx, which was the strongest of the
Carthaginian cities, by storm, instead of waiting for the slow operations of
an ordinary siege. The troops were accordingly ordered to advance at once to
the walls, and there mounting, by means of innumerable ladders, to the parapets
above, they were to force their way in, over the defenses of the city, in spite
of all opposition. Of course, such a service as this is, of all the duties ever
required of the soldier, the most dangerous possible. The towers and parapets
above, which the assailants undertake to scale, are covered with armed men, who
throng to the part of the wall against which 'the attack is to be directed, and
stand there ready with spears, javelins, rocks, and every other conceivable
missile, to hurl upon the heads of the besiegers coming up the ladders.
Pyrrhus,
however, whatever may have been his faults in other respects, seems to have
been very little inclined at any time to order his soldiers to encounter any
danger which he was not willing himself to share. He took the head of the
column in the storming of Eryx, and was the first to
mount the ladders. Previous, however, to advancing for the attack, he performed
a grand religious ceremony, in which he implored thle assistance of the god Hercules in the encounter which was about to take place;
and made a solemn vow that if Hercules would assist him in the conflict, so as
to enable him to display before the Sicilians such strength and valor, and to
perform such feats as should be worthy of his name, his ancestry, and his past
history, he would, immediately after the battle, institute on the spot a course
of festivals and sacrifices of the most imposing and magnificent character in
honor of the god. This vow being made, the trumpet sounded and the storming
party went forward—Pyrrhus at the head of it. In mounting the ladder, he
defended himself with his shield from the missiles thrown down upon him from
above until he reached the top of the wall, and there, by means of his
prodigious strength, and desperate and reckless bravery, he soon gained ground
for those that followed him, and established a position there both for himself
and for them, having cut down one after another of those who attempted to
oppose him, until he had surrounded himself with a sort of parapet, formed of
the bodies of the dead.
In
the meantime, the whole line of ladders extending along the wall were crowded
with men, all forcing their way upward against the resistance which the
besieged opposed to them from above; while thousands of troops, drawn up below
as near as possible to the scene of conflict, were throwing a shower of darts,
arrows, javelins, spears, and other missiles, to aid the storming party by
driving away the besieged from the top of the wall. By these means those who
were mounting the ladders were so much aided in their efforts that they soon
succeeded in gaining possession of the wall, and thus made themselves masters
of the city.
Pyrrhus
then, in fulfillment of his vow, instituted a great celebration, and devoted
several days to games, spectacles, shows, and public rejoicings of all kinds,
intended to express his devout gratitude to Hercules for the divine assistance
Which the god had vouchsafed to him in the assault by which the city had been
carried.
By
the result of this battle, and of some other military operations which we can not here particularly describe, the Carthaginians were
driven from the open field and compelled to shut themselves up in their
strongholds, or retire to the fastnesses of the mountains, where they found
places of refuge and defense from Which Pyrrhus could not at once dislodge
them. Accordingly, leaving things at present as they were in the Carthaginian
or western part of the island, he proceeded to attack the Mamertines in the
eastern part. He was equally successful here. By means of the tact and skill
which he exercised in his military arrangements and maneuvers, and by the
desperate bravery and impetuosity which he displayed in battle, he conquered
wherever he came. He captured and destroyed many of the strongholds of the
Mamertines, drove them entirely out of the open country, and shut them up in Messana. Thus the island was almost wholly restored to the
possession of the Sicilians, while yet the foreign intruders, though checked
and restrained, were not, after all, really expelled.
The
Carthaginians sent messengers to him proposing terms of peace. Their intention
was, in these proposals, to retain their province in Sicily, as heretofore, and
to agree with Pyrrhus Jn respect to a boundary, each party being required by
the proposed treaty to confine themselves within their respective limits, as
thus ascertained. Pyrrhus, however, replied that he could entertain no such
proposals. He answered them precisely as the Romans had answered him on a
similar occasion, saying that he should insist upon their first retiring from
Sicily altogether, as a preliminary step to any negotiations whatever. The
Carthaginians would not accede to this demand, and so the negotiations were
suspended.
Still
the Carthaginians were so securely posted in their strongholds, that Pyrrhus
supposed the work of dislodging them by force would 'be a slow, and tedious,
and perhaps doubtful undertaking. His bold and restless spirit accordingly
conceived the design of leaving them as they were, and going on in the
prosecution of his original design, by organizing a grand expedition for the
invasion of Africa. In fact, he thought this would be the most effectual means
of getting the Carthaginians out of Sicily; since he anticipated that, if hie
were to land in Africa, and threaten Carthage itself, the authorities there
would be compelled to recall all their forces from foreign lands to defend
their own homes and firesides at the capital. He determined, therefore, to. equip his fleet for a voyage across the Mediterranean
without any delay.
He
had ships enough, but he was in want of mariners. In order to supply this want,
he began to impress the Sicilians into his service. They were very reluctant to
engage in it, partly from natural aversion to so distant and dangerous an
enterprise, and partly because they were unwilling that Pyrrhus should leave
the island himself until their foreign foes were entirely expelled. “As soon
as you have gone,” they said, “the Carthaginians and the Marnertines will come out from their hiding-places and retreats, and the country will be
immediately involved in all the difficulties from which you have been
endeavoring to deliver us. All your labor will have been lost, and we shall
sink, perhaps, into a more deplorable condition than ever.”
It
was evident that these representations were true, but Pyrrhus could not be induced
to pay any heed to them. He was determined on carrying into effect his design
of a descent upon the coast of Africa. He accordingly pressed forward his
preparations in a more arbitrary and reckless spirit than ever. He became
austere, imperious, and tyrannical in his measures. He arrested some of the
leading generals and ministers of state—men who had been his firmest friends,
and through whose agency it was that he had been invited into Sicily, but whom
he now suspected of being unfriendly to his designs. One of these men he put to
death. In the mean time, he pressed forward his
preparations, compelling men to join his army and to embark on board his fleet,
and resorting to other harsh and extreme measures, which the people might
perhaps have submitted to from one of their own hereditary sovereigns, but
which were altogether intolerable when imposed upon them by a foreign
adventurer, who came to their island by their invitation, to accomplish a
prescribed and definite duty. In a word, before Pyrrhus was ready to embark on
his African campaign, a general rebellion broke out all over Sicily against his
authority. Some of the people joined the Mamertines, some the Carthaginians.
In a word, the whole country was in an uproar, and Pyrrhus had the
mortification of seeing the great fabric of power which, as he imagined, he bad
been so successfully rearing, come tumbling suddenly on all sides to the
ground.
As
the reader will have learned long before this time, it was not the nature of
Pyrrhus to remain on the spot and grapple with difficulties like these. If
there were any new enterprise to be undertaken, or any desperate battle to be
fought on a sudden emergency, Pyrrhus was always ready and eager for action,
and almost sure of success. But he had no qualities whatever to fit him for the
exigencies of such a crisis as this. He had ardor and impetuosity, but no perseverance
or decision. He could fight, but he could not plan. He was recklessly and
desperately brave in encountering physical danger, but, when involved in
difficulties and embarrassments, his only resource was to fly. Accordingly, it
was soon announced in Sicily that Pyrrhus had determined to postpone his plan
of proceeding to Africa, and was going back to Tarentum, whence he came. He had
received intelligence from Tarentum, he said, that required his immediate
return to that city. This was probably true; for he had left things in such a
condition at Tarentum, that he was, doubtless, continually receiving such
intelligence from that quarter. Whether he received any special or
extraordinary summons from Tarentum just at this time is extremely uncertain.
He, however, pretended that such a message had come; and under this pretence he sheltered himself in his intended departure, so
as just to escape the imputation of being actually driven away.
His
enemies, however, did not intend to allow him to depart in peace. The
Carthaginians, being apprised of his design, sent a fleet to watch the coast
and intercept him; while the Mamertines, crossing the Strait, marched to the
place on the coast of Italy where they expected he would land, intending to
attack him as soon as he should set foot upon the shore. Both these plans were
successful. The Carthaginians attacked his fleet, and destroyed many of ‘his
ships. Pyrrhus himself barely succeeded in making his escape with a small
number of vessel's, and reaching the shore. Here, as soon as he gained the
land, he was confronted by the Mamertines, who had reached the place before him
with ten thousand men. Pyrrhus soon collected from the ships that reached the
land a force so formidable that the Mamertines did not dare to attack him in a
body, but they blocked up the passes through which the way to Tarentum lay, and
endeavored in every way to intercept and harass him in his march. They killed
two of his elephants, and cut off many separate detachments of men, and
finally deranged all his plans, and threw his whole army into confusion.
Pyrrhus at length determined to force his enemies to battle. Accordingly, as
soon as a favorable opportunity occurred, he pushed forward at the head of a
strong force, and attacked the Mamertines in a sudden and most impetuous
manner.
A
terrible conflict ensued, in which Pyrrhus, as usual, exposed himself
personally in the most desperate manner. In fact, the various disappointments
and vexations which he had endured had aroused him to a state of great exasperation
against his tormenting enemies. He pushed forward into the hottest part of the
battle, his prodigious muscular strength enabling him to beat down and
destroy, for a time, all who attempted to oppose him.
At
last, however, he received a terrible wound in the head, which, for a moment,
entirely disabled him. He was rescued from his peril by his friends, though
stunned and fainting under the blow and was borne off from the scene of
conflict with the blood flowing down his face and neck—a frightful spectacle.
On being carried to a place of safety within his own ranks, he soon revived,
and it was found that he was not dangerously hurt. The enemy, however, full of
rage and hatred, came up as near as they dared to the spot where Pyrrhus had
been carried, and stood there, calling out to him to come back if he was still
alive, and vociferations of challenge and defiance. Pyrrhus endured this
mockery for a few moments as well as he could, but was finally goaded by it
into a perfect phrensy of rage. He seized his weapons, pushed his friends and
attendants aside, and, in spite of all their remonstrances and all their
efforts to restrain him, he rushed forth and assailed his enemies with greater
fury than ever. Breathless as he was from his former efforts, and covered with blood
and gore, he exhibited a shocking spectacle to all who beheld him. The
champion of the Mamertines—the one who had been foremost in challenging
Pyrrhus to return—came up to meet him with his weapon upraised. Pyrrhus parried
the blow, and then, suddenly bringing down his own sword upon the top of his
antagonist’s head, he cut the man down, as the story is told, from head to
foot, making so complete a division, that one half of the body fell over to one
side, and the other half to the other.
It
is difficult, perhaps, to assign limits to the degree of physical strength
which the human arm is capable of exerting. This fact, however, of cleaving
the body of a man by a blow from a sword, was regarded in ancient times as just
on the line of absolute impossibility, and was considered, consequently, as the
highest personal exploit which a soldier could perform. It was attributed, at
different times, to several different warriors, though it is not believed in
modern days that the feat was ever really performed.
But,
whatever may have been the fate of the Mamertine champion under Pyrrhus’s
sword, the army itself met with such a discomfiture in the battle that they
gave Pyrrhus no further trouble, but, retiring from t)he field, left him to
pursue his march to Tarentum for the remainder of the way in peace. He arrived
there at last, with a force in numbers about equal to that with which he had
left Tarentum for Sicily. The whole object, however, of his expedition had totally
failed. The enterprise, in fact, like almost all the undertakings which Pyrrhus
engaged in, though brilliantly and triumphantly successful in the beginning,
came only to disappointment and disaster in the end.
CHAPTER
VIII.
THE
RETREAT FROM ITALY.
The force with which Pyrrhus
returned to Tarentum was very nearly as large as that which he had taken away,
but was composed of very different materials. The Greeks from Epirus, whom he
had brought over with him in the first instance from his native land, had
gradually disappeared from the ranks of his army. Many of them had been killed
in battle, and still greater numbers had been carried off by exposure and
fatigue, and by the thousand other casualties incident to such a service as
that in which they were engaged. Their places had been supplied, from time to
time, by new enlistments, or by impressment and conscription. Of course, these
new recruits were not bound to their commander by any ties of attachment or
regard. They were mostly mercenaries—that is, men hired to fight, and willing
to fight, in any cause or for any commander, provided they could be paid. In a
word, Pyrrhus’s fellow-countrymen of Epirus had disappeared, and the ranks of
his army were filled with unprincipled and destitute wretches, who felt no
interest in his cause—no pride in his success—no concern for his honor. They
adhered to him only for the sake of the pay and the indulgences of a soldier’s
life, and for their occasional hopes of plunder.
Besides
the condition of his army, Pyrrhus found the situation of his affairs in other
respects very critical on his arrival at Tarentum. The Romans had made great
progress, during his absence, in subjugating the whole country to their sway.
Cities and towns, which had been under his dominion when he went to Sicily,
had been taken by the Romans, or had gone over to them of their own accord. The
government which he had established at Tarentum was thus curtailed of power,
and shut in in respect to territory; and he felt himself compelled
immediately to take the field, in order to recover his lost ground.
He
adopted vigorous measures immediately to re-enforce his army, and to obtain the
necessary supplies. His treasury was exhausted; in order to replenish it, he
dispatched embassadors to his various allies to
borrow money. He knew, of course, that a large portion of his army would
abandon him immediately so soon as they should find that he was unable to pay
them. He was, therefore, quite uneasy for a time in respect to the state of his
finances, and he instructed his embassadors to press
the urgency of his wants upon his allies in a very earnest manner.
He
did not, however, wait for the result of these measures, but immediately
commenced active operations in the field. One of his first exploits was the
recapture of Locri, a city situated on the southern
shore of Italy, as will be seen by the map. This city had been in his
possession before he went to Sicily, but it had gone over to the Romans during
his absence. Locri was a very considerable town and
the recovery of it from the Romans was considered quite an important gain. The
place derived its consequence, in some considerable degree, from a celebrated
temple which stood there. It was the temple of Proserpina, the Goddess of
Death. This temple was magnificent in its structure, and it was enriched with
very costly and valuable treasures. It not only gave distinction to the town
in which it stood, but, on account of an extraordinary train of circumstances
which occurred in connection with it, it became the occasion of one of the most
important incidents in Pyrrhus’s history.
Proserpina,
as has already been intimated was the Goddess of Death. It is very difficult
for us at the present day to understand and appreciate the conceptions which
the Greeks and Romans, in ancient times, entertained of the supernatural beings
which they worshiped —those strange creations, in which we see historic truth,
poetic fancy, and a sublime superstition so singularly blended. To aid us in
rightly understanding this subject, we must remember that in those days the
boundaries of what was known as actual reality were very uncertain and vague.
Only a very small portion, either of the visible world or of the domain of
science and philosophy, had then been explored; and in the thoughts and
conceptions of every man, the natural and the true passed by insensible
gradations, on every hand, into the monstrous and the supernatural, there being
no principles of any kind established in men’s minds to mark the boundaries
where the true and the possible must end, and all beyond be impossible and
absurd. The knowledge, therefore, that men derived from the observation of
such truths and such objects as were immediately around them, passed by
insensible gradations into the regions of fancy and romance, and all was
believed together. They saw lions and elephants in the 'lands which were near,
and which they knew; and they believed in the centaurs, the mermaids, the
hippogriffs, and the dragons, which they imagined inhabiting regions more
remote. They saw heroes and chieftains in the plains and in the valleys below;
and they had no reason to disbelieve in the existence of gods and demi-god’s
upon the summits of the blue and beautiful mountains above, where, for aught
they knew, there might lie boundless territories of verdure and loveliness,
wholly inaccessible to man. In the same manner, beneath the earth somewhere,
they knew not where, there lay, as they imagined, extended region's destined
to receive the spirits of the dead, with approaches leading to it, through
mysterious grottoes and caverns, from above. Proserpina was the Goddess of
Death, and the queen of these lower abodes.
Various
stories were told of her origin and history. The one most characteristic and
most minutely detailed is this:
She
was the daughter of Jupiter and Ceres. She was very beautiful; and, in order to
protect her from the importunity of lovers, her mother sent her, under ‘the
care of an attendant named Calligena, to a cavern in
Sicily, and concealed her there. The mouth of the cavern was guarded by
dragons. Pluto, who was the god of the inferior regions, asked her of Jupiter,
her father, for his wife. Jupiter consented, and sent Venus to entice her out
of her cavern, that Pluto might obtain her. Venus, attended by Minerva and
Diana, proceeded to the cavern where Proserpina was concealed. The three
goddesses contrived some means to keep the dragons that guarded the cavern
away, and then easily persuaded the maiden to come out to take a walk.
Proserpina was charmed with the verdure and beauty which she found around her
on the surface of the ground, strongly contrasted as they were with the gloom and
desolation of her cavern. She was attended by nymphs and zephyrs in her walk,
and in their company she rambled along, admiring the beauty and enjoying the
fragrance of the flowers. Some of the flowers which most attracted her
attention were produced on the spot by the miraculous power of Jupiter, who
caused them to spring up in wonderful luxuriance and splendor, the more
effectually to charm the senses of the maiden whom they were enticing away. At
length, suddenly the earth opened, and Pluto appeared, coming up from below in
a golden chariot drawn by immortal steeds, and, seizing Proserpina, he carried
her down to his own abodes.
Ceres,
the mother of Proserpina, was greatly distressed when she learned the fate of
her daughter. She immediately went to Jupiter, and implored him to restore
Proserpina to the upper world. Jupiter, on the other hand, urged Ceres to
consent to her remaining as the wife of Pluto. The mother, however, would not
yield, and finally her tears and entreaties so far prevailed over Jupiter as to
induce him to give permission to Ceres to bring Proserpina back, provided that
she had not tasted of any food that grew in the regions below. Ceres accordingly
went in search of her daughter. She found, unfortunately, that Proserpina, in
walking through the Elysian fields with Pluto, had incautiously eaten a
pomegranate which she had taken from a tree that was growing there. She was
consequently precluded from availing herself of Jupiter’s permission to return
to Olympus. Finally, however, Jupiter consented that she should divide her time
between the inferior and the superior regions, spending six months with Pluto
below, and six months with her mother above; and she did so.
Proserpina
was looked upon by all mankind with feelings of great veneration and awe as
the goddess and queen of death, and she was worshiped in many places with solemn
and imposing ceremonies. There was, moreover, in the minds of men, a certain
mystical significancy in the mode of life which she ^led, in thus dividing her
time by regular alternations 'between the lower and upper worlds, that seemed
to them to denote and typify the principle of vegetation, which may be regarded
as, in a certain sense, alternately a principle of life and death, inasmuch as,
for six months in the year, it appears in the form of living and growing
plants, rising above the ground, and covering the earth with verdure and
beauty, and then, for the six months that remain, it withdraws from the view,
and exists only in the form of inert and apparently lifeless roots and seeds,
concealed in hidden recesses beneath the ground. Proserpina was thus considered
the type and emblem of vegetation, and she was accordingly worshiped, in some
sense, as the goddess of resuscitation and life, as well as of death and the
grave.
One
of the principal temples which had been built in honor of Proserpina was situated,
as has already been said, at Locri, and ceremonials
and festivals were celebrated here, at stated intervals, with great pomp and parade.
This temple had become very wealthy, too, immense treasures having been
collected in it, consisting of gold and silver vessels, precious stones, and
rich and splendid paraphernalia of every kind—the gifts and offerings which
had been made, from time to time, by princes and kings who had attended the
festivals.
When
Pyrrhus had reconquered Locri from the Romans, and
this temple, with all its treasures, fell into his power, some of his advisers
suggested that, since he was in such urgent need of money, and all his other
plans for supplying himself had hitherto failed, he should take possession of
these treasures. They might, it was argued, be considered, in some sense, as
public property; and, as the Locrians had revolted from him in his absence,
and had now been conquered anew, he was entitled to regard these riches as the
spoils of victory. Pyrrhus determined to follow this advice. He took
possession of the richest and most valuable of the articles which the temple
contained, and, putting them on board ships which he sent to Locri for the purpose, he undertook to transport them to
Tarentum. He intended to convert them here into money, in order to obtain funds
to supply the wants of his army.
The
ships, however, on their passage along the coast, encountered a terrible storm,
and were nearly all wrecked and destroyed. The mariners who had navigated the
vessels were drowned, while yet the sacred treasures were saved, and that, too,
as it would seem, by some supernatural agency, since the same surges which
overwhelmed and destroyed the sacrilegious ships and seamen, washed the cases in
which the holy treasures had been packed up upon the beach; and there the messengers
of Pyrrhus found them, scattered among the rocks and on the sand at various
points along the shore. Pyrrhus was greatly terrified at this disaster. He
conceived that it was a judgment of Heaven, inflicted upon him through the
influence and agency of Proserpina, as a punishment for his impious presumption
in despoiling her -shrine. He carefully collected all that the sea had saved,
and sent every thing back to Locri.
He instituted solemn services there in honor ot Prosperpina, to express his penitence for his faults, and,
to give a still more decisive proof of his desire to appease her anger, he put
to death the counselors who had advised him to take the treasures.
Notwithstanding
all these attempts to atone for his offense, Pyrrhus could not dispel from his
mind the gloomy impression which had been made upon it by the idea that he had
incurred the direct displeasure of Heaven. He did not believe that the anger
of Proserpina was ever fully appeased; and whenever misfortunes and calamities
befell him in his sub sequent career, he attributed them to the displeasure of
the goddess of death, who, as he believed, followed him every
where, and was intent on effecting his ruin.
It
was now late in the season, and the military operations both of Pyrrhus and of
the Romans were, in a great measure, suspended until spring. Pyrrhus spent the
interval in making arrangements for taking the field as soon as the winter
should be over. He had, however, many difficulties to contend with. His
financial embarrassment still continued. His efforts to procure funds were only
very partially successful. The people too, in all the legion about Tarentum,
were, he found, wholly alienated from him. They had not forgiven him for having
left them to go to Sicily, and, in consequence of this abandonment of their
cause, they had lost much of their confidence in him as their protector, while every thing like enthusiasm in his service was wholly
gone. Through these and other causes, he encountered innumerable impediments
in executing his plans, and his mind was harassed with continual disappointment
and anxiety.
Such,
however, was still his resolution and energy, that when the season arrived for
taking the field, he had a considerable force in readiness, and he marched out
of Tarentum at the head of it, to go and meet the Romans. The Romans
themselves, on the other hand, had raised a very large force, and had sent it
forward in two divisions, under the command of the two consuls. These two
divisions took different routes; one passing to the north, through the province
of Samnium, and the other to the south, through Lucania—both, however, leading
toward Tarentum. Pyrrhus divided his forces also into two parts. One body of
troops he sent northwardly into Samnium, to meet the northern division of the
Roman army, while with the other he advanced himself by the more southern
route, to meet the Roman consul who was coming through Lucania. The name of
this consul was Curius Dentatus.
Pyrrhus
advanced into Lucania. The Roman general, when he found that his enemy was
coming, thought it most prudent to send for the other division of his army—namely,
the one which was marching through Samnium—and to wait until it should arrive
before giving Pyrrhus battle. He accordingly dispatched the necessary orders
to Lentulus, who commanded the northern division,
and, in the meantime, intrenched himself in a strong encampment at a place
called Beneventum. Pyrrhus entered Lucania and advanced toward Beneventum,
and, after ascertaining the state of the case in respect to the situation of
the camp and the plans of Curius, he paused at some
distance from the Roman position, in order to consider what it was best for him
to do. He finally came to the conclusion that it was very important that his
conflict with the Romans under Curius should take
place before Lentulus should arrive to re-enforce
them, and so he determined to advance rapidly, and fall upon and surprise them
in their intrenchments before they were aware of his approach. This plan he
accordingly attempted to execute. He advanced in the ordinary manner and by
the public roads of the country until he began to draw near to Beneventum. At
the close of the day he encamped as usual; but, instead of waiting in his camp
until the following day, and then marching on in his accustomed manner, he
procured guides to lead his troops around by a circuitous path among the
mountains, with a view of coming down suddenly and unexpectedly upon the camp
of the Romans from the hills very early in the morning. An immense number of
torches were provided, to furnish light for the soldiers in traversing the dark
forests and gloomy ravines through which their pathway lay.
Notwithstanding
all the precautions which had been taken, the difficulties of the route were so
great that the progress of the troops was very much impeded. The track was
everywhere encumbered with bushes, rocks, fallen trees, and swampy tracts of
ground, so that the soldiers made way very slowly. Great numbers of the torches
failed in the course of the night, some getting extinguished by accident, and
others going out from exhaustion of fuel. By these means great numbers of
troops were left in the dark, and after groping about for a time in devious and
uncertain paths, he came hopelessly lost in the forest. Notwithstanding all
these difficulties and discouragements, however, the main body of the army
pressed resolutely on, and, just about daybreak, the van came out upon the
heights above the Roman encampment. As soon as a sufficient number were
assembled, they were at once marshaled in battle array, and, descending from
the mountains, they made a furious onset upon the intrenchments of the enemy.
The
Romans were taken wholly by surprise, and their camp became immediately a scene
of the wildest confusion. The men started up every where out of their sleep and seized their arms. They were soon in a situation to make
a very effectual resistance to the attack of their enemies. They first beat the
assailants back from the points where they were endeavoring to gain admission,
and then, encouraged by their success, they sallied forth from their intrenchments,
and became assailants in their turn. The Greeks were soon overpowered, and
forced to retire altogether from the ground. A great many were killed, and some
elephants, which Pyrrhus had contrived by some means to bring up to the spot,
were taken. The Romans were, of course, greatly elated at this victory.
In
fact, so much was Curius gratified and pleased with
this success, and so great was the confidence with which it inspired him, that
he determined to wait no longer for Lentulus, but to
march out at once and give Pyrrhus battle. He accordingly brought forth his
troops and drew them up on a plain near his encampment, posting them in such a
way as to gain a certain advantage for himself in the nature of the ground
which he had chosen, while yet, since there was nothing but the open field
between himself and his enemy, the movement was a fair and regular challenge to
battle. Pyrrhus accepted this challenge by bringing up his forces to the field,
and the conflict began.
As
soon as the combatants were fairly engaged, one of the wings of Pyrrhus’s army
began to give way. The other wing, on the contrary, which was the one that
Pyrrhus himself personally commanded, was victorious. Pyrrhus himself led his
soldiers on; and he inspired them with so much strength and energy by his own
reckless daring, that all those portions of the Roman army which were opposed
to them were beaten and driven back into the camp. This success, however, was
not wholly owing to the personal prowess of Pyrrhus. It was due, in a great
measure, to the power of the elephants, for they fought in that part of the
field. As the Romans were almost wholly unaccustomed to the warfare of elephants,
they knew not how to resist them; and the huge beasts bore down all before them
wherever they moved. In this crisis, Curius ordered a
fresh body of troops to advance. It was a corps of reserve, which he had
stationed near the camp under orders to hold themselves in readiness there, to
come forward and act at any moment, and at any part of the field wherever their
services might be required. These troops were now summoned to advance and
attack the elephants. They accordingly came rushing on, brandishing their
swords in one hand, and bearing burning torches, with which they had been
provided for the occasion, in the other. The torches they threw at the
elephants as soon as they came near, in order to terrify them and make them
unmanageable ; and then, with their swords, they at. tacked the keepers and
drivers of the beasts, and the men who fought in connection with them. The
success of this onset was so great, that the elephants soon became
unmanageable.
They
even broke into the phalanx, and threw the ranks of it into confusion,
overturning and trampling upon the men, and falling themselves upon the slain,
under the wounds which the spears inflicted upon them.
A
remarkable incident is said to have occurred in the midst of this scene of
confusion and terror, which strikingly illustrates the strength of the maternal
instinct, even among brutes. It happened that there was a young elephant, and
also its mother, in the same division of Pyrrhus’s army. The former, though
young, was sufficiently grown to serve as an elephant of war, and, as it
happened, its post on the field of battle was not very far from that of its
mother. In the course of the battle the young elephant was wounded, and it
uttered immediately a piercing cry of pain and terror. The mother heard the
cry, and recognized the voice that uttered it through all the din and uproar
of the battle. She immediately became wholly ungovernable, and, breaking away
from the control of her keepers, she rushed forward, trampling down everything
in her way, to rescue and protect her offspring. This incident occurred at the
commencement of the attack which the Roman reserve made upon the elephants, and
contributed very essentially to the panic and confusion which followed.
In
the end Pyrrhus was entirely defeated. He was compelled to abandon his camp and
to retire toward Tarentum. The Romans immediately advanced, flushed with
victory, and carrying all before them. Pyrrhus retreated faster and faster, his
numbers continually diminishing as he fled, until at last, when he reached
Tarentum, he had only a few horsemen in his train. He sent off the most urgent
requests to his friends and allies in Greece to furnish him aid. The help,
however, did not come, and Pyrrhus, in order to keep the small remnant that
still adhered to him together, re sorted to the
desperate expedient of forging letters from his friends, promising speedy and
abundant supplies, and showing these letters to his officers, to prevent them
from being wholly discouraged and abandoning his cause. This miserable
contrivance, however, even if successful, could only afford a momentary relief.
Pyrrhus soon found that all hope and possibility of retrieving his fortunes in
Italy had entirely disappeared, and that no alternative was left to him but to
abandon the ground. So, pretending to wonder why his allies did not send
forward the succors which they had promised in their letters, and saying that,
since they were so dilatory and remiss, he must go himself and bring them, but
promising that he would immediately return, he set sail from Tarentum, and,
crossing the sea, went home to his own kingdom. He arrived safely in Epirus
after an absence of six years.
CHAPTER
IX.
THE
FAMILY OF LYSIMACHUS.
The reader will perhaps recollect
that when Pyrrhus withdrew from Macedon, before he embarked on his celebrated
expedition into Italy, the enemy before he was compelled to retire was
Lysimachus. Lysimachus continued to reign in Macedon for some time after Pyrrhus
had gone, until, finally, he was himself overthrown, under circumstances of a
very remarkable character. In fact, his whole history affords a striking
illustration of the nature of the results which often followed, in ancient
times, from the system of government which then almost universally prevailed—a
system in which the supreme power was considered as rightfully belonging to
some sovereign who derived it from his ancestors by hereditary descent, and
who, in the exercise of it, was entirely above all sense of responsibility to
the subjects of his dominion.
It
has sometimes been said by writers on the theory of civil government that the
principle of hereditary sovereignty in the government of a nation has a decided
advantage over any elective mode of designating the chief magistrate, on
account of its certainty. If the system is such that, on the death of a monarch,
the supreme power descends to his eldest son, the succession is determined at
once, without debate or delay. If, on the other hand, an election is to take
place, there must be a contest. Parties are formed; plans and counterplans
are laid; a protracted and heated controversy ensues; and when, finally, the
voting is ended, there is sometimes doubt and uncertainty in ascertaining the
true result, and very often an angry and obstinate refusal to acquiesce in it
when it is determined. Thus the principle of hereditary descent seems simple,
clear, and liable to no uncertainty or doubt, while that of popular election
tends to lead the country subject to it into endless disputes, and often
ultimately to civil war.
But
though this may be in theory the operation of the two systems, in actual
practice it has been found that the hereditary principle has very little
advantage over any other in respect to the avoidance of uncertainty and dispute.
Among the innumerable forms and phases which the principle of hereditary descent
assumes in actual life, the cases in which one acknowledged and unquestioned
sovereign of a country dies, and leaves one acknowledged and unquestioned
heir, are comparatively few. The relationships existing among the various
branches of a family are often extremely intricate and complicated. Sometimes
they become viciously entangled with each other by intermarriages; sometimes
the claims arising under them are disturbed, or modified, or confused by
conquests and revolutions; and thus they often become so hopelessly involved
that no human sagacity can classify or arrange them. The case of France at the
present time* is a striking illustration of this difficulty, there being in
that country no less than three sets of claimants who regard themselves entitled
to the supreme power—the representatives, namely, of the Bourbon, the Orleans,
and the Napoleon dynasties. Each one of the great parties rests the claim which
they severally advance in behalf of their respective candidates more or less
exclusively on rights derived from their hereditary relationship to former rulers
of the kingdom, and there is no possible mode of settling the question between
them but by the test of power. Even if all concerned were disposed to determine
the controversy by a peaceful appeal to the principles of the law of descent,
as relating to the transmission of governmental power, no principles could be
found that would apply to the case; or, rather, so numerous are the principles
that would be required to be taken into the account, and so involved and
complicated are the facts to which they must be applied, that any distinct
solution of the question on theoretical grounds would be utterly impossible.
There is, and there can be, no means of solving such a question but power.
In
fact, the history of the smaller monarchies of ancient times is comprised,
sometimes for centuries almost exclusively, in narratives of the intrigues, the
contentions, and the bloody wars of rival families, and rival branches of the
same family, in asserting their respective claims as inheritors to the possession
of power. This truth is strikingly illustrated in the events which occurred in
Mace don during the absence of Pyrrhus in Italy and Sicily, in connection with
the family of Lysimachus, and his successor in power there. These events we
shall now proceed to relate in their order.
At
the time when Pyrrhus was driven from Macedon by Lysimachus, previous to his going
into Italy, Lysimachus was far advanced in age. He was, in fact, at this time nearly
seventy years old. He commenced his military career during the lifetime of
Alexander the Great, having been one of the great conqueror’s most
distinguished generals. Many stories were told in his early life, of his personal
strength and valor. On one occasion, as was said, when hunting in Syria, he encountered
a lion of immense size singlehanded, and, after a very desperate and obstinate
conflict, he succeeded in killing him, though not without receiving severe
wounds himself in the contest. Another story was, that at one time, having
displeased Alexander, he was condemned to suffer death, and that, too, in a
very cruel and horrible manner. He was to be thrown into a lion’s den. This was
a mode of execution not uncommon in ancient times. It answered a double
purpose; it not only served for a terrible punishment in respect to the man,
but it also effected a useful end in respect to the animal. By giving him a
living man to seize and devour, the savage ferocity of the beast was stimulated
and increased, and thus he was rendered more valuable for the purposes and
uses for which he was retained. In the case of Lysimachus, however, both these
objects failed. As soon as he was put into the dungeon where the lion was
awaiting him, he attacked the beast, and, though unarmed, he succeeded in
destroying him. Alexander admired so much the desperate strength and courage
evinced by this exploit, that he pardoned the criminal and restored him to
favor.
Lysimachus
continued in the service of Alexander as long as that monarch lived; and when,
at the death of Alexander, the empire was divided among the leading generals,
the kingdom of Thrace, which adjoins Macedon on the east,* was assigned to him
as his portion. He is commonly designated, therefore, in history, as the King
of Thrace; though in the subsequent part of his life he obtained possession
also, by conquest, of the kingdom of Macedon. He married, in succession,
several wives, and experienced through them a great variety of domestic
troubles. His second wife was a Sicilian princess named Amastris.
She was a widow at the time of her marriage with Lysimachus, and had two sons.
After being married to her for some time, Lysimachus repudiated and abandoned
her, and she returned to Sicily with her two sons, and lived in a certain city
which belonged to them there. The young men were not of age, and Amastris accordingly assumed the government of the city in
their name. They, however, quarreled with their mother, and finally drowned
her, in order to remove her out of their way. Lysimachus, though he might
justly have considered himself as in some sense the cause of this catastrophe,
since, by deserting his wife and withdrawing his protection from her, he
compelled her to return to Sicily and put herself in the power of her unnatural
sons, was still very indignant at the event, and, fitting out an expedition, he
went to Sicily, captured the city, took the sons of Amastris prisoners, and put them to death without mercy, in retribution for their atrocious
crime.
At
the time when Lysimachus put away his wife, Amastris,
he married Arsinoe, an Egyptian princess, the daughter, in fact, of Ptolemy,
the son of Lagus, who was at this time the king of Egypt.
How far Lysimachus was governed, in his repudiation of Amastris,
by the influence of Arsinoe’s personal attractions in winning his heart away
from his fidelity to his legitimate wife, and how far, on the other hand, he
was alienated from her by her own misconduct or the violence of her temper, is
not now known. At any rate, the Sicilian wife, as has been stated, was
dismissed and sent home, and the Egyptian princess came into her place.
The
small degree of domestic peace and comfort which Lysimachus had hitherto enjoyed
was far from being improved by this change. The family of Ptolemy was distracted
by a deadly feud, and, by means of the marriage of Arsinoe with Lysimachus, and
of another marriage which subsequently occurred, and which will be spoken of
presently, the quarrel was transferred, in all its bitterness, to the family of
Lysimachus, where it produced the most dreadful results.
The
origin of the quarrel in the household of Ptolemy was this: Ptolemy married,
for his first wife, Eurydice, the daughter of Antipater. When Eurydice, at the
time of her marriage, went with her husband into Egypt, she was accompanied by
her cousin Berenice, a young and beautiful widow, whom she invited to go with
her as her companion and friend. A great change, however, soon took place in
the relations which they sustained to each other. From being very affectionate
and confidential friends, they became, as often happens in similar cases, on
far less conspicuous theatres of action, rivals and enemies. Berenice gained
the affections of Ptolemy, and at length he married her. Arsinoe, whom Lysimachus
married, was the daughter of Ptolemy and Berenice. They had also a son who was
named Ptolemy, and who, at the death of his father, succeeded him on the
throne. This son subsequently became renowned in history under the name of
Ptolemy Philadelphus. He was the second monarch of the Ptolemaic line.
But,
besides these descendants of Berenice, there was another set of children in
Ptolemy's family—namely, those by Eurydice. Eury- dice had a son and a
daughter. The name of the son was Ptolemy Ceraunus; that of the daughter was
Lysandra. There was, of course, a standing and bitter feud always raging
between these two branches of the royal household. The two wives, though they
had once been friends, now, of course, hated each other with perfect hatred.
Each had her own circle of partisans and adherents, and the court was
distracted for many years with the intrigues, the plots, the_ dissensions, and
the endless schemes and counter schemes which were resorted to by the two
parties in their efforts to thwart and circumvent each other. As Arsinoe, the
wife of Lysimachus, was the daughter of Berenice, it might have been expected
that the influence of Berenice's party would prevail in Lysimachus’s .court.
This would doubtless have been the case, had it not been that unfortunately
there was another alliance formed between the two families which complicated
the connection, and led, in the end, to the most deplorable results. This other
alliance was the marriage of Agathocles, the son of Lysimachus, with Lysandra,
Eury- dice’s daughter. Thus, in the court and family of Lysimachus, Berenice
had a representative in the person of her daughter Arsinoe, the wife of the
king himself; while Eurydice, also, had one in the person of her daughter
Lysandra, the wife of the king’s son. Of course, the whole virulence of the
quarrel was spread from Egypt to Macedon, and the household of Lysimachus was
distracted by the dissensions of Arsinoe and Lysandra, and by the attempts
which each made to effect the destruction of the other.
Of
course, in this contest, the advantage was on the side of Arsinoe, since she
was the wife of the king himself, while Lysandra was only the wife of his son.
Still, the position and the influence of Lysandra were very high. Agathocles
was a prince of great consideration and honor. He had been very successful in
his military campaigns, had won many battles, and had greatly extended the
dominion and power of his father. He was a great favorite, in fact, both with
the army and with the people, all of whom looked up to him as the hope and the
pride of the kingdom.
Of
course, the bestowal of all this fame and honor upon Lysandra’s husband only served to excite the rivalry and hatred of Arsinoe the more. She
and Lysandra were sisters, or, rather, half-sisters—being daughters of the same
father. They were, however, on this very account, natural enemies to each
other, for their mothers were rivals. Arsinoe, of course, was continually
devising means to curtail the growing importance and greatness of Agathocles.
Agathocles himself, on the other hand, would naturally make every effort to
thwart and counteract her designs. In the end, Arsinoe succeeded in convincing
Lysimachus that Agathocles was plotting a conspiracy against him, and was
intending to take the kingdom into his own hands. This may have been true.
Whether it was true or false, however, can now never be known. At all events,
Lysimachus was induced to believe it. He ordered Agathocles to be seized and
put into prison, and then, a short time afterward, he caused him to be
poisoned. Lysandra was overwhelmed with consternation and sorrow at this event.
She was, moreover, greatly alarmed for herself and for her children, and also
for her brother, Ptolemy Ceraunus, who was with her at this time. It was
obvious that there could be no longer any safety for her in Macedon, and so,
taking with her her children, her brother, and a few
friends who adhered to her cause, she made her escape from Macedon and went to
Asia. Here she cast herself upon the protection of Seleucus, king of Syria.
Seleucus
was another of the . generals of Alexander—the only one, in fact, besides Lysimachus,
who now survived. He had, of course, like Lysimachus, attained to a very advanced
period of life, being at this time more than seventy-five years old. These
veterans might have been supposed to have lived long enough to have laid aside
their ancient rivalries, and to have been willing to spend their few remaining
years in peace. But it was far otherwise in fact. Seleucus was pleased with the
pretext afforded him, by the coming of Lysandra, for embarking in new wars. Lysan- dra was, in a short time,
followed in her flight by many of the nobles and chieftains of Macedon, who
had espoused her cause. Lysimachus, in fact, had driven them away by the severe
measures which he had adopted against them. These men assembled at the court of
Seleucus, and there, with Lysander and Ptolemy Ceraunus, they began to form
plans for invading the dominions of Lysimachus, and avenging the cruel death of
Agathocles. Seleucus was very easily induced to enter into these plans, and
war was declared.
Lysimachus
did not wait for his enemies to invade his dominions; he organized an army,
crossed the Hellespont, and marched to meet Seleucus in Asia Minor. The armies
met in Phrygia. A desperate battle was fought. Lysimachus was conquered and
slain.
Seleucus
now determined to cross the Hellespont himself, and, advancing into Thrace and
Macedon, to annex those kingdoms to his own domains. Ptolemy Ceraunus
accompanied him. This Ptolemy, it will be recollected, was the son of Ptolemy,
king of Egypt, by his wife Eurydice; and, at first view, it might seem that he
could have no claim whatever himself to the crown of Macedon. But Eurydice, his
mother, was the daughter of Antipater, the general to whom Macedon had been
assigned on the original division of the empire after Alexander’s death. Antipater
had reigned over the kingdom for a long time with great splendor and renown,
and his name and memory were still held in great veneration by all the
Macedonians. Ptolemy Ceraunus began to conceive, therefore, that he was
entitled to succeed to the kingdom as the grandson and heir of the monarch who
was Alexander’s immediate successor, and whose claims were consequently, as he
contended, entitled to take precedence of all others.
Moreover,
Ptolemy Ceraunus had lived for a long time in Macedon, at the court of Lysimachus,
having fled there from Egypt on account of the quarrels in which he was involved
in his father’s family. He was a man of a very reckless and desperate
character, and, while a young man in his father’s court, he had shown himself
very ill able to brook the preference which his father was disposed to accord
to Berenice and to her children over his mother Eurydice and him. In fact, it
was said that one reason which led his father to give Berenice’s family the
precedence over that of Eurydice, and to propose that her son rather than
Ptolemy Ceraunus should succeed him, was the violent and uncontrollable spirit
which Ceraunus displayed. At any rate, Ceraunus quarreled openly with his
father, and went to Macedon to join his sister there. He had subsequently spent
some considerable time at the court of Lysimachus, and had taken some active
part in public affairs. When Agathocles was poisoned, he fled with Lysandra to
Seleucus f and when the preparations were made by Seleucus for war with Lysimachus,
he probably regarded himself as in some sense the leader of the expedition. He
considered Seleucus as his ally, going with him to aid him in the attempt to
recover the kingdom of his ancestors.
Seleucus,
however, had no such design. He by no means considered himself as engaged in
prosecuting an expedition for the benefit of Ceraunus. His plan was the
enlargement of his own dominion; and as for Ceraunus, he regarded him only as
an adventurer following in his train—a useful auxiliary, perhaps, but by no
means entitled to be considered as a principal in the momentous transactions
which were taking place. Ceraunus, when he found what the state of the case
really was, being wholly unscrupulous in respect to the means that he. employed
for the attainment of his ends, determined to kill Seleucus on the first
opportunity.
Seleucus
seems to have had no suspicion of this design, for he advanced into Thrace, on
his way to Macedon, without fear, and without taking any precautions to guard
himself from the danger of Ceraunus’s meditated
treachery. At length he arrived at a certain town which they told him was
called Argos. He seemed alarmed on hearing this name, and, when they inquired
the reason, he said that he had been warned by an oracle, at some former period
of his life, to beware of Argos, as a place that was destined to be for him the
scene of some mysterious and dreadful danger. He had supposed that another
Argos was alluded to in this warning, namely, an Argos in Greece. He had not
known before of the existence of any Argos in Thrace. If he had been aware of
it, he would have ordered his march so as to have avoided it altogether; and
now, in consequence of the anxious forebodings that were excited by the name,
he determined to withdraw from the place without delay. He was, however,
overtaken by his fate before he could effect his
resolution. Ptolemy Ceraunus, watching a favorable opportunity which occurred
while he was at Argos, came stealthily up behind the aged king, and stabbed him
in the back with a dagger. Se- leucus immediately
fell down and died.
Ptolemy
Ceraunus forthwith organized a body of adherents and proceeded to Macedon,
where he assumed the diadem, and caused himself to be proclaimed king. He found
the country distracted by dissensions, many parties having been formed, from
time to time, in the course of the preceding reigns, each of which was now
disposed to come forward with its candidates and its claims. All these Ptolemy
Ceraunus boldly set aside. He endeavored to secure all those who were friendly
to the ancient house of Antipater by saying that he was Antipater’s grandson
and heir; and, on the other hand, to conciliate the partisans of Lysimachus, by
saying that he was Lysimachus’s avenger. This was in one sense true, for he had
murdered Seleucus, the man by whom Lysimachus had been destroyed. He relied,
however, after all, for the means of sustaining himself in his new position,
not on his reasons, but on his troops; and he accordingly advanced into the
country more as - a conqueror coming to subjugate a nation by force, than as a
prince succeeding peacefully to an hereditary crown.
He
soon had many rivals and enemies in the field against him. The three principal
ones were Antiochus, Antigonus, and Pyrrhus. Antiochus was the son of
Seleucus. He maintained that his father had fairly conquered the kingdom of
Macedon, and had acquired the right to reign over it; that Ptolemy Ceraunus, by
assassinating Seleucus, had not divested him of any of his rights, but that
they all descended unimpaired to his son, and that he himself, therefore, was
the true king of Macedon. Antigonus was the son of Demetrius, who had reigned
in Macedon at a former period, before Lysimachus had invaded and conquered the
kingdom. Antigonus therefore maintained that his right was superior to that of
Ptolemy, for his father had been the acknowledged sovereign of the country at a
period subsequent to that of the reign of Antipater. Pyrrhus was the third
claimant. He had held Macedon by conquest immediately before the reign of
Lysimachus, and now, since Lysimachus had been deposed, his rights, as he
alleged, revived. In a word, there were four competitors for the throne, each
urging claims compounded of rights of conquest and of inheritance, so
complicated and so involved, one with the other, as to render all attempts at
a peaceable adjudication of them absolutely hopeless. There could be no possible
way of determining who was best entitled to the throne in such a case. The
only question, therefore, that remained was, who was best able to take and keep
it.
This
question Ptolemy Ceraunus had first to try with Antigonus, who came to invade
the country with a fleet and an army from Greece. After a very short but
violent contest, Antigonus was defeated, both by sea and by land, and Ceraunus
remained master of the kingdom. This triumph greatly strengthened his power in
respect to the other competitors. He, in fact, contrived to settle the question
with them by treaty, in which they acknowledged him as king. In the case of
Pyrrhus, he agreed, in consideration of being allowed peaceably to retain
possession of his kingdom, to furnish a certain amount of military aid to
strengthen the hands of Pyrrhus in the wars in which he was then engaged in
Italy and Sicily. The force which he thus furnished consisted of five thousand
foot, four thousand horse, and fifty elephants.
Thus
it would seem that every thing was settled. There
was, however, one difficulty still remaining. Arsinoe, the widow of Lysimachus,
still lived. It was Arsinoe, it will be recollected, whose jealousy of her
half-sister, Lysandra, had caused the death of Agathocles and the flight of
Lysandra, and which had led to the expedition of Seleucus, and the subsequent
revolution in Macedon. When her husband was killed, she, instead of submitting
at once to the change of government, shut herself up in Cassandria,
a rich and well-defended city. She had her sons with her, who, as the children
of Lysimachus, were heirs to the throne. She was well aware that she had, for
the time being, no means at her command for supporting the claims of her
children, but she was fully determined not to relinquish them, but to defend
herself and her children in the city of Cassandria,
as well as she was able, until some change should take place in the aspect of
public affairs. Ceraunus, of course, saw in her a very formidable and dangerous
opponent; and, after having triumphed over Antigonus, and concluded his peace
with Antiochus and with Pyrrhus, he advanced toward Cassandria,
revolving in his mind the question by what means he could best manage to get
Arsinoe and her children into his power.
He
concluded to try the effect of cunning and treachery before resorting to force.
He accordingly sent a message to Arsinoe, proposing that, instead of
quarreling for the kingdom, they should unite their claims, and asking her, for
this purpose, to become his wife. He would marry her, he said, and adopt her
children as his own, and thus the whole question would be amicably settled.
Arsinoe
very readily acceded to this proposal. It is true that she was the half-sister
of Ceraunus; but this relationship was no bar to a matrimonial union, according
to the ideas that prevailed in the courts of kings in those days. Arsinoe,
accordingly, gave her consent to the proposal, and opened the gates of the city
to Ceraunus and his troops. Ceraunus immediately put her two sons to death. Arsinoe
herself fled from the city. Very probably Ceraunus allowed her to escape,
since, as she herself had no claim to the throne, any open violence offered to
her would have been a gratuitous crime, which would have increased,
unnecessarily, the odium that would naturally attach to Ceraunus’s proceedings. At any rate, Arsinoe escaped, and, after various wanderings, found
her way back to her former home in her father’s court at Alexandria.
The
heart of Ceraunus was now filled with exultation and pride. All his schemes had
proved successful, and he found himself, at last, in secure possession, as he
thought, of a powerful and wealthy kingdom. He wrote home to his brother in
Egypt, Ptolemy Phil- adelphus—by whom, as the reader
will recollect, he had been supplanted there, in consequence of his father’s
preference for the children of Berenice—saying that he now acquiesced in that
disposition of the kingdom of Egypt, since he had acquired for himself a better
kingdom in Macedon. He proceeded to complete the organization of his
government. He recruited his armies; he fortified his towns; and began to
consider himself as firmly established on his throne. All his dreams, however,
of security and peace, were soon brought to a very sudden termination.
There
was a race of half-civilized people on the banks of the Danube called Gauls.
Some tribes of this nation afterward settled in what is now France, and gave
their name to that country. At the period, however, of the events which we are
here relating, the chief seat of their dominion was a region on the banks of
the Danube, north of Macedon and Thrace. Here they had been for some time
concentrating their forces and gradually increasing in power, although their movements
had been very little regarded by Ceraunus. Now, however, a deputation suddenly
appeared at Ceraunus’s capital, to say that they
were prepared for an invasion of his dominions, and asking him how much money
he would give for peace. Ceraunus, in the pride of his newly-established power,
treated this proposal with derision. He directed the embassadors to go back and say that, far from wishing to purchase peace, he would not allow
peace to them, unless they immediately sent him all their principal generals,
as hostages for their good behavior. Of course, after such an interchange of
messages as this, both parties immediately prepared for war.
Ceraunus
assembled all the forces that he could command, marched northward to meet his
enemy, and a great battle was fought between the two armies. Ceraunus
commanded in person in this conflict. He rode into the field at the head of his
troops, mounted on an elephant. In the course of the action he was wounded, and
the elephant on which he rode becoming infuriated at the same time, perhaps
from being wounded himself too, threw his rider to the ground. The Gauls who
were fighting around him immediately seized him. .Without any hesitation or
delay they cut off phis head, and, raising it on the
point of a pike, they bore it around the field in triumph. This spectacle so
appalled and intimidated the army of the Macedonians, that the ranks were soon
broken, and the troops, giving way, fled in all .directions, and the Gauls
found themselves masters of the field.
The
death of Ptolemy Ceraunus was, of course, the signal for all the old claimants
to the throne to come forward with their several pretensions anew A protracted
period of dissension and misrule ensued, during which the Gauls made dreadful
havoc in all the northern portions of Macedon. Antigonus at last succeeded in
gaining the advantage, and obtained a sort of nominal possession of the throne
which he held until the time when Pyrrhus returned to Epirus from Italy.
Pyrrhus, being informed of this state of things, could not resist the desire
which he felt of making an incursion into Macedon, and seizing for himself the
prize for which rivals, no better entitled to it than he, were so fiercely contending.
CHAPTER
X.
THE
RECONQUEST OF MACEDON.
It was the great misfortune of
Pyrrhus’s life, a misfortune resulting apparently from an inherent and radical
defect in his character, that he had no settled plans or purposes, but
embarked in one project after another, as accident or caprice might incline
him, apparently without any forethought, consideration, or design. He seemed
to form no plan, to live for no object, to contemplate no end, but was governed
by a sort of blind and instinctive impulse, .which led him to love danger, and
to take a wild and savage delight in the performance of military exploits on
their own account, and without regard to any ultimate end or aim to be
accomplished by them. Thus, although he evinced great power, he produced no
permanent effects. There was no steadiness or perseverance in his action, and
there could be none, for in his whole course of policy there were no ulterior
ends in view by which perseverance could be sustained. He was, consequently,
always ready to abandon any enterprise in which he might be engaged as soon as
it began to be involved in difficulties requiring the exercise of patience,
endurance, and self-denial, and to embark in any new undertaking, provided
that it promised to bring him speedily upon a field of battle. He was, in a
word, the type and exemplar of that large class of able men who waste their
lives in a succession of efforts, which, though they evince great talent in
those who perform them, being still without plan or aim, end without producing
any result. Such men often, like Pyrrhus, attain to a certain species of greatness.
They are famed among men for what they seem to have the power to do, and not
for any thing that they have actually done.
In
accordance with this view of Pyrrhus’s character, we see him changing
continually the sphere of his action from one country to another, gaining great
victories every where, and evincing in all his
operations—in the organizing and assembling of his armies, in his marches, in
his encampments, and in the disposition of his troops on the field of battle,
and especially in his conduct during the period of actual conflict—the most
indomitable energy and the most consummate military skill. But when the battle
was fought and the victory gained, and an occasion supervened requiring a*
cool and calculating deliberation in the forming of future plans, and a steady
adherence to them when formed, the character and resources of Pyrrhus’s mind
were found woefully wanting. The first summons from any other quarter,
inviting him to a field of more immediate excitement and action, was always
sufficient to call him away. Thus he changed his field of action successively
from Macedon to Italy, from Italy to Sicily, from Sicily back to Italy, and
from Italy to Macedon again, perpetually making new beginnings, but nowhere
attaining any ends.
His
determination to invade Macedon once more, on his return to Epirus from Italy,
was prompted, apparently, by the mere accident that the government was
unsettled, and that Antigonus was insecure in his possession of the throne. He
had no intention, when he first embarked in this scheme, of attempting the
conquest of Macedon, but only designed to make a predatory incursion into the
country for the purpose of plunder, its defenseless condition affording him,
as he thought, a favorable opportunity of doing this. The plea on which he
justified this invasion was, that Antigonus was his enemy. Ptolemy Ceraunus had
made a treaty of alliance with him, and had furnished him with troops for recruiting
and re-enforcing his armies in Italy, as has already been stated; but
Antigonus, when called upon, had refused to do this. This, of course, gave
Pyrrhus ample justification, as he imagined, for his intended incursion into
the Macedonian realms.
Besides
this, however, there was another justification, namely, that of necessity. Although
Pyrrhus had been compelled to withdraw from Italy, he had not returned by any
means alone, but had brought quite a large army with him, consisting of many
thousands of men, all of whom must now be fed and paid. All the resources of
his own kingdom had been wellnigh exhausted by the drafts which he had made upon
them to sustain himself in Italy, and it was now necessary, he thought, to
embark in some war, as a means of finding employment and subsistence for these
troops. He determined, therefore, on every account, to make a foray into
Macedon.
Before
setting off on his expedition, he contrived to obtain a considerable force
from among the Gauls as auxiliaries. Antigonus, also, had Gauls in his service,
for they themselves were divided, as it would seem, in respect both to their
policy and their leaders, as well as the Macedonians; and Antigonus, taking
advantage of their dissensions, had contrived to enlist some portion of them
in his cause, while t'he rest were the more easily,
on that very account, induced to join the expedition of Pyrrhus. Things being
in this state, Pyrrhus, after completing his preparations, commenced his
march, and soon crossed the Macedonian frontier.
As
was usually the case with the enterprises which he engaged in, he was, in the
outset, very successful. He conquered several cities and towns as he advanced,
and soon began to entertain higher views in respect to the object of his
expedition than he had at first formed. Instead of merely plundering the
frontier, as he had at first intended, he began to think that it would be
possible for him to subdue Antigonus entirely, and reannex the whole of Macedon
to His dominions. He was well known in Macedon, his former campaigns in that
country having brought him very extensively before the people and the army
there. He had been a general favorite, too, among them at the time when he had
been their ruler; the people admired his personal qualities as a soldier, and
had been accustomed to compare him with Alexander, whom, in his appearance and
manners, and in a certain air of military frankness and generosity which
characterized him, he was said strongly to resemble. Pyrrhus now found, as he
advanced into the country of Macedonia, that the people were disposed to regard
him with the same sentiments of favor which they had formerly entertained for
him. Several of the garrisons of the cities joined his standard; and the
detachments of troops which Antigonus sent forward to the frontier to check his
progress, instead of giving him battle, went over to him in a body and espoused
his cause. In a word, Pyrrhus found that, unexpectedly to himself, his
expedition, instead of being merely an incursion across the frontiers on a
plundering foray, was assuming the character of a regular invasion. In short,
the progress that he made was such, that it soon became manifest that to meet
Antigonus in one pitched battle, and to gain one victory, was all that was
required to complete the conquest of the country.
He
accordingly concentrated his forces more and more, strengthened himself by
every means in his power, and advanced further and further into the interior of
the country. Antigonus began to retire, desirous, perhaps, of reaching some
ground where he could post himself advantageously. Pyrrhus, acting with his
customary energy, soon overtook the enemy. He came up with the rear of Antigonus’s
army in a narrow defile among the mountains; at least, the place is designated
as a narrow defile by the ancient historian who narrates these events, though,
from the number of men that were engaged in the action which ensued, as well
as from the nature of the action itself, as a historian describes it, it would
seem that there must have been a considerable breadth of level ground in the
bottom of the gorge.
The
main body of Antigonus’s troops was the phalanx. The Macedonian phalanx is
considered one of the most extraordinary military contrivances of ancient
times. The invention of it was ascribed to Philip, the father of Alexander the Great,
though it is probable that it was only improved and perfected, and brought
into general use, but not really originated by him. The single phalanx was
formed of a body of about four thousand men. These men were arranged in a compact
form, the whole body consisting of sixteen ranks, and each rank of two hundred
and fifty-six men. These men wore each a short sword, to be used in cases of
emergency, and were defended by large shields. The main peculiarity, however,
of their armor, and the one on which the principal power of the phalanx
depended as a military body, was in the immensely long spears which they carried.
These spears were generally twenty- one, and sometimes twenty-four feet long.
The handles were slender, though strong, and the points were tipped with steel.
The spears were not intended to be thrown, but to be held firmly in the hands,
and pointed toward the enemy; and they were so long, and the ranks of the men
were so close together, that the spears of the fifth rank projected several
feet before the men who stood in the front rank. Thus each man in the front
rank had five steel-pointed spears projecting to different distances before
him, while the men who stood in ranks further behind rested their spears upon
the shoulders of those who were before them, so as to elevate the points into
the air.
The
men were protected by large shields, which, when the phalanx was formed in
close array, just touched each other, and formed an impregnable defense. In a
word, the phalanx, as it moved slowly over the plain, presented the appearance
of a vast monster, covered with scales, and bristling with points of steel—a
sort of military porcupine, which nothing could approach or in any way injure.
Missiles thrown toward it were intercepted by the shields, and fell harmless to
the ground. Darts, arrows, javelins, and every other weapon which could be
projected from a distance, were equally ineffectual, and no one could come
near enough to men thus protected to strike at them with the sword. Even
cavalry were utterly powerless in attacking such chevaux de frise as the phalanx presented. No charge,
however furious, could break its serrated ranks; an onset upon it could only
end in impaling the men and the horses that made it together on the points of
the innumerable spears.
To
form a phalanx, and to maneuver it successfully, required a special training,
both on the part of the officers and men, and in the Macedonian armies the
system was carried to very high perfection. When foreign auxiliaries, however,
served under Macedonian generals, they were not generally formed this way, but
were allowed to fight under their own leaders, and in the accustomed manner of
their respective nations. The army of Antigonus, accordingly, as he was
retiring before Pyrrhus, consisted of two portions. The phalanx was in advance,
and large bodies of Gauls, armed and arrayed in their usual manner, were in
the rear. Of course, Pyrrhus, as he came up with his force in the ravine or
valley, encountered the Gauls first. Their lines, it would seem, filled up the
whole valley at the place where Pyrrhus overtook them, so that, at the outset
of the contest, Pyrrhus had them only to engage. There was not space sufficient
for the phalanx to come to their aid.
Besides
the phalanx and the bodies of Gauls, there was a troop of elephants in Antigonus’s
army. Their position, as it would seem, was between the phalanx and the Gauls.
This being the state of things, and Pyrrhus coming up to the attack in the
rear, would, of course, encounter first the Gauls, then the elephants, and,
lastly, the most formidable of all, the phalanx itself.
Pyrrhus
advanced to the attack of the Gauls with the utmost fury, and, though they made
a very determined resistance, they were soon overpowered and almost all cut to
pieces. The troop of elephants came next. The army of Pyrrhus, flushed with
their victory over the Gauls, pressed eagerly on, and soon so surrounded the
elephants and hemmed them in, that the keepers of them perceived that all hope
of resistance was vain. They surrendered without an effort to defend
themselves. The phalanx now remained. It had hastily changed its front, and it
stood on the defensive. Pyrrhus advanced toward it with his forces, bringing
his men up in array in front of the long lines of spears, and paused. The
bristling monster remained immovable, evincing no disposition to advance
against its enemy, but awaiting, apparently, an attack. Pyrrhus rode out in front
of his lines and surveyed the body of Macedonians before him. He found that he
knew the officers personally, having served with them before in the wars in
which he had been engaged in Macedon in former years. He saluted them, calling
them by name. They were pleased with being thus remembered and recognized by a
personage so renowned. Pyrrhus urged them to abandon Antigonus, who had, as he
maintained, no just title to the crown, and whose usurped power he was about to
overthrow, and invited them to enter into his service, as the ancient and
rightful sovereign of their country. The officers seemed much disposed to
listen to these overtures; in fine, they soon decided to accede to them. The
phalanx went over to Pyrrhus’s side in a body, and Antigonus, being thus
deprived of his last remaining support, left the field in company with a few
personal followers, and fled for his life.
Of
course, Pyrrhus found himself at once in complete possession of the Macedonian
kingdom. Antigonus did not, indeed, entirely give up the contest. He retreated
toward the coast, where he contrived to hold possession, for a time, of a few
maritime towns; but his power as King of Macedon was gone. Some few of the
interior cities attempted, for a time, to resist Pyrrhus’s rule, but he soon
overpowered them. Some of the cities that he thus conquered he garrisoned with
Gauls.
Of
course, after such a revolution as this, a great deal was required to be done
to settle the affairs of the government on their new footing, and to make the
kingdom secure in the hands of the conqueror; but no one in the least degree
acquainted with the character and tendencies of Pyrrhus’s mind could expect
that he would be at all disposed to attend to these duties. He had neither the
sagacity to plan nor the steadiness of purpose to execute such measures. He
could conquer, but that was all. To secure the results of his conquests was
utterly beyond his power.
In
fact, far from making such a use of his power as to strengthen his position,
and establish a permanent and settled government, he so administered the
affairs of state, or, rather, he so neglected them, that very soon an extended
discontent and disaffection began to prevail. The Gauls, whom he had left as
garrisons in the conquered cities, governed them in so arbitrary a manner, and
plundered them so recklessly, as to produce extreme irritation among the
people. They complained earnestly to Pyrrhus. Pyrrhus paid little attention to
their representations. To fight a battle with an open enemy on the field was
always a pleasure to him; but to meet and grapple with difficulties of this
kind—to hear complaints, and listen to evidence, and discuss and consider
remedies, was all weariness and toil to him.
What
he would have done, and what would have been the end of his administration in Macedon,
had he been left to himself, can not now be known;
for, very fortunately, as he deemed it, he was suddenly relieved of all the
embarrassment in which he was gradually getting involved, as he had often been
relieved in similar circumstances before, by an invitation which came to him
just at this time to embark in a new military enterprise, which would draw him
away from the country altogether. It is scarcely necessary to say that Pyrrhus
accepted the invitation with the most eager alacrity. The circumstances of the
case will be explained in the next chapter.
CHAPTER
XI.
SPARTA.
The war in which Pyrrhus was
invited to engage, at the time referred to at the close of the last chapter,
arose out of a domestic quarrel in one of the royal families of Sparta. Sparta
was one of the principal cities of the Peloponnesus, and the capital of a very
powerful and warlike kingdom.* The institutions of government in this
commonwealth were very peculiar, and among the most extraordinary of them all
was the arrangement made in respect to the kingly power. There were two
dynasties, or lines of kings, reigning conjointly. The division of power between
the two incumbents who reigned at any one time may have been somewhat similar
to that made in Rome between the consuls. But the system differed from that of
the consular government in the fact that the Spartan kings were not elected
magistrates, like the Roman consuls, but hereditary sovereigns, deriving their
power from their ancestors, each in his own line.
The
origin of this extraordinary system was said to be this: at a very early period
of the Spartan history, a king died suddenly, leaving two children twins, as
his heirs, but without designating either one of them as his successor. The
Spartans then applied to the mother of the two children to know which of them
was the first-born. She pretended that she could not tell. They then applied to
the oracle at Delphi, asking what they should do. The response of the oracle
directed them to make both the children kings, but to bestow the highest honors
upon the oldest. By this answer the Spartans were only partially relieved from
their dilemma; for, under the directions of the oracle, the necessity of determining
the question of priority in respect to the birth of the two children remained,
without any light or guidance being afforded them in respect to the mode of
doing it.
At
last some person suggested that a watch should be set over the mother, with a
view to ascertain for which of her children she had the strongest affection.
They supposed that she really knew which was the first-born, and that she would
involuntarily give to the one whom she regarded in that light the precedence
in the maternal services and duties which she rendered to the babes. This plan
succeeded. It was discovered which was the first-born, and which was the
younger; and the Spartans, accordingly, made both the children kings, but gave
the highest rank to the former, as the oracle had directed. The children both
lived, and grew up to be men, and in due time were married. By a singular
coincidence, they married twin-sisters. In the two families thus arising
originated the Spartan lines of kings that reigned jointly over the kingdom for
many successive generations. To express this extraordinary system of government,
it has sometimes been said that Sparta, though governed by kings, was not a
monarchy, but a diarchy.
The
diarchy, however, as might have been expected, was found not to work very
successfully in practice. Various dissensions and difficulties arose; and at
length, about two hundred years after the original establishment of the two
lines, the kingdom became almost wholly disorganized. At this juncture the celebrated
lawgiver Lycurgus arose. He framed a system of laws and regulations for the
kingdom, which were immediately put in force, and resulted not only in
restoring the public affairs to order at the time, but were the means, in the
end, of raising Sparta to the highest condition of prosperity and renown.
Lycurgus
was indebted for his success in the measures which he adopted not merely to the
sagacity which he exercised in framing them, and the energy with which he
carried them into effect: he occupied personally a very peculiar position,
which afforded him great facilities for the performance of his work. He was a
member of one of the royal families, being a younger son of one of the kings.
He had an elder brother named Polydectes. His father died suddenly, from a stab
that he received in a fray. He was not personally engaged in the fray himself
as one of the combatants, but only went into it to separate other persons, who
had by some means become involved in a sudden quarrel. In the struggle, he
received a stab from a kitchen knife, with which one of the combatants was
armed, and immediately died.
Polydectes,
of course, being the eldest son, succeeded to the throne. He, however, very
soon died, leaving a wife, but no children. About eight months after his death,
however, a child was born to his widow, and this child, according to the then
received principles of hereditary descent, was entitled to succeed his father.
As,
however, at the time of Polydectes’s death the child
was not born, Lycurgus, the brother, was then apparently the heir. He
accordingly assumed the government—so far as the government devolved upon the
line t? which his brother had belonged—intending only to hold it in the
interim, and to give it up ultimately when the proper heir should appear. In
the meantime, the widow supposed very naturally that he would like to retain
the power permanently. She was herself also ambitious of reigning as queen;
and she accordingly made to Lycurgus the atrocious and unnatural proposal to
destroy the life of her child, on condition that he would marry her, and allow
her to share the kingdom with him. Lycurgus was much shocked at receiving such
a proposition, but he deemed it best, for the time being, to appear to accede
to it. He accordingly represented to the queen that it would not be best for
her to make the attempt which she had proposed, lest she should thereby
endanger her own safety. “Wait,” said he, “and let me know as soon as the child
is born; then leave everything to me. I will do myself whatever is required to
be done.”
Lycurgus,
moreover, had attendants, provided with orders to keep themselves in readiness
when the child should be born, and, if it proved to be a son, to bring the babe
to him immediately, wherever he might be, or however he might be engaged. If it
proved to be a daughter, they were to leave it in the hands of the woman who
had charge of the queen. The babe proved to be a son. The officers took it,
accordingly, and brought it at once to Lycurgus. The unnatural mother, of
course, understood that it was taken away from her to be destroyed, and she
acquiesced in the supposed design, in order, by sacrificing her child, to
perpetuate her own queenly dignity and power. Lycurgus, however, was intending
to conduct the affair to a very different result.
At
the time when the attendants brought the new-born babe to Lycurgus’s house, Lycurgus
was engaged with a party of friends whom he had invited to a festival. These
friends consisted of nobles, generals, ministers of state, and other principal
personages of the Spartan commonwealth, whom Lycurgus had thus assembled in
anticipation, probably, of what was to take place. The attendants had been
ordered to bring the child to him without delay, wherever they might find him.
They accordingly came into the apartment where Lycurgus and his friends were
assembled, bringing the infant with them in their arms. Lycurgus received him,
and holding him up before the company, called out to them, in a loud voice,
“Spartans, I present to you your new-born king!” The people received the young
prince with the most extravagant demonstrations of joy; and Lycurgus named him
Charilaus, which means, “Dear to the people.”
The
conduct of Lycurgus on this occasion was thought to be very generous and noble,
since by bringing the child forward as the true heir to the crown, he
surrendered at once all his own pretensions to the inheritance, and made
himself a private citizen. Very few of the sons of kings, either in ancient or
modern times, would have pursued such a course. But, though in respect to his
position, he abased himself by thus descending from his place upon the throne
to the rank of a private citizen, he exalted himself very highly in respect to
influence and character. He was at once made protector of the person of the child
and regent of the realm during the young king’s minority; and all the people of
the city, applauding the noble deed which he had performed, began to entertain
toward him feelings of the highest respect and veneration.
It
proved, however, that there were yet very serious difficulties, which he was
destined to meet and surmount before the way should be fully open for the
performance of the great work for which he afterward became so renowned.
Although the people generally of Sparta greatly applauded the conduct of Lycurgus,
and placed the utmost confidence in him, there were still a few who hated and
opposed him. Of course, the queen herself, whose designs he had thwarted, was
extremely indignant at having been thus deceived. Not only was her own
personal ambition disappointed by the failure of her design, but her womanly
pride was fatally wounded in having been rejected by Lycurgus in the offer
which she had made to become his wife. She and her friends, therefore, were
implacably hostile to him. She had a brother, named Leonidas, who warmly
espoused her cause. Leonidas quarreled openly with Lycurgus. He addressed him
one day, in the presence of several witnesses, in a very violent and threatening
manner. “I know very well” said he, “that your seeming disinterestedness, and
your show of zeal for the safety and welfare of the young king, are all an
empty pretense. You are plotting to destroy him, and to raise yourself to the
throne in his stead; and if we wait a short time, we shall see you
accomplishing the results at which you are really aiming, in your iniquitous
and hypocritical policy.
On
hearing these threats and denunciations, Lycurgus, instead of making an angry
reply to them, began at once calmly to consider what it would be best for him
to do. He reflected that the life of the child was uncertain, notwithstanding
every precaution which he might make for the preservation of it; and if by any casuality it should die, his enemies might charge him with
having secretly murdered it. He resolved, therefore, to remove at once and
forever all possible suspicion, present or prospective, of the purity of his
motives, by withdrawing altogether from Sparta until the child should come of
age. He accordingly made arrangements for placing the young king under
protectors who could not be suspected of collusion with him for any guilty
purpose, and also organized an administration to govern the country until the
king should be of age.
Having
taken these steps, he bade Sparta farewell, and set out upon a long and
extended course of travels.
He
was gone from his native land many years, during which period he visited all
the principal states and kingdoms of the earth, employing himself, wherever he
went, in studying the history, the government, and the institutions of the
countries through which he journeyed and in visiting and conversing with all
the most distinguished men. He went first to Crete, a large island which lay
south of the Aegean Sea, its western extremity being not far from the coast of
Peloponnesus. After remaining for some time in Crete, visiting all its
principal cities, and making himself thoroughly acquainted with its history
and condition, he sailed for Asia Minor, and visited all the chief capitals
there. From Asia Minor he went to Egypt, and, after finishing his observations
and studies in the cities of the Nile, he journeyed westward, and passed
through all the countries lying on the northern coast of Africa, and then from
Africa he crossed over into Spain. He remained long enough in each place that
he visited to make himself very thoroughly acquainted with its philosophy, its
government, its civilization, its state of progress in respect to the arts and
usages of social life—with everything, in fact, which could have a bearing upon
national prosperity and welfare.
In
the meantime, the current of affairs at Sparta flowed by no means smoothly. As
years rolled on, and the young prince, Charilaus, advanced toward the period of
manhood, he became involved in various difficulties, which greatly embarrassed
and perplexed him. He was of a very amiable and gentle disposition, but was
wholly destitute of the strength and energy of character required for the station
in which he was placed. Disagreements arose between him and the other king.
They both quarreled, too, with their nobles and with the people. The people did
not respect them, and gradually learned to despise their authority. They
remembered the efficiency and the success of Lycurgus’s government, and the
regularity and order which had marked the whole course of public affairs during
his administration. They appreciated now, too, more fully than before, the
noble personal qualities which Lycurgus had evinced—his comprehensiveness of
view, his firmness of purpose, his disinterestedness, his generosity; and they
contrasted the lofty sentiments and principles which had always governed him
with the weakness, the childishness, and the petty ambition of their actual
kings. In a word, they all wished that Lycurgus would return.
Even
the kings themselves participated in this wish. They perceived that their
affairs were getting into confusion, and began to feel apprehension and
anxiety. Lycurgus received repeated messages from them and from the people of
Sparta, urging him to return, but he declined to accept these proposals, and
went on with his travels and his studies as before.
At
last, however, the Spartans sent a formal embassy to Lycurgus, representing to
him the troubled condition of public affairs in Sparta, and the dangers which
threatened the commonwealth, and urging him in the most pressing manner to
return. These embassadors, in their interview with
Lycurgus, told him that they had kings, indeed, at Sparta, so far as birth, and
title, and the wearing of royal robes would go, but as for any royal qualities
beyond this mere outside show, they had seen nothing of the kind since
Lycurgus had left them.
Lycurgus
finally concluded to comply with the request. He returned to Sparta. Here he employed
himself for a time in making a careful examination into the state of the
country, and in conversing with the principal men of influence in the city, and
renewing his acquaintance with them. At length he formed a plan for an entire
organization of the government. He proposed this plan to the principal men,
and, having obtained the consent of a sufficient number of them to the leading
provisions of his new constitution, he began to take measures for the public
promulgation and establishment of it.
The
first step was to secure a religious sanction for 'his proceedings, in order
to inspire the common people with a feeling of reverence and awe for his
authority. He accordingly left Sparta, saying that he was going to consult the
oracle at Delphi. In due time he returned, bringing with him the response of
the oracle. The response was as follows:
“Lycurgus
is beloved of the gods, and is himself divine. The laws which he has framed are
perfect, and under them a commonwealth shall arise which shall hereafter become
the most famous in the world.”
This
response, having been made known in Sparta, impressed every one with a very
high sense of the authority of Lycurgus, and disposed all classes of people to
acquiesce in the coming change. Lycurgus did not, however, rely entirely on
this disposition. When the time came for organizing the new government, he stationed
an armed force in the marketplace one morning at a very early hour, so that
the people, when they came forth, as usual, into the streets, found that
Lycurgus had taken military possession of the city. The first feeling was a
general excitement and alarm. Charilaus, the king, who, it seems, had not been
consulted in these movements at all, was very much terrified. He supposed that
an insurrection had taken place against his authority, and that his life was
in danger. To save himself, he fled to one of the temples as to a sanctuary.
Lycurgus sent to him, informing him that those engaged in the revolution which
had taken place intended no injury to him, either in respect to his person or
his royal prerogatives. By these assurances the fears of Charilaus were
allayed, and thenceforth he co-operated with Lycurgus in carrying his measures
into effect.
This
is not the place for a full account of the plan of government which Lycurgus
introduced, nor of the institutions which gradually grew up under it. It is
sufficient to say that the system which he adopted was celebrated throughout
the world during the period of its continuance, and has since been celebrated
in every age, as being the most stern and rugged social system that was ever framed.
The commonwealth of Sparta became, under the institutions of Lycurgus, one
great camp. The nation was a nation of soldiers. Every possible device was
resorted to inure all classes of the population, the young and the old, the men
and the women, the rich and the poor, to every species of hardship and
privation. The only qualities that were respected or cultivated were such stern
virtues as courage, fortitude, endurance, insensibility to pain and grief, and
contempt for all the pleasures of wealth and luxury. Lycurgus did not write out
his system. He would not allow it to be written out. He preferred to put it in
operation, and then leave it to perpetuate itself, as a matter of usage and
precedent. Accordingly, after fully organizing the government on the plan which
he had arranged, and announcing the laws, and establishing the customs by which
he intended that the ordinary course of social life should be regulated, he
determined to withdraw from the field and await the result. He therefore informed
the people that he was going away again on another journey, and that he would
leave the carrying forward of the government which he had framed for them and
initiated in their hands; and he required of them a solemn oath that they would
make no change in the system until he returned. In doing this, his secret
intention was never to return.
Such
was the origin, and such the general character of the Spartan government. In
the time of Pyrrhus, the system had been in operation for about five hundred
years. During this period the state passed through many and various
vicissitudes. It engaged in wars, offensive and defensive; it passed through
many calamitous and trying scenes, suffering, from time to time, under the
usual ills which, in those days, so often disturbed the peace and welfare of
nations. But during all this time, the commonwealth retained in a very striking
degree, the extraordinary marks and characteristics which the institutions of
Lycurgus had enstamped upon it. The Spartans still
were terrible in the estimation of all mankind, so stern and indomitable was
the spirit which they manifested in all the enterprises in which they engaged.
It
was from Sparta that the message came to Pyrrhus asking his assistance in a war
that was then waging there. The war originated in a domestic quarrel which
arose in the family of one of the lines of kings. The name of the prince who
made application to Pyrrhus was Cleonymus. He was a younger son of one of the
Spartan kings. He had had an older brother named Aerotatus. The crown, of
course, would have devolved on this brother, if he had been living when the
father died. But he was not. He died before his father, leaving a son, however,
named Areus, as his heir. Areus, of course, claimed the throne when his
grandfather died. He was not young himself at this time. He had advanced beyond
the period of middle life, and had a son who had grown up to maturity.
Cleonymus
was very unwilling to acquiesce in the accession of Areus to the throne. He was
himself the son of the king who had died, while Areus was only the grandson. He
maintained, therefore, that he had the highest claim to the succession. He was,
however, overruled, and Areus assumed the crown.
Soon
after his accession, Areus left Sparta and went to Crete, intrusting the government of his kingdom, in the meantime, to his son. The name of this
son was Aerotatus. Cleonymus, of course, looked with a particularly evil eye
upon this young man, and soon began to form designs against him. At length,
after the lapse of a considerable period, during which various events occurred
which cannot be here described, a circumstance took place which excited the
hostility which Cleonymus felt for Aerotatus to the highest degree. The circumstances
were these:
Cleonymus,
though far advanced in life, married, about the time that the events occurred
which we are here describing, a very young lady named Chelidonis. Chelidonis
was a princess of the royal line, and was a lady of great personal beauty. She,
however, had very little affection for her husband, and at length Aerotatus,
who was young and attractive in person, succeeded in winning her love, and enticing
her away from her husband. This affair excited the mind of Cleonymus to a perfect
phrensy of jealousy and rage. He immediately left Sparta, and, knowing well
the character and disposition of Pyrrhus, he proceeded northward to Macedon,
laid his case before Pyrrhus, and urged him to fit out an expedition and march
to the Peloponnesus, with a view of aiding him to put down the usurpers, as he
called them and to establish him on the throne of Sparta instead. Pyrrhus
immediately saw that the conjuncture opened before him a prospect of a very
brilliant campaign, in a field entirely new, and he at once determined to
embark forthwith in the enterprise. He resolved, accordingly, to abandon his
interests in Macedon and march into Greece.
CHAPTER
XII.
THE
LAST CAMPAIGN OF PYRRHUS.
Immediately on
receiving the invitation of Cleonymus, Pyrrhus commenced making preparations
on a very extensive scale for the intended campaign. He gathered all the
troops that he could command, both from Macedon and Epirus. He levied taxes and
contributions, provided military stores of every kind, and entered into all
the other arrangements required for such an enterprise. These preliminary
operations required a considerable time, so that he was not ready to commence
his march until the following year. When all was ready, he found that his force
consisted of twenty-five thousand foot, two thousand horse, and a troop of
twenty-four elephants. He had two sons, neither of whom, it would seem, was old
enough to be intrusted with the command, either in
Macedon or Epirus, during his absence, and he accordingly determined to take
them with him. Their names were Ptolemy and Helenus. Pyrrhus himself at this
time was about forty-five years of age.
Although
in this expedition Cleonymus supposed that Pyrrhus was going into Greece only
as his ally, and that the sole object of the war was to depose Areus and place
Cleonymus on the throne in his stead, Pyrrhus himself entertained far different
designs. His intention was, while invading the country in Cleonymus’s name, to overrun and conquer it all, with a view of adding it to his own dominions.
Of course, he gave no intimation to Cleonymus that he entertained any such designs.
The
approach of Pyrrhus naturally produced great excitement and commotion in Sparta.
His fame as a military commander was known throughout the world; and the
invasion of their country by such a conqueror, at the head of so large a force,
was calculated to awaken great alarm among the people. The Spartans, however,
were not much accustomed to be alarmed. They immediately began to make
preparations to defend themselves. They sent forward an embassage to meet
Pyrrhus on the way, and demand wherefore he was coming. Pyrrhus made evasive
and dishonest replies. He was not intending, he said, to commit any
hostilities against Sparta. His business was with certain other cities of the
Peloponnesus, which had been for some time under a foreign yoke, and which he
was now coming to free. The Spartans were not deceived by these protestations,
but time was gained, and this was Pyrrhus’s design.
His
army continued to advance, and in its progress began to seize and plunder towns
belonging to the Spartan territory. The Spartans sent embassadors again, demanding what. these proceedings meant. The embassadors charged it upon Pyrrhus, that, contrary to the laws and usages of nations, he
was making war upon them without having previously declared war.
“And
do you Spartans,” said Pyrrhus, in reply, “always tell the world whatever you
are going to do before you do it?” Such a rejoinder was virtually acknowledging
that the object of the expedition was an attack on Sparta itself. The embassadors so understood it, and bid the invader defiance.
“Let
there be war, then,” said they, “if you will have it so. We do not fear you,
whether you are a god or a man. If you are a god, you will not be disposed to
do us any injury, for we have never injured you. If you are a man you cannot
harm us, for we can produce men in Sparta able to meet any other man whatever.”
The embassadors then returned to Sparta, and the people
immediately pushed forward with all diligence their preparations for putting
the city in an attitude of defense.
Pyrrhus
continued his march, and at length, toward evening, approached the walls of the
city. Cleonymus, who knew well what sort of enemies they had to deal with,
urgently recommended that an assault should be made that night, supposing that
the Spartans would succeed in making additional defenses if the attack were
postponed until the morning. Pyrrhus, however, was disposed not to make the
attack until the following day. He felt perfectly sure of his prize, and was,
accordingly, in no haste to seize it. He thought, it was said, that if the attack
were made in the night, the soldiers would plunder the city, and thus he should
lose a considerable part of the booty which he hoped otherwise to secure for
himself. He could control them better in the daytime. He accordingly
determined to remain in his camp, without the city, during the night, and to
advance to the assault in the morning.
So
he ordered the tents to be pitched on the plain, and sat quietly down.
In
the meantime, great activity prevailed, within the walls. The senate was
convened, and was engaged in debating and deciding the various questions that
necessarily arise in such an emergency. A plan was proposed for removing the
women from the city, in order to save them from the terrible fate which would
inevitably await them, should the army of Pyrrhus be successful on the
following day. It was thought that they might go out secretly on the side
opposite to that on which Pyrrhus was encamped, and thence be conducted to the
seashore, where they might be conveyed in ships and galleys to the island of
Crete, which, as will appear from the map, was situated at no great distance
from the Spartan coast. By this means the mothers and daughters, it was
thought, would be saved, whatever might be the fate of the husbands and brothers.
The news that the senate were discussing such a plan as this was soon spread
abroad among the people. The women were aroused to the most strenuous
opposition against this plan. They declared that they never would seek safety
for themselves by going away, and leaving their fathers, husbands, and brothers
in such danger. They commissioned one of their number, a princess named
Archidamia, to make known to the senate the views which they entertained of
this proposal. Archidamia went boldly into the senate-chamber, with a drawn
sword in her hand, and there arrested the discussion in which the senators
were engaged by demanding how they could entertain such an opinion of the
women of Sparta as to suppose that they could survive the destruction of the
city and the death of all whom they loved. They did not wish to be saved, they
said, unless all could be saved together; and she implored the senate to
abandon at once all ideas of sending them away, and allow them, instead, to
take their share in the necessary labors required for the defense of the city.
The senate yielded to this appeal, and, abandoning the design which they had
entertained of sending the women away, turned their attention immediately to
plans of defense.
While
these earnest consultations and discussions were going on in the senate, and
in the streets and dwellings of the city, there was one place which presented a
scene of excitement of a very different kind—namely, the palace of Cleonymus.
There all were in a state of eager anticipation, expecting the speedy arrival
of their master. The domestics believed confidently that an attack would be
made upon the city that night by the combined army of Cleonymus and Pyrrhus;
and presuming that it would be successful, they supposed that their master, as
soon as the troops should obtain possession of the city, would come home at
once to his own house, bringing his distinguished ally with him. They busied
themselves, therefore, in adorning and preparing the apartments of the house,
and in making ready a splendid entertainment, in order that they might give to
Cleonymus and his friend a suitable reception when they should arrive.
Chelidonis,
however, the young and beautiful, but faithless, wife of Cleonymus, was not there.
She had long since left her husband’s dwelling, and now she was full of
suspense and anxiety in respect to his threatened return. If the city should
be taken, she knew very well that she must necessarily fall again into her
husband’s power, and she determined that she never would fall into his power
again alive. So she retired to her apartment, and there putting a rope around
her neck, and making all other necessary preparations, she awaited the issue of
the battle, resolved to destroy herself the moment she should hear tidings
that Pyrrhus had gained the victory.
In
the meantime, the military leaders of the Spartans were engaged in
strengthening the defenses, and in making all the necessary preparations for
the ensuing conflict. They did not, however, intend to remain within the city,
and await the attack of the assailants there. With the characteristic
fearlessness of the Spartan character, they determined, when they found that
Pyrrhus was not intending to attack the city that night, that they would
themselves go out to meet him in the morning.
One
reason, however, for this determination doubtless was, that the city was not
shut in with substantial walls and defenses, like most of the other cities of
Greece, as it was a matter of pride with the Spartans to rely on their own
personal strength and courage for protection, rather than on artificial
bulwarks and towers. Still, such artificial aids were not wholly despised, and
they now determined to do what was in their power in this respect, by throwing
up a rampart of earth, under cover of the darkness of the night, along the line
over which the enemy must march in attacking the city. This work was
accordingly begun. They would not, however, employ the soldiers in the work, or
any strong and able-bodied men capable of bearing arms. They wished to reserve
the strength of all these for the more urgent and dreadful work of the
following day. The ditch was accordingly dug, and the ramparts raised by the
boys, the old men, and especially by the women. The women of all ranks in the
city went out and toiled all night at this labor, having laid aside half their
clothes, that their robes might not hinder them in the digging. The reader,
however, must not, in his imagination, invest these fair laborers with the
delicate forms, and gentle manners, and timid hearts which are generally
deemed characteristic of women, for the Spartan females were trained expressly,
from their earliest life, to the most rough and bold exposures and toils. They
were inured from infancy to hardihood, by being taught to contend in public wrestlings and games, to endure every species of fatigue
and exposure, and to despise everything like gentleness and delicacy. In a
word, they were little less masculine in appearance and manners than the men;
and accordingly, when Archidamia went into the senate-chamber with a drawn sword
in her hand, and there, boldly facing the whole assembly, declared that the
women would on no account consent to leave the city, she acted in a manner not
at all inconsistent with what at Sparta was considered the proper position and
character of 'her sex. In a word, the Spartan women were as bold and stern, and
almost as formidable, as the men.
All
night long the work of excavation went on. Those who were too young or too
feeble to work were employed in going to and fro,
carrying tools where they were required, or bringing food and drink to those
who were digging in the trench, while the soldiers remained quietly at rest
within the city, awaiting the duties which were to devolve upon them in the
morning. The trench was made wide and deep enough to impede the passage of the
elephants and of the cavalry, and it was guarded at the ends by wagons, the
wheels of which were half buried in the ground at the places chosen for them,
in order to render them immovable. All this work was performed in such silence
and secrecy that it met with no interruption from Pyrrhus’s camp, and the whole
was completed before the morning dawned.
As
soon as it began to be light, the camp of Pyrrhus was in motion. All was excitement
and commotion, too, within the city. The soldiers assumed their arms and formed
in array. The women gathered around them while they were making these
preparations, assisting them to buckle on their armor, and animating them with
words of sympathy and encouragement. “How glorious it will be for you,” said they,
“to gain a victory here in the precincts of the city, where we can all witness
and enjoy your triumph; and even if you fall in the contest, your mothers and
your wives are close at hand to receive you to their arms, and to soothe and
sustain you in your dying struggles!”
When
all was ready, the men marched forth to meet the advancing columns of Pyrrhus’s
army, and the battle soon began. Pyrrhus soon found that the trench which the
Spartans had dug in the night was destined greatly to obstruct his intended
operations. The horse and the elephants could not cross it at all; and even the
men, if they succeeded in getting over the ditch, were driven back when attempting
to ascend the rampart of earth which had been formed along the side of it, by
the earth thrown up in making the excavation, for this earth was loose and
steep, and afforded them no footing. Various attempts were made to dislodge
the wagons that had been fixed into the ground at the ends of the trench, but
for a time all these efforts were fruitless. At last, however, Ptolemy, the son
of Pyrrhus, came very near succeeding. He had the command of a force of about
two thousand Gauls, and with this body he made a circuit, so as to come upon
the line of wagons in such a manner as to give him a great advantage in
attacking them. The Spartans fought very resolutely in defense of them; but the
Gauls gradually prevailed, and at length succeeded in dragging several of the
wagons up out of the earth. All that they thus extricated they drew off out of
the way, and threw them into the river.
Seeing
this, young Aerotatus, the prince whom Areus his father, now absent, as the
reader will recollect, in Crete, had left in command in Sparta when he went
away, hastened to interpose. He placed himself at the head of a small band of
two or three hundred men, and, crossing the city on the other side, he went
unobserved, and then, making a circuit, came round and attacked the Gauls, who
were at work on the wagons in the rear. As the Gauls had already a foe in front
nearly strong enough to cope with them, this sudden assault from behind
entirely turned the scale. They were driven away in great confusion. This feat
being accomplished, Aerotatus came back at the head of his detachment into the
city, panting and exhausted with the exertions he had made, and covered with
blood. He was received there with the loudest applause and acclamations. The
women gathered around him, and overwhelmed him with thanks and congratulations. “Go to Chelidonis,” said they, “and
rest. She ought to be yours. You have deserved her. How we envy her such a
lover!”
The
contest continued all the day, and when night came on Pyrrhus found that he had
made no sensible progress in the work of gaining entrance into the city. He
was, however, now forced to postpone all further efforts till the following
day. At the proper time he retired to rest, but he awoke very early in the
morning in a state of great excitement; and, calling up some of the officers
around him, he related to them a remarkable dream which he had had during the
night, and which, he thought, presaged success to the efforts which they were
to make on the following day. He had seen, he said, in his dream, a flash of
lightning dart from the sky upon Sparta, and set the whole city on fire. This,
he argued, was a divine omen which promised them certain success; and he called
upon the generals to marshal the troops and prepare for the onset, saying, “We
are sure of victory now.”
Whether
Pyrrhus really had had such a dream, or whether he fabricated the story for the
purpose of inspiring anew the courage and confidence of his men, which, as
would naturally be supposed, might have been somewhat weakened by the ill
success of the preceding day, cannot be absolutely ascertained. Whichever it
was, it failed wholly of its intended effect. Pyrrhus’s generals said, in reply,
that the omen was adverse, and not propitious, for it was one of the
fundamental principles of haruspicial science that
lightning made sacred whatever it touched. It was forbidden even to step upon
the ground where a thunder-bolt had fallen; and they ought to consider, therefore,
that the descent of the lightning upon Sparta, as figured to Pyrrhus in the
dream, was intended to mark the city as under the special protection of heaven,
and to warn the invaders not to molest it. Finding thus that the story of his
vision produced a different effect from the one he had intended, Pyrrhus
changed his ground, and told his generals that no importance whatever was to
be attached to visions and dreams. They might serve, he argued, very well to
amuse the ignorant and superstitious, but wise men should be entirely above
being influenced by them in any way. “You have something better than these
things to trust in,” said he. You have arms in your hands, and you have Pyrrhus
for your leaden This is proof enough for you that you are destined to
conquer.”
How
far these assurances were found effectual in animating the courage of the
generals we do not know; but the result did not at all confirm Pyrrhus’s vainglorious
predictions. During the first part of the day, indeed, he made great progress,
and for a time it appeared probable that the city was about to fall into his
hands. The plan of his operations was first to fill up the ditch which the Spartans
had made; the soldiers throwing into it for this purpose great quantities of
materials of every kind, such as earth, stones, fagots, trunks of trees, and
whatever came most readily to hand. They used in this work immense quantities
of dead bodies, which they found scattered over the plain, the results of the
conflict of the preceding day. By means of the horrid bridging thus made, the
troops attempted to make their way across the ditch, while the Spartans,
formed on the top of the rampart of earth on the inner side of it, fought
desperately to repel them. All this time the women were passing back and forth
between them and the city, bringing out water and refreshments to sustain the
fainting strength of the men, and carrying home the wounded and dying, and the
bodies of the dead.
At
last a considerable body of troops, consisting of a division that was under
the personal charge of Pyrrhus himself, succeeded in breaking through the
Spartan lines, at a point near one end of the rampart which had been thrown up.
When the men found that they had forced their way through, they raised loud
shouts of exultation and triumph, and immediately rushed forward toward the
city. For a moment it seemed that for the Spartans all was lost; but the tide
of victory was soon suddenly turned by a very unexpected incident. An arrow
pierced the breast of the horse on which Pyrrhus was riding, and gave the animal
a fatal wound. The horse plunged and reared in his agony and terror, and then
fell, throwing Pyrrhus to the ground. This occurrence, of course, arrested the
whole troop in their progress. The horsemen wheeled suddenly about, and
gathered around Pyrrhus to rescue him from his danger. This gave the Spartans
time to rally, and to bring up their forces in such numbers that the Macedonian
soldiers were glad to be able to make their way back again, bearing Pyrrhus
with them beyond the lines. After recovering a little from the agitation
produced by this adventure, Pyrrhus found that his troops, discouraged,
apparently, by the fruitlessness of their efforts, and especially by this last
misfortune, were beginning to lose their spirit and ardor, and were fighting
feebly and falteringly, all along the line. He concluded therefore, that there
was no longer any prospect of accomplishing his object that day, and that it
would be better to save the remaining strength of his troops by withdrawing
them from the field, rather than to discourage and enfeeble them still more by
continuing what was now very clearly a useless struggle. He accordingly put a
stop to the action, and the army retired to their encampment.
Before
he had opportunity to make a third attempt, events occurred which entirely
changed the whole aspect of the controversy. The reader will recollect that
Areus, the king of Sparta, was absent in Crete at the time of Pyrrhus’s
arrival, and that the command of the army devolved, during his absence, on Aerotatus,
his son; for the kings of the other line, for some reason or other, took a very
small part in the public affairs of the city at this time, and are seldom
mentioned in history. Areus, as soon as he heard of the Macedonian invasion,
immediately collected a large force and set out on his return to Sparta, and he
entered into the city at the head of two thousand men just after the second
repulse which Aerotatus had given to their enemies. At the same time, too, another
body of re-enforcements came in from Corinth, consisting of the allies of the
Spartans, gathered from the northern part of the Peloponnesus. The arrival of these
troops in the city filled the Spartans with joy, and entirely dispelled their
fears. They considered themselves as now entirely safe. The old men and the
women, considering that their places were now abundantly supplied, thenceforth
withdrew from all active participation in the contest, and retired to their
respective homes, to rest and refresh themselves after their toils.
Notwithstanding
this however, Pyrrhus was not yet prepared to give up the contest. The
immediate effect, in fact, of the arrival of the re-enforcements was to arouse
his spirit anew, and to stimulate him to a fresh determination that he would
not be defeated in his purpose, but that he would conquer the city at all
hazards. He accordingly made several more desperate attempts, but they were
wholly unsuccessful; and at length, after a series of losses and defeats, he
was obliged to give up the contest and withdraw. He retired, accordingly, to
some little distance from Sparta, where he established a permanent camp, subsisting
his soldiers by plundering the surrounding country. He was vexed and irritated
by the mortifications and disappointments which he had endured, and waited
impatiently for an opportunity to seek revenge.
While
he was thus pondering his. situation, uncertain what to do next, he received
one day a message from Argos, a city in the northern part of the Peloponnesus,
asking him to come and take part in a contest which had been opened there. It
seems that a civil war had broken out in that city, and one of the leaders,
knowing the character of Pyrrhus, and his readiness to engage in any quarrel
which was offered to him, had concluded to apply for his aid. Pyrrhus was, as
usual, very ready to yield to this request. It afforded him, as similar
proposals had so often done before, a plausible excuse for abandoning an enterprise
in which he began to despair of being able to succeed. He immediately commenced
his march to the northward. The Spartans, however, were by no means disposed to
allow him to go off unmolested. They advanced with all the force they could
command, and, though they were not powerful enough to engage him in a general
battle, they harassed him and embarrassed his march in a very vexatious manner.
They laid ambushes in the narrow defiles through which he had to pass; they cut
off his detachments, and plundered and destroyed his baggage. Pyrrhus at length
sent back a body of his guards under Ptolemy, his son, to drive them away.
Ptolemy attacked the Spartans and fought them with great bravery, until at
length, in the heat of the contest, a celebrated Cretan, of remarkable
strength and activity, riding furiously up to Ptolemy, felled him to the
ground, and killed him at a single blow. On seeing him fall, his detachment
were struck with dismay, and, turning their backs on the Spartans, fled to
Pyrrhus with the tidings.
Pyrrhus
was, of course, excited to the highest pitch of phrensy at hearing what had occurred.
He immediately placed himself at the head of a troop of horse, and galloped
back to attack the Spartans and avenge the death of his son. He assaulted his
enemies, when he reached the ground where they were posted, in the most
furious manner, and killed great numbers of them in the conflict that ensued.
At one time, he was for a short period in the most imminent danger. A Spartan, named
Evalcus, who came up and engaged him hand to hand, aimed a blow at his head,
which, although it failed of its intended effect, came down close in front of
his body, as he sat upon his horse, and cut off the reins of the bridle. The
instant after, Pyrrhus transfixed Evalcus with his spear. Of course, Pyrrhus
had now no longer the control of his horse, and he accordingly leaped from him
to the ground and fought on foot, while the Spartans gathered around,
endeavoring to rescue and protect the body of Evalcus. A furious and most
terrible contest ensued, in which many on both sides were slain. At length
Pyrrhus made good his retreat from the scene, and the Spartans themselves
finally withdrew, Pyrrhus having thus, by way of comfort for his grief, taken
the satisfaction of revenge, resumed his march and went to Argos.
Arrived
before the city, he found that there was an army opposed to him there, under
the command of a general named Antigonus. His army was encamped upon a hill near
the city, awaiting his arrival. The mind of Pyrrhus had become so chafed and
irritated by the opposition which he had encountered, and the defeats,
disappointments, and mortifications which he had endured, that he was full of rage and fury, and seemed to manifest the
temper of a wild beast rather than that of a man. He sent a herald to the camp
of Antigonus, angrily defying him, and challenging him to come down from his
encampment and meet him in single combat on the plain. Antigonus very cooly replied that time was a weapon which he employed in
his contests as well as the sword, and that he was not yet ready for battle;
adding, that if Pyrrhus was weary of his life, and very impatient to end it,
there were plenty of modes by which he could accomplish his desire.
Pyrrhus
remained for some days before the walls of Argos, during which time various negotiations
took place between the people of the city and the several parties involved in
the quarrel, with a view to an amicable adjustment of the dispute, in order to
save the city from the terrors attendant upon a contest for the possession of
it between such mighty armies. At length some sort of settlement was made, and
both armies agreed to retire. Pyrrhus, however, had no intention of keeping
his agreement. Having thrown the people of the city somewhat off their guard by
his promise, he took occasion to advance stealthily to one of the gates at
dead of night, and there, the gate being opened to him by a confederate within
the city, he began to march his soldiers in. The troops were ordered to keep
silence, and to step noiselessly, and thus a large body of Gauls gained
admission, and posted themselves in the market place without alarming or
awakening the inhabitants. To render this story credible, we must suppose that
the sentinels and guards had been previously gained over to Pyrrhus’s side.
The
foot-soldiers having thus made their entrance into the city, Pyrrhus undertook
next to pass some of his elephants in. It was found, however, when they
approached the gate, that they could not enter without having the towers first
removed from their backs, as the gates were only high enough to admit the
animals alone. The soldiers accordingly proceeded to take off the towers, and
then the elephants were led in. The towers were then to be replaced. Th work
of taking down the towers, and then of putting them on again, which all had to
be done in the dark, was attended with great difficulty and delay, and so much
noise was unavoidably made in the operation, that at length the people in the
surrounding houses took the alarm, and in a very short period the whole city
was aroused. Eager gatherings were immediately held in all quarters. Pyrrhus
pressed forward with all haste into the marketplace, and posted himself
there, arranging his elephants, his horse, and his foot in the manner best
adapted to protect them from any attack that might be made. The people of Argos
crowded into the citadel, and sent out immediately to Antigonus to come in to
their aid. He at once put his camp in motion, and, advancing toward the walls
with the main body, he sent in some powerful detachments of troops to
co-operate with the inhabitants of the city. All these scenes occurring in the
midst of the darkness of the night, the people having been awakened from their
sleep by a sudden alarm, were attended, of course, by a dreadful panic and
confusion; and, to complete the complication of horrors, Areus, with the
Spartan army under his command, who had followed Pyrrhus in his approach to the
city, and had been closely watching his movements ever since he had arrived,
now burst in through the gates, and attacked the troops of his hated enemy in
the streets, in the market-place, and wherever he could find them, with
shouts, outcries, and imprecations, that made the whole city one widespread
scene of unutterable confusion and terror.
The
general confusion and terror, however, produced by the assaults of the Spartans
were the only results that immediately followed them, for the troops soon found
that no real progress could be made, and no advantage gained by this nocturnal
warfare. The soldiers could not distinguish friends from foes. They could not
see or hear their commander, or act with any concert or in any order. They were
scattered about, and lost their way in narrow streets, or fell into drains or
sewers, and all attempts on the part of the officers to rally them, or to
control them in any way, were unavailing. At length, by common consent, all
parties desisted from fighting, and awaited—all in an awful condition of uncertainty
and suspense—the coming of the dawn.
Pyrrhus,
as the objects that were around him were brought gradually into view by the
gray light of the morning, was alarmed at seeing that the walls of the citadel
were covered with armed men, and at observing various other indications, by
which he was warned that there was a very powerful force opposed to him
within the city. As the light increased, and brought the boundaries of the market-place
where he posted himself into view, and revealed the various images and figures
which had been placed there to adorn it, he was struck with consternation at
the sight of one of the groups, as the outlines of it slowly made themselves
visible. It was a piece of statuary, in bronze, representing a combat between a
wolf and a bull. In seems that in former times some oracle or diviner had
forewarned him that when he should see a wolf encountering a bull, he might
know that the hour of his death was near. Of course, he had supposed that such
a spectacle, if it was indeed true that he was ever destined to see it, could
only be expected to appear in some secluded forest, or in some wide and unfrequented
spot among the mountains. Perhaps, indeed, he paid very little attention to
the prophecy, and never expected that it would be literally realized. When,
however, this group in bronze came out to view, it reminded him of the oracle,
and the dreadful foreboding which its appearance awakened, connected with the
anxiety and alarm naturally inspired 'by the situation in which he was placed,
filled him with consternation. He feared that his hour was come, and his only
solicitude now was to make good his retreat as soon as possible from the fatal
dangers by which he seemed to be surrounded.
But
how to escape was the difficulty. The gate was narrow, the body of troops with
him was large, and he knew that in attempting to retire he would be attacked
from all the streets in the vicinity, and from the tops of the houses and
walls, and that his column would inevitably be thrown into disorder, and would
choke up the gateway and render it wholly impassable, through their eagerness
to escape and the confusion that would ensue. He accordingly sent out a
messenger to his son Helenus, who remained all the time in command of the main
body of the army, without the walls, directing him to come forward with all his
force, and break down a portion of the wall adjoining the gateway, so as to
open a free egress for his troops in their retreat from the city. He remained
himself at his position in the marketplace until time had elapsed sufficient,
as he judged, for Helenus to have received his orders, and to have reached the
gate in the execution of them; and then, being by this time hard pressed by
his enemies, who began early in the morning to attack him in all quarters, he
put his troops in motion, and in the midst of a scene of shouts, uproar,
terror, and confusion indescribable, the whole body moved on toward the gate,
expecting that, by the time they arrived there, Helenus would have accomplished
his work, and that they should find a broad opening made, which would allow of
an easy egress. Instead of this, however, they found, before they reached the
gate, that the streets before them were entirely blocked up with an immense
concourse of soldiers that were pouring tumultuously into the city. It seems
that Helenus had, in some way or other, misunderstood the orders, and supposed
that he was directed to enter the city himself, to re-enforce his father within
the walls. The shock of the encounter produced by these opposing currents
redoubled the confusion. Pyrrhus, and the officers with him, shouted out
orders to the advancing soldiers of Helenus to fall back; but in the midst of
the indescribable din and confusion that prevailed, no vociferation, however
loud, could be heard. Nor, if the orders had been heard, could they have been
obeyed, for the van of the coming column was urged forward irresistibly by the
pressure of those behind, and the panic which by this time prevailed among the
troops of Pyrrhus’s command made them frantic and furious in their efforts to force
their way onward and get out of the city. An awful scene of confusion and
destruction ensued. Men pressed and trampled each other to death, and the air
was filled with shrieks and cries of pain and terror. The destruction of life
was very great, but it was produced almost entirely by the pressure and the
confusion—men, horses, and elephants being mingled inextricably together in
one vast living mass, which seemed, to those who looked down upon it from
above, to be writhing and struggling in the most horrible contortions. There
was no fighting, for there was no room for anyone to strike a blow. If a man
drew his sword, or raised his pike, his arms were caught and pinioned immediately
by the pressure around him, and he found himself utterly helpless. The injury,
therefore, that was done, was the result almost altogether of the pressure and
the struggles, and of the trampling of the elephants and the horses upon the
men, and of the men upon each other.
The
elephants added greatly to the confusion of the scene. One of the largest in
the troop fell in the gateway, and lay there for some time on his side, unable
to rise, and braying in a terrific manner. Another was excited to a phrensy by
the loss of his master, who had fallen off from his head, wounded by a dart or
a spear. The faithful animal turned around to save him. With his trunk he threw
the men who were in the way off to the right hand and the left, and then,
taking up the body of his master with his trunk, he placed it carefully upon
his tusks, and then attempted to force a passage through the crowd, trampling
down all who came in his way. History has awarded to this elephant a
distinction which he well deserved, by recording his name. It was Nicon.
All
this time Pyrrhus was near the rear of his troops, and thus was in some degree
removed from the greatest severity of the pressure. He turned and fought,
from time to time, with those who were pressing upon his line from behind. As
the danger became more imminent, he took out from his helmet the plume by which
he was distinguished from the other generals, and gave it to a friend who was
near him, in order that he might be a less conspicuous mark for the shafts of
his enemies. The combats, however, between his party and those who were
harassing them in the rear were still continued; and at length, in one of them,
a man of Argos wounded Him, by throwing a javelin with so much force that the
point of it passed through his breast-plate and entered his side. The wound was
not dangerous, but it had the effect of maddening Pyrrhus against the man who
had inflicted it, and he turned upon him with great fury, as if he were
intending to annihilate him at a blow. He would very probably Have killed the
Greek, had it not been that just at that moment the mother of the man, by a
very singular coincidence, was surveying the scene from a house-top which
overlooked the street where these events were occurring. She immediately
seized a heavy tile from the roof, and with all her strength hurled it into the
street upon Pyrrhus just as he was striking the blow. The tile came down upon
his head, and, striking the helmet heavily, it carried both helmet and head
down together, and crushed the lower vertebrae of the neck at their junction
with the spine.
Pyrrhus
dropped the reins from his hands, and fell over from his horse heavily to the
ground. It happened that no one knew him who saw him fall, for so great had
been the crowd and confusion, that Pyrrhus had got separated from his immediate
friends. Those who were near him, therefore, when he fell, pressed on, intent
only on their own safety, and left him where he lay. At last a soldier of
Antigonus’s army, named Zopyrus, coming up to the spot, accompanied by several
others of his party, looked upon the wounded man and recognized him as Pyrrhus.
They lifted him up, and dragged him out of the street to a portico that was
near. Zopyrus drew his sword, and raised it to cut off his prisoner’s head. At
this instant Pyrrhus opened his eyes, and rolled them up with such a horrid
expression as to strike Zopyrus with terror. His arm consequently faltered in
dealing the blow, so that he missed his aim, and instead of striking the neck,
only wounded and mutilated the mouth and chin. He was obliged to repeat the
stroke again and again before the neck was sundered. At length, however, the
dreadful deed was done, and the head was severed from the body.
Very
soon after this, Halcyoncus, the son of Antigonus, rode up to the spot, and
after learning what had occurred, he asked the soldiers to lift up the head to
him, that he might look at it a moment. As soon as it was within his reach, he
seized it and rode away, in order to carry it to his father. He found his
father sitting with his friends, and threw down the head at his feet, as a
trophy which he supposed his father would rejoice to see. Antigonus was,
however, in fact, extremely shocked at the spectacle. He reproved his son in
the severest terms for his brutality, and then, sending for the mutilated
trunk, he gave to the whole body an honorable burial.
That
Pyrrhus was a man of great native power of mind, and of extraordinary capacity
as a military leader, no one can deny. His capacity and genius were in fact so
great, as to make him, perhaps, the most conspicuous example that the world
has produced of the manner in which the highest power and the noblest
opportunities may be wasted and thrown away. He accomplished nothing. He had no
plan, no aim, no object, but obeyed every momentary impulse, and entered,
without thought and without calculation, into any scheme that chance, or the
ambitious designs of others, might lay before him. He succeeded in creating a
vast deal of turmoil and war, in killing an immense number of men, and in
conquering, though temporarily and to no purpose, a great many kingdoms. It was
mischief, and only mischief, that he did; and though the scale on which he perpetrated
mischief was great, his fickleness and vacillation deprived it altogether of
the dignity of greatness. His crimes against the peace and welfare of mankind
did not arise from any peculiar depravity; he was, on the contrary, naturally
of a noble and generous spirit, though in process of time, through the reaction
of his conduct upon his heart, these good qualities almost entirely
disappeared. Still, he seems never really to have wished mankind ill. He
perpetrated his crimes against them thoughtlessly, merely for the purpose of
showing what great things he could do.