READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECE
CHAPTER LVII (57).
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The
reconquest of Ionia being thoroughly completed, Artaphernes proceeded to
organize the future government of it, with a degree of prudence and forethought
not often visible in Persian proceedings. Convoking deputies from all the
different cities, he compelled them to enter into a permanent convention, for
the amicable settlement of disputes, so as to prevent all employment of force
by any one against the others. Moreover, he caused the territory of each city
to be measured by parasangs (each parasang was equal to thirty stadia, or
about three miles and a half), and arranged the assessments of tribute
according to this measurement, without any material departure, however, from
the sums which had been paid before the revolt.
Unfortunately,
Herodotus is unusually brief in his allusion to this proceeding, which it would
have been highly interesting to be able to comprehend perfectly. We may,
however, assume it ascertain, that both the population and the territory of
many among the Ionic cities, if not of all, were materially altered in
consequent of the preceding revolt, and still more in consequence of the
cruelties with which the suppression of the revolt had been accompanied. In
regard to Miletus, Herodotus tells us that the Persians retained for themselves
the city with its circumjacent plain, but gave the mountain portion of the
Milesian territory to the Carians of Pedasa. Such a proceeding would naturally
call for a fresh measurement and assessment of tribute; and there may have been
similar transfers of land elsewhere. I have already observed that the
statements which we find in Herodotus, of utter depopulation and destruction
falling upon the cities, cannot be credited in their full extent; for these
cities are all peopled, and all Hellenic, afterwards. But there can be no doubt
that they are partially true, and that the miseries of those days, as stated in
the work of Hecataeus, as well as by contemporary informants with whom
Herodotus had probably conversed, must have been extreme. New inhabitants would
probably be admitted in many of them, to supply the loss sustained; and such
infusion of fresh blood would strengthen the necessity for the organization
introduced by Artaphernes, in order to determine clearly the obligations due
from the cities both to the Persian government and towards each other.
Herodotus considers that the arrangement was extremely beneficial to the
Ionians, and so it must unquestionably have appeared, coming as it did
immediately after so much previous suffering. He farther adds, that the tribute
then fixed remained unaltered until his own day,—a statement requiring some
comment, which I reserve until the time arrives lor describing the condition of
the Asiatic Greeks alter the repulse of Xerxes from Greece proper.
Meanwhile,
the intentions of Darius for the conquest of Greece were now effectively
manifested: Mardonius, invested with the supreme command, and at the head of a
large force, was sent down m the ensuing spring for the purpose. Having reached
Cilicia in the course of the march, he himself got on ship-board and went by
sea to Ionia, while his army marched across Asia Minor to the Hellespont. His
proceeding in Ionia surprises ns, and seems to have appeared surprising as well
to Herodotus himself as to his readers. Mardonius deposed the despots
throughout the various Greek cities, and left the people of each to govern
themselves, subject to the Persian dominion and tribute. This was a complete
reversal of the former policy of Persia, and must be ascribed to a new
conviction, doubtless wise and well founded, which had recently grown up among
the Persian leaders, that on the whole their unpopularity was aggravated, more
than their strength was increased, by employing these despots as instruments.
The phenomena of the late Ionic revolt were well calculated to teach such a
lesson; but we shall not often find the Persians profiting by experience,
throughout the course of this history.
Mardonius
did not remain long in Ionia, but passed on with his fleet to the Hellespont,
where the land-force had already arrived. He transported it across into
Europe, and began his march through Thrace; all of which had already been
reduced by Megabazus, and does not seem to have participated in the Ionic
revolt. The island of Thasus surrendered to the fleet without any resistance,
and the land-force was conveyed across the Strymon to the Greek city of
Acanthus, on the western coast of the Strymonic gulf. From hence his land-force
marched into Macedonia, and subdued a considerable portion of its inhabitants,
perhaps some of those not comprised in the dominion of Amyntas, since that
prince had before submitted to Megabazus. Meanwhile, he sent his fleet, to
double the promontory of Mount Athos, and to join the land-force again at the
Thermaic gulf with a view of conquering as much of Greece as he could, and
even of prosecuting the march as far as Athens and Eretria; so that the
expedition afterwards accomplished by Xerxes would have been tried at least by
Mardonius, twelve or thirteen years earlier, had not a terrible storm
completely disabled the fleet. The sea near Athos was then, and is now, full of
peril to navigators. One of the hurricanes, so frequent in its neighborhood,
overtook the Persian fleet, destroyed three hundred ships, and drowned or cast
ashore not less than twenty thousand men: of those who reached the shore, many
died of cold, or were devoured by the wild beasts on that inhospitable tongue
of land. This disaster checked altogether the farther progress of Mardonius,
who also sustained considerable loss with his land-army, and was himself
wounded, in a night attack made upon him by the tribe of Thracians called
Brygi. Though strong enough to repel and avenge this attack, and to subdue the
Brygi, he was yet in no condition to advance farther. Both the land-force and
the fleet were conveyed back to the Hellespont, and from thence across to Asia,
with all the shame of failure. Nor was Mardonius again employed by Darius,
though we cannot make out that the fault was imputable to him. We shall hear of
him again under Xerxes.
The
ill-success of Mardonius seems to have inspired the Thasians, so recently
subdued, with the idea of revolting. At least, they provoked the suspicion of
Darius by making active preparations for defence, building war-ships, and
strengthening their fortifications. The Thasians were at this time in great
opulence, chiefly from their gold and silver mines, both in their island and in
their mainland territory opposite. Their mines at Skapte Hyle, in Thrace,
yielded to them an annual income of eighty talents; and altogether their
surplus revenue—after defraying nil the expenses of government, so that the
inhabitants were entirely untaxed—was two hundred talents. With these large
means, they were enabled soon to make preparations which excited notice among
their neighbors, many of whom were doubtless jealous of their prosperity, and
perhaps inclined to dispute with them possession of the profitable mines of
Skapte Hyle. As in other cases, so in this: the jealousies among subject
neighbors often procured revelations to the superior power: the proceedings of
the Thasians were made known, and they were forced to raze their fortifications
as well as to surrender all their ships to the Persians at Abdera.
Though dissatisfied with Mardonius, Darius was only the more eagerly bent on his project of conquering Greece, and Hippias was at his side to keep alive his wrath against the Athenians. Orders were despatched to the maritime cities of his empire to equip both ships of war and horse-transports for a renewed attempt. His intentions were probably known in Greece itself by this time, from the recent march of his army to Macedonia; but he thought it advisable to send heralds round to most of the Grecian cities, in order to require from each the formal token of submission,—earth and water; and thus to ascertain what extent of resistance his intended expedition was likely to experience. The answers received were to a high degree favorable. Many of the continental Greeks sent their submission, as well as all those islanders to whom application was made. Among the former, we are probably to reckon the Thebans and Thessalians, though Herodotus does not particularize them. Among the latter, Naxos, Euboea, and some of the smaller islands, are not included; but Aegina, at that time the first maritime power of Greece, is expressly included.
Nothing
marks so clearly the imminent peril in which the liberties of Greece, were now
placed, and the terror inspired by the Persians after their reconquest of
Ionia, as this abasement on the part of the Aeginetans, whose commerce with the
Asiatic islands and continent, doubtless impressed them strongly with the melancholy
consequences of unsuccessful resistance to the Great King. But on the present
occasion, their conduct was dictated as much by antipathy to Athens as by fear,
so that Greece was thus threatened with the intrusion of the Persian arm as
ally and arbiter in her internal contests: a contingency which, if it had
occurred now in the dispute between Aegina and Athens, would have led to the
certain enslavement of Greece,—though when it did occur nearly a century
afterwards, towards the close of the Peloponnesian war. and in consequence of
the prolonged struggle between Lacedaemon and Athens, Greece had become strong
enough in her own force to endure it without the loss of substantial
independence. The war between Thebes and Aegina on one side, and Athens on the
other,—begun several years before, and growing out of the connection between
Athens and Plataea,—had never yet been terminated. The Aeginetans had taken
part in that war from gratuitous feeling, either of friendship for Thebes, or
of enmity to Athens, without any direct ground of quarrel, and they
had begun the war even without the formality of notice. Though a period
apparently not less than fourteen years (from about 506-492 bc) had elapsed since it began, the
state of hostility still continued; and we may well conceive that Hippias, the
great instigator of Persian attack upon Greece, would not fail to enforce upon
all the enemies of Athens the prudence of seconding, or at least of not
opposing, the efforts of the Persian to reinstate him in that city. It was
partly under this feeling, combined with genuine alarm, that both Thebes and
Aegina manifested submissive dispositions towards the heralds of Darius.
Among
these heralds, some had gone both to Athens and to Sparta, for the same purpose
of demanding earth and water. The reception given to them at both places was
angry in the extreme. The Athenians cast the herald into the pit called the
barathrum, into which they sometimes precipitated public criminals: the
Spartans threw the herald who came to them into a well, desiring the
unfortunate messenger to take earth and water from thence to the king. The
inviolability of heralds was so ancient and undisputed in Greece, from the
Homeric times downward, that nothing short of the fiercest excitement could
have instigated any Grecian community to such an outrage. But to the
Lacedaemonians, now accustomed to regard themselves as the first of all Grecian
states, and to be addressed always in the character of superiors, the demand
appeared so gross an insult as to banish from their minds for the time all
recollection of established obligations. They came subsequently, however, to
repent of the act as highly criminal, and to look upon it as the cause of
misfortunes which overtook them thirty or forty years afterwards: how they
tried at that time to expiate it, I shall hereafter recount.
But
if, on the one hand, the wounded dignity of the Spartans hurried them into the
commission of this wrong, it was on the other hand of signal use to the general
liberties of Greece, by rousing them out of their apathy as to the coming
invader, and placing them with regard to him in the same state of inexpiable
hostility as Athens and Eretria. We see at once the bonds drawn closer between
Athens and Sparta. The Athenians, for the first time, prefer a complaint at
Sparta against the Aeginetans for having given earth and water to
Darius,—accusing them of having done this with views of enmity to Athens, and
in order to invade Attica conjointly with the Persian. This they represented
“as treason to Hellas,” calling upon Sparta as head of Greece to interfere. And
in consequence of their appeal, Kleomenes king of Sparta went over to Aegina,
to take measures against the authors of the late proceeding, “for the general
benefit of Hellas”.
The
proceeding now before us is of very great importance in the progress of Grecian
history. It is the first direct and positive historical manifestation of
Hellas as an aggregate body, with Sparta as its chief, and obligations of a
certain sort on the part of its members, the neglect or violation of which
constitutes a species of treason. I have already pointed out several earlier
incidents, showing how the Greek political mind, beginning from entire
severance of states, became gradually prepared for this idea of a permanent,
league with mutual obligations and power of enforcement vested in a permanent
chief,—an idea never fully carried into practice, but now distinctly manifest
and partially operative. First, the great acquired power and territory of
Sparta, her military training, her undisturbed political traditions, create an
unconscious deference towards her, such as was not felt towards any other
state: next, she is seen in the proceedings against Athens, after the expulsion
of Hippias, as summoning and conducting to war a cluster of self-obliged
Peloponnesian allies, with certain formalities which gave to the alliance an imposing
permanence and solemnity: thirdly, her position becomes recognized as first
power or president of Greece, both by foreigners who invite alliance (Croesus),
or by Greeks who seek help, such as the Plataeans against Thebes, or the
Ionians against Persia. But Sparta has not been hitherto found willing to take
on herself the performance of this duty of protector-general. She refused the
Ionians and the Samian Maeandrius, as well as the Plataeans, in spite of their
entreaties founded on common Hellenic lineage: the expedition which she
undertook against Polycrates of Samos, was founded upon private motives of
displeasure, even in the estimation of the Lacedaemonians themselves: moreover,
even if all these requests had been granted, she might have seemed to be rather
obeying a generous sympathy than performing a duty incumbent upon her as
superior. But in the case now before us, of Athens against Aegina, the latter
consideration stands distinctly prominent. Athens is not a member of the cluster
of Spartan allies, nor does she claim the compassion of Sparta, as defenceless
against an overpowering Grecian neighbor. She complains of a Pan-Hellenic
obligation as having been contravened by the Aeginetans to her detriment and
danger, and calls upon Sparta to enforce upon the delinquents respect to these
obligations. For the first time in Grecian history, such a call is made; for
the first time in Grecian history, it is effectively answered. We may
reasonably doubt, whether it would have been thus answered,—considering the
tardy, unimpressible, and home-keeping character of the Spartans, with their
general insensibility to distant dangers,—if the adventure of the Persian
herald had not occurred to gall their pride beyond endurance; to drive them
into unpardonable hostility with the Great King; and to cast them into the same
boat with Athens for keeping off an enemy who threatened the common liberties
of Hellas.
From
this time, then, we may consider that there exists a recognized political
union of Greece against the Persians,—or at least something as near to a
political union as Grecian temper will permit,—with Sparta as its head for the
present. To such a preeminence of Sparta, Grecian history had been gradually
tending; but the final event which placed it beyond dispute, and which humbled
for the time her ancient and only rival—Argos—is now to be noticed.
It
was about three or four years before the arrival of these Persian heralds in
Greece, and nearly at the time when Miletus was besieged by the Persian
generals, that a war broke out between Sparta and Argos,—on what grounds
Herodotus does not inform us. Kleomenes, encouraged by a promise of the oracle
that he should take Argos, led the Lacedaemonian troops to the banks of the
Erasinus, the border river of the Argeian territory. But the sacrifices,
without which no river could be crossed, were so unfavorable, that he altered
his course, extorted some vessels from Aegina and Sicyon, and carried his
troops by sea to Nauplia, the seaport belonging to Argos, and to the territory
of Tiryns. The Argeians having marched their forces down to resist him, the two
armies joined battle at Sepeia, near Tiryns: Kleomenes, by a piece of
simplicity on the part of his enemies, which we find it difficult to credit in
Hero lotus, was enabled to attack them unprepared, and obtained a decisive victory.
For the Argeians, it is stated, were so afraid of being overreached by
stratagem, in the post which their army occupied over against the enemy, that
they listened for the commands proclaimed aloud by the Lacedaemonian herald,
and performed with their own army the same order which they thus heard given.
This came to the knowledge of Kleomenes, who communicated private notice to his
soldiers, that when the herald proclaimed orders to go to dinner, they should
not obey, but immediately stand to their arms. We are to presume that the
Argeian camp was sufficiently near to that of the Lacedemonians to enable them
to hear the voice of the herald, yet not within sight, from the nature of the
ground. Accordingly, so soon as the Argeians heard the herald in the enemy’s
camp proclaim the word to go to dinner, they went to dinner themselves; and in
this disorderly condition they were easily overthrown by the Spartans. Many of
them perished in the field, while the fugitives took refuge in a thick grove
consecrated to their eponymous hero Argus. Kleomenes pursued and inclosed them
therein; but thinking it safer to employ deceit rather than force, he
ascertained from deserters the names of the chief Argeians thus shut up, and
then invited them out successively by means of a herald,—pretending that he had
received their ransom, and that they were released. As fast as each man came
out, he was put to death; the fate of these unhappy sufferers being concealed
from their comrades within the grove by the thickness of the foliage, until
some one climbing to the top of a tree detected and proclaimed the destruction
going on,—after about fifty of the victims had perished. Unable to entice any
more of the Argeians from their consecrated refuge, which they still vainly
hoped would protect them, Kleomenes set fire to the grove, and burnt it to the
ground, insomuch that the persons within it appear to have been destroyed,
either by fire or by sword. After the conflagration had begun, he
inquired for the first time to whom the grove belonged, and learnt that it
belonged to the hero Argus.
Not
less than six thousand citizens, the flower and strength of Argos, perished in
this disastrous battle and retreat. And so completely was the city prostrated,
that Kleomenes might easily have taken it, had he chosen to march thither
forthwith and attack it with vigor. If we are to believe later historians whom
Pausanias, Polyaenus, and Plutarch have copied, he did march thither and attack
it, but was repulsed by the valor of the Argeian women; who, in the dearth of
warriors occasioned by the recent defeat, took arms along with the slaves,
headed by the poetess Telesilla, and gallantly defended the walls. This is
probably a myth, generated by a desire to embody in detail the dictum of the
oracle a little before, about “the female conquering the male.” Without
meaning to deny that the Argeian women might have been capable of achieving so
patriotic a deed, if Kleomenes had actually marched to the attack of their
city, we are compelled, by the distinct statement of Herodotus, to affirm that
he never did attack it. Immediately after the burning of the sacred grove of
Argos, he dismissed the bulk of his army to Sparta, retaining only one thousand
choice troops,—with whom he marched up to the Heraeum, or great temple of Here,
between Argos and Mykenae, to offer sacrifice. The priest in attendance forbade
him to enter, saying that no stranger was allowed to offer sacrifice in the
temple. But Kleomenes had once already forced his way into the sanctuary of
Athene, on the Athenian acropolis, in spite of the priestess and her
interdict,—and he now acted still more brutally towards the Argeian priest, for
he directed his helots to drag him from the altar and scourge him. Having
offered sacrifice, Kleomenes returned with his remaining force to Sparta.
But
the army whom he had sent home returned with a full persuasion that Argos might
easily have been taken,—that the king alone was to blame for having missed the
opportunity. As soon as he himself returned, his enemies—perhaps his colleague
Demaratus—brought him to trial before the ephors, on a charge of having been
bribed, against which he defended himself as follows: He had invaded the
hostile territory on the faith of an assurance from the oracle that he should
take Argos; but so soon as be had burnt down the sacred grove of the hero
Argus,—without knowing to whom it belonged,—he became at once sensible that
this was all that the god meant by taking Argos, and therefore that the divine
promise had been fully realized. Accordingly, he did not think himself at
liberty to commence any fresh attack, until he had ascertained whether the gods
would approve it and would grant him success. It was with this view that he
sacrificed in the Heraeum. But though his sacrifice was favorable, he observed
that the flame kindled on the altar flashed back from the bosom of the statue
of Here, and not from her head. If the flame had flashed from her head, he
would have known at once that the gods intended him to take the city by storm;
but the flash from her bosom plainly indicated that the topmost success was out
of his reach, and that he had already reaped all the glories which they
intended for him. We may see that Herodotus, though he refrains from
criticizing this story, suspects it to tea fabrication. Not so the Spartan
ephors: to them it appeared not less true as a story than triumphant as a
defence, insuring to Kleomenes an honorable acquittal.
Though
this Spartan king lost the opportunity of taking Argos, his victories already gained
had inflicted upon her a blow such as she did not recover for a generation, and
put her for a time out of all condition to dispute the primacy of Greece with
Lacedaemon. I have already mentioned that both in legend and in earliest
history, Argos stands forth as the first power in Greece, with legendary claims
to headship, and decidedly above Lacedaemon; who gradually usurps from her,
first the reality of superior power, next the recognition of preeminence,—and
is now, at the period which we have reached, taking upon herself both the
rights and the duties of a presiding state over a body of allies who are bound
both to her and to each other. Her title to this honor, however, was never
admitted at Argos, and it is very probable that the war just described grew in
some way or other out of the increasing presidential power which circumstances
were tending to throw into her hands. And the complete temporary prostration of
Argos was an essential condition to the quiet acquisition of the power by
Sparta. Occurring as it did two or three years before the above-recounted
adventure of the heralds, it removed the only rival at that time both willing
and able to compete with Sparta,—a rival who might well have prevented any
effective union under another chief, though she could no longer have secured
any Pan-Hellenic ascendency for herself,—a rival who would have seconded Aegina
in her submission to the Persians, and would thus have lamed incurably the
defensive force of Greece. The ships which Kleomenes had obtained from the
Aeginetans as well as from the Sicyonians, against their own will, for landing
his troops at Nauplia, brought upon both these cities the enmity of Argos,
which the Sicyonians compromised by paying a sum of money, while the
Aeginetans refused to do so. And thus the circumstances of the Kleomenic war
had the effect not only of enfeebling Argos, but of alienating her from natural
allies and supporters, and clearing the ground for undisputed Spartan primacy.
Returning
now to the complaint preferred by Athens to the Spartans against the traitorous
submission of Aegina to Darius, we find that king Kleomenes passed immediately
over to that island for the purpose of inquiry and punishment. He was proceeding
to seize and carry away as prisoners several of the leading Aeginetans, when
Krius and some others among them opposed to him a menacing resistance, telling
him that he came without any regular warrant from Sparta and under the
influence of Athenian bribes,—that, in order to carry authority, both the
Spartan kings ought to come together. It was not of their own accord that the
Aeginetans ventured to adopt so dangerous a course. Demaratus, the colleague of
Kleomenes in the junior or Prokleid line of kings, had suggested to them the
step and promised to carry them through it safely. Dissension between the two
coordinate kings was no new phenomenon at Sparta; but in the case of Demaratus
and Kleomenes, it had broken out some years previously on the occasion of the march
against Attica; and Demaratus, hating his colleague more than ever, entered
into the present intrigue with the Aeginetans with the deliberate purpose of
frustrating his intervention. He succeeded, and Kleomenes was compelled to
return to Sparta; not without unequivocal menace against Krius and the other
Aeginetans who had repelled him, and not without a thorough
determination to depose Demaratus.
It
appears that suspicions had always attached to the legitimacy of Demaratus’s
birth. His reputed father Aristo had had no offspring by two successive wives:
at last, he became enamored of the wife of his friend Agetus,—a woman of
surpassing beauty,—and entrapped him into an agreement, whereby each solemnly
bound himself to surrender anything belonging to him which the other might ask
for. That which Agetus asked from Aristo was at once given: in return, the
latter demanded to have the wife of Agetus, who was thunderstruck at the
request, and indignantly complained of having been cheated into a sacrifice of
all others the most painful: nevertheless, the oath was peremptory, and he was
forced to comply. The birth of Demaratus took place so soon after this change
of husbands, that when it was first made known to Aristo, as he sat upon a
bench along with the ephors, he counted on his fingers the number of months
since his marriage, and exclaimed with an oath, “The child cannot be mine.” He
soon, however, retracted his opinion, and acknowledged the child, who grew up
without any question being publicly raised as to his birth, and succeeded his
father on the throne. But the original words of Aristo had never been
forgotten, and private suspicions were still cherished that Demaratus was
really the son of his mother’s first husband.
Of
these suspicions, Kleomenes now resolved to avail himself, exciting
Leotychides, the next heir in the Prokleid line of kings, to impugn publicly
the legitimacy of Demaratus; engaging to second him with till his influence as
next in order for the crown, and exacting in return a promise that he would
support the intervention against Aegina. Leotychides was animated not merely by
ambition, but also by private enmity against Demaratus, who had disappointed
him of his intended bride: he warmly entered into the scheme, arraigned
Demaratus as no true Herakleid, and produced evidence to prove the original
doubts expressed by Aristo. A serious dispute was thus raised at Sparta, and
Kleomenes, espousing the pretensions of Leotychides, recommended that the
question as to the legitimacy of Demaratus should be decided by reference to
the Delphian oracle. Through the influence of Kobon, a powerful native of
Delphi, he procured from the Pythian priestess an answer pronouncing that
Demaratus was not the son of Aristo. Leotychides thus became king of the
Prokleid line, while Demaratus descended into a private station, and was
elected at the ensuing solemnity of the Gymnopaedia to an official function.
The new king, unable to repress a burst of triumphant spite, sent an attendant,
to ask him, in the public theatre, how he felt as an officer after having once
been a king. Stung with this insult, Demaratus replied that he himself had
tried them both, and that Leotychides might in time come to try them both
also: the question, he added, shall bear its fruit,—great evil, or great good,
to Sparta. So saying, he covered his face and retired home from the
theatre,—offered a solemn farewell sacrifice at the altar of Zeus Herkeios, and
solemnly adjured his mother to declare to him who his real father was,—then at
once quitted Sparta for Elis, under pretence of going to consult the Delphian
oracle.
Demaratus
was well known to be a high-spirited and ambitious man—noted, among other
things, as the only Lacedaemonian king down to the time of Herodotus who had
ever gained a chariot victory at Olympia; and Kleomenes and Leotychides became
alarmed at the mischief which he might do them in exile. By the law of Sparta,
no Herakleid was allowed to establish his residence out of the country, on pain
of death: this marks the sentiment of the Lacedaemonians, and Demaratus was not
the less likely to give trouble because they had pronounced him illegitimate.
Accordingly they sent in pursuit of him, and seized him in the island of
Zakynthus. But the. Zakynthians would not consent to surrender him, so that he
passed unobstructed into Asia, where he presented himself to Darius, and was
received with abundant favors and presents. We shall hereafter find him the
companion of Xerxes, giving to that monarch advice such as, if it bad been
acted upon, would have proved the ruin of Grecian independence; to which,
however, he would have been even more dangerous, if he had remained at home as
king of Sparta.
Meanwhile
Kleomenes, having obtained a consentient colleague in Leotychides, went with
him over to Aegina, eager to revenge himself for the affront which had been put
upon him. To the requisition and presence of the two kings jointly, the
Aeginetans did not dare to oppose any resistance. Kleomenes made choice of ten
citizens, eminent for wealth, station, and influence, among whom were Krius and
another person named Kasambus, the two most powerful men in the island.
Conveying them away to Athens, he deposited them as hostages in the hands of
the Athenians.
It
was in this state that the affairs of Athens and of Greece generally were found
by the Persian armament which landed at Marathon, the progress of which we are
now about to follow. And the events just recounted were of material importance,
considered in their indirect bearing upon the success of that armament.
Sparta had now, on the invitation of Athens, assumed to herself for the first
time a formal Pan-Hellenic primacy, her ancient rival Argos being too much
broken to contest it,—her two kings, at this juncture unanimous, employ their
presiding interference in coercing Aegina, and placing Aeginetan hostages in
the hands of Athens. The Aeginetans would not have been unwilling to purchase
victory over a neighbor and rival at the cost of submission to Persia, and it
was the Spartan interference only which restrained them from assailing Athens
conjointly with the Persian invaders; thus leaving the hands of the latter
free, and her courage undiminished, for the coming trial.
Meanwhile,
a vast Persian force, brought together in consequence of the preparation made
during the last two years in every part of the empire, had assembled in the
Aleian plain of Cilicia, near the sea. A fleet of six hundred armed triremes,
together with many transports, both of men and horses, was brought hither for
their embarkation: the troops were put on board, and sailed along the coast to
Samos in Ionia. The Ionic and Aeolic Greeks constituted an important part of
this armament, and the Athenian exile Hippias was on board as guide and
auxiliary in the attack of Attica. The generals were Datis, a Median,—and
Artaphernes, son of the satrap of Sardis, so named, and nephew of Darius. We
may remark that Datis is the first person of Median lineage who is mentioned as
appointed to high command after the accession of Darius, which had been
preceded and marked, as I have noticed in a former chapter, by an outbreak of
hostile nationality between the Medes and Persians. Their instructions were,
generally, to reduce to subjection and tribute all such Greeks as had not
already given earth and water. But Darius directed them most particularly to
conquer Eretria and Athens, and to bring the inhabitants as slaves into his
presence. These orders were literally meant, and probably neither the generals
nor the soldiers of this vast armament doubted that they would be literally
executed; and that before the end of the year, the wives, or rather the widows,
of men like Themistokles and Aristeides would be seen among a mournful train of
Athenian prisoners, on the road from Sardis to Susa, thus accomplishing the
wish expressed by queen Atossa at the instance of Demokedes.
The
recent terrific storm near Mount Athos deterred the Persians from following the
example of Mardonius, and taking their course by the Hellespont and Thrace. It
was resolved to strike straight across the Aegean (the mode of attack which
intelligent Greeks like Themistokles most feared, even after the repulse of
Xerxes), from Samos to Euboea, attacking the intermediate islands in the way.
Among those islands was Naxos, which ten years before had stood a long siege,
and gallantly repelled the Persian Megabates with the Milesian Aristagoras. It
was one of the main objects of Datis to efface this stain on the Persian arms,
and to take a signal revenge on the Naxians. Crossing from Samos to Naxos, he
landed his army on the island, which was found an easier prize than he had
expected. The terrified citizens, abandoning their town, fled with their
families to the highest summits of their mountains; while the Persians, seizing
as slaves a few who bad been dilatory in flight, burnt the undefended town
with its edifices sacred and profane.
Immense,
indeed, was the difference in Grecian sentiment towards the Persians, created
by the terror-striking reconquest of Ionia, and by the exhibition of a large
Phenician fleet in the Aegean. The strength of Naxos was the same now as it had
been before the Ionic revolt, and the successful resistance then made might
have been supposed likely to nerve the courage of its inhabitants. Yet such is
the fear now inspired by a Persian armament, that the eight thousand Naxian
hoplites abandon their town and their gods without striking a blow, and think
of nothing but personal safety for themselves and their families. A sad augury
for Athens and Eretria.
From
Naxos, Datis despatched his fleet round the other Cyclades islands, requiring
from each, hostages for fidelity and a contingent to increase his army. With
the sacred island of Delos, however, he dealt tenderly and respectfully. The Delians
had fled before his approach to Tenos, but Datis sent a herald to invite them
back again, promised to preserve their persons and property inviolate, and
proclaimed that he had received express orders from the Great King to reverence
the island in which Apollo and Artemis were born. His acts corresponded with
this language; for the fleet was not allowed to touch the island, and he
himself, landing with only a few attendants, offered a magnificent sacrifice at
the altar. A large portion of his armament consisted of Ionic Greeks, and this
pronounced respect to the island of Delos may probably be ascribed to the
desire of satisfying their religious feelings; for in their days of early
freedom, this island had been the scene of their solemn periodical festivals,
as I have already more than once remarked.
Pursuing
his course without resistance along the islands, and demanding reinforcements
as well as hostages from each, Datis at length touched the southernmost portion
of Euboea,—the town of Carystus and its territory. The Carystians, though at
first refusing either to give hostages or to furnish any reinforcements
against their friends and neighbors, were speedily compelled to submission by
the aggressive devastation of the invaders. This was the first taste of
resistance which Datis had yet experienced; and the facility with which it was
overcome gave him a promising omen as to his success against Eretria, whither
he soon arrived.
The
destination of the armament was no secret to the inhabitants of this fated
city, among whom consternation, aggravated by intestine differences, was the
reigning sentiment. They made application to Athens for aid, which was readily
and conveniently afforded to them by means of those four thousand kleruchs, or
out-citizens, whom the Athenians had planted sixteen years before in the
neighboring territory of Chalcis. Notwithstanding this reinforcement, however,
many of them despaired of defending the city, and thought only of seeking
shelter on the unassailable summits of the island, as the more numerous and
powerful Naxians had already done before them; while another party,
treacherously seeking their own profit out of the public calamity, lay in wait
for an opportunity of betraying the city to the Persians. Though a public
resolution was taken to defend the city, yet so manifest was the absence of
that stoutness of heart which could alone avail to save it, that a leading
Eretrian named Aeschines was not ashamed to forewarn the four thousand Athenian
allies of the coming treason, and urge them to save themselves before it was
too late. They followed his advice and passed over to Attica by way of Oropus;
while the Persians disembarked their troops, and even their horses, in
expectation that the Eretrians would come out and fight, at Tamynae and other
places in the territory. As the Eretrians did not come out, they proceeded to
lay siege to the city, and for some days met with a brave resistance, so that
the loss on both sides was considerable. At length two of the leading citizens,
Euphorbus and Philagrue, with others, betrayed Eretria to the besiegers; its
temples were burnt, and its inhabitants dragged into slavery. It is impossible
to credit the exaggerated statement of Plato, which is applied by him to the
Persians at Eretria, as it had been before applied by Herodotus to the Persians
at Chios and Samos,—that they swept the territory clean of inhabitants by
joining hands and forming a line across its whole breadth. Evidently, this is
an idea illustrating the possible effects of numbers and ruinous conquest,
which has been woven into the tissue of historical statements, like so many
other illustrative ideas in the writings of Greek authors. That a large
proportion of the inhabitants were carried away as prisoners, there can be no
doubt. But the traitors who betrayed the town were spared and rewarded by the
Persians, and we see plainly that either some of the inhabitants must have been
left or new settlers introduced, when we find the Eretrians reckoned ten years
afterwards among the opponents of Xerxes.
Datis
had thus accomplished with little or no resistance one of the two express
objects commanded by Darius, and his army was elated with the confident hope of
soon completing the other. After halting a few days at Eretria, and depositing
in the neighboring islet of Aegilia the prisoners recently captured, he reembarked
his army to cross over to Attica, and landed in the memorable bay of Marathon
on the eastern coast,—the spot indicated by the despot Hippias, who now landed
along with the Persians, twenty years after his expulsion from the government.
Forty-seven years had elapsed since he had made as a young man this same
passage, from Eretria to Marathon, in conjunction with his father Peisistratus,
on the occasion of the second restoration of the latter. On that previous
occasion, the force accompanying the father had been immeasurably inferior to
that which now seconded the son; yet it had been found amply sufficient to
carry him in triumph to Athens, with feeble opposition from citizens alike
irresolute and disunited. And the inarch of Hippias from Marathon to Athens
would now have been equally easy, as it was doubtless conceived to be by
himself, both in his waking hopes and in the dream which Herodotus
mentions,—had not the Athenians whom he found been men radically different from
those whom he had left.
To
that great renewal of the Athenian character, under the democratical
institutions which had subsisted since the dispossession of Hippias, I have
already pointed attention in a former chapter. The modifications introduced by
Kleisthenes in the constitution had now existed eighteen or nineteen years,
without any attempt to overthrow them by violence. The Ten Tribes, each with
its constituent demes, had become a part of the established habits of the
country, and the citizens had become accustomed to exercise a genuine and
self-determined decision in their assemblies, political as well as judicial;
while even the senate of Areopagus, renovated by the nine annual archons
successively chosen who passed into it after their year of office, had also become
identified in feeling with the constitution of Kleisthenes. Individual
citizens, doubtless, remained partisans in secret, and perhaps correspondents
of Hippias; but the mass of citizens, in every scale of life, could look upon
his return with nothing but terror and aversion. With what degree of
newly-acquired energy the democratical Athenians could act in defence of their
country and institutions, has already been related in a former chapter; though
unfortunately we possess few particulars of Athenian history during the decade
preceding 490 BC, nor can we follow in detail the working of the government.
The new form, however, which Athenian politics had assumed becomes partially
manifest, when we observe the three leaders who stand prominent at this important
epoch,—Miltiades, Themistocles, and Aristeides.
The
first of the three had returned to Athens, three or four years before the
approach of Datis, after six or seven years’ absence in the Chersonesus of
Thrace, whither he had been originally sent by Hippias about the year 517-510
BC, to inherit the property as well as the supremacy of his uncle the oekist
Miltiades. As despot of the Chersonese, and as one of the subjects of Persia,
he had been among the Ionians who accompanied Darius to the Danube in his
Scythian expedition, and he had been the author of that memorable
recommendation which Histiaeus and the other despots did not think it their
interest to follow,—of destroying the bridge and leaving the Persian king to
perish. Subsequently, he had been unable to remain permanently in the
Chersonese, for reasons which have before been noticed; yet he seems to have
occupied it during the period of the Ionic revolt. What part he took in that
revolt we do not know. But he availed himself of the period while the Persian
satraps were employed in suppressing it, and deprived of the mastery of the
sea, to expel, in conjunction with forces from Athens, both the Persian
garrison and Pelasgic inhabitants from the islands of Lemnos and Imbros. The
extinction of the Ionic revolt threatened him with ruin; so that when the
Phenician fleet, in the summer following the capture of Miletus, made its
conquering appearance in the Hellespont, he was forced to escape rapidly to
Athens with his immediate friends and property, and with a small squadron of
five ships. One of these ships, commanded by his son Metiochus, was actually
captured between the Chersonese and Imbros; and the Phenicians were most eager
to capture himself,—inasmuch as he was personally odious to Darius from his
strenuous recommendation to destroy the bridge over the Danube. On arriving at
Athens, after his escape from the Phenician fleet, he was brought to trial
before the judicial popular assembly for alleged misgovernment in the
Chersonese, or for what Herodotus calls “his despotism” there exercised. Nor is
it improbable, that the Athenian citizens settled in that peninsula may have
had good reason to complain of him,—the more so as he had carried out with him
the maxims of government prevalent at Athens under the Peisistratids, and had
in his pay a body of Thracian mercenaries. However, the people at Athens honorably
acquitted him, probably in part from the reputation which he had obtained as
conqueror of Lemnos; and he was one of the ten annually-elected generals of the
republic, during the year of this Persian expedition,—chosen at the beginning
of the Attic year, shortly after the summer solstice, at a time when Datis and
Hippias had actually sailed, and were known to be approaching.
The
character of Miltiades is one of great bravery and decision,—qualities
preeminently useful to his country on the present crisis, and the more useful
as he was under the strongest motive to put them forth, from the personal
hostility of Darius towards him; but he does not peculiarly belong to the
democracy of Kleisthenes, like his younger contemporaries Themistokles and
Aristeides. The two latter are specimens of a class of men new at Athens since
the expulsion of Hippias, and contrasting forcibly with Peisistratus,
Lycurgus, and Megacles, the political leaders of the preceding generation.
Themistokles and Aristeides, different as they were in disposition, agree in
being politicians of the democratical stamp, exercising ascendency by and
through the people,—devoting their time to the discharge of public duties, and
to the frequent discussions in the political and judicial meetings of the
people,—manifesting those combined powers of action, comprehension, and
persuasive speech, which gradually accustomed the citizens to look to them as
advisers as well as leaders,—but always subject to criticism and accusation
from unfriendly rivals, and exercising such rivalry towards each other with an
asperity constantly increasing. Instead of Attica, disunited and torn into
armed factions, as it had been forty years before,—the Diakrii under one man,
and the Parali and Pedieis under others,—we have now Attica one and
indivisible; regimented into a body of orderly hearers in the Pnyx, appointing
and holding to accountability the magistrates, and open to be ad’ dressed by
Themistokles, Aristeides, or any other citizen who can engage their attention.
Neither
Themistocles nor Aristeides could boast of a lineage of gods and heroes, like
the Aeakid Miltiades: both were of middling station and circumstances.
Aristeides, son of Lysimachus, was on both sides of pure Athenian blood. But
the wife of Neocles, father of Themistocles, was a foreign woman of Thrace or
of Caria: and such an alliance is the less surprising, since Themistokles must
have been born during the dynasty of the Peisistratids, when the status of an
Athenian citizen had not yet acquired its political value. There was a marked
contrast between these two eminent men,—those points which stood most
conspicuous in the one being comparatively deficient in the other, in the
description of Themistocles, which we have the advantage of finding briefly
sketched by Thucydides, the circumstance most emphatically brought out is, his
immense force of spontaneous invention and apprehension, without any previous
aid either from teaching or gradual practice. The might of unassisted nature
was never so strikingly exhibited as in him: he conceived the complications of
a present embarrassment, and divined the chances of a mysterious future, with
equal sagacity and equal quickness : the right expedient seemed to flash upon
his mind extempore, even in the most perplexing contingences, without the least
necessity for premeditation. Nor was he less distinguished for daring and
resource in action. When engaged on any joint affairs, his superior competence
marked him out as the leader for others to follow, and no business, however
foreign to his experience, ever took him by surprise, or came wholly amiss to
him. Such is the remarkable picture which Thucydides draws of a countryman
whose death nearly coincided in time with his own birth: the untutored
readiness and universality of Themistokles probably formed in his mind a
contrast to the more elaborate discipline, and careful preliminary study, with
which the statesmen of his own day—and Pericles especially, the greatest of
them—approached the consideration and discussion of public affairs.
Themistokles had received no teaching from philosophers, sophists, and rhetors,
who were the instructors of well-born youth in the days of Thucydides, and whom
Aristophanes, the contemporary of the latter, so unmercifully
derides,—treating such instruction as worse than nothing, and extolling, in
comparison with it, the unlettered courage, with mere gymnastic
accomplishments, of the victors at Marathon.
There
is no evidence in the mind of Thucydides of any such undue contempt towards his
own age. Though the same terms of contrast are tacitly present to his mind, he
seems to treat the great capacity of Themistokles as the more a matter of
wonder, since it sprung up without that preliminary cultivation which bad gone
to the making of Perikles.
The
general character given of Plutarch, though many of his anecdotes are both
trifling and apocryphal, is quite consistent with the brief sketch just cited
from Thucydides. Themistokles had an unbounded passion,—not merely for glory,
insomuch that the laurels of Miltiades acquired at Marathon deprived him of
rest,—but also for display of every kind. He was eager to vie with men richer
than himself in showy exhibition,—one great source, though not the only source,
of popularity at Athens,—nor was he at all scrupulous in procuring the means of
doing so. Besides being assiduous in attendance at the ekklesia and the
dikastery, he knew most of the citizens by name, and was always ready with
advice to them in their private affairs. Moreover, he possessed all the tactics
of an expert party-man in conciliating political friends and in defeating
political enemies; and though he was in the early part of his life sincerely
bent upon the upholding and aggrandizement of his country, and was on some most
critical occasions of unspeakable value to it,—yet on the whole his morality
was as reckless as his intelligence was eminent. He will be found grossly
corrupt in the exercise of power, and employing tortuous means, sometimes
indeed for ends in themselves honorable and patriotic, but sometimes also
merely for enriching himself. He ended a glorious life by years of deep
disgrace, with the forfeiture of all Hellenic esteem and brotherhood—a rich
man, an exile, a traitor, and a pensioner of the Great King, pledged to undo his
own previous work of liberation accomplished at the victory of Salamis.
Of
Aristeides we possess unfortunately no description from the hand of Thucydides;
yet his character is so simple and consistent, that we may safely accept the
brief but unqualified encomium of Herodotus and Plato, expanded as it is in the
biography of Plutarch and Cornelius Nepos, however little the details of the
latter can be trusted. Aristeides was inferior to Themistocles in resource,
quickness, flexibility, and power of coping with difficulties; but incomparably
superior to him, as well as to other rivals and contemporaries, in integrity,
public as well as private; inaccessible to pecuniary temptations, as well as to
other seductive influences, and deserving as well as enjoying the highest
measure of personal confidence. He is described as the peculiar friend of
Cleisthenes, the first founder of the democracy,—as pursuing a straight and
single-handed course in political life, with no solicitude for party ties, and
with little care either to conciliate friends or to offend enemies,—as
unflinching in the exposure of corrupt practices, by whomsoever committed or upheld,—as
earning for himself the lofty surname of the Just, not less by his judicial
decisions in the capacity of archon, than by his equity in private
arbitrations, and even his candor in political dispute,—and as manifesting
throughout a long public life, full of tempting opportunities, an uprightness
without flaw and beyond all suspicion, recognized equally by his bitter
contemporary the poet Timokreon, and by the allies of Athens, upon whom he
first assessed the tribute. Few of the leading men in any part of Greece were
without some taint on their reputation, deserved or undeserved, in regard to
pecuniary probity; but whoever became notoriously recognized as possessing
this vital quality, acquired by means of it a firmer hold on the public esteem
than even eminent talents could confer. Thucydides ranks conspicuous probity
among the first of the many ascendent qualities possessed by Perikles; and
Nicias, equal to him in this respect, though immeasurably inferior in every
other, owed to it a still larger proportion of that exaggerated confidence
which the Athenian people continued so long to repose in him. The abilities of
Aristeides, though apparently adequate to every occasion on which he was
engaged, and only inferior when we compare him with so remarkable a man as
Themistocles, were put in the shade by this incorruptible probity, which
procured for him, however, along with the general esteem, no inconsiderable
amount of private enmity from jobbers whom he exposed, and even some jealousy
from persons who heard it proclaimed with offensive ostentation.
We
are told that a rustic and unlettered citizen gave his ostracizing vote, and
expressed his dislike against Aristeides, on the simple ground that he was
tired of hearing him always called the Just. Now the purity of the most
honorable man will not bear to be so boastfully talked of as if he were the
only honorable man in the country: the less it is obtruded, the more deeply and
cordially will it be felt: and the story just alluded to, whether true or
false, illustrates that natural reaction of feeling, produced by absurd
encomiasts, or perhaps by insidious enemies under the mask of encomiasts, who
trumpeted forth Aristeides as The Just man at Attica, so as to wound the
legitimate dignity of every one else. Neither indiscreet friends nor artful
enemies, however, could rob him of the lasting esteem of his country men; which
he enjoyed, with intervals of their displeasure, to the end of his life. Though
he was ostracized during a part of the period between the battle of Marathon
and Salamis,—at a time when the rivalry between him and Themistocles was so
violent that both could not remain at Athens without peril,—yet the dangers of
Athens during the invasion of Xerxes brought him back before the ten years of
exile were expired. His fortune, originally very moderate, was still farther
diminished during the course of his life, so that he died very poor, and the
state was obliged to lend aid to his children.
Such
were the characters of Themistocles and Aristeides, the two earliest leaders
thrown up by the Athenian democracy. Half a century before, Themistocles would
have been an active partisan in the faction of the Parali or the Pedieis, while
Aristeides would probably have remained an unnoticed citizen. At the present
period of Athenian history, the characters of the soldier, the magistrate, and
the orator, were intimately blended together in a citizen who stood forward for
eminence, though they tended more and more to divide themselves during the
ensuing century and a half. Aristeides and Miltiades were both elected among
the ten generals, each for his respective tribe, in the year of the expedition
of Datis across the Aegean, and probably even after that expedition was known
to be on its voyage. Moreover, we arc led to suspect from a passage in
Plutarch, that Themistocles also was general of his tribe on the same occasion,
though this is doubtful; but it is certain that he fought at Marathon. The ten
generals had jointly the command of the army, each of them taking his turn to
exercise it for a day: in addition to the ten, moreover, the third archon, or
polemarch, was considered as eleventh in the military council. The polemarch
of this year was Kallimachus of Aphidnae. Such were the chiefs of the military
force, and to a great degree the administrators of foreign affairs, at the
time when the four thousand Athenian kleruchs, or settlers planted in
Euboea,—escaping from Eretria, now invested by the Persians,—brought word to
their countrymen at home that the fall of that city was impending. It was
obvious that the Persian host would proceed from Eretria forthwith against
Athens, and a few days afterwards Hippias disembarked them at Marathon, whither
the Athenian army marched to meet them.
Of
the feeling which now prevailed at Athens we have no details, but doubtless
the alarm was hardly inferior to that which had been felt at Eretria:
dissenting opinions were heard as to the proper steps to be taken, nor were
suspicions of treason wanting. Pheidippides the courier was sent to Sparta
immediately to solicit assistance; and such was his prodigious activity, that
he performed this journey of one hundred and fifty miles, on foot, in
forty-eight hours. Ho revealed to the ephors that Eretria was already enslaved,
and entreated their assistance to avert the same fate from Athens, the most
ancient city in Greece. The Spartan authorities readily promised their aid, but
unfortunately it was now the ninth day of the moon: ancient law or custom
forbade them to march, in this month at least, during the last quarter before
the full moon; but after the full they engaged to march without delay. Five
days’ delay at this critical moment might prove the utter ruin of the
endangered city; yet the reason assigned seems to have been no pretence on the
part of the Spartans. It was mere blind tenacity of ancient habit, which we
shall find to abate, though never to disappear, as wo advance in their history.
Indeed, their delay in marching to rescue Attica from Mardonius, eleven years
afterwards, at the imminent hazard of alienating Athens and ruining the
Hellenic cause, marks the same selfish dulness. But the reason now given
certainly looked very like a pretence, so that the Athenians could indulge no
certain assurance that the Spartan troops would start even when the full moon
arrived.
In
this respect the answer brought by Pheidippides was mischievous, as it tended
to increase that uncertainty and indecision which already prevailed among the
ten generals, as to the proper steps for meeting the invaders. Partly, perhaps,
in reliance on this expected Spartan help, five out of the ten generals were
decidedly averse to an immediate engagement with the Persians; while Miltiades
with the remaining four strenuously urged that not a moment should be lost in
bringing the enemy to action, without leaving time to the timid and the
treacherous to establish correspondence with Hippias, and to take some active
step for paralyzing all united action on the part of the citizens. This most
momentous debate, upon which the fate of Athens hung, is represented by
Herodotus to have occurred at Marathon, after the army had marched out and
taken post there within sight of the Persians; while Cornelius Nepos describes
it as having been raised before the army quitted the city,—upon the question,
whether it was prudent to meet the enemy at all in the field, or to confine the
defence to the city and the sacred rock. Inaccurate as this latter author
generally is, his statement seems more probable here than that of Herodotus.
For the ten generals would scarcely march out of Athens to Marathon without
having previously resolved to fight: moreover, the question between fighting in
the field or resisting behind the walls, which had already been raised at
Eretria, seems the natural point on which the five mistrustful generals would
take their stand. And probably indeed Miltiades himself, if debarred from
immediate action, would have preferred to hold possession of Athens, and
prevent any treacherous movement from breaking out there,—rather than to remain
inactive on the hills, watching the Persians at Marathon, with the chance of a
detachment from their numerous fleet sailing round to Phalerum, and thus
distracting, by a double attack, both the city and the camp.
However
this may be, the equal division of opinion among the ten generals, whether
manifested at Marathon or at Athens, is certain,—so that Miltiades had to
await the casting-vote of the polemarch Kallimachus. To him he represented
emphatically the danger of delay, and the chance of some traitorous intrigue
occurring to excite disunion and aggravate the alarms of the citizens. Nothing
could prevent such treason from breaking out, with all its terrific
consequences of enslavement to the Persians and to Hippias, except a bold,
decisive, and immediate attack,—the success of which he (Miltiades) was
prepared to guarantee. Fortunately for Athens, the polemarch embraced the
opinion of Miltiades, and the seditious movements which were preparing did not
show themselves until after the battle had been gained. Aristeides and
Themistocles are both recorded to have seconded Miltiades warmly in this
proposal,—while all the other generals agreed in surrendering to Miltiades
their days of command, so as to make him, as much as they could, the sole
leader of the army. It is said that the latter awaited the day of his own regular
turn before he fought the battle. Yet considering the eagerness
which he displayed to bring on an immediate and decisive action, we cannot
suppose that he would have admitted any serious postponement upon such a
punctilio.
While
the army were mustered on the ground sacred to Heracles near Marathon, with
the Persians and their fleet occupying the plain and shore beneath, and in
preparation for immediate action, they were joined by the whole force of the
little town of Plataea, consisting of about one thousand hoplites, who had marched
directly from their own city to the spot, along the southern range of
Kithaeron and passing through Dekeleia. We are not told that they had been
invited, and very probably the Athenians had never thought of summoning aid
from this unimportant neighbor, in whose behalf they had taken upon themselves
a lasting feud with Thebes and the Boeotian league. Their coining on
this important occasion seems to have been a spontaneous effort of gratitude,
which ought not to be the less commended because their interests were really
wrapped up in those of Athens,—since if the latter had been conquered, nothing
could have saved Plataea from being subdued by the Thebans,—yet many a Grecian
town would have disregarded both generous impulse and rational calculation, in
the fear of provoking a new and terrific enemy. If we summon up to our
imaginations all the circumstances of the case,—which it requires some effort
to do, because our authorities come from the subsequent generations, after
Greece had ceased to fear the Persians,—we shall be sensible that this
volunteer march if the whole Plataean force to Marathon is one of the most
affecting incidents of all Grecian history. Upon Athens generally it produced
an indelible impression, commemorated ever afterwards in the public prayers of
the Athenian herald, and repaid by a grant, to the Plataeans of the full civil
rights—seemingly without the political rights—of Athenian citizens. Upon the
Athenians then marshalled at Marathon its effect must have been unspeakably
powerful and encouraging, as a proof that they were not altogether isolated
from Greece, and as an unexpected countervailing stimulus under circumstances
so full of hazard.
Of
the two opposing armies at Marathon, we are told that the Athenians were ten thousand
hoplites, either including or besides the one thousand who came from Plataea.
Nor is this statement in itself improbable, though it does not come from Herodotus,
who is our only really valuable authority on the case, and who mentions no
numerical total. Indeed, the number named seems smaller than we should have
expected, considering that no less than four thousand kleruchs, or outsettled
citizens, had just come over from Euboea. A sufficient force of citizens must
of course have been left behind to defend the city. The numbers of the Persians
we cannot be said to know at all, nor is there anything certain except that
they were greatly superior to the Greeks. We hear from Herodotus that their
armament originally consisted of six hundred ships of war, but we are not told
how many separate transports there were; and, moreover, reinforcements had
been procured as they came across the Aegean from the islands successively
conquered. The aggregate crews on board of all their ships must have been
between one hundred and fifty thousand and two hundred thousand men; but what
proportion of these were fighting men, or how many actually did fight at
Marathon, we have no means of determining. There were a certain proportion of
cavalry, and some transports expressly prepared for the conveyance of horses:
moreover, Herodotus tells us that Hippias selected the plain of Marathon for a
landing place, because it was the most convenient spot in Attica for cavalry
movements,—though it is singular, that in the battle the cavalry are not
mentioned.
Marathon,
situated near to a bay on the eastern coast of Attica, and in a direction
E.N.E. from Athens, is divided by the high ridge of Mount Pentelikus from the
city, with which it communicated by two roads, one to the north, another to the
south of that mountain. Of these two roads, the northern, at once the shortest
and the most difficult, is twenty-two miles in length: the southern—longer but
more easy, and the only one practicable for chariots—is twenty-six miles in
length, or about six and a half hours of computed march. It passed between
mounts Pentelikus and Hymettus, through the ancient demes of Gargettus and
Pallene, and was the road by which Peisistratus and Hippias, when they landed
at Marathon forty-seven years before, had marched to Athens. The bay of
Marathon, sheltered by a projecting cape from the northward, affords both deep
water and a shore convenient for landing; while its plain (says a careful
modern observer) extends in a perfect level along this fine bay, and is in
length about six miles, in breadth never less than about one mile and a half.
Two marshes bound the extremities of the plain: the southern is not very
large, and is almost dry at the conclusion of the great heats; but the
northern, which generally covers considerably more than a square mile, offers
several parts which are at all seasons impassable. Both, however, leave a
broad, firm, sandy beach between them and the sea. The uninterrupted flatness
of the plain is hardly relieved by a single tree; and an amphitheatre of rocky
hills and rugged mountains separates it from the rest of Attica, over the lower
ridges of which some steep and difficult paths communicate with the districts
of the interior.
The
position occupied by Miltiades before the battle, identified as it was to all
subsequent Athenians by the sacred grove of Heracles near Marathon, was
probably on some portion of the high ground above this plain, and Cornelius
Nepos tells us that he protected it from the attacks of the Persian cavalry by
felled trees obstructing the approach. The Persians occupied a position on the
plain; while their fleet was ranged along the beach, and Hippias himself
marshalled them for the battle. The native Persians and Sakae, the
best troops in the whole army, were placed in the centre, which they considered
as the post of honor, and which was occupied by the Persian king himself, when
present at a battle. The right wing was so regarded by the Greeks, and the
polemarch Callimachus had the command of it; the hoplites being arranged in the
order of their respective tribes from right, to left, and at the extreme left
stood the Plataeans. It was necessary for Miltiades to present a front equal,
or nearly equal, to that of the more numerous Persian host, in order to guard
himself from being taken in flank: and with this view he drew up the central
tribes, including the Leontis and Antiochis, in shallow files, and occupying a
large breadth of ground; while each of the wings was in stronger and deeper
order, so as to make his attack efficient on both sides. His whole army consisted
of hoplites, with some slaves as unarmed or light-armed attendants, but without
either bowmen or cavalry. Nor could the Persians have been very strong in this
latter force, seeing that their horses had to be transported across the Aegean.
But the elevated position of Miltiades enabled them to take some measure of the
numbers under his command, and the entire absence of cavalry among their enemies
could not but confirm the confidence with which a long career of uninterrupted
victory had impressed their generals.
At
length the sacrifices in the Greek camp were favorable for battle, and
Miltiades, who had everything to gain by coming immediately to close quarters,
ordered his army to advance at a running step over the interval of one mile
which separated the two armies. This rapid forward movement, accompanied by the
war-cry, or paean, which always animated the charge of the Greek
soldier, astounded the Persian army; who construed it as an act of desperate
courage, little short of insanity, in a body not only small but destitute of
cavalry or archers,—but who, at the same time, felt their conscious
superiority sink within them. It seems to have been long remembered also among
the Greeks as the peculiar characteristic of the battle of Marathon, and Herodotus
tells us that the Athenians were the first Greeks who ever charged at a run. It
doubtless operated beneficially in rendering the Persian cavalry and archers
comparatively innocuous, but we may reasonably suppose that it also disordered
the Athenian ranks, and that when they reached the Persian front, they were
both out of breath and unsteady in that line of presented spears and shields
which constituted their force. On the two wings, where the files were deep,
this disorder produced no mischievous effect: the Persians, after a certain
resistance, were overborne and driven back. But in the centre, where the files
were shallow, and where, moreover, the native Persians and other choice troops
of the army were posted, the breathless and disordered Athenian hoplites found
themselves in far greater difficulties. The tribes Leontis and Antiochis, with
Themistokles and Aristeides among them, were actually defeated, broken, driven
back, and pursued by the Persians and Sakae. Miltiades seems to have foreseen
the possibility of such a check, when he found himself compelled to diminish so
materially the depth of his centre: for his wings, having routed the enemies
opposed to them, were stayed from pursuit until the centre was extricated, and
the Persians and Sakae put to flight along with the rest. The pursuit then
became general, and the Persians were chased to their ships ranged in line
along the shore: some of them became involved in the impassable marsh and
there perished. The Athenians tried to set the ships on fire, but the defence
here was both vigorous and successful,—several of the forward warriors of
Athens were slain,—and only seven ships out of the numerous fleet destroyed.
This part of the battle terminated to the advantage of the Persians. They
repulsed the Athenians from the sea-shore, and secured a safe reembarkation;
leaving few or no prisoners, but a rich spoil of tents and equipments which had
been disembarked and could not be carried away.
Herodotus
estimates the number of those who fell on the Persian side in this memorable
action at six thousand four hundred men: the number of Athenian dead is
accurately known, since all were collected for the last solemn obsequies,—they
were one hundred and ninety-two. How many were wounded, we do not hear. The
brave Callimachus the polemarch, and Stesilaus, one of the ten generals, were
among the slain; together with Kynegeirus son of Euphorion, who, in laying hold
on the poop-staff of one of the vessels, had his hand cut off by an axe, and
died of the wound. He was brother of the poet Aeschylus, himself present at
the fight; to whose imagination this battle at the ships must have emphatically
recalled the fifteenth book of the Iliad. Both these Athenian generals are said
to have perished in the assault of the ships, apparently the hottest part of
the combat. The statement of the Persian loss as given by Herodotus appears
moderate and reasonable, but he does not specify any distinguished individuals
as having fallen.
But
the Persians, though thus defeated and compelled to abandon the position of
Marathon, were not yet disposed to relinquish altogether their chances against
Attica. Their fleet was observed to take the direction of Cape Sunium,—a
portion being sent to take up the Eretrian prisoners and the stores which had
been left in the island of Aegilia. At the same time a shield, discernible from
its polished surface afar off, was seen held aloft upon some high point of
Attica,—perhaps on the summit of Mount Pentelikus, as Colonel Leake supposes
with much plausibility. The Athenians doubtless saw it as well as the Persians;
and Miltiades did not fail to put the right interpretation upon it, taken in
conjunction with the course of the departing fleet. The shield was a signal put
up by partisans in the country, to invite the Persians round to Athens by sea,
while the Marathonian army was absent. Miltiades saw through the plot, and lost
not a moment in returning to Athens. On the very day of the battle, the
Athenian army marched back with the utmost speed from the precinct of Heracles
at Marathon to the precinct of the same god at Kynosarges, close to Athens,
which they reached before the arrival of the Persian fleet. Datis soon came off
the port of Phalerum, but the partisans of Hippias had been dismayed by the
rapid return of the Marathonian army, and he did not therefore find those aids
and facilities which he had anticipated for a fresh disembarkation in the
immediate neighborhood of Athens. Though too late, however, it seems that he
was not much too late: the Marathonian army had only just completed their
forced return-march. A little less quickness on the part of Miltiades in
deciphering the treasonable signal and giving the instant order of march,—a
little less energy on the part of the Athenian citizens in superadding a
fatiguing march to a no less fatiguing combat,—and the Persians, with the
partisans of Hippias, might have been found in possession of Athens. As the
facts turned out, Dalis, finding at Phalerum no friendly movement to encourage
him, but, on the contrary, the unexpected presence of the soldiers who had
already vanquished him at Marathon—made no attempt again to disembark in
Attica, and sailed away, after a short delay, to the Cyclades.
Thus
was Athens rescued, for this time at least, from a danger not less terrible
than imminent. Nothing could have rescued her except that decisive and
instantaneous attack which Miltiades so emphatically urged. The running step on
the field of Marathon might cause some disorder in the ranks of the hoplites;
but extreme haste in bringing on the combat was the only means of preventing
disunion and distraction in the minds of the citizens. Imperfect as the account
is which Herodotus gives of this most interesting crisis, we see plainly that
the partisans of Hippias had actually organized a conspiracy, and that it only
failed by coming a little too late. The bright shield uplifted on Mount
Pentelikus, apprizing the Persians that matters were prepared for them at
Athens, was intended to have come to their view before any action had taken
place at Marathon, and while the Athenian army were yet detained there; so that
Datis might have sent a portion of his fleet round to Phalerum, retaining the
rest for combat with the enemy before him. If it had ones become known to the
Marathonian army that a Persian detachment had landed at Phalerum,—where there
was a good plain for cavalry to act in, prior to the building of the Phaleric
wall, as had been seen in the defeat of the Spartan Anchimolius by the
Thessalian cavalry, in 510 bc,—that
it had been joined by timid or treacherous Athenians, and had perhaps even got
possession of the city,—their minds would have been so distracted by the
double danger, and by fears for their absent wives and children, that they
would have been disqualified for any unanimous execution of military orders,
and generals as well as soldiers would have become incurably divided in
opinion,—perhaps even mistrustful of each other. The citizen-soldier of Greece
generally, and especially of Athens, possessed in a high degree both personal
bravery and attachment to order and discipline; but his bravery was not of
that equal, imperturbable, uninquiring character, which belonged to the
battalions of Wellington or Napoleon,—it was fitful, exalted or depressed by
casual occurrences, and often more sensitive to dangers absent and unseen, than
to enemies immediately in his front. Hence the advantage, so unspeakable in the
case before us, and so well appreciated by Miltiades, of having one undivided
Athenian army,—with one hostile army, and only one, to meet in the field. When
we come to the battle of Salamis, ten years later, it will be seen that the
Greeks of that day enjoyed the same advantage: though the wisest advisers of
Xerxes impressed upon him the prudence of dividing his large force, and of sending
detachments to assail separate Greek states—which would infallibly produce the
effect of breaking up the combined Grecian host, and leaving no central or
cooperating force for the defence of Greece generally. Fortunately for the
Greeks, the childish insolence of Xerxes led him to despise all such advice, as
implying conscious weakness. Not so Datis and Hippias. Sensible of the prudence
of detracting the attention of the Athenians by a double attack, they laid a
scheme, while tbs main army was at Marathon, for rallying the partisans of
Hippias, with a force to assist them, in the neighborhood of Athens—and the
signal was upheld by these partisans as soon as their measures were taken. But
the rapidity of Miltiades so precipitated the battle, that this signal came
too late, and was only given, “when the Persians were already in their
ships”, after the Marathonian defeat.
Even then it might have proved dangerous, had not the movements of Miltiades
been as rapid after the victory as before it: but if time had been allowed for
the Persian movement on Athens before the battle of Marathon had been fought,
the triumph of the Athenians might well have been exchanged for a calamitous
servitude. To Miltiades belongs the credit of having comprehended the emergency
from the beginning, and overruled the irresolution of his colleagues by his
own single-hearted energy. The chances all turned out in his favor,—for the
unexpected junction of the Plataeans in the very encampment of Marathon must
have wrought up the courage of his army to the highest pitch: and not only did
he thus escape all the depressing and distracting accidents, but he was
fortunate enough to find this extraneous encouragement immediately preceding
the battle, from a source on which he could not have calculated.
I
have already observed that the phase of Grecian history best known to us,
amidst which the great authors from whom we draw our information lived, was one
of contempt for the Persians in the field. And it requires some effort of
imagination to call back previous feelings after the circumstances have been
altogether reversed: perhaps even Aeschylus the poet, at the time when he
composed his tragedy of the Persae, to celebrate the disgraceful flight of the
invader Xerxes, may have forgotten the emotions with which he and his brother
Kynegeirus must have marched out from Athens fifteen years before, on the eve
of the battle of Marathon. It must therefore be again mentioned that, down to
the time when Datis landed in the bay of Marathon, the tide of Persian success
had never yet been interrupted,—and that especially during the ten years
immediately preceding, the high-handed and cruel extinction of the Ionic Revolt
had aggravated to the highest pitch the alarm of the Greeks. To this must be
added the successes of Datis himself and the calamities of Eretria, coming
with all the freshness of novelty as an apparent sentence of death to Athens.
The extreme effort of courage required in the Athenians, to encounter such
invaders, is attested by the division of opinion among the ten generals.
Putting all the circumstances together, it is without a parallel in Grecian
history, surpassing even the combat of Thermopylae, as will appear when I come
to describe that memorable event. And the admirable conduct of the five dissentient
generals, when outvoted by the decision of the polemarch against them, in
cooperating heartily for the success of a policy which they deprecated,—proves
how much the feelings of a constitutional democracy, and that entire acceptance
of the pronounced decision of the majority on which it rests, had worked
themselves into the Athenian mind. The combat of Marathon was by no means a
very decisive defeat, but it was a defeat,—and the first which the Persians had
ever received from Greeks in the field. If the battle of Salamis, ten years
afterwards, could be treated by Themistokles as a hair-breadth escape for
Greece, much more is this true of the battle of Marathon; which first afforded
reasonable proof, even to discerning and resolute Greeks, that the Persians
might be effectually repelled, and the independence of European Greece
maintained against them,—a conviction of incalculable value in reference to the
formidable trials destined to follow. Upon the Athenians themselves, the first
to face in the field successfully the terrific look of a Persian army, the
effect of the victory was yet more stirring and profound. It supplied them with
resolution for the far greater actual sacrifices which they cheerfully
underwent ten years afterwards, at the invasion of Xerxes, without faltering
in their Pan-Hellenic fidelity; and it strengthened them at home by swelling
the tide of common sentiment and patriotic fraternity in the bosom of every
individual citizen. It was the exploit of Athenians alone, but of all Athenians
without dissent or exception,—the boast of orators, repeated until it almost
degenerated into common-place, though the people seem never Io have become
weary of allusions to their single-handed victory over a host of forty-six
nations. It had been purchased with out a drop of intestine bloodshed,—for even
the unknown traitors who raised the signal-shield on Mount Pentelikus, took
care not to betray themselves by want of apparent sympathy with the triumph:
lastly, it was the final guarantee of their democracy, barring all chance of
restoration of Hippias for the future. Themistokles is said to have been robbed
of his sleep by the trophies of Miltiades, and this is cited in proof of his
ambitious temperament; but without supposing either jealousy or personal love
of glory, the rapid transit from extreme danger to unparalleled triumph might
well deprive of rest even the most sober-minded Athenian.
Who
it was that raised the treacherous signal-shield to attract the Persians to
Athens was never ascertained: very probably, in the full exultation of success,
no investigation was made. Of course, however, the public belief would not be
satisfied without singling out some persons as the authors of such a treason;
and the information received by Herodotus (probably about 450-440 BC, forty or
fifty years after the Marathonian victory) ascribed the deed to the
Alkmaeonids; nor does he notice any other reported authors, though he rejects
the allegation against them one a very sufficient grounds. They were a race
religiously tainted, ever since the Kylonian sacrilege, and were therefore
convenient persons to brand with the odium of an anonymous crime; while party
feud, if it did not originally invent, would at least be active in spreading
and certifying such rumors. At the time when Herodotus knew Athens, the
political enmity between Pericles son of Xanthippus, and Kimon son of
Miltiades, was at its height: Pericles belonged by his mother’s side to the
Alkmaonid race, and we know that such lineage was made subservient to political
manoeuvres against him by his enemies. Moreover, the enmity between Kimon and
Pericles had been inherited by both from their fathers; for we shall find
Xanthippus, not long after the battle of Marathon, the prominent accuser of
Miltiades. Though Xanthippus was not an Alcmaeonid, his marriage with Agariste
connected himself indirectly, and his son Pericles directly, with that race. And
we may trace in this standing political feud a probable origin for the false
reports as to the treason of the Alkmaeonids, on that great occasion which
founded the glory of Miltiades; for that the reports were false, the intrinsic
probabilities of the case, supported by the judgment of Herodotus, afford ample
ground for believing.
When
the Athenian army made its sudden return-march from Marathon to Athens,
Aristeides with his tribe was left to guard the field and the spoil; but the
speedy retirement of Datis from Attica left the Athenians at full liberty to
revisit the scene and discharge the last duties to the dead. A tumulus was
erected on the spot—such distinction was never conferred by Athens except in
this case only—to the one hundred and ninety-two Athenian citizens who had
been slain. Their names were inscribed on ten pillars erected at the spot, one
for each tribe: there was also a second tumulus for the slain Plataeans, a
third for the slaves, and a separate funeral monument to Miltiades himself. Six
hundred years after the battle, Pausanias saw the tumulus, and could still read
on the pillars the names of the immortalized warriors; and even now a
conspicuous tumulus exists about Calf a mile from the sea-shore, which Colonel
Leake believes to be the same. The inhabitants of the deme of Marathon worshipped
these slain warriors as heroes, along with their own eponymus and with
Herakles.
So
splendid a victory had not been achieved, in the belief of the Athenians,
without marked supernatural aid. The god Pan had met the courier Pheidippides
on his hasty route from Athens to Sparta, and had told him that he was much
hurt that the Athenians had as yet neglected to worship him; in spite of which
neglect, however, he promised them effective aid at Marathon. The promise was
faithfully executed, and the Athenians repaid it by a temple with annual
worship and sacrifice. Moreover, the hero Theseus was seen strenuously
assisting in the battle; and an unknown warrior, in rustic garb and armed only
with a ploughshare, dealt destruction among the Persian ranks: after the battle
he could not be found; and the Athenians, on asking at Delphi who he was, were
directed to worship the hero Echetlus. Even in the time of
Pausanias, this memorable battle-field was heard to resound every night with
the noise of combatants and the snorting of horses. “It is dangerous (observes
that pious author) to go to the spot with the express purpose of seeing what is
passing; but if a man finds himself there by accident, without having heard
anything about the matter, the gods will not be angry with him.” The gods, it
seems, could not pardon the inquisitive mortal who deliberately pried into
their secrets. Amidst the ornaments with which Athens was decorated during the
free working of her democracy, the glories of Marathon of course occupied a
conspicuous place. The battle was painted on one of the compartments of the
portico called Poekile, wherein, amidst several figures of gods and heroes,—Athene, Heracles, Theseus, Echetlus, and the local patron of Marathon,—were
seen honored and prominent the polemarch Callimachus and the general
Miltiades, while the Plataeans were distinguished by their Boeotian leather
casques. And the sixth of the month Boedromion, the anniversary of the battle,
was commemorated by an annual ceremony, even down to the time of Plutarch.
Two
thousand Spartans, starting from their city, immediately after the full moon,
reached the frontier of Attica, on the third day of their march, a surprising
effort, when we consider that the total distance from Sparta to Athens was
about one hundred and fifty miles. They did not arrive, however, until the
battle had been fought, and the Persians departed; but curiosity led them to
the field of Marathon to behold the dead bodies of the Persians, after which
they returned home, bestowing well-merited praise on the victors.
Datis
and Artaphernes returned across the Aegean with their Eretriari prisoners to
Asia; stopping for a short time at the island of Mykonos, where discovery was
made of a gilt image of Apollo carried off as booty in a Phenician ship. Datis
went himself to restore it to Delos, requesting the Delians to carry it back to
the Delium, or temple of Apollo, on the eastern coast of Boeotia: the Delians,
however, chose to keep the statue until it was reclaimed from them twenty
years afterwards by the Thebans. On reaching Asia, the Persian generals
conducted their prisoners up to the court of Susa, and into the presence of
Darius. Though he had been vehemently incensed against them, yet when he saw
them in his power, his wrath abated, and he manifested no desire to kill or
harm them. They were planted at a spot called Arderikka, in the Kissian
territory, one of the resting-places on the road from Sardis to Susa, and about
twenty-six miles distant from the latter place: Herodotus seems himself to have
seen their descendants there on his journey between the two capitals, and to
have had the satisfaction of talking to them in Greek,—which we may well
conceive to have made some impression upon him, at a spot distant by nearly
three months’ journey from the coast of Ionia.
Happy
would it have been for Miltiades if he had shared the honorable death of the
polemarch Kallimachus, in seeking to fire the ships of the defeated Persians at
Marathon. The short sequel of his history will be found in melancholy contrast
with the Marathonian heroism.
His
reputation had been great before the battle, and after it the admiration and
confidence of his countrymen knew no bounds: it appears, indeed, to have
reached such a pitch that his head was turned, and he lost both his patriotism
and his prudence. He proposed to his countrymen to incur the cost of equipping
an armament of seventy ships, with an adequate armed force, and to place it
altogether at his discretion; giving them no intimation whither he intended to
go, but merely assuring them that, if they would follow him, he would conduct
them to a land where gold was abundant, and thus enrich them. Such a promise,
from the lips of the recent victor of Marathon, was sufficient, and the
armament was granted, no man except Miltiades knowing what was its destination.
He sailed immediately to the island of Paros, laid siege to the town, and sent
in a herald to require from the inhabitants a contribution of one hundred
talents, on pain of entire destruction. His pretence for this attack was, that
the Parians had furnished a trireme to Dalis for the Persian fleet at Marathon;
but his real motive, so Herodotus assures us, was vindictive animosity against
a Parian citizen named Lysagoras, who had exasperated the Persian general
Hydarnes against him. The Parians amused him at first with evasions, until they
had procured a little delay to repair the defective portions of their wall,
after which they set him at defiance; and Miltiades in vain prosecuted
hostilities against them for the space of twenty-six days: he ravaged the
island, but his attacks made no impression upon the town. Beginning to despair
of success in his military operations, he entered into some negotiation—such at
least was the tale of the Parians themselves—with a Parian woman named Timo,
priestess or attendant in the temple of Demeter, near the town-gates. This
woman, promising to reveal to him a secret which would place Paros in his
power, induced him to visit, by night a temple to which no male person was
admissible. He leaped the exterior fence, and approached the sanctuary; but on
coming near, was seized with a panic terror and ran away, almost out of his
senses: on leaping the same fence to get back, he strained or bruised his thigh
badly, and became utterly disabled. In this melancholy, state he was placed on
ship-board; the siege being raised, and the whole armament returning to Athens.
Vehement
was the indignation both of the armament and of the remaining Athenians against
Miltiades on his return; and Xanthippus, father of the great Pericles, became
the spokesman of this feeling. He impeached Miltiades before the popular
judicature as having been guilty of deceiving the people, and as having
deserved the penalty of death. The accused himself, disabled by his injured
thigh, which even began to show symptoms of gangrene, was unable to stand, or
to say a word in his own defence: he lay on his couch before the assembled
judges, while his friends made the best case they could in his behalf. Defence,
it appears, there was none; all they could do, was to appeal to his previous
services: they reminded the people largely and emphatically of the inestimable
exploit of Marathon, coming in addition to his previous conquest of Lemnos. The
assembled dikasts, or jurors, showed their sense of these powerful appeals by
rejecting the proposition of his accuser to condemn him to death; but they
imposed on him the penalty of fifty talents “for his iniquity.”
Cornelius
Nepos affirms that these fifty talents represented the expenses incurred by the
state in fitting out the armament; but we may more probably believe, looking to
the practice of the Athenian dikastery in criminal cases, that fifty talents
was the minor penalty actually proposed by the defenders of Miltiades
themselves, as a substitute for the punishment of death. In those penal cases
at Athens, where the punishment was not fixed beforehand by the terms of the
law, if the person accused was found guilty, it was customary to submit to the
jurors, subsequently and separately, the question as to amount of punishment:
first, the accuser named the penalty which he thought suitable; next, the
accused person was called upon to name an amount of penalty for himself, and
the jurors were constrained to take their choice between these two,—no third
gradation of penalty being admissible for consideration. Of course, under such
circumstances, it was the interest of the accused party to name, even in his
own case, some real and serious penalty,—something which the jurors might be
likely to deem not wholly inadequate to his crime just proved; for if he
proposed some penalty only trifling, he drove them to prefer the heavier
sentence recommended by his opponent. Accordingly, in the case of Miltiades,
his friends, desirous of inducing the jurors to refuse their assent to the
punishment of death, proposed a fine of fifty talents as the self-assessed
penalty of the defendant; and perhaps they may have stated, as an argument in
the case, that such a sum would suffice to defray the costs of the expedition.
The fine was imposed, but Miltiades did not live to pay it, his injured limb
mortified, and he died, leaving the fine to be paid by his son Kimon.
According
to Cornelius Nepos, Diodorus, and Plutarch, he was put in prison, after having
been fined, and there died. But Herodotus does not mention this imprisonment,
and the tale appears to me improbable: he would hardly have omitted to notice
it, had it come to his knowledge. Immediate imprisonment of a person fined by
the dikastery, until his fine was paid, was not the natural and ordinary course
of Athenian procedure, though there were particular cases in which such
aggravation was added. Usually, a certain time was allowed for payment, before
absolute execution was reported to, but the person under sentence became
disfranchised and excluded from all political rights, from the very instant of
his condemnation as a public debtor, until the fine was paid. Now in the
instance of Miltiades, the lamentable condition of his wounded thigh rendered
escape impossible,—so that there would be no special motive for departing from
the usual practice, and imprisoning him forthwith: moreover, if he was not
imprisoned forthwith, he would not be imprisoned at all, since he cannot have
lived many days after his trial. To carry away the suffering general in his
couch, incapable of raising himself even to plead for his own life, from the
presence of the dikasts to a prison, would not only have been a needless
severity, but could hardly have failed to imprint itself on the sympathies and
the memory of all the beholders; so that Herodotus would have been likely to
hear and mention it, if it had really occurred. I incline to believe therefore
that Miltiades died at home: all accounts concur in stating that he died of the
mortal bodily hurt which already disabled him even at the moment of his trial,
and that his son Kimon paid the fifty talents after his death. If he could pay
them, probably his father could have paid them also. And this is an additional
reason for believing that there was no imprisonment,—for nothing but
non-payment could have sent him to prison; and to rescue the suffering
Miltiades from being sent thither, would have been the first and strongest
desire of all sympathizing friends.
Thus
closed the life of the conqueror of Marathon. The last act of it produces an
impression so mournful, and even shocking,—his descent from the pinnacle of
glory to defeat, mean tampering with a temple-servant, mortal bodily hurt,
undefended ignominy, and death under a sentence of heavy fine, is so abrupt and
unprepared,—that readers, ancient and modern, have not been satisfied without
finding some one to blame for it: we must except Herodotus, our original
authority, who recounts the transaction without dropping a single hint of
blame against any one. To speak ill of the people, as Machiavel has long ago
observed, is a strain in which every one at all times, even under a democratical
government, indulges with impunity and without provoking any opponent to reply;
and in this instance, the hard fate of Miltiades has been imputed to the vices
of the Athenians and their democracy,—it has been cited in proof, partly of
their fickleness, partly of their ingratitude. But however such blame may serve
to lighten the mental sadness arising from a series of painful facts, it will
not be found justified if we apply to those facts a reasonable criticism.
What
is called the fickleness of the Athenians on this occasion is nothing more than
a rapid and decisive change in their estimation of Miltiades; unbounded
admiration passing at once into extreme wrath. To censure them for fickleness
is here an abuse of terms; such a change in their opinion was the unavoidable
result of his conduct. His behavior in the expedition of Paros was as
reprehensible as at Marathon it had been meritorious, and the one succeeded
immediately after the other: what else could ensue except an entire revolution
in the Athenian feelings? He had employed his prodigious ascendency over their
minds to induce them to follow him without knowing whither, in the confidence
of an unknown booty: he had exposed their lives and wasted their substance in
wreaking a private grudge: in addition to the shame of an unprincipled project,
comes the constructive shame of not having succeeded in it. Without doubt, such
behavior, coming from a man whom they admired to excess, must have produced a
violent and painful revulsion in the feelings of his countrymen. The idea of
having lavished praise and confidence upon a person who forthwith turns it to
an unworthy purpose, is one of the greatest torments of the human bosom; and we
may well understand that the intensity of the subsequent displeasure would be
aggravated by this reactionary sentiment, without accusing the Athenians of
fickleness. If an officer, whose conduct has been such as to merit the highest
encomiums, comes on a sudden to betray his trust, and manifests cowardice or
treachery in a new and important undertaking confided to him, are we to treat
the general in command as fickle, because his opinion as well as his conduct
undergoes an instantaneous revolution,—which will be all the more vehement in
proportion to his previous esteem? The question to be determined is, whether
there be sufficient ground for such a change; and in the case of Miltiades,
that question must be answered in the affirmative.
In
regard to the charge of ingratitude against the Athenians, this last-mentioned
point—sufficiency of reason—stands tacitly admitted. It is conceded that
Miltiades deserved punishment for his conduct in reference to the Parian
expedition, but it is nevertheless maintained that gratitude for his previous
services at Marathon ought to have exempted him from punishment. But the
sentiment upon which, after all, this exculpation rests, will not bear to be
drawn out and stated in the form of a cogent or justifying reason. For will any
one really contend, that a man who has rendered great services to the public,
is to receive in return a license of unpunished misconduct for the future? Is
the general, who has earned applause by eminent skill and important victories,
to be recompensed by being allowed the liberty of betraying his trust
afterwards, and exposing his country to peril, without censure or penalty? This
is what no one intends to vindicate deliberately; yet a man must be prepared
to vindicate it when he blames the Athenians for ingratitude towards Miltiades.
For if all that be meant is, that gratitude for previous services ought to
pass, not as a receipt in lull for subsequent crime, but as an extenuating
circumstance in the measurement of the penalty, the answer is, that it was so
reckoned in the Athenian treatment of Miltiades, his friends had nothing
whatever to urge, against the extreme penalty proposed by bis accuser, except
these previous services,—which influenced the dikasts sufficiently to induce
them to inflict the lighter punishment instead of the heavier. Now the whole
amount, of punishment inflicted consisted in a fine which certainly was not
beyond his reasonable means of paying, or of prevailing upon friends to pay for
him, since his son Kimon actually did pay it. And those who blame the Athenians
for ingratitude,—unless they are prepared to maintain the doctrine that
previous services are to pass as full acquittal for future crime,—have no
other ground left except to say that the fine was too high; that instead of
being fifty talents, it ought to have been no more than forty, thirty, twenty,
or ten talents. Whether they are right in this, I will not take upon me to
pronounce. If the amount was named on behalf of the accused party, the dikastery
had no legal power of diminishing it; but it is within such narrow limits that
the question actually lies, when transferred from the province of sentiment to
that of reason. It. will be recollected that the death of Miltiades arose
neither from his trial nor his fine, but from the hurt in his thigh.
The
charge of ingratitude against the Athenian popular juries really amounts to
this,—that, in trying a person accused of present crime or fault, they were
apt to confine themselves too strictly and exclusively to the particular matter
of charge, either forgetting, or making too little account of, past services
which he might have rendered. Whoever imagines that such was the habit of
Athenian dikasts, must have studied the orators to very little purpose. Their
real defect was the very opposite: they were too much disposed to wander from
the special issue before them, and to be affected by appeals to previous
services and conduct. That which an accused person at Athens usually strives to
produce is, an impression in the minds of the dikasts favorable to his general
character and behavior. Of course, he meets the particular allegation of his
accuser as well as he can, but he never fails also to remind them emphatically,
how well he has performed his general duties of a citizen,—how many times he
has served in military expeditions,—how many trierarchies and liturgies he has
performed, and performed with splendid efficiency. In fact, the claim of an
accused person to acquittal is made to rest too much on his prior services, and
too little upon innocence or justifying matter as to the particular indictment.
When we come down to the time of the orators. I shall be prepared to show that
such indisposition to confine themselves to a special issue was one of the most
serious defects of the assembled dikasts at Athens. It is one which we should
naturally expect from a body of private, non-professional citizens assembled
for the occasion, and which belongs more or less to the system of jury-trial
everywhere; but it is the direct reverse of that ingratitude, or habitual
insensibility to prior services, for which they have, been so often denounced.
The
fate of Miltiades, then, so far from illustrating either the fickleness or the
ingratitude of his countrymen, attests their just appreciation of deserts. It
also illustrates another moral, of no small importance to the right
comprehension of Grecian affairs; it teaches us the painful lesson, how
perfectly maddening were the effects of a copious draught of glory on the
temperament of an enterprising and ambitious Greek. There can be no doubt, that
the rapid transition, in the course of about one week, from Athenian terror
before the battle to Athenian exultation after it, must have produced
demonstrations towards Miltiades such as were never paid towards any other man
in the whole history of the commonwealth. Such unmeasured admiration unseated
his rational judgment, so that his mind became abandoned to the reckless
impulses of insolence, and antipathy, and rapacity;—that distempered state, for
which (according to Grecian morality) the retributive Nemesis was ever on the
watch, and which, in his case, she visited with a judgment startling in its
rapidity, as well as terrible in its amount. Had Miltiades been the same man
before the battle of Marathon as he became after it, the battle might probably
have turned out a defeat instead of a victory. Demosthenes, indeed, in speaking
of the wealth and luxury of political leaders in his own time, and the profuse
rewards bestowed upon them by the people, pointed in contrast to the house of
Miltiades as being noway more splendid than that of a private man. But though
Miltiades might continue to live in a modest establishment, he received from
his countrymen marks of admiration and deference such as were never paid to
any citizen before or after him; and, after all, admiration and deference
constitute the precious essence of popular reward. No man except Miltiades
ever dared to raise his voice in the Athenian assembly, and say : “Give me a
fleet of ships : do not ask what I am going to do with them, but only follow
me. and I will enrich you.” Herein we may read the unmeasured confidence which
the Athenians placed in their victorious general, and the utter incapacity of a
leading Greek to bear it without mental depravation; while we learn from it to
draw the melancholy inference, that one result of success was to make the
successful leader one of the most dangerous men in the community. We shall
presently be called upon to observe the same tendency in the case of the
Spartan Pausanias, and even in that of the Athenian Themistocles. It is, indeed,
fortunate that the reckless aspirations of Miltiades did not take a turn more
noxious to Athens than the comparatively unimportant enterprise against Paros.
For had he sought to acquire dominion and gratify antipathies against enemies
at home, instead of directing his blow against a Parian enemy, the peace and
security of his country might have been seriously endangered.
Of
the despots who gained power in Greece, a considerable proportion began by
popular conduct, and by rendering good service to their fellow-citizens: having
first earned public gratitude, they abused it for purposes of their own
ambition. There was far greater danger, in a Grecian community, of dangerous
excess of gratitude towards a victorious soldier, than of deficiency in that
sentiment: hence the person thus exalted acquired a position such that the
community found it difficult afterwards to shake him off. Now there is a
disposition almost universal among writers and readers to side with an
individual, especially an eminent individual, against the multitude; and
accordingly those who under such circumstances suspect the probable abuse of an
exalted position, are denounced as if they harbored an unworthy jealousy of
superior abilities. But the truth is, that the largest analogies of the Grecian
character justified that suspicion, and required the community to take
precautions against the corrupting effects of their own enthusiasm. There is
no feature which more largely pervades the impressible Grecian character, than
a liability to be intoxicated and demoralized by success: there was no fault
from which so few eminent Greeks were free: there was hardly any danger,
against which it was at once so necessary and so difficult for the Grecian
governments to take security,—especially the democracies, where the
manifestations of enthusiasm were always the loudest. Such is the real
explanation of those charges which have been urged against the Grecian democracies,
that they came to hate and ill-treat previous benefactors; and the history of
Miltiades illustrates it in a manner no less pointed than painful.
I
have already remarked that the fickleness, which has been so largely imputed to
the Athenian democracy in their dealings with him, is nothing more than a
reasonable change of opinion on the best grounds. Nor can it be said that
fickleness was in any case an attribute of the Athenian democracy. It is a
well-known fact, that feelings, or opinions, or modes of judging, which have
once obtained footing among a large number of people, are more lasting and
unchangeable than those which belong only to one or a few; insomuch that the
judgment and actions of the many admit of being more clearly understood as to
the past, and more certainly predicted as to the future. If we are to predicate
any attribute of the multitude, it will rather be that of undue tenacity than
undue fickleness; and there will occur nothing in the course of this history to
prove that the Athenian people changed their opinions on insufficient grounds
more frequently than an unresponsible one or few would have changed.
But
there were two circumstances in the working of the Athenian democracy which
imparted to it an appearance of greater fickleness, without the reality: First,
that the manifestations and changes of opinion were all open, undisguised, and
noisy: the people gave utterance to their present impression, whatever it was,
with perfect frankness; if their opinions were really changed, they had no
shame or scruple in avowing it. Secondly,—and this is a point of capital
importance in the working of democracy generally,—the present impression, whatever
it might be, was not merely undisguised in its manifestations, but also had a
tendency to be exaggerated in its intensity. This arose from their habit of
treating public affairs in multitudinous assemblages, the well-known effect of
which is, to inflame sentiment in every man’s bosom by mere contact with a
sympathizing circle of neighbors. Whatever the sentiment might be,—fear,
ambition, cupidity, wrath, compassion, piety, patriotic devotion, etc,—and
whether well-founded or ill-founded, it was constantly influenced more or less
by such intensifying cause. This is a defect which of course belongs in a
certain degree to all exercise of power by numerous bodies, even though they be
representative bodies,— especially when the character of the people, instead of
being comparatively sedate and slow to move, like the English, is quick,
impressible, and fiery, like Greeks or Italians; but it operated far more
powerfully on the self-acting Demos assembled in the Pnyx. It was in fact the
constitutional malady of the democracy, of which the people were themselves
perfectly sensible,—as I shall show hereafter from the securities which they
tried to provide against it,—but which no securities could ever wholly
eradicate. Frequency of public assemblies, far from aggravating the evil, had a
tendency to lighten it. The people thus became accustomed to hear and balance
many different views as a preliminary to ultimate judgment; they contracted
personal interest and esteem for a numerous class of dissentient speakers; and
they even acquired a certain practical consciousness of their own liability to
error. Moreover, the diffusion of habits of public speaking, by means of the
sophists and the rhetors, whom it has been so much the custom to disparage,
tended in the same direction,—to break the unity of sentiment among the
listening crowd, to multiply separate judgments, and to neutralize the
contagion of mere sympathizing impulse. These were important deductions, still
farther assisted by the superior taste and intelligence of the Athenian
people: but still, the inherent malady remained,—excessive and misleading
intensity of present sentiment. It was this which gave such inestimable value
to the ascendency of Pericles, as depicted by Thucydides: his hold on the
people was so firm, that he could always speak with effect against excess of
the reigning tone of feeling. “When Pericles (says the historian) saw the
people in a state of unseasonable and insolent confidence, he spoke so as to
cow them into alarm; when again they were in groundless terror, he combated it,
and brought them back to confidence.” We shall find Demosthenes, with far
inferior ascendency, employed in the same honorable task: the Athenian people
often stood in need of such correction, but unfortunately did not always find
statesmen, at once friendly and commanding, to administer it.
These
two attributes, then, belonged to the Athenian democracy; first, their
sentiments of every kind were manifested loudly and openly; next, their
sentiments tended to a pitch of great present intensity. Of course, therefore,
when they changed, the change of sentiment stood prominent, and forced itself
upon every one’s notice,— being a transition from one strong sentiment past to
another strong sentiment present. And it was because such alterations, when
they did take place, stood out so palpably to remark, that the Athenian people
have drawn upon themselves the imputation of fickleness: for it is not at all
true, I repeat, that changes of sentiment were more frequently produced in them
by frivolous or insufficient causes, than changes of sentiment in other
governments.