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      READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM | 
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GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECECHAPTER XCIII
              
        SECOND AND THIRD ASIATIC CAMPAIGNS OF ALEXANDER—
          BATTLE OF ISSUS—SIEGE OF TYRE
              
        
           It was about February or March 333 B.C., when
          Alexander reached Gordium; where he appears to have halted for some time,
          giving to the troops who had been with him in Pisidia a repose doubtless
          needful. While at Gordium, he performed the memorable exploit familiarly known
          as the cutting of the Gordian knot. There was preserved in the citadel an
          ancient waggon of rude structure, said by the legend to have once belonged to
          the peasant Gordius and his son Midas—the primitive rustic kings of Phrygia,
          designated as such by the gods, and chosen by the people. The cord (composed of
          fibres from the bark of the cornel tree), attaching the yoke of this waggon to
          the pole, was so twisted and entangled as to form a knot of singular
          complexity, which no one had ever been able to untie. An oracle had pronounced,
          that to the person who should untie it the empire of Asia was destined. When
          Alexander went up to see this ancient relic, the surrounding multitude,
          Phrygian as well as Macedonian, were full of expectation that the conqueror of
          the Granicus and of Halikarnassus would overcome the difficulties of the knot
          and acquire the promised empire. But Alexander, on inspecting the knot, was as
          much perplexed as others had been before him, until at length, in a fit of
          impatience, he drew his sword and severed the cord in two. By every one this
          was accepted as a solution of the problem, thus making good his title to the
          empire of Asia; a belief which the gods ratified by a storm of thunder and
          lightning during the ensuing night.
               At Gordium, Alexander was visited by envoys from
          Athens, entreating the liberation of the Athenian prisoners taken at the
          Granikus, who were now at work chained in the Macedonian mines. But he refused
          this prayer until a more convenient season. Aware that the Greeks were held
          attached to him only by their fears, and that, if opportunity occurred, a large
          fraction of them would take part with the Persians, he did not think it prudent
          to relax his hold upon their conduct.
               Such opportunity seemed now not unlikely to occur.
          Memnon, excluded from efficacious action on the continent since the loss of
          Halikarnassus, was employed among the islands of the Aegean (during the first
          half of 333 B.C.), with the purpose of carrying war into Greece and Macedonia.
          Invested with the most ample command, he had a large Phenician fleet and a
          considerable body of Grecian mercenaries, together with his nephew Pharnabazus
          and the Persian Furophanate’s. Having acquired the important island of Chios,
          through the co-operation of a part of its inhabitants, he next landed on
          Lesbos, where four out of the five cities, either from fear or preference,
          declared in his favour; while Mitylene, the greatest of the five, already
          occupied by a Macedonian garrison, stood out against him. Memnon accordingly
          disembarked his troops and commenced the blockade of the city both by sea and
          land, surrounding it with a double palisade wall from sea to sea. In the midst
          of this operation he died of sickness; but his nephew Pharnabazus, to whom he
          had consigned the command provisionally, until the pleasure of Darius could be
          known, prosecuted his measures vigorously, and brought the city to a
          capitulation. It was stipulated that the garrison introduced by Alexander
          should be dismissed; that the column, recording alliance with him, should be
          demolished ; that the Mityleneans should become allies of Darius, upon the
          terms of the old convention called by the name of Antalcidas; and that the
          citizens in banishment should be recalled, with restitution of half their
          property. But Pharnabazus, as soon as admitted, violated the capitulation at
          once. He not only extorted contributions, but introduced a garrison under
          Lykomedes, and established a returned exile named Diogenes as despot. Such
          breach of faith was ill-calculated to assist the further extension of Persian
          influence in Greece.
               Had the Persian fleet been equally active a year
          earlier, Alexander’s army could never have landed in Asia. Nevertheless, the
          acquisitions of Chios and Lesbos, late as they were in coming, were highly
          important as promising future progress. Several of the Cyclades islands sent to
          tender their adhesion to the Persian cause; the fleet was expected in Euboea,
          and the Spartans began to count upon aid for an anti-Macedonian movement But
          all these hopes were destroyed by the unexpected decease of Memnon.
               It was not merely the superior ability of Memnon, but
          also his established reputation both with Greeks and Persians, which rendered
          his death a fatal blow to the interests of Darius. The Persians had with them
          other Greek officers—brave and able—probably some not unfit to execute the full
          Memnonian schemes. But none of them had gone through the same experience in the
          art of exercising command among Orientals—none of them had acquired the
          confidence of Darius to the same extent, so as to be invested with the real
          guidance of operations, and upheld against court-calumnies. Though Alexander
          had now become master of Asia Minor, yet the Persians had ample means, if
          effectively used, of defending all that yet remained, and even of seriously
          disturbing him at home. But with Memnon vanished the last chance of employing
          these means with wisdom or energy. The full value of his loss was better
          appreciated by the intelligent enemy whom he opposed, than by the feeble master
          whom he served. The death of Memnon, lessening the efficiency of the Persians
          at sea, allowed full leisure to reorganise the Macedonian fleet, and to employ
          the undivided land-force for further inland conquest.
               If Alexander was a gainer in respect to his own
          operations by the death of this eminent Rhodian, he was yet more a gainer by
          the change of policy which that event induced Darius to adopt. The Persian king
          resolved to renounce the defensive schemes of Memnon, and to take the offensive
          against the Macedonians on land. His troops, already summoned from the various
          parts of the empire, had partially arrived, and were still coming in. Their
          numbers became greater and greater, amounting at length to a vast and
          multitudinous host, the total of which is given by some as 600,000 men—by
          others as 400,000 infantry and 100,000 cavalry. The spectacle of this showy and
          imposing mass, in every variety of arms, costume, and language, filled the mind
          of Darius with confidence; especially as there were among them between 20,000
          and 30,000 Grecian mercenaries. The Persian courtiers, themselves elate and
          sanguine, stimulated and exaggerated the same feeling in the king himself, who
          became confirmed in his persuasion that his enemies could never resist him.
          From Sogdiana, Bactria, and India, the contingents had not yet had time to
          arrive; but most of those between the Persian Gulf and the Caspian sea had come
          in—Persians, Medes, Armenians, Derbikes, Barkanians, Hyrcanians, Kardakes,
  &c.; all of whom, mustered in the plains of Mesopotamia, are said to have
          been counted, like the troops of Xerxes in the plain of Doriskus, by paling off
          a space capable of containing exactly 10,000 men, and passing all the soldiers
          through it in succession. Neither Darius himself, nor any of those around him,
          had ever before seen so overwhelming a manifestation of the Persian imperial
          force. To an Oriental eye, incapable of appreciating the real conditions of
          military preponderance,—accustomed only to the gross and visible computation of
          numbers and physical strength,—the king who marched forth at the head of such
          an army appeared like a god on earth, certain to trample down all before
          him—just as most Greeks had conceived respecting Xerxes, and by stronger reason
          Xerxes respecting himself, a century and a half before. Because all this turned
          out a ruinous mistake, the description of the feeling, given in Curtius and
          Diodorus, is often mistrusted as baseless rhetoric. Yet it is in reality the
          self-suggested illusion of untaught men, as opposed to trained and scientific
          judgement.
   But though such was the persuasion of Orientals, it
          found no response in the bosom of an intelligent Athenian. Among the Greeks now
          near Darius, was the Athenian exile Charidemus; who having incurred the
          implacable enmity of Alexander, had been forced to quit Athens after the
          Macedonian capture of Thebes, and had fled together with Ephialtes to the
          Persians. Darius, elate with the apparent omnipotence of his army under review,
          and hearing but one voice of devoted concurrence from the courtiers around him,
          asked the opinion of Charidemus, in full expectation of receiving an
          affirmative reply. So completely were the hopes of Charidemus bound up with the
          success of Darius, that he would not suppress his convictions, however
          unpalatable, at a moment when there was yet a possibility that they might prove
          useful. He replied (with the same frankness as Demaratus had once employed
          towards Xerxes), that the vast multitude now before him were unfit to cope with
          the comparatively small number of the invaders. He advised Darius to place no
          reliance on Asiatics, but to employ his immense treasures in subsidising an
          increased army of Grecian mercenaries. He tendered his own hearty services
          either to assist or to command. To Darius, what he said was alike surprising
          and offensive; in the Persian courtiers, it provoked intolerable wrath.
          Intoxicated as they all were with the spectacle of their immense muster, it
          seemed to them a combination of insult with absurdity, to pronounce Asiatics
          worthless as compared with Macedonians, and to teach the king that his empire
          could be defended by none but Greeks. They denounced Charidemus as a traitor
          who wished to acquire the king’s confidence in order to betray him to
          Alexander. Darius, himself stung with the reply, and still further exasperated
          by the clamours of his courtiers, seized with his own hands the girdle of
          Charidemus, and consigned him to the guards for execution. “You will discover
          too late (exclaimed the Athenian)the truth of what I have said. My avenger will
          soon be upon you.”
               Filled as he now was with certain anticipations of
          success and glory, Darius resolved to assume in person the command of his army,
          and march down to overwhelm Alexander. From this moment, his land army became
          the really important and aggressive force, with which he himself was to act.
          Herein we note his distinct abandonment of the plans of Memnon—the
          turning-point of his future fortune. He abandoned them, too, at the precise
          moment when they might have been most safely and completely executed. For at the
          time of the battle of the Granikus, when Memnon’s counsel was originally given,
          the defensive part of it was not easy to act upon; since the Persians had no
          very strong or commanding position. But now, in the spring of 333 B.C., they
          had a line of defence as good as they could possibly desire; advantages,
          indeed, scarcely to be paralleled elsewhere. In the first place, there was the
          line of Mount Taurus, barring the entrance of Alexander into Cilicia; a line of
          defence (as will presently appear) nearly inexpugnable. Next, even if Alexander
          had succeeded in forcing this line and mastering Cilicia, there would yet
          remain the narrow road between Mount Amanus and the sea, called the Amanian
          Gates, and the Gates of Cilicia and Assyria—and after that, the passes over
          Mount Amanus itself—all indispensable for Alexander to pass through, and
          capable of being held, with proper precautions, against the strongest force of
          attack. A better opportunity for executing the defensive part of Memnon’s
          scheme could not present itself; and he himself must doubtless have reckoned
          that such advantages would not be thrown away.
               The momentous change of policy, on the part of the
          Persian king, was manifested by the order which he sent to the fleet after
          receiving intelligence of the death of Memnon. Confirming the appointment of
          Pharnabazus (made provisionally by the dying Memnon) as admiral, he at the same
          time despatched Thymodes (son of Mentor and nephew of Memnon) to bring away
          from the fleet the Grecian mercenaries who served aboard, to be incorporated
          with the main Persian army.1 Here was a clear proof that the main stress of
          offensive operations was henceforward to be transferred from the sea to the
          land.
               It is the more important to note such desertion of
          policy, on the part of Darius, as the critical turning-point in the
          Greco-Persian drama—because Arrian and the other historians leave it out of
          sight, and set before us little except secondary points ill the case. Thus, for
          example, they condemn the imprudence of Darius, for coming to fight Alexander
          within the narrow space near Issus, instead of waiting for him on the spacious
          plains beyond Mount Amanus. Now, unquestionably, granting that a general battle
          was inevitable, this step augmented the chances in favour of the Macedonians.
          But it was a step upon which no material consequences turned; for the Persian
          army under Darius was hardly less unfit for a pitched battle in the open plain;
          as was afterwards proved at Arbela. The real imprudence—the neglect of the
          Memnonian warning—consisted in fighting the battle at all. Mountains and
          defiles were the real strength of the Persians, to be held as posts of defence
          against the invader. If Darius erred, it was not so much in relinquishing the
          open plain of Sochi, as in originally preferring that plain with a pitched
          battle, to the strong lines of defence offered by Taurus and Amanus.
               The narrative of Arrian, except perhaps in what it
          affirms, is not only brief and incomplete, but even omits on various occasions
          to put in relief the really important and determining points.
               While halting at Gordium, Alexander was joined by
          those newly-married Macedonians whom he had sent home to winter, and who now
          came back with reinforcements to the number of 3000 infantry and 300 cavalry,
          together with 200 Thessalian cavalry, and 150 Eleians. As soon as his troops
          had been sufficiently rested, he marched (probably about the latter half of
          May) towards Paphlagonia and Cappadocia. At Ankyra he was met by a deputation
          from the Paphlagonians, who submitted themselves to his discretion, only
          entreating that he would not conduct his army into their country. Accepting
          these terms, he placed them under the government of Kallas, his satrap of
          Hellespontine Phrygia. Advancing farther, he subdued the whole of Cappadocia,
          even to a considerable extent beyond the Halys, leaving therein Sabiktas as
          satrap.
               Having established security in his rear, Alexander
          marched southward towards Mount Taurus. He reached a post called the Camp of
          Cyrus, at the northern foot of that mountain, near the pass Tauripylae, or
          Cilician Gates, which forms the regular communication between Cappadocia on the
          north side, and Cilicia on the south, of this great chain. The long road
          ascending and descending was generally narrow, winding, and rugged, sometimes
          between two steep and high banks; and it included, near its southern
          termination, one spot particularly obstructed and difficult. From ancient
          times, down to the present, the main road from Asia Minor into Cilicia and
          Syria has run through this pass. During the Roman empire, it must doubtless
          have received many improvements, so as to render the traffic comparatively
          easier. Yet the description given of it by modern travellers represents it to
          be as difficult as any road ever traversed by an army. Seventy years before
          Alexander, it had been traversed by the younger Cyrus with the 10,000 Greeks,
          in his march up to attack his brother Artaxerxes; and Xenophon, who then went
          through it, pronounces it absolutely impracticable for an army, if opposed by
          any occupying force. So thoroughly persuaded was Cyrus himself of this fact,
          that he had prepared a fleet, in case he found the pass occupied, to land
          troops by sea in Cilicia in the rear of the defenders; and great indeed was his
          astonishment to discover that the habitual recklessness of Persian management
          had left the defile unguarded. The narrowest part, while hardly sufficient to
          contain four armed men abreast, was shut in by precipitous rock on each side.
          Here, if anywhere, was the spot in which the defensive policy of Memnon might
          have been made sure. To Alexander, inferior as he was by sea, the resource
          employed by the younger Cyrus was not open.
               Yet Arsames, the Persian satrap commanding at Tarsus
          in Cilicia, having received seemingly from his master no instructions, or worse
          than none, acted as if ignorant of the existence of his enterprising enemy
          north of Mount Taurus. On the first approach of Alexander, the few Persian
          soldiers occupying the pass fled without striking a blow, being seemingly
          unprepared for any enemy more formidable than mountain-robbers. Alexander thus
          became master of this almost insuperable barrier without the loss of a man. On
          the ensuing day he marched his whole army over it into Cilicia, and arriving in
          a few hours at Tarsus, found the town already evacuated by Arsames.
               At Tarsus Alexander made a long halt; much longer than
          he intended. Either from excessive fatigue, or from bathing while hot in the
          chilly water of the river Kydnus, he was seized with a violent fever, which
          presently increased to so dangerous a pitch that his life was despaired of.
          Amidst the grief and alarm with which this misfortune filled the army, none of
          the physicians would venture to administer remedies, from fear of being held
          responsible for what threatened to be a fatal result. One alone among them, an
          Acarnanian named Philippus, long known and trusted by Alexander, engaged to
          cure him by a violent purgative draught. Alexander directed him to prepare it;
          but before the time for taking it arrived, he received a confidential letter
          from Parmenio, entreating him to beware of Philippus, who had been bribed by
          Darius to poison him. After reading the letter, he put it under his pillow.
          Presently came Philippus with the medicine, which Alexander accepted and
          swallowed without remark, at the same time giving Philippus the letter to read,
          and watching the expression of his countenance. The look, words, and gestures
          of the physician were such as completely to reassure him. Philippus,
          indignantly repudiating the calumny, repeated his full confidence in the
          medicine, and pledged himself to abide the result. At first it operated so
          violently as to make Alexander seemingly worse, and even to bring him to
          death’s door; but after a certain interval, its healing effects became
          manifest. The fever was subdued, and Alexander was pronounced out of danger, to
          the delight of the whole army. A reasonable time sufficed to restore him to his
          former health and vigour.
               It was his first operation, after recovery, to send
          forward Parmenio, at the head of the Greeks, Thessalians, and Thracians, in his
          army, for the purpose of clearing the forward route and of securing the pass
          called the Gates of Cilicia and Syria. This narrow road, bounded by the range
          of Mount Amanus on the east and by the sea on the west, had been once barred by
          a double cross-wall with gates for passage, marking the original boundaries of
          Cilicia and Syria. The Gates, about six days’ march beyond Tarsus, were found
          guarded, but the guard fled with little resistance. At the same time, Alexander
          himself, conducting the Macedonian troops in a south-westerly direction from
          Tarsus, employed some time in mastering and regulating the towns of Anchialus
          and Soli, as well as the Cilician mountaineers. Then, returning to Tarsus, and
          recommencing his forward march, he advanced with the infantry and with his
          chosen squadron of cavalry, first to Magarsus near the mouth of the river
          Pyramus, next to Mallus; the general body of cavalry, under Philotas, being
          sent by a more direct route across the Aleian plain. Mallus, sacred to the
          prophet Amphilochus as patron-hero, was said to be a colony from Argos; on both
          these grounds Alexander was disposed to treat it with peculiar respect. He
          offered solemn sacrifice to Amphilochus, exempting Mallus from tribute, and
          appeased some troublesome discord among the citizens.
               It was at Mallus that he received his first distinct
          communication respecting Darius and the main Persian army; which was said to
          be encamped at Sochi in Syria, on the eastern side of Mount Amanus, about two
          days’ march from the mountain pass now called Beylan. That pass, traversing the
          Amanian range, forms the continuance of the main road from Asia Minor into
          Syria, after having passed first over Taurus, and next through the difficult
          point of ground above specified (called the Gates of Cilicia and Syria),
          between Mount Amanus and the sea. Assembling his principal officers, Alexander
          communicated to them the position of Darius, now encamped in a spacious plain
          with prodigious superiority of numbers, especially of cavalry. Though the
          locality was thus rather favourable to the enemy, yet the Macedonians, full of
          hopes and courage, called upon Alexander to lead them forthwith against him.
          Accordingly Alexander, well pleased with their alacrity, began his forward
          march on the following morning. He passed through Issus, where he left some
          sick and wounded under a moderate guard—then through the Gates of Cilicia and
          Syria. At the second day’s march from those Gates, he reached the seaport
          Myriandrus, the first town of Syria or Phenicia.
               Here, having been detained in his camp one day by a
          dreadful storm, he received intelligence which altogether changed his plans.
          The Persian army had been marched away from Sochi, and was now in Cilicia,
          following in his rear. It had already got possession of Issus.
               Darius had marched out of the interior his vast and
          miscellaneous host, stated at 600,000 men. His mother, his wife, his harem, his
          children, his personal attendants of every description, accompanied him, to
          witness what was anticipated as a certain triumph. All the apparatus of
          ostentation and luxury was provided in abundance, for the king and for his
          Persian grandees. The baggage was enormous: of gold and silver alone, we are
          told that there was enough to furnish load for 600 mules and 300 camels. A temporary
          bridge being thrown over the Euphrates, five days were required to enable the
          whole army to cross. Much of the treasure and baggage, however, was not allowed
          to follow the army to the vicinity of Mount Amanus, but was sent under a guard
          to Damascus in Syria.
               At the head of such an overwhelming host, Darius was
          eager to bring on at once a general battle. It was not sufficient for him
          simply to keep back an enemy, whom, when once in presence, he calculated on
          crushing altogether. Accordingly, he had given no orders (as we have just seen)
          to defend the line of the Taurus; he had admitted Alexander unopposed into
          Cilicia, and he intended to let him enter in like manner through the remaining
          strong passes—first, the Gates of Cilicia and Syria, between Mount Amanus and
          the sea—next, the pass, now called Beylan, across Amanus itself. He both
          expected and wished that his enemy should come into the plain to fight, there
          to be trodden down by the countless horsemen of Persia.
               But such anticipation was not at once realised. The
          movements of Alexander, hitherto so rapid and unremitting, seemed suspended.
          We have already noticed the dangerous fever which threatened his life,
          occasioning not only a long halt, but much uneasiness among the Macedonian
          army. All was doubtless reported to the Persians, with abundant exaggerations;
          and when Alexander, immediately after recovery, instead of marching forward
          towards them, turned away from them to subdue the western portion of Cilicia,
          this again was construed by Darius as an evidence of hesitation and fear. It is
          even asserted that Parmenio wished to await the attack of the Persians in
          Cilicia, and that Alexander at first consented to do so. At any rate, Darius,
          after a certain interval, contracted the persuasion, and was assured by his
          Asiatic councillors and courtiers, that the Macedonians, though audacious and
          triumphant against frontier satraps, now hung back intimidated by the
          approaching majesty and full muster of the empire, and that they would not stand
          to resist his attack. Under this impression Darius resolved upon an advance
          into Cilicia with all his army. Thymodes indeed, and other intelligent Grecian
          advisers—together with the Macedonian exile Amyntas—deprecated his new
          resolution, entreating him to persevere in his original purpose. They pledged
          themselves that Alexander would come forth to attack him wherever he was, and
          that too, speedily. They dwelt on the imprudence of fighting in the narrow
          defiles of Cilicia, where his numbers, and especially his vast cavalry, would
          be useless. Their advice, however, was not only disregarded by Darius, but
          denounced by the Persian councillors as traitorous. Even some of the Greeks in
          the camp shared, and transmitted in their letters to Athens, the blind
          confidence of the monarch. The order was forthwith given for the whole army to
          quit the plains of Syria and march across Mount Amanus into Cilicia. To cross,
          by any pass, over stich a range as that of Mount Amanus, with a numerous army,
          heavy baggage, and ostentatious train (including all the suite necessary for
          the regal family), must have been a work of no inconsiderable time; and the
          only two passes over this mountain were, both of them, narrow and easily
          defensible. Darius followed the northernmost of the two, which brought him into
          the rear of the enemy.
               Thus at the same time that the Macedonians were
          marching southward to cross Mount Amanus by the southern pass, and attack
          Darius in the plain—Darius was coming over into Cilicia by the northern pass to
          drive them before him back into Macedonia. Reaching Issus, seemingly about two
          days after they had left it, he became master of their sick and wounded left in
          the town. With odious brutality, his grandees impelled him to inflict upon
          these poor men either death or amputation of hands and arms. He then marched
          forward—along the same road by the shore of the Gulf which had already been
          followed by Alexander—and encamped on the banks of the river Pinarus.
               The fugitives from Issus hastened to inform Alexander,
          whom they overtook at Myriandus. So astonished was he that he refused to
          believe the news until it had been confirmed by some officers whom he sent
          northward along the coast of the Gulf in a small galley, and to whom the vast
          Persian multitude on the shore was distinctly visible. Then, assembling the
          chief officers, he communicated to them the near approach of the enemy,
          expatiating on the favourable auspices under which a battle would now take place.1
          His address was hailed with acclamation by his hearers, who demanded only to be
          led against the enemy.
               His distance from the Persian position may have been
          about eighteen miles. By an evening march, after supper, he reached at midnight
          the narrow defile (between Mount Amanus and the sea) called the Gates of
          Cilicia and Syria, through which he had marched two days before. Again master
          of that important position, he rested there the last portion of the night, and
          advanced forward at daybreak northward towards Darius. At first the breadth of
          practicable road was so confined as to admit only a narrow column of march,
          .with the cavalry following the infantry; presently it widened, enabling
          Alexander, to enlarge his front by bringing up successively the divisions of
          the phalanx. On approaching near to the river Pinarus (which flowed across the
          pass), he adopted his order of battle. On the extreme right he placed the
          hypaspists, or light division of hoplites; next (reckoning from right to left),
          five Taxeis or divisions of the phalanx, under Koenus, Perdikkas, Meleager,
          Ptolemy, and Amyntas. Of these three last or left divisions, Craterus had the
          general command; himself subject to the orders of Parmenio, who commanded the
          entire left half of the army. The breadth of plain between the mountains on the
          right, and the sea on the left, is said to have been not more than fourteen
          stadia, or somewhat more than one English mile and a half. From fear of being
          outflanked by the superior numbers of the Persians, he gave strict orders to
          Parmenio to keep close to the sea. His Macedonian cavalry, the Companions,
          together with the Thessalians, were placed on his right flank; as were also the
          Agrianes, and the principal portion of the light infantry. The Peloponnesian
          and allied cavalry, with the Thracian and Cretan light infantry, were sent on
          the left flank to Parmenio.
               Darius, informed that Alexander was approaching,
          resolved to fight where he was encamped, behind the river Pinarus. He, however,
          threw across the river a force of 30,000 cavalry, and 20,000 infantry, to
          ensure the undisturbed formation of his main force behind the river. He
          composed his phalanx, or main line of battle, of 90,000 hoplites; 30,000 Greek
          hoplites in the centre, and 30,000 Asiatics armed as hoplites (called
          Kardakes), on each side of these Greeks. These men—not distributed into
          separate divisions, but grouped in one body or multitude—filled the breadth
          between the mountains and the sea. On the mountains to his left, he placed a
          body of 20,000 men, intended to act against the right flank and rear of
          Alexander. But for the great numerical mass of his vast host, he could find no
          room to act; accordingly they remained useless in the rear of his Greek and
          Asiatic hoplites; yet not formed into any body of reserve, or kept disposable
          for assisting in case of need. When his line was thoroughly formed, he recalled
          to the right bank of the Pinarus the 30,000 cavalry and 20,000 infantry which
          he had sent across as a protecting force. A part of this cavalry were sent to
          his extreme left wing, but the mountain ground was found unsuitable for them to
          act, so that they were forced to cross to the right wing, where accordingly the
          great mass of the Persian cavalry became assembled. Darius himself in his
          chariot was in the centre of the line, behind the Grecian hoplites. In the
          front of his whole line ran the river or rivulet Pinarus; the banks of which,
          in many parts naturally steep, he obstructed in some places by embankments.
               As soon as Alexander, by the retirement of the Persian
          covering detachment, was enabled to perceive the final dispositions of Darius,
          he made some alteration in his own, transferring his Thessalian cavalry by a
          rear movement from his right to his left wing, and bringing forward the
          lancer-cavalry or sarissophori, as well as the light infantry, Paeonians and
          archers, to the front of his right. The Agrianians, together with some cavalry
          and another body of archers, were detached from the general line to form an
          oblique front against the 20,000 Persians posted on the hill to outflank him.
          As these 20,000 men came near enough to threaten his flank, Alexander directed
          the Agrianians to attack them, and to drive them farther away on the hills.
          They manifested so little firmness, and gave way so easily, that he felt no
          dread of any serious aggressive movement from them. He therefore contented
          himself with holding back in reserve against them a body of 300 heavy cavalry;
          while he placed the Agrianians and the rest on the right of his main line, in
          order to make his front equal to that of his enemies.
               Having thus formed his array, after giving the troops
          a certain halt after their march, he advanced at a very slow pace, anxious to
          maintain his own front even, and anticipating that the enemy might cross the
          Pinarus to meet him. But as they did not move, he continued his advance,
          preserving the uniformity of the front, until he arrived within bowshot, when
          he himself, at the head of his cavalry, hypaspists, and divisions of the
          phalanx on the right, accelerated his pace, crossed the river at a quick step, and
          fell upon the Kardakes or Asiatic hoplites on the Persian left. Unprepared for
          the suddenness and vehemence of this attack, these Kardakes scarcely resisted a
          moment, but gave way as soon as they came to close quarters, and fled,
          vigorously pressed by the Macedonian right. Darius, who was in his chariot in
          the centre, perceived that this untoward desertion exposed his person from the
          left flank. Seized with panic, he caused his chariot to be turned round, and
          fled with all speed among the foremost fugitives.1 He kept to his chariot as
          long as the ground permitted, but quitted it on reaching some rugged ravines,
          and mounted on horseback to make sure of escape; in such terror that he cast
          away his bow, his shield, and his regal mantle. He does not seem to have given
          a single order, nor to have made the smallest effort to repair a first
          misfortune. The flight of the king was the signal for all who observed it to
          flee also; so that the vast host in the rear were quickly to be seen trampling
          one another down, in their efforts to get through the difficult ground out of
          the reach of the enemy. Darius was himself not merely the centre of union for
          all the miscellaneous contingents composing the army, but also the sole
          commander; so that after his flight there was no one left to give any general
          order.
               This great battle—we might rather say, that which
          ought to have been a great battle—was thus lost,—through the giving way of the
          Asiatic hoplites on the Persian left, and the immediate flight of
          Darius,—within a few minutes after its commencement. But the centre and right
          of the Persians, not yet apprised of these misfortunes, behaved with gallantry.
          When Alexander made his rapid dash forward with the right, under his own
          immediate command, the phalanx in his left centre (which was under Kraterus and
          Parmenio) either did not receive the same accelerating order, or found itself
          both retarded and disordered by greater steepness in the banks of the Pinarus.
          Here it was charged by the Grecian mercenaries, the best troops in the Persian
          service. The combat which took place was obstinate, and the Macedonian loss not
          inconsiderable ; the general of division, Ptolemy son of Seleucus, with 120 of
          the front-rank men or choice phalangites, being slain. But presently Alexander,
          having completed the rout on the enemies’ left, brought back his victorious
          troops from the pursuit, attacked the Grecian mercenaries in flank, and gave
          decisive superiority to their enemies. These Grecian mercenaries were beaten
          and forced to retire. On finding that Darius himself had fled, they got away
          from the field as well as they could, yet seemingly in good order. There is
          even reason to suppose that a part of them forced their way up the mountains or
          through the Macedonian line, and made their escape southward.
               Meanwhile on the Persian right, towards the sea, the
          heavy armed Persian cavalry had shown much bravery. They were bold enough to
          cross the Pinarus2 * and vigorously to charge the Thessalians; with whom they
          maintained a close contest, until the news spread that Darius had disappeared,
          and that the left of the army was routed. They then turned their backs and
          fled, sustaining terrible damage from their enemies in the retreat. Of the
          Kardakes on the right flank of the Grecian hoplites in the Persian line, we
          hear nothing, nor of the Macedonian infantry opposed to them. Perhaps these
          Kardakes came little into action, since the cavalry on their part of the field
          were so severely engaged. At any rate they took part in the general flight of
          the Persians, as soon as Darius was known to have left the field.
               The rout of the Persians being completed, Alexander
          began a vigorous pursuit. The destruction and slaughter of the fugitives were
          prodigious. Amidst so small a breadth of practicable ground, narrowed sometimes
          into a defile and broken by frequent watercourses, their vast numbers found no
          room, and trod one another down. As many perished in this way as by the sword
          of the conquerors; insomuch that Ptolemy (afterwards king of Egypt, the
          companion and historian of Alexander) recounts that he himself in the pursuit
          came to a ravine choked up with dead bodies, of which he made a bridge to pass
          over it. The pursuit was continued as long as the light of a November day
          allowed; but the battle had not begun till a late hour. The camp of Darius was
          taken, together with his mother, his wife, his sister, his infant son, and two
          daughters. His chariot, his shield, and his bow also fell into the power of the
          conquerors; and a sum of 3000 talents in money was found, though much of the
          treasure had been sent to Damascus. . The total loss of the Persians is said to
          have amounted to 10,000 horse and 100,000 foot; among the slain moreover were
          several eminent Persian grandees— Arsames, Rheomithres, and Atizyes, who had
          commanded at the Granikus—Sabakes, satrap of Egypt. Of the Macedonians we are
          told that 300 foot and 150 horse were killed. Alexander himself was slightly
          wounded in the thigh by a sword.
               The mother, wife, and family of Darius, who became
          captives, were treated by Alexander’s order with the utmost consideration and
          respect. When Alexander returned at night from the pursuit, he found the
          Persian regal tent reserved and prepared for him. In an inner compartment of it
          he heard the tears and wailings of women. He was informed that the mourners
          were the mother and wife of Darius, who had learnt that the bow and shield of
          Darius had been taken, and were giving loose to their grief under the belief
          that Darius himself was killed. Alexander immediately sent Leonnatus to assure
          them that Darius was still living, and to promise further that they should be
          allowed to preserve the regal title and state—his war against Darius being
          undertaken not from any feelings of hatred, but as a fair contest for the
          empire of Asia. Besides this anecdote, which depends on good authority, many
          others, uncertified or untrue, were recounted about his kind behaviour to these
          princesses; and Alexander himself, shortly after the battle, seems to have
          heard fictions about it, which he thought it necessary to contradict in a
          letter. It is certain (from the extract now remaining of this letter) that he
          never saw, nor ever entertained the idea of seeing, the captive wife of Darius,
          said to be the most beautiful woman in Asia; moreover he even declined to hear
          encomiums upon her beauty.
               How this vast host of fugitives got out of the narrow
          limits of Cilicia, or how many of them quitted that country by the same pass
          over Mount Amanus as that by which they had entered it—we cannot make out. It
          is probable that many, and Darius himself among the number, made their escape
          across the mountain by various subordinate roads and bypaths; which, though
          unfit for a regular army with baggage, would be found a welcome resource by
          scattered companies. Darius managed to get together 4000 of the fugitives, with
          whom he hastened to Thapsakus, and there recrossed the Euphrates. The only
          remnant of force, still in a position of defence after the battle, consisted of
          8000 of the Grecian mercenaries under Amyntas and Thymodes. These men, fighting
          their way out of Cilicia (seemingly towards the south, by or near Myriandrus,
          marched to Tripolis on the coast of Phenicia, where they still found the same
          vessels in which they had themselves been brought from the armament of Lesbos.
          Seizing sufficient means of transport, and destroying the rest to prevent
          pursuit, they immediately crossed over to Cyprus, and from thence to Egypt.
          With this single exception, the enormous Persian host disappears with the
          battle of Issus. We hear of no attempt to rally or reform, nor of any fresh
          Persian force afoot until two years afterwards. The booty acquired by the
          victors was immense, not merely in gold and silver, but also in captives for
          the slave-merchant. On the morrow of the battle, Alexander offered a solemn
          sacrifice of thanksgiving, with three altars erected on the banks of the
          Pinarus; while he at the same time buried the dead, consoled the wounded, and
          rewarded or complimented all who had distinguished themselves.
               No victory recorded in history was ever more complete
          in itself, or more far-stretching in its consequences, than that of Issus. Not
          only was the Persian force destroyed or dispersed, but the efforts of Darius
          for recovery were paralysed by the capture of his family. Portions of the
          dissipated army of Issus may be traced, reappearing in different places for
          operations of detail, but we shall find no further resistance to Alexander,
          during almost two years, except from the brave freemen of two fortified cities.
          Everywhere an overwhelming sentiment of admiration and terror was spread
          abroad, towards the force, skill, or good fortune of Alexander, by whichever
          name it might be called—together with contempt for the real value of a Persian
          army, in spite of so much imposing pomp and numerical show; a contempt not new
          to intelligent Greeks, but now communicated even to vulgar minds by the recent
          unparalleled catastrophe. Both as general and as soldier, indeed, the
          consummate excellence of Alexander stood conspicuous, not less than the signal
          deficiency of Darius. The fault in the latter, upon which most remark is
          usually made, was, that of fighting the battle, not in an open plain, but in a
          narrow valley, whereby his superiority of number was rendered unprofitable. But
          this (as I have already observed) was only one among many mistakes, and by no
          means the most serious. The result would have been the same, had the battle
          been fought in the plains to the eastward of Mount Amanus. Superior numbers are
          of little avail on any ground, unless there be a general who knows how to make
          use of them; unless they be distributed into separate divisions ready to combine
          for offensive action on many points at once, or at any rate to lend support to
          each other in defence, so that a defeat of one fraction is not a defeat of the
          whole. The faith of Darius in simple multitude was altogether blind and
          childish; nay, that faith, though overweening beforehand, disappeared at once
          when he found his enemies did not run away, but faced him boldly—as was seen by
          his attitude on the banks of the Pinarus, where he stood to be attacked instead
          of executing his threat of treading down the handful opposed to him. But it was
          not merely as a general, that Darius acted in such a manner as to render the
          loss of the battle certain. Had his dispositions been ever so skilful, his
          personal cowardice, in quitting the field and thinking only of his own safety,
          would have sufficed to nullify their effect. Though the Persian grandees are
          generally conspicuous for personal courage, yet we shall find Darius hereafter
          again exhibiting the like melancholy timidity, and the like incompetence for
          using numbers with effect, at the battle of Arbela, though fought in a spacious
          plain chosen by himself.
               Happy was it for Memnon that he did not live to see
          the renunciation of his schemes, and the ruin consequent upon it! The fleet in
          the Aegean, which had been transferred at his death to Pharnabazus, though
          weakened by the loss of those mercenaries whom Darius had recalled to Issus,
          and disheartened by a serious defeat which the Persian Orontobates had received
          from the Macedonians in Karia, was nevertheless not inactive in trying to
          organise an anti-Macedonian manifestation in Greece. While Pharnabazus was at
          the island of Siphnos with his 100 triremes, he was visited by the Lacedaemonian
          king Agis, who pressed him to embark for Peloponnesus as large a force as he
          could spare, to second a movement projected by the Spartans. But such
          aggressive plans were at once crushed by the terror-striking news of the battle
          of Issus. Apprehending a revolt in the island of Chios, as the result of this
          news, Pharnabazus immediately sailed thither with a large detachment. Agis,
          obtaining nothing more than a subsidy of thirty talents and a squadron of ten
          triremes, was obliged to renounce his projects in Peloponnesus, and to content
          himself with directing some operations in Crete, to be conducted by his brother
          Agesilaus; while he himself remained among the islands, and ultimately
          accompanied the Persian Autophradates to Halikarnassus. It appears, however,
          that he afterwards went to conduct the operations in Crete, and that he had
          considerable success in that island, bringing several Cretan towns to join the
          Persians. On the whole, however, the victory of Issus overawed all free spirit
          throughout Greece, and formed a guarantee to Alexander for at least a temporary
          quiescence. The philo-Macedonian synod, assembled at Corinth during the period
          of the Isthmian festival, manifested their joy by sending to him an embassy of
          congratulation and a wreath of gold.
           With little delay after his victory, Alexander marched
          through Coele-Syria to the Phenician coast, detaching Parmenio in his way to
          attack Damascus, whither Darius, before the battle, had sent most part of his
          treasure with many confidential officers, Persian women of rank, and envoys.
          Though the place might have held out a considerable siege, it was surrendered
          without resistance by the treason or cowardice of the governor; who made a
          feint of trying to convey away the treasure, but took care that it should fall
          into the hands of the enemy.4 * There was captured a large treasure—with a
          prodigious number and variety of attendants and ministers of luxury, belonging
          to the court and the grandees. Moreover the prisoners made were so numerous,
          that most of the great Persian families had to deplore the loss of some
          relative, male or female. There were among them the widow and daughters of king
          Ochus, the predecessor of Darius—the daughter of Darius’s brother Oxathres—the
          wives of Artabazus, and of Pharnabazus—the three daughters of Mentor, and
          Barsine, widow of the deceased Memnon with her child, sent up by Memnon to
          serve as an hostage for his fidelity. There were also several eminent Grecian
          exiles, Theban, Lacedaemonian and Athenian, who had fled to Darius, and whom he
          had thought fit to send to Damascus, instead of allowing them to use their
          pikes with the army at Issus. The Theban and Athenian exiles were at once
          released by Alexander; the Lacedaemonians were for the time put under arrest,
          but not detained long. Among the Athenian exiles was a person of noble name and
          parentage—Iphicrates, son of the great Athenian officer of that name. The
          captive Iphikrates not only received his liberty, but was induced by courteous
          and honourable treatment to remain with Alexander. He died however shortly
          afterwards from sickness, and his ashes were then collected, by order of
          Alexander, to be sent to his family at Athens.
               I have already stated in a former chapter that the
          elder Iphikrates had been adopted by Alexander’s grandfather into the regal
          family of Macedonia, as the saviour of their throne. Probably this was the
          circumstance which determined the superior favour shown to the son, rather than
          any sentiment either towards Athens or towards the military genius of the
          father. The difference of position, between Iphikrates the father and
          Iphikrates the son, is one among the painful evidences of the downward march of
          Hellenism. The father, a distinguished officer moving amidst a circle of
          freemen, sustaining by arms the security and dignity of his own fellowcitizens,
          and even interfering for the rescue of the Macedonian regal family; the son,
          condemned to witness the degradation of his native city by Macedonian arms, and
          deprived of all other means of reviving or rescuing her, except such as could
          be found in the service of an Oriental prince, whose stupidity and cowardice
          threw away at once his own security and the freedom of Greece.
               Master of Damascus and of Coele-Syria, Alexander
          advanced onward to Phenicia. The first Phenician town which he approached was
          Marathus, on the mainland opposite the islet of Aradus, forming, along with
          that islet and some other neighbouring towns, the domain of the Aradian prince
          Gerostratus. That prince was himself now serving with his naval contingent
          among the Persian fleet in the Aegean; but his son Strato, acting as viceroy at
          home, despatched to Alexander his homage with a golden wreath, and made over to
          him at once Aradus with the neighbouring towns included in its domain. The
          example of Strato was followed, first by the inhabitants of Byblus, the next
          Phenician city in a southerly direction; next, by the great city of Sidon, the
          queen and parent of all Phenician prosperity. The Sidonians even sent envoys to
          meet him and invite his approach. Their sentiments were unfavourable to the
          Persians, from remembrance of the bloody and perfidious proceedings which
          (about eighteen years before) had marked the recapture of their city by the
          armies of Ochus. Nevertheless, the naval contingents both of Byblus and of
          Sidon (as well as that of Aradus), were at this moment sailing in the Aegean
          with the Persian admiral Autophradates, and formed a large proportion of his
          entire fleet.
               While Alexander was still at Marathus, however,
          previous to his onward march, he received both envoys and a letter from Darius,
          asking for the restitution of his mother, wife, and children—and tendering
          friendship and alliance, as from one king to another. Darius further attempted
          to show, that the Macedonian Philip had begun the wrong against Persia—that
          Alexander had continued it—and that he himself (Darius) had acted merely in
          self-defence. In reply, Alexander wrote a letter, wherein he set forth his own
          case against Darius, proclaiming himself the appointed leader of the Greeks,
          to avenge the ancient invasion of Greece by Xerxes. He then alleged various
          complaints against Darius, whom he accused of having instigated the
          assassination of Philip as well as the hostilities of the anti-Macedonian
          cities in Greece. “Now (continued he), by the grace of the gods, I have been
          victorious, first over your satraps, next over yourself. I have taken care of
          all who submit to me, and made them satisfied with their lot. Come yourself to
          me also, as to the master of all Asia. Come without fear of suffering harm; ask
          me, and you shall receive back your mother and wife, and anything else which
          you please. When next you write to me, however, address me not as an equal, but
          as lord of Asia and of all that belongs to you; otherwise I shall deal with
          you as a wrong-doer. If you intend to contest the kingdom with me, stand and
          fight for it, and do not run away. I shall march forward against you, wherever
          you may be.”
           This memorable correspondence, which led to no result,
          is of importance only as it marks the character of Alexander, with whom
          fighting and conquering were both the business and the luxury of life, and to
          whom all assumption of equality and independence with himself, even on the part
          of other kings— every thing short of submission and obedience—appeared in the
          light of wrong and insult to be avenged. The recital of comparative injuries,
          on each side, was mere unmeaning pretence. The real and only question was (as
          Alexander himself had put it in his message to the captive Sisygambis) which of
          the two should be master of Asia.
               The decision of this question, already sufficiently
          advanced on the morrow after the battle of Issus, was placed almost beyond
          doubt by the rapid and unopposed successes of Alexander among most of the
          Phenician cities. The last hopes of Persia now turned chiefly upon the
          sentiments of these Phenicians. The greater part of the Persian fleet in the
          Aegean was composed of Phenician triremes, partly from the coast of Syria,
          partly from the island of Cyprus. If the Phenician towns made submission to
          Alexander, it was certain that their ships and seamen would either return home
          spontaneously or be recalled; thus depriving the Persian quiver of its best
          remaining arrow. But if the Phenician towns held out resolutely against him,
          one and all, so as to put him under the necessity of besieging them in
          succession—each lending aid to the rest by sea, with superiority of naval
          force, and more than one of them being situated upon islets—the obstacles to be
          overcome would have been so multiplied, that even Alexander’s energy and
          ability might hardly have proved sufficient for them at any rate, he would have
          had hard work before him for perhaps two years, opening the door to many new
          accidents and efforts. It was therefore a signal good fortune to Alexander when
          the prince of the islet of Aradus spontaneously surrendered to him that
          difficult city, and when the example was followed by the still greater city of
          Sidon. The Phenicians, taking them generally, had no positive tie to the
          Persians; neither had they much confederate attachment one towards the other,
          although as separate communities they were brave and enterprising. Among the
          Sidonians, there was even a prevalent feeling of aversion to the Persians, from
          the cause above mentioned. Hence the prince of Aradus, upon whom Alexander’s
          march first came, had little certainty of aid from his neighbours, if he
          resolved to hold out; and still less disposition to hold out single-handed,
          after the battle of Issus had proclaimed the irresistible force of Alexander
          not less than the impotence of Persia. One after another, all these important
          Phenician seaports, except Tyre, fell into the hands of Alexander without
          striking a blow. At Sidon, the reigning prince Strato, reputed as
          philo-Persian, was deposed, and a person named Abdalonymus—of the reigning
          family, yet poor in circumstances—was appointed in his room.
               With his usual rapidity, Alexander marched onward
          towards Tyre; the most powerful among the Phenician cities, though apparently
          less ancient than Sidon. Even on the march, he was met by a deputation from
          Tyre, composed of the most eminent men in the city, and headed by the son of
          the Tyrian prince Azemilchus, who was himself absent commanding the Tyrian
          contingent in the Persian fleet. These men brought large presents and supplies
          for the Macedonian army, together with a golden wreath of honour; announcing formally
          that the Tyrians were prepared to do whatever Alexander commanded. In reply, he
          commended the dispositions of the city, accepted the presents, and desired the
          deputation to communicate at home, that he wished to enter Tyre and offer
          sacrifice to Herakles. The Phenician God Melkart was supposed identical with
          the Grecian Herakles, and was thus ancestor of the Macedonian kings. His temple
          at Tyre was of the most venerable antiquity; moreover the injunction, to
          sacrifice there, is said to have been conveyed to Alexander in an oracle. The
          Tyrians at home, after deliberating on this message, sent out an answer
          declining to comply, and intimating that they would not admit within their
          walls either Macedonians or Persians; but that as to all other points, they
          would obey Alexander’s orders. They added that his wish to sacrifice to
          Herakles might be accomplished without entering their city, since there was, in
          Palaetyrus (on the mainland over against the islet of Tyre, separated from it
          only by the narrow strait) a temple of that god yet more ancient and venerable
          than their own. Incensed at this qualified adhesion, in which he took note only
          of the point refused,—Alexander dismissed the envoys with angry menaces, and
          immediately resolved on taking Tyre by force.
               Those who (like Diodorus) treat such refusal on the
          part of the Tyrians as foolish wilfulness, have not fully considered how much
          the demand included. When Alexander made a solemn sacrifice to Artemis at
          Ephesus, he marched to her temple with his whole force armed and in battle
          array. We cannot doubt that his sacrifice at Tyre to Herakles—his ancestral
          Hero, whose especial attribute was force—would have been celebrated with an
          array equally formidable, as in fact it was, after the town had been taken. The
          Tyrians were thus required to admit within their walls an irresistible military
          force; which might indeed be withdrawn after the sacrifice was completed, but
          which might also remain, either wholly or in part, as permanent garrison of an
          almost impregnable position. They had not endured such treatment from Persia,
          nor were they disposed to endure it from a new master. It was, in fact,
          hazarding their all; submitting at once to a fate which might be as bad as
          could befall them after a successful siege. On the other hand, when we reflect
          that the Tyrians promised everything short of submission to military
          occupation, we see that Alexander, had he been so inclined, could have obtained
          from them all that was really essential to his purpose, without the necessity
          of besieging the town. The great value of the Phenician cities consisted in
          their fleet, which now acted with the Persians, and gave to them the command of
          the sea. Had Alexander required that this fleet should be withdrawn from the
          Persians and placed in his service, there can be no doubt that he would have
          obtained it readily. The Tyrians had no motive to devote themselves for Persia,
          nor did they probably (as Arrian supposes) attempt to trim between the two
          belligerents, as if the contest was still undecided. Yet rather than hand over
          their city to the chances of a Macedonian soldiery, they resolved to brave the
          hazards of a siege. The pride of Alexander, impatient of opposition even to his
          most extreme demands, prompted him to take a step politically unprofitable, in
          order to make display of his power, by degrading and crushing, with or without
          a siege, one of the most ancient, spirited, wealthy, and intelligent
          communities of the ancient world.
               Tyre was situated on an islet nearly half a mile from
          the mainland; the channel between the two being shallow towards the land, but
          reaching a depth of eighteen feet in the part adjoining the city. The islet was
          completely surrounded by prodigious walls, the loftiest portion of which, on
          the side fronting the mainland, reached a height not less than 150 feet, with
          corresponding solidity and base. Besides these external fortifications, there
          was a brave and numerous population within, aided by a good stock of arms,
          machines, ships, provisions, and other things essential to defence.
               It was not without reason, therefore, that the
          Tyrians, when driven to their last resource, entertained hopes of holding out
          even against the formidable army of Alexander; and against Alexander as he then
          stood, they might have held out successfully; for he had as yet no fleet, and
          they could defy any attack made simply from land. The question turned upon the
          Phenician and Cyprian ships, which were for the most part (the Tyrian among
          them) in the Aegean under the Persian admiral. Alexander—master as he was of
          Aradus, Byblus, Sidon, and all the Phenician cities except Tyre— calculated
          that the seamen belonging to these cities would follow their countrymen at home
          and bring away their ships to join him. He hoped also, as the victorious
          potentate, to draw to himself the willing adhesion of the Cyprian cities. This
          could hardly have failed to happen, if he had treated the Tyrians with decent
          consideration; but it was no longer certain, now that he had made them his
          enemies.
               What passed among the Persian fleet under
          Autophradates in the Aegean, when they were informed, first that Alexander was
          master of the other Phenician cities—next, that he was commencing the siege of
          Tyre—we know very imperfectly. The Tyrian prince Azemilchus brought home his
          ships for the defence of his own city;1 the Sidonian and Arcadian ships also
          went home, no longer serving against a power to whom their own cities had
          submitted; but the Cyprians hesitated longer before they declared themselves.
          If Darius, or even Autophradates without Darius, instead of abandoning Tyre
          altogether (as they actually did), had energetically aided the resistance which
          it offered to Alexander, as the interests of Persia dictated—the Cypriot ships
          might not improbably have been retained on that side in the struggle. Lastly,
          the Tyrians might indulge a hope, that their Phenician brethren, if ready to
          serve Alexander against Persia, would be nowise hearty as his instruments for
          crushing a kindred city. These contingencies, though ultimately they all
          turned out in favour of Alexander, were in the beginning sufficiently promising
          to justify the intrepid resolution of the Tyrians; who were further encouraged
          by promises of aid from the powerful fleets of their colony Carthage. To that
          city, whose deputies were then within their walls for some religious
          solemnities, they sent many of their wives and children.
               Alexander began the siege of Tyre without any fleet;
          the Sidonian and Aradian ships not having yet come. It was his first task to
          construct a solid mole two hundred feet broad, reaching across the half mile of
          channel between the mainland and the islet. He pressed into his service
          labouring hands by thousands from the neighbourhood; he had stones in
          abundance from Palaetyrus, and wood from the forests in Lebanon. But the work,
          though prosecuted with ardour and perseverance, under pressing instigations from
          Alexander, was tedious and toilsome, even near the mainland, where the Tyrians
          could do little to impede it; and became far more tedious as it advanced into
          the sea, so as to be exposed to their obstruction, as well as to damage from
          winds and waves. The Tyrian triremes and small boats perpetually annoyed the
          workmen, and destroyed parts of the work, in spite of all the protection
          devised by the Macedonians, who planted two towers in front of their advancing
          mole, and discharged projectiles from engines provided for the purpose. At
          length, by unremitting efforts the mole was pushed forward until it came nearly
          across the channel to the city-wall; when suddenly, on a day of strong wind,
          the Tyrians sent forth a fireship loaded with combustibles, which they drove
          against the front of the mole and set fire to the two towers. At the same time,
          the full naval force of the city, ships and little boats, were sent forth to
          land men at once on all parts of the mole. So successful was this attack, that
          all the Macedonian engines were burnt,—the outer woodwork which kept the mole
          together was torn up in many places,—and a large part of the structure came to
          pieces.1 ' Alexander had thus not only to construct fresh engines, but also to
          begin the mole nearly anew. He resolved to give it greater breadth and
          strength, for the purpose of carrying more towers abreast in front, and for
          better defence against lateral attacks. But it had now become plain to him,
          that while the Tyrians were masters of the sea, no efforts by land alone would
          enable him to take the town. Leaving Perdikkas and Craterus therefore to
          reconstruct the mole and build new engines, he himself repaired to Sidon, for
          the purpose of assembling as large a fleet as he could. He got together
          triremes from various quarters—two from Rhodes, ten from the seaports in Lycia,
          three from Soli and Mallus. But his principal force was obtained by putting in
          requisition the ships of the Phenician towns, Sidon, Byblus, and Aradus, now
          subject to him. These ships, eighty in number, had left the Persian admiral and
          come to Sidon, there awaiting his orders; while not long afterwards, the
          princes of Cyprus came thither also, tendering to him their powerful fleet of
          120 ships of war. He was now master of a fleet of 200 sail, comprising the most
          part, and the best part, of the Persian navy. This was the consummation of
          Macedonian triumph—the last real and effective weapon wrested from the grasp of
          Persia. The prognostic afforded by the eagle near the ships at Miletus, as
          interpreted by Alexander, had now been fulfilled; since by successful
          operations on land, he had conquered and brought into his power a superior
          Persian fleet.
               Having directed these ships to complete their
          equipments and training, with Macedonians as soldiers on board, Alexander put
          himself at the head of some light troops for an expedition of eleven days
          against the Arabian mountaineers on Libanus, whom he dispersed or put down,
          though not without some personal exposure and hazard. On returning to Sidon, he
          found Cleander arrived with a reinforcement of 4000 Grecian hoplites, welcome
          auxiliaries for prosecuting the siege. Then, going aboard his fleet in the
          harbour of Sidon, he sailed with it in good battle order to Tyre, hoping that
          the Tyrians would come out and fight. But they kept within, struck with
          surprise and consternation; having not before known that their fellow-Phenicians
          were now among the besiegers. Alexander, having ascertained that the Tyrians
          would not accept a sea-fight, immediately caused their two harbours to be
          blocked up and watched; that on the north, towards Sidon, by the Cyprians— that
          on the south, towards Egypt, by the Phenicians.
               From this time forward the doom of Tyre was certain.
          The Tyrians could no longer offer obstruction to the mole, which was completed
          across the channel and brought up to the town. Engines were planted upon it to
          batter the walls; moveable towers were rolled up to take them by assault;
          attack was also made from seaward. Yet though reduced altogether to the
          defensive, the Tyrians still displayed obstinate bravery, and exhausted all the
          resources of ingenuity in repelling the besiegers. So gigantic was the strength
          of the wall fronting the mole, and even that of the northern side fronting
          Sidon, that none of Alexander’s engines could make any breach in it; but on the
          south side towards Egypt he was more successful. A large breach having been
          made in this south wall, he assaulted it with two ships manned by the
          hypaspists and the soldiers of his phalanx : he himself commanded in one and
          Admetus in the other. At the same time he caused the town to be menaced all
          round, at every approachable point, for the purpose of distracting the
          attention of the defenders. Himself and his two ships having been rowed close
          up to the breach in the south wall, boarding bridges were thrown out from each
          deck, upon which he and Admetus rushed forward with their respective storming
          parties. Admetus got upon the wall, but was there slain; Alexander also was
          among the first to mount, and the two parties got such a footing on the wall as
          to overpower all resistance. At the same time his ships also forced their way
          into the two harbours, so that Tyre came on all sides into his power.
               Though the walls were now lost, and resistance had
          become desperate, the gallant defenders did not lose their courage. They
          barricaded the streets, and concentrated their strength especially at a
          defensible post called the Agenori on, or chapel of Agenor. Here the battle
          again raged furiously until they were overpowered by the Macedonians, incensed
          with the long toils of the previous siege, as well as by the slaughter of some
          of their prisoners, whom the Tyrians had killed publicly on the battlements. All
          who took shelter in the temple of Herakles were spared by Alexander, from
          respect to the sanctuary: among the number were the prince Azemilchus, a few
          leading Tyrians, the Carthaginian envoys, and some children of both sexes. The
          Sidonians also, displaying a tardy sentiment of kindred, and making partial
          amends for the share which they had taken in the capture, preserved some lives
          from the sword of the conqueror. But the greater number of the adult freemen
          perished with arms in their hands; while 2000 of them who survived either from
          disabling wounds, or from the fatigue of the slaughterers, were hanged on the
          sea-shore by order of Alexander. The females, the children, and the slaves,
          were sold to the slave-merchant. The number sold is said to have been about
          30,000: a total rather small, as we must assume slaves to be included; but we
          are told that many had been previously sent away to Carthage.
               Thus master of Tyre, Alexander marched into the city
          and consummated his much-desired sacrifice to Herakles. His whole force, land
          and naval, fully armed and arrayed, took part in the procession. A more costly
          hecatomb had never been offered to that god, when we consider that it had been
          purchased by all the toils of an unnecessary siege, and by the extirpation of
          these free and high-spirited citizens, his former worshippers. What the loss of
          the Macedonians had been, we cannot say. The number of their slain is stated by
          Arrian at 400, which must be greatly beneath the truth; for the courage and
          skill of the besieged had prolonged the siege to the prodigious period of seven
          months, though Alexander had left no means untried to accomplish it sooner.
               Towards the close of the siege of Tyre, Alexander
          received and rejected a second proposition from Darius, offering 10,000
          talents, with the cession of all the territory westward of the Euphrates, as
          ransom for his mother and wife, and proposing that Alexander should become his
          son-in-law as well as his ally. “If I were Alexander (said Parmenio) I should
          accept such terms, instead of plunging into further peril.”—“So would I
          (replied Alexander) if I were Parmenio; but since I am Alexander, I must return
          a different answer.” His answer to Darius was to this effect:—“I want neither
          your money nor your cession. All your money and territory are already mine, and
          you are tendering to me a part in place of the whole. If I choose to marry your
          daughter, I shall marry her—whether you give her to me or not. Come hither to
          me, if you wish to obtain from me any act of friendship.” Alexander might spare
          the submissive and the prostrate; but he could not brook an equal or a
          competitor, and his language towards them was that of brutal insolence. Of
          course this was the last message sent by Darius, who now saw, if he had not
          before seen, that he had no chance open except by the renewal of war.
               Being thus entire master of Syria, Phenicia, and
          Palestine, and having accepted the voluntary submission of the Jews, Alexander
          marched forward to conquer Egypt. He had determined, before he undertook any
          further expedition into the interior of the Persian empire, to make himself
          master of all the coast-lands which kept open the communications of the
          Persians with Greece, so as to secure his rear against any serious hostility.
          His great fear was, of Grecian soldiers or cities raised against him by Persian
          gold; and Egypt was the last remaining possession of the Persians, which gave
          them the means of acting upon Greece. Those means were indeed now prodigiously
          curtailed by the feeble condition of the Persian fleet in the Aegean, unable to
          contend with the increasing fleet of the Macedonian admirals Hegelochus and
          Amphoterus, now numbering 160 sail. During the summer of 332 B.C., while
          Alexander was prosecuting the siege of Tyre, these admirals recovered all the
          important acquisitions—Chios, Lesbos, and Tenedos—which had been made by Memnon
          for the Persian interests. The inhabitants of Tenedos invited them and ensured
          their success; those of Chios attempted to do the same, but were coerced by
          Pharnabazus, who retained the city by means of his insular partisans,
          Apollonides and others, with a military force. The Macedonian admirals laid
          siege to the town, and were presently enabled to carry it by their friends
          within. Pharnabazus was here captured with his entire force; twelve triremes
          thoroughly armed and manned, thirty store-ships, several privateers, and 3000
          Grecian mercenaries. Aristonikus, philo-Persian despot of Methymna—arriving at
          Chios shortly afterwards, but ignorant of the capture—was entrapped into the
          harbour and made prisoner. There remained only Mitylene, which was held for the
          Persians by the Athenian Chares, with a garrison of 2000 men: who however,
          seeing no hope of holding out against the Macedonians, consented to evacuate
          the city on condition of a free departure. The Persians were thus expelled from
          the sea, from all footing among the Grecian islands, and from the vicinity of
          Greece and Macedonia.
               These successes were in full progress, when Alexander
          himself directed his march from Tyre to Egypt, stopping in his way to besiege
          Gaza. This considerable town, the last before entering on the desert track
          between Syria and Egypt, was situated between one and two miles from the sea.
          It was built upon a lofty artificial mound, and encircled with a high wall; but
          its main defence was derived from the deep sand immediately around it, as well
          as from the mud and quicksand on its coast. It was defended by a brave man, the
          eunuch Batis, with a strong garrison of Arabs, and abundant provision of every
          kind. Confiding in the strength of the place, Batis refused to admit Alexander.
          Moreover his judgement was confirmed by the Macedonian engineers themselves,
          who, when Alexander first surveyed the walls, pronounced it to be impregnable,
          chiefly from the height of its supporting mound. But Alexander could not endure
          the thought of tacitly confessing his inability to take Gaza. The more
          difficult the enterprise, the greater was the charm for him, and the greater
          would be the astonishment produced all around when he should be seen to have
          triumphed.
               He began by erecting a mound south of the city, close
          by th 3 wall, for the purpose of bringing up his battering engines. This
          external mound was completed, and the engines had begun to batter the wall,
          when a well-planned sally by the garrison overthrew the assailants and
          destroyed the engines. The timely aid of Alexander himself with his hypaspists,
          protected their retreat; but he himself, after escaping a snare from a
          pretended Arabian deserter, received a severe wound through the shield and the
          breastplate into the shoulder, by a dart discharged from a catapult; as the
          prophet Aristander had predicted—giving assurance at the same time, that Gaza
          would fall into his hands. During the treatment of his wound, he ordered the
          engines employed at Tyre to be brought up by sea; and caused his mound to be
          carried around the whole circumference of the town, so as to render it
          approachable from every point. This Herculean work, the description of which we
          read with astonishment, was 250 feet high all round, and two stadia (1240 feet)
          broad; the loose sand around could hardly have been suitable, so that materials
          must have been brought up from a distance. The undertaking was at length
          completed; in what length of time we do not know, but it must have been
          considerable—though doubtless thousands of labourers would be pressed in from
          the circumjacent country.
               Gaza was now attacked at all points by battering-rams,
          by mines, and by projectile engines with various missiles. Presently the walls
          were breached in several places, though the defenders were unremitting in their
          efforts to repair the damaged parts. Alexander attempted three distinct general
          assaults; but in all three he was repulsed by the bravery of the Gazaeans. At
          length, after still further breaching of the wall, he renewed for the fourth
          time his attempt to storm. The entire Macedonian phalanx being brought up to
          attack at different points, the greatest emulation reigned among the officers.
          The Aeakid Neoptolemus was first to mount the wall; but the other divisions
          manifested hardly less ardour, and the town was at length taken. Its gallant
          defenders resisted with unabated spirit to the last; and all fell in their
          posts, the incensed soldiery being no way disposed to give quarter.
               One prisoner alone was reserved for special
          treatment—the prince or governor himself, the eunuch Batis; who, having
          manifested the greatest energy and valour, was taken severely wounded, yet
          still alive. In this condition he was brought by Leonnatus and Philotas into
          the presence of Alexander, who cast upon him looks of vengeance and fury. The
          Macedonian prince had undertaken the siege mainly in order to prove to the
          world that he could overcome difficulties insuperable to others. But he had
          incurred so much loss, spent so much time and labour, and undergone so many
          repulses before he succeeded, that the palm of honour belonged rather to the
          minority vanquished than to the multitude of victors. To such disappointment,
          which would sting Alexander in the tenderest point, is to be added the fact,
          that he had himself incurred great personal risk, received a severe wound,
          besides his narrow escape from the dagger of the pretended Arabian deserter.
          Here was ample ground for violent anger; which was moreover still further
          exasperated by the appearance of Batis—eunuch—a black man—tall and robust, but
          at the same time fat and lumpish—and doubtless at the moment covered with blood
          and dirt. Such visible circumstances, repulsive to eyes familiar with Grecian
          gymnastics, contributed to kindle the wrath of Alexander to its highest pitch.
          After the siege of Tyre, his indignation had been satiated by the hanging of
          the 2000 surviving combatants; here, to discharge the pressure of a still
          stronger feeling, there remained only the single captive, upon whom therefore
          he resolved to inflict a punishment as novel as it was cruel. He directed the
          feet of Batis to be bored, and brazen rings to be passed through them; after
          which the naked body of this brave man, yet surviving, was tied with cords to
          the tail of a chariot driven by Alexander himself, and dragged at full speed
          amidst the triumphant jeers and shouts of the army.1 Herein Alexander, emulous
          even from childhood of the exploits of his legendary ancestor Achilles, copied
          the ignominious treatment described in the Iliad as inflicted on the dead body
          of Hector.
               This proceeding of Alexander, the product of Homeric
          reminiscences operating upon an infuriated and vindictive temperament, stands
          out in respect of barbarity from all that we read respecting the treatment of
          conquered towns in antiquity. His remaining measures were conformable to
          received usage. The wives and children of the Gazaeans were sold into slavery.
          New inhabitants were admitted from the neighbourhood, and a garrison was placed
          there to hold the town for the Macedonians.
               The two sieges of Tyre and Gaza, which occupied both
          together nine months, were the hardest fighting that Alexander had ever
          encountered, or in fact ever did encounter throughout his life. After such
          toils, the march to Egypt, which he now commenced (October 332 B.C.), was an
          affair of holiday and triumph. Mazakes, the satrap of Egypt, having few Persian
          troops and a disaffected native population, was noway disposed to resist the
          approaching conqueror. Seven days’ march brought Alexander and his army from
          Gaza to Pelusium, the frontier fortress of Egypt, commanding the eastern branch
          of the Nile, whither his fleet, under the command of Hephaestion, had come
          also. Here he found not only open gates and a submissive governor, but also
          crowds of Egyptians assembled to welcome him. He placed a garrison in Pelusium,
          sent his fleet up the river to Memphis, and marched himself to the same place
          by land. The satrap Mazakes surrendered himself, with all the treasure in the
          city, 800 talents in amount, and much precious furniture. Here Alexander
          reposed some time, offering splendid sacrifices to the gods generally, and
          especially to the Egyptian God Apis; to which he added gymnastic and musical
          matches, sending to Greece for the most distinguished artists.
               From Memphis, he descended the westernmost branch of
          the Nile to Canopus at its mouth, from whence he sailed westerly along the
          shore to look at the island of Pharos, celebrated in Homer, and the lake
          Mareotis. Reckoning Egypt now as a portion of his empire, and considering that
          the business of keeping down an unquiet population, as well as of collecting a
          large revenue, would have to be performed by his extraneous land and sea force,
          he saw the necessity of withdrawing the seat of government from Memphis, where
          both the Persians and the natives had maintained it, and of founding a new city
          of his own on the seaboard, convenient for communication with Greece and
          Macedonia. His imagination, susceptible to all Homeric impressions and
          influenced by a dream, first fixed upon the isle of Pharos as a suitable place
          for his intended city. Perceiving soon, however, that this little isle was inadequate
          by itself, he included it as part of a larger city to be founded on the
          adjacent mainland. The gods were consulted, and encouraging responses were
          obtained; upon which Alexander himself marked out the circuit of the walls, the
          direction of the principal streets, and the sites of numerous temples to
          Grecian gods as well as Egyptian. It was thus that the first stone was laid of
          the mighty, populous, and busy Alexandria; which however the founder himself
          never lived to see, and wherein he was only destined to repose as a corpse. The
          site of the place between the sea and the Lake Mareotis, was found airy and
          healthy, as well as convenient for shipping and commerce. The protecting island
          of Pharos gave the means of forming two good harbours for ships coming by sea,
          on a coast harbourless elsewhere; while the Lake Mareotis, communicating by
          various canals with the river Nile, received with facility the exportable
          produce from the interior. As soon as houses were ready, commencement was made
          by the intendant Kleomenes, transporting to them in mass the population of the
          neighbouring town of Canopus, and probably of other towns besides.
               Alexandria became afterwards the capital of the
          Ptolemaic princes. It acquired immense grandeur and population during their
          rule of two centuries and a half, when their enormous revenues were spent
          greatly in its improvement and decoration. But we cannot reasonably ascribe to
          Alexander himself any prescience of such an imposing future. He intended it as
          a place from which he could conveniently rule Egypt, considered as a portion of
          his extensive empire all round the Aegean; and had Egypt remained thus a fraction,
          instead of becoming a substantive imperial whole, Alexandria would probably not
          have risen beyond mediocrity.
               The other most notable incident, which distinguished
          the four or five months’ stay of Alexander in Egypt, was his march through the
          sandy desert to the temple of Zeus Ammon. This is chiefly memorable as it marks
          his increasing self-adoration and inflation above the limits of humanity. His
          achievements during the last three years had so transcended the expectations of
          every one, himself included—the gods had given to him such incessant good
          fortune, and so paralysed or put down his enemies—that the hypothesis of a
          superhuman personality seemed the natural explanation of such a superhuman
          career. He had to look back to the heroic legends, and to his ancestors Perseus
          and Herakles, to find a worthy prototype. Conceiving himself to be (like them)
          the son of Zeus, with only a nominal human parentage, he resolved to go and
          ascertain the fact by questioning the infallible oracle of Zeus Ammon. His
          march of several days, through a sandy desert—always fatiguing, sometimes
          perilous,—was distinguished by manifest evidences of the favour of the gods.
          Unexpected rain fell just when the thirsty soldiers required water. When the
          guides lost their track, from shifting of the sand, on a sudden two speaking
          serpents, or two ravens, appeared preceding the march and indicating the right
          direction. Such were the statements made by Ptolemy, Aristobulus, and
          Callisthenes, companions and contemporaries; while Arrian, four centuries
          afterwards, announces his positive conviction that there was a divine intervention
          on behalf of Alexander, though he cannot satisfy himself about the details. The
          priest of Zeus Ammon addressed Alexander, as being the son of the god, and
          further assured him that his career would be one of uninterrupted victory,
          until he was taken away to the gods; while his friends also, who consulted the
          oracle for their own satisfaction, received for answer that the rendering of
          divine honours to him would be acceptable to Zeus. After profuse sacrifices and
          presents, Alexander quitted the oracle, with a full and sincere faith that he
          really was the son of Zeus Ammon; which faith was further confirmed by
          declarations transmitted to him from other oracles—that of Erythrae in Ionia,
          and of Branchidae near Miletus. Though he did not directly order himself to be
          addressed as the son of Zeus, he was pleased with those who volunteered such a
          recognition, and angry with sceptics or scoffers, who disbelieved the oracle of
          Ammon. Plutarch thinks that this was a mere political manoeuvre of Alexander,
          for the purpose of overawing the non-Hellenic population over whom he was
          enlarging his empire. But it seems rather to have been a genuine faith,— a
          simple exaggeration of that exorbitant vanity which from the beginning reigned
          so largely in his bosom. He was indeed aware that it was repugnant to the
          leading Macedonians in many ways, but especially as a deliberate insult to the
          memory of Philip. This is the theme always touched upon in moments of
          dissatisfaction. To Parmenio, to Philotas, to Kleitus, and other principal
          officers, the insolence of the king, in disclaiming Philip and putting himself
          above the level of humanity, appeared highly offensive. Discontents on this
          subject among the Macedonian officers, though condemned to silence by fear and
          admiration of Alexander, became serious, and will be found reappearing
          hereafter.
               The last month of Alexander’s stay in Egypt was passed
          at Memphis. While nominating various officers for the permanent administration
          of the country, he also received a visit of Hegelochus his admiral, who brought
          as prisoners Aristonikus of Methymna, and other despots of the various insular
          Grecian cities. Alexander ordered them to be handed over to their respective
          cities, to be dealt with as the citizens pleased; all except the Chian
          Apollonides, who was sent to Elephantine in the south of Egypt for detention.
          In most of the cities, the despots had incurred such violent hatred, that when
          delivered up, they were tortured and put to death. Pharnabazus also had been
          among the prisoners, but had found means to escape from his guards when the
          fleet touched at Kos.
               In the early spring, after receiving reinforcements of
          Greeks and Thracians, Alexander marched into Phenicia. It was there that he
          regulated the affairs of Phenicia, Syria, and Greece, prior to his intended
          expedition into the interior against Darius. He punished the inhabitants of
          Samaria, who had revolted and burnt alive the Macedonian prefect Andromachus.
          In addition to all the business transacted, Alexander made costly presents to
          the Tyrian Herakles, and offered splendid sacrifices to other gods. Choice
          festivals with tragedy were also celebrated, analogous to the Dionysia at
          Athens, with the best actors and chorists contending for the prize. The princes
          of Cyprus vied with each other in doing honour to the son of Zeus Ammon; each
          undertaking the duty of choregus, getting up at his own cost a drama with
          distinguished chorus and actors, and striving to obtain the prize from
          pre-appointed judges—as was practised among the ten tribes at Athens.
               In the midst of these religious and festive
          exhibitions, Alexander was collecting magazines for his march into the
          interior. He had already sent forward a detachment to Thapsakus, the usual ford
          of the Euphrates, to throw bridges over the river. The Persian Mazaecus was on
          guard on the other side, with a small force of 3000 men, 2000 of them Greeks;
          not sufficient to hinder the bridges from being built, but only to hinder them
          from being carried completely over to the left bank. After eleven days of march
          from Phenicia, Alexander and his whole army reached Thapsakus. Mazaecus, on the
          other side, as soon as he saw the main army arrive, withdrew his small force
          without delay, and retreated to the Tigris; so that the two bridges were
          completed, and Alexander crossed forthwith.
               Once over the Euphrates, Alexander had the option of
          marching down the left bank of that river to Babylon, the chief city of the
          Persian empire, and the natural place to find Darius. But this march (as we
          know from Xenophon, who made it with the Ten Thousand Greeks) would be one of
          extreme suffering and through a desert country where no provisions were to be
          got. Moreover, Mazaecus in retreating had taken a north-easterly direction
          towards the upper part of the Tigris; and some prisoners reported that Darius
          with his main army was behind the Tigris, intending to defend the passage of
          that river against Alexander. The Tigris appears not to be fordable below
          Nineveh (Mosul). Accordingly he directed his march, first nearly northward,
          having the Euphrates on his left hand; next eastward across Northern
          Mesopotamia, having the Armenian mountains on his left hand. On reaching the
          ford of the Tigris, he found it absolutely undefended. Not a single enemy being
          in sight, he forded the river as soon as possible, with all his infantry,
          cavalry, and baggage. The difficulties and perils of crossing were extreme,
          from the depth of the water, above their breasts, the rapidity of the current,
          and the slippery footing. A resolute and vigilant enemy might have rendered the
          passage almost impossible. But the good fortune of Alexander was not less
          conspicuous in what his enemies left undone, than in what they actually did.
               After this fatiguing passage, Alexander rested for two
          days. During the night an eclipse of the moon occurred, nearly total; which
          spread consternation among the army, combined with complaints against his
          overweening insolence, and mistrust as to the unknown regions on which they
          were entering. Alexander, while offering solemn sacrifices to Sun, Moon, and
          Earth, combated the prevailing depression by declarations from his own prophet
          Aristander and from Egyptian astrologers, who proclaimed that Helios favoured
          the Greeks, and Selene the Persians; hence the eclipse of the moon portended
          victory to the Macedonians—and victory too (so Aristander promised), before the
          next new moon. Having thus reassured the soldiers, Alexander marched for four
          days in a south-easterly direction through the territory called Aturia, with
          the Tigris on his right hand, and the Gordyene or Kurd mountains on his left.
          Encountering a small advanced guard of the Persians, he here learnt from
          prisoners that Darius with his main host was not far off.
               Nearly two years had elapsed since the ruinous defeat
          of Issus. What Darius had been doing during this long interval, and especially
          during the first half of it, we are unable to say. We hear only of one
          proceeding on his part—his missions, twice repeated, to Alexander, tendering or
          entreating peace, with the especial view of recovering his captive family.
          Nothing else does he appear to have done, either to retrieve the losses of the
          past, or to avert the perils of the future; nothing, to save his fleet from
          passing into the hands of the conqueror; nothing, to relieve either Tyre or
          Gaza, the sieges of which collectively occupied Alexander for near ten months.
          The disgraceful flight of Darius at Issus had already lost him the confidence
          of several of his most valuable servants. The Macedonian exile Amyntas, a brave
          and energetic man, with the best of the Grecian mercenaries, gave up the
          Persian cause as lost, and tried to set up for himself, in which attempt he
          failed and perished in Egypt. The satrap of Egypt, penetrated with contempt for
          the timidity of his master, was induced, by that reason as well as by others,
          to throw open the country to Alexander. Having incurred so deplorable a loss,
          as well in reputation as in territory, Darius had the strongest motives to
          redeem it by augmented vigour.
               But he was paralysed by the fact, that his mother, his
          wife, and several of his children, had fallen into the hands of the conqueror.
          Among the countless advantages growing out of the victory of Issus, this
          acquisition was not the least. It placed Darius in the condition of one who had
          given hostages for good behaviour to his enemy. The Persian kings were often in
          the habit of exacting from satraps or generals the deposit of their wives and
          families, as a pledge for fidelity; and Darius himself had received this
          guarantee from Memnon, as a condition of entrusting him with the Persian fleet.
          Bound by the like chains himself, towards one who had now become his superior,
          Darius was afraid to act with energy, lest success should bring down evil upon
          his captive family. By allowing Alexander to subdue unopposed all the territory
          west of the Euphrates, he hoped to be allowed to retain his empire eastward,
          and to ransom back his family at an enormous price. Such propositions did
          satisfy Parmenio, and would probably have satisfied even Philip, had Philip
          been the victor. The insatiate nature of Alexander had not yet been fully
          proved. It was only when the latter contemptuously rejected everything short of
          surrender at discretion, that Darius began to take measures east of the
          Euphrates for defending what yet remained.
               The conduct of Alexander towards the regal hostages,
          honourable as it was to his sentiment, evinced at the same time that he knew
          their value as a subject of political negotiation. It was essential that he
          should treat them with the full deference due to their rank, if he desired to
          keep up their price as hostages in the eyes of Darius as well as of his own
          army. He carried them along with his army, from the coast of Syria, over the
          bridge of the Euphrates, and even through the waters of the Tigris. To them,
          this must have proved a severe toil; and in fact, the queen Statira became so
          worn out that she died shortly after crossing the Tigris; to him also, it must
          have been an onerous obligation, since he not only sought to ensure to them all
          their accustomed pomp, but must have assigned a considerable guard to watch
          them, at a moment when he was marching into an unknown country, and required
          all his military resources to be disposable. Simply for safe detention, the
          hostages would have been better guarded and might have been treated with still
          greater ceremony, in a city or a fortress. But Alexander probably wished to
          have them near him, in case of the possible contingency of serious reverses to
          his army on the eastern side of the Tigris. Assuming such a misfortune to
          happen, the surrender of them might ensure a safe retreat under circumstances
          otherwise fatal to its accomplishment.
               Being at length convinced that Alexander would not be
          satisfied with any prize short of the entire Persian empire, Darius summoned
          all his forces to defend what he still retained. He brought together a host
          said to be superior in number to that which had been defeated at Issus.1 Contingents
          arrived from the farthest extremities of the vast Persian territory—from the
          Caspian sea, the rivers Oxus and Indus, the Persian Gulf, and the Red Sea. The
          plains eastward of the Tigris, about the latitude of the modern town of Mosul,
          between that river and the Gordyene mountains (Zagros), were fixed upon for the
          muster of this prodigious multitude; partly conducted by Darius himself from
          Babylon, partly arriving there by different routes from the north, east, and
          south. Arbela—a considerable town about twenty miles east of the Great Zab
          river, still known under the name of Erbil, as a caravan station on the
          ordinary road between Erzurum and Bagdad—was fixed on as the muster-place or
          head-quarters, where the chief magazines were collected and the heavy baggage
          lodged, and near which the troops were first assembled and exercised.
               But the spot predetermined for a pitched battle was,
          the neighbourhood of Gaugamela near the river Bumodus, about thirty miles west
          of Arbela, towards the Tigris, and about as much south-east of Mosul—a spacious
          and level plain, with nothing more than a few undulating slopes, and without
          any trees. It was by nature well adapted for drawing up a numerous army,
          especially for the free manoeuvres of cavalry, and the rush of scythed
          chariots; moreover, the Persian officers had been careful beforehand to level artificially
          such of the slopes as they thought inconvenient. There seemed every thing in
          the ground to favour the operation both of the vast total, and the special
          forces, of Darius; who fancied that his defeat at Issus had been occasioned
          altogether by his having adventured himself in the narrow defiles of Cilicia—and
          that on open and level ground his superior numbers must be triumphant. He was
          even anxious that Alexander should come and attack him on the plain. Hence the
          undefended passage of the Tigris.
               For those who looked only to numbers, the host
          assembled at Arbela might well inspire confidence; for it is said to have
          consisted of 1,000,000 of infantry—40,000 cavalry—200 scythed chariots—and
          fifteen elephants; of which animals we now read for the first time in a field
          of battle. But besides the numbers, Darius had provided for his troops more
          effective arms; instead of mere javelins, strong swords and short thrusting
          pikes, such as the Macedonian cavalry wielded so admirably in close
          combat—together with shields for the infantry and breastplates for the
          horsemen. He counted much also on the terrific charge of the chariots, each of
          which had a pole projecting before the horses and terminating in a sharp point,
          together with three sword-blades stretching from the yoke on each side, and
          scythes also laterally from the naves of the wheels.
               Informed of the approach of Alexander, about the time
          when the Macedonian army first reached the Tigris, Darius moved from Arbela,
          where his baggage and treasure were left—crossed by bridges the river Lykus or
          Great Zab, an operation which occupied five days—and marched to take post on
          the prepared ground near Gaugamela. His battle array was formed—of the Bactrians
          on the extreme left, under command of Bessus the satrap of Bactria; next, the
          Dahae and Arachoti, under command of Barsaentes, satrap of Arachosia; then the
          native Persians, horse and foot alternating,—the Susians, under Oxathres,—and
          the Kadusians. On the extreme right were the contingents of Syria both east and
          west of the Euphrates, under Mazaecus; then the Medes, under Atropates; next,
          the Parthians, Sakae, Tapyrians, and Hyrkanians, all cavalry, under
          Phrataphernes; then the Albanians and the Sakesinae. Darius himself was in the
          centre, with the choice troops of the army near and around him—the Persian
          select Horse-guards, called the king’s kinsmen—the Persian foot-guards,
          carrying pikes with a golden apple at the butt-end—a regiment of Karians, or descendants
          of Karians, who had been abstracted from their homes and planted as colonists
          in the interior of the empire—the contingent of Mardi, good archers—and
          lastly, the mercenary Greeks, of number unknown, in whom Darius placed his
          greatest confidence.
               Such was the first or main line of the Persians. In
          the rear of it stood deep masses of Babylonians—inhabitants of Sittake down to
          the Persian Gulf—Uxians, from the territory adjoining Susiana, to the east—and
          others in unknown multitude. In front of it were posted the scythed chariots,
          with small advanced bodies of cavalry—Scythians and Bactrians on the left, with
          one hundred chariots—Armenians and Cappadocians on the right, with fifty
          more—and the remaining fifty chariots in front of the centre.
               Alexander had advanced within about seven miles of the
          Persian army, and four days’ march since his crossing the Tigris—when he first
          learnt from Persian prisoners how near his enemies were. Pie at once halted,
          established on the spot a camp with ditch and stockade, and remained there for
          four days, in order that the soldiers might repose. On the night of the fourth
          day, he moved forward, yet leaving under guard in the camp the baggage, the
          prisoners, and the ineffectives. He began his march, over a range of low
          elevations which divided him from the enemy, hoping to approach and attack them
          at daybreak. But his progress was so retarded, that day broke, and the two
          armies first came in sight, when he was still on the descending slope of the
          ground, more than three miles distant. On seeing the enemy, he halted, and
          called together his principal officers, to consult whether he should not
          prosecute his march and commence the attack forthwith. Though most of them
          pronounced for the affirmative, yet Parmenio contended that this course would
          be rash; that the ground before them, with all its difficulties, natural or
          artificial, was unknown, and that the enemy’s position, which they now saw for
          the first time, ought to be carefully reconnoitred. Adopting this latter view,
          Alexander halted for the day; yet still retaining his battle order, and forming
          a new entrenched camp, to which the baggage and the prisoners were now brought
          forward from the preceding day’s encampment. He himself spent the day, with an
          escort of cavalry and light troops, in reconnoitring both the intermediate
          ground and the enemy, who did not interrupt him, in spite of their immense
          superiority in cavalry. Parmenio, with Polysperchon and others, advised him to
          attack the enemy in the night; which promised some advantages, since Persian
          armies were notoriously unmanageable by night, and since their camp had no
          defence. But on the other hand, the plan involved so many disadvantages and
          perils, that Alexander rejected it; declaring—with an emphasis intentionally enhanced,
          since he spoke in the hearing of many others—that he disdained the meanness of
          stealing a victory; that he both would conquer, and could conquer, Darius
          fairly and in open daylight. Having then addressed to his officers a few brief
          encouragements, which met with enthusiastic response, he dismissed them to
          their evening meal and repose.
           On the next morning, he marshalled his army,
          consisting of 40,000 foot, and 7000 horse, in two lines. The first or main line
          was composed, on the right, of the eight squadrons of Companion-cavalry, each
          with its separate captain, but all under the command of Philotas son of
          Parmenio. Next (proceeding from right to left) came the Agema or chosen band of
          the Hypaspistas—then the remaining Hypaspistae, under Nikanor— then the phalanx
          properly so called, distributed into six divisions, under the command of
          Koenus, Perdikkas, Meleager, Polysperchon, Simmias, and Craterus, respectively.
          Next on the left of the phalanx, were arranged the allied Grecian cavalry, Locrian
          and Phocian, Phthiot, Malians, and Peloponnesians; after whom, at the extreme
          left, came the Thessalians under Philippus—among the best cavalry in the army,
          hardly inferior to the Macedonian Companions. As in the two former battles,
          Alexander himself took the command of the right half of the army, confiding the
          left to Parmenio.
               Behind this main line, was placed a second or body of
          reserve, intended to guard against attacks in the flanks and rear, which the
          superior numbers of the Persians rendered probable. For this purpose, Alexander
          reserved,—on the right, the light cavalry or Lancers—the Paeonians, under
          Aretes and Aristo—half the Agrianes, under Attalus—the Macedonian archers,
          under Brison—and the mercenaries of old service, under Cleander; on the left,
          various bodies of Thracian and allied cavalry, under their separate officers.
          All these different regiments were held ready to repel attack either in flank
          or rear. In front of the main line were some advanced squadrons of cavalry and
          light troops—Grecian cavalry, under Menidas on the right, and under Andromachus
          on the left—a brigade of darters under Balakrus, together with Agrianian
          darters, and some bowmen. Lastly, the Thracian infantry were left to guard the
          camp and the baggage.
               Forewarned by a deserter, Alexander avoided the places
          where iron spikes had been planted to damage the Macedonian cavalry. He
          himself, at the head of the Royal Squadron, on the extreme right, led the march
          obliquely in that direction, keeping his right somewhat in advance. As he
          neared the enemy, he saw Darius himself with the Persian left centre
          immediately opposed to him—Persian guards, Indians, Albanians, and Carians.
          Alexander went on inclining to the right, and Darius stretching his front
          towards the left to counteract this movement, but still greatly outflanking the
          Macedonians to the left. Alexander had now got so far to his right, that he was
          almost beyond the ground levelled by Darius for the operations of his chariots
          in front. To check any further movement in this direction, the Bactrian 1000
          horse and the Scythians in front of the Persian left, were ordered to make a
          circuit and attack the Macedonian right flank. Alexander detached against them
          his regiment of cavalry under Menidas, and the action thus began.
               The Baktrian horse, perceiving the advance of Menidas,
          turned from their circuitous movement to attack him, and at first drove him
          back until he was supported by the other advanced detachments—Paeonians and
          Grecian cavalry. The Bactrians, defeated in their turn, were supported by the
          satrap Bessus with the main body of Bactrians and Scythians in the left portion
          of Darius’s line. The action was here for some time warmly contested, with some
          loss to the Greeks ; who at length however, by a more compact order against
          enemies whose fighting was broken and desultory, succeeded in pushing them out
          of their place in the line, and thus making a partial opening in it.
               While this conflict was still going on, Darius had
          ordered his scythed chariots to charge, and his main line to follow them,
          calculating on the disorder which he expected that they would occasion. But the
          chariots were found of little service. The horses were terrified, checked, or
          wounded, by the Macedonian archers and darters in front; who even found means
          to seize the reins, pull down the drivers, and kill the horses. Of the hundred
          chariots in Darius’s front, intended to bear down the Macedonian ranks by
          simultaneous pressure along their whole line, many were altogether stopped or
          disabled ; some turned right round, the horses refusing to face the protended
          pikes, or being scared with the noise of pike and shield struck together; some
          which reached the Macedonian line, were let through without mischief by the
          soldiers opening their ranks; a few only inflicted wounds or damage.
               As soon as the chariots were thus disposed of, and the
          Persian main force laid open as advancing behind them, Alexander gave orders to
          the troops of his main line, who had hitherto been perfectly silent, to raise
          the war-shout and charge at a quick pace; at the same time directing Aretes
          with the Paeonians to repel the assailants on his right flank. He himself,
          discontinuing his slanting movement to the right, turned towards the Persian
          line, and dashed, at the head of all the Companion-cavalry, into that partial
          opening in it, which had been made by the flank movement of the Bactrians.
          Having by this opening got partly within the line, he pushed straight towards
          the person of Darius; his cavalry engaging in the closest hand-combat, and
          thrusting with their short spikes at the faces of the Persians. Here, as at the
          Granikus, the latter were discomposed by this mode of fighting—accustomed as
          they were to rely on the use of missiles, with rapid wheeling of the horse for
          renewed attack. They were unable to prevent Alexander and his cavalry from
          gaining ground and approaching nearer to Darius; while at the same time, the
          Macedonian phalanx in front, with its compact order and long protended pikes,
          pressed upon the Persian line opposed to it. For a short interval, the combat
          here was close and obstinate ; and it might have been much prolonged—since the
          best troops of Darius’s army—Greeks, Carians, Persian guards, regal kinsmen,
  &c., were here posted,—had the king’s courage been equal to that of his
          soldiers. But here, even worse than at Issus, the flight of the army began with
          Darius himself. It had been the recommendation of Cyrus the younger, in
          attacking the army of his brother Artaxerxes at Cunaxa, to aim the main blow at
          the spot where his brother was in person—since he well knew that victory there
          was victory everywhere. Having already once followed this scheme successfully
          at Issus, Alexander repeated it with still more signal success at Arbela.
          Darius, who had been long in fear, from the time when he first beheld his
          formidable enemy on the neighbouring hills, became still more alarmed when he
          saw the scythed chariots prove a failure, and when the Macedonians, suddenly
          breaking out from absolute silence into an universal war-cry, came to close
          quarters with his troops, pressing towards and menacing the conspicuous chariot
          on which he stood. The sight and hearing of this terrific combined with the
          prestige already attached to Alexander’s name, completely overthrew the courage
          and self-possession of Darius. He caused his chariot to be turned round, and
          himself set the example of flight.
   From this moment, the battle, though it had lasted so
          short a time, was irreparably lost. The king’s flight, followed of course
          immediately by that of the numerous attendants around him, spread dismay among
          all his troops, leaving them neither centre of command, nor chief to fight for.
          The best soldiers in his army, being those immediately around him, were under
          these circumstances the first to give way. The fierce onset of Alexander with
          the Companion-cavalry, and the unremitting pressure of the phalanx in front,
          were obstructed by little else than a mass of disordered fugitives. During the
          same time, Aretes with his Paeonians had defeated the Bactrians on the right
          flank, so that Alexander was free to pursue the routed main body,—which he did
          most energetically. The cloud of dust raised by the dense multitude is said to
          have been so thick, that nothing could be clearly seen, nor could the pursuers
          distinguish the track taken by Darius himself. Amidst this darkness, the cries
          and noises from all sides were only the more impressive; especially the sound
          from the whips of the charioteers, pushing their horses to full speed. It was
          the dust alone which saved Darius himself from being overtaken by the pursuing
          cavalry.
               While Alexander was thus fully successful on his right
          and centre, the scene on his left under Parmenio was different. Mazaecus, who
          commanded the Persian right, after launching his scythed chariots (which may
          possibly have done more damage than those launched on the Persian left, though
          we have no direct information about them), followed it up by vigorously
          charging the Grecian and Thessalian horse in his front, and also by sending
          round a detachment of cavalry to attack them on their left flank. Here the
          battle was obstinately contested, and success for some time doubtful. Even
          after the flight of Darius, Parmenio found himself so much pressed, that he
          sent a message to Alexander. Alexander, though full of mortification at
          relinquishing the pursuit, checked his troops, and brought them back to the
          assistance of his left, by the shortest course across the field of battle. The
          two left divisions of the phalanx, under Simmias and Craterus, had already
          stopped short in the pursuit, on receiving the like message from Parmenio;
          leaving the other four divisions to follow the advanced movement of Alexander.
          Hence there arose a gap in the midst of the phalanx, between the four right
          divisions, and the two left; into which gap a brigade of Indian and Persian
          cavalry darted, galloping through the midst of the Macedonian line to get into
          the rear and attack the baggage. At first this movement was successful, the
          guard was found unprepared, and the Persian prisoners rose at once to set
          themselves free; though Sisygambis, whom these prisoners were above measure
          anxious to liberate, refused to accept their aid, either from mistrust of their
          force, or gratitude for the good treatment received from Alexander. But while
          these assailants were engaged in plundering the baggage, they were attacked in
          the rear by the troops forming the second Macedonian line, who though at first
          taken by surprise, had now had time to face about and reach the camp. Many of the
          Persian brigade were thus slain, the rest got off as they could.
               Mazaeus maintained for a certain time fair equality,
          on his own side of the battle, even after the flight of Darius. But when, to
          the paralysing effect of that fact in itself, there was added the spectacle of
          its disastrous effects on the left half of the Persian army, neither he nor his
          soldiers could persevere with unabated vigour in a useless combat. The
          Thessalian and Grecian horse, on the other hand, animated by the turn of
          fortune in their favour, pressed their enemies with redoubled energy, and at length
          drove them to flight; so that Parmenio was victor, on his own side and with his
          own forces, before the succours from Alexander reached him.
               In conducting those succours, on his way back from the
          pursuit, Alexander traversed the whole field of battle, and thus met face to
          face some of the best Persian and Parthian cavalry, who were among the last to
          retire. The battle was already lost, and they were seeking only to escape. As
          they could not turn back, and had no chance for their lives except by forcing
          their way through his Companion-cavalry, the combat here was desperate and
          murderous; all at close quarters, cut and thrust with hand weapons on both
          sides, contrary to the Persian custom. Sixty of the Macedonian cavalry were
          slain; and a still greater number, including Hephaestion, Koenus, and Menidas,
          were wounded, and Alexander himself encountered great personal danger. He is
          said to have been victorious ; yet probably most of these brave men forced
          their way through and escaped, though leaving many of their number on the
          field.
               Having rejoined his left, and ascertained that it was
          not only out of danger, but victorious, Alexander resumed his pursuit of the
          flying Persians, in which Parmenio now took part. The host of Darius was only a
          multitude of disorderly fugitives, horse and foot mingled together. The greater
          part of them had taken no share in the battle. Here, as at Issus, they remained
          crowded in stationary and unprofitable masses, ready to catch the contagion of
          terror and to swell the number of runaways, so soon as the comparatively small
          proportion of real combatants in the front had been beaten. On recommencing the
          pursuit, Alexander pushed forward with such celerity, that numbers of the
          fugitives were slain or taken, especially at the passage of the river Lykus;
          where he was obliged to halt for a while, since his men as well as their horses
          were exhausted. At midnight, he again pushed forward, with such cavalry as
          could follow him, to Arbela, in hopes of capturing the person of Darius. In
          this he was disappointed, though he reached Arbela the next day. Darius had
          merely passed through it, leaving an undefended town, with his bow, shield,
          chariot, a large treasure, and rich equipage, as prey to the victor. Parmenio
          had also occupied without resistance the Persian camp near the field of battle,
          capturing the baggage, the camels, and the elephants.
               To state anything like positive numbers of slain or
          prisoners, is impossible. According to Arrian, 300,000 Persians were slain, and
          many more taken prisoners. Diodorus puts the slain at 90,000, Curtius at
          40,000. The Macedonian killed were, according to Arrian, not more than
          100—according to Curtius, 300: Diodorus states the slain at 500, besides a
          great number of wounded. The estimate of Arrian is obviously too great on one
          side, and too small on the other; but whatever may be the numerical truth, it is
          certain that the prodigious army of Darius was all either killed, taken, or
          dispersed at the battle of Arbela. No attempt to form a subsequent army ever
          succeeded; we read of nothing stronger than divisions or detachments. The
          miscellaneous contingents of this once mighty empire, such at least among them
          as survived, dispersed to their respective homes and could never be again
          mustered in mass.
               The defeat of Arbela was in fact the death-blow of the
          Persian empire. It converted Alexander into the Great King, and Darius into
          nothing better than a fugitive pretender. Among all the causes of the
          defeat—here as at Issus—the most prominent and indisputable was the cowardice
          of Darius himself. Under a king deficient not merely in the virtues of a
          general, but even in those of a private soldier, and who nevertheless insisted
          on commanding in person—nothing short of ruin could ensue. To those brave Persians
          whom he dragged into ruin along with him and who knew the real facts, he must
          have appeared as the betrayer of the empire. We shall have to recall this state
          of sentiment, when we describe hereafter the conspiracy formed by the Bactrian
          satrap Bessus. Nevertheless, even if Darius had behaved with unimpeachable
          courage, there is little reason to believe, that the defeat of Arbela, much
          less that of Issus, could have been converted into a victory. Mere immensity of
          number, even with immensity of space, was of no efficacy without skill as well
          as bravery in the commander. Three-fourths of the Persian army were mere spectators,
          who did nothing, and produced absolutely no effect. The flank movement against
          Alexander’s right, instead of being made by some unemployed division, was so
          carried into effect, as to distract the Bactrian troops from their place in the
          front line, and thus to create a fatal break, of which Alexander availed
          himself for his own formidable charge in front. In spite of amplitude of
          space—the condition wanting at Issus,—the attacks of the Persians on Alexander’s
          flanks and rear were feeble and inefficient. After all, Darius relied mainly
          upon his front line of battle, strengthened by the scythe chariots; these
          latter being found unprofitable, there remained only the direct conflict,
          wherein the strong point of the Macedonians resided.
               On the other hand, in so far as we can follow the
          dispositions of Alexander, they appear the most signal example recorded in
          antiquity, of military genius and sagacious combination. He had really as great
          an available force as his enemies, because every company in his army was turned
          to account, either in actual combat, or in reserve against definite and
          reasonable contingencies. All his successes, and this most of all, were fairly
          earned by his own genius and indefatigable effort, combined with the admirable
          organisation of his army. But his good fortune was no less conspicuous in the
          unceasing faults committed by his enemies. Except during the short period of
          Memnon’s command, the Persian king exhibited nothing but ignorant rashness
          alternating with disgraceful apathy; turning to no account his vast real power
          of resistance in detail—keeping back his treasures to become the booty of the
          victor—suffering the cities which stoutly held out to perish unassisted—and
          committing the whole fate of the empire, on two successive occasions, to that
          very hazard which Alexander most desired.
               The decisive character of the victory was manifested
          at once by the surrender of the two great capitals of the Persian
          empire—Babylon and Susa. To Babylon, Alexander marched in person; to Susa, he
          sent Philoxenus. As he approached Babylon, the satrap Mazaeus met him with the
          keys of the city; Bagophanes, collector of the revenue, decorated the road of
          march with altars, sacrifices, and scattered flowers; while the general
          Babylonian population and their Chaldaean priests poured forth in crowds with
          acclamations and presents. Susa was yielded to Philoxenus with the same
          readiness, as Babylon to Alexander. The sum of treasure acquired at Babylon was
          great; sufficient to furnish a large donative to the troops—600 drachms per man
          to the Macedonian cavalry, 500 to the foreign cavalry, 200 to the Macedonian
          infantry, and something less to the foreign infantry. But the treasure found
          and appropriated at Susa was yet greater. It is stated at 50,000 talents, a
          sum which we might have deemed incredible, if we did not find it greatly
          exceeded by what is subsequently reported about the treasures in Persepolis. Of
          this Susian treasure four-fifths are said to have been in uncoined gold and
          silver, the remainder in golden Daries; the untouched accumulations of several
          preceding kings, who had husbanded them against a season of unforeseen urgency.
          A moderate portion of this immense wealth, employed by Darius three years
          earlier to push the operations of his fleet, subsidise able Grecian officers,
          and organise anti-Macedonian resistance— would have preserved both his life and
          his crown.
               Alexander rested his troops for more than thirty days
          amidst the luxurious indulgences of Babylon. He gratified the feelings of the
          population and the Chaldaean priests by solemn sacrifices to Belus, as well as
          by directing that the temple of that god, and the other temples destroyed in
          the preceding century by Xerxes, should be rebuilt.5Treating the Persian empire
          now as an established conquest, he nominated the various satraps. He confirmed
          the Persian Mazaeus in the satrapy of Babylon, but put along with him two
          Greeks as assistants and guarantees—Apollodorus of Amphipolis, as commander of
          the military force—Asklepiodorus as collector of the revenue. He rewarded the
          Persian traitor Mithrines, who had surrendered at his approach the strong
          citadel of Sardis, with the satrapy of Armenia. To that of Syria and Phenicia,
          he appointed Menes, who took with him 3000 talents, to be remitted to Antipater
          for levying new troops against the Lacedaemonians in Peloponnesus. The march of
          Alexander from Babylon to Susa occupied twenty days; an easy route through a
          country abundantly supplied. At Susa he was joined by Amyntas son of
          Andromenes, with a large reinforcement of about 15,000 men—Macedonians,
          Greeks, and Thracians. There were both cavalry and infantry—and what is not the
          least remarkable, fifty Macedonian youths of noble family, soliciting admission
          into Alexander's corps of pages. The incorporation of these new-comers into the
          army afforded him the opportunity for remodelling on several points the
          organisation of his different divisions, the smaller as well as the larger.
               After some delay at Susa—and after confirming the
          Persian Abulites, who had surrendered the city, in his satrapy, yet not without
          two Grecian officers as guarantees, one commanding the military force, the
          other governor of the citadel—Alexander crossed the river Eulaeus or
          Pasitigris, and directed his march to the south-east towards Persis proper, the
          ancient hearth or primitive seat from whence the original Persian conquerors
          had issued. Between Susa and Persis lay a mountainous region occupied by the
          Uxii—rude but warlike shepherds, to whom the Great King himself had always been
          obliged to pay a tribute whenever he went from Susa to Persepolis, being unable
          with his inefficient military organisation to overcome the difficulties of such
          a pass held by an enemy. The Uxii now demanded the like tribute from Alexander,
          who replied by inviting them to meet him at their pass and receive it.
          Meanwhile a new and little frequented mountain track had been made known to
          him, over which he conducted in person a detachment of troops so rapidly and
          secretly as to surprise the mountaineers in their own villages. He thus not
          only opened the usual mountain pass for the transit of his main army, but so
          cut to pieces and humiliated the Uxii, that they were forced to sue for pardon.
          Alexander was at first disposed to extirpate or expel them; but at length, at
          the request of the captive Sisygambis, permitted them to remain as subjects of
          the satrap of Susa, imposing a tribute of sheep, horses, and cattle, the only
          payment which their poverty allowed.
               But bad as the Uxian pass had been, there remained
          another still worse—called the Susian or Persian Gates, in the mountains which
          surrounded the plain of Persepolis, the centre of Persis proper. Ariobarzanes,
          satrap of the province, held this pass; a narrow defile walled across, with
          mountain positions on both sides, from whence the defenders, while out of reach
          themselves, could shower down missiles upon an approaching enemy. After four
          days of march, Alexander reached on the fifth day the Susian Gates; which,
          inexpugnable as they seemed, he attacked on the ensuing morning. In spite of
          all the courage of his soldiers, however, he sustained loss without damaging
          his enemy, and was obliged to return to his camp. He was informed that there
          was no other track by which this difficult pass could be turned; but there was
          a long circuitous march of many days whereby it might be evaded, and another
          entrance found into the plain of Persepolis. To recede from any enterprise as
          impracticable, was a humiliation which Alexander had never yet endured. On
          further inquiry, a Lycian captive, who had been for many years tending sheep as
          a slave on the mountains, acquainted him with the existence of a track known
          only to himself, whereby he might come on the flank of Ariobarzanes. Leaving Craterus
          in command of the camp, with orders to attack the pass in front, when he should
          hear the trumpet give signal—Alexander marched forth at night at the head of a
          light detachment, under the guidance of the Lycian. He had to surmount
          incredible hardship and difficulty—the more so as it was mid-winter, and the
          mountain was covered with snow; yet such were the efforts of his soldiers and
          the rapidity of his movements, that he surprised all the Persian outposts, and
          came upon Ariobarzanes altogether unprepared. Attacked as they were at the same
          time by Craterus also, the troops of the satrap were forced to abandon the
          Gates, and were for the most part cut to pieces. Many perished in their flight
          among the rocks and precipices; the satrap himself being one of a few that
          escaped.
               Though the citadel of Persepolis is described as one
          of the strongest of fortresses, yet after this unexpected conquest of a pass
          hitherto deemed inexpugnable, few had courage to think of holding it against
          Alexander. Nevertheless Ariobarzanes, hastening thither from the conquered
          pass, still strove to organise a defence, and at least to carry off the regal
          treasure, which some in the town were already preparing to pillage But
          Tiridates, commander of the garrison, fearing the wrath of the conqueror, resisted
          this, and despatched a message entreating Alexander to hasten his march.
          Accordingly Alexander, at the head of his cavalry, set forth with the utmost
          speed, and arrived in time to detain and appropriate the whole. Ariobarzanes,
          in a vain attempt to resist, was slain with all his companions. Persepolis and
          Pasargadae—the two peculiar capitals of the Persian race, the latter memorable
          as containing the sepulchre of Cyrus the Great—both fell into the hands of the
          conqueror.
               On approaching Persepolis, the compassion of the army
          was powerfully moved by the sight of about 800 Grecian captives, all of them
          mutilated in some frightful and distressing way, by loss of legs, arms, eyes,
          ears, or some other bodily members. Mutilation was a punishment commonly
          inflicted in that age by Oriental governors, even by such as were not accounted
          cruel. Thus Xenophon, in eulogising the rigid justice of Cyrus the younger,
          remarks that in the public roads of his satrapy, men were often seen who had
          been deprived of their arms or legs, or otherwise mutilated, by penal
          authority. Many of these maimed captives at Persepolis were old, and had lived
          for years in their unfortunate condition. They had been brought up from various
          Greek cities by order of some of the preceding Persian kings; but on what
          pretences they had been thus cruelly dealt with we are not informed. Alexander,
          moved to tears at such a spectacle, offered to restore them to their respective
          homes, with a comfortable provision for the future. But most of them felt so
          ashamed of returning to their homes, that they entreated to be allowed to
          remain all together in Persis, with lands assigned to them, and with dependent
          cultivators to raise produce for them. Alexander granted their request in the
          fullest measure, conferring besides upon each an ample donation of money,
          clothing, and cattle.
               The sight of these mutilated Greeks was well
          calculated to excite not merely sympathy for them, but rage against the
          Persians, in the bosoms of all spectators. Alexander seized this opportunity,
          as well for satiating the anger and cupidity of his soldiers, as for
          manifesting himself in his self-assumed character of avenger of Greece against
          the Persians, to punish the wrongs done by Xerxes a century and a half before.
          He was now amidst the native tribes and seats of the Persians, the descendants
          of those rude warriors who, under the first Cyrus, had overspread Western Asia
          from the Indus to the Aegean. In this their home the Persian kings had
          accumulated their national edifices, their regal sepulchres, the inscriptions
          commemorative of their religious or legendary sentiment, with many trophies and
          acquisitions arising out of their conquests. For the purposes of the Great
          King’s empire, Babylon, or Susa, or Ecbatana, were more central and convenient
          residences; but Persepolis was still regarded as the heart of Persian
          nationality. It was the chief magazine, though not the only one, of those
          annual accumulations from the imperial revenue, which each king successively
          increased, and which none seems to have ever diminished. Moreover, the Persian
          grandees and officers, who held the lucrative satrapies and posts of the
          empire, were continually sending wealth home to Persis, for themselves or their
          relatives. We may therefore reasonably believe what we find asserted, that
          Persepolis possessed at this time more wealth, public and private, than any
          place within the range of Grecian or Macedonian knowledge.
               Convening his principal officers, Alexander denounced
          Persepolis as the most hostile of all Asiatic cities,—the home of those impious
          invaders of Greece, whom he had come to attack. He proclaimed his intention of
          abandoning it to be plundered, as well as of burning the citadel. In this
          resolution he persisted, notwithstanding the remonstrance of Parmenio, who
          reminded him that the act would be a mere injury to himself by ruining his own
          property, and that the Asiatics would construe it as evidence of an intention
          to retire speedily, without founding any permanent dominion in the country.
          After appropriating the regal treasure—to the alleged amount of 120,000 talents
          in gold and silver—Alexander set fire to the citadel. A host of mules, with
          5000 camels, were sent for from Mesopotamia and elsewhere, to carry off this
          prodigious treasure; the whole of which was conveyed out of Persis proper,
          partly to be taken along with Alexander himself in his ulterior marches, partly
          to be lodged in Susa and Ecbatana. Six thousand talents more, found in
          Pasargadae, were added to the spoil. The persons and property of the
          inhabitants were abandoned to the licence of the soldiers, who obtained an
          immense booty, not merely in gold and silver, but also in rich clothing,
          furniture, and ostentatious ornaments of every kind. The male inhabitants were
          slain, the females dragged into servitude ; except such as obtained safety by
          flight, or burned themselves with their property in their own houses. Among the
          soldiers themselves, much angry scrambling took place for the possession of
          precious articles, not without occasional bloodshed. As soon as their ferocity
          and cupidity had been satiated, Alexander arrested the massacre. His
          encouragement and sanction of it was not a burst of transient fury, provoked by
          unexpected length of resistance, such as the hanging of the 2000 Tyrians and the
          dragging of Batis at Gaza—but a deliberate proceeding, intended partly as a
          recompense and gratification to the soldiery, but still more as an imposing
          manifestation of retributive vengeance against the descendants of the ancient
          Persian invaders. In his own letters seen by Plutarch, Alexander described the
          massacre of the native Persians as having been ordered by him on grounds of
          state policy.
               As it was now winter or very early spring, he suffered
          his main army to enjoy a month or more of repose at or near Persepolis. But he
          himself, at the head of a rapidly moving division, traversed the interior of
          Persis proper; conquering or receiving into submission the various towns and
          villages. The greatest resistance which he experienced was offered by the rude
          and warlike tribe called the Mardi; but worse than any enemy was the severity
          of the season and the rugged destitution of a frozen country. Neither physical
          difficulties, however, nor human enemies, could arrest the march of Alexander.
          He returned from his expedition, complete master of Persis; and in the spring,
          quitted that province with his whole army, to follow Darius into Media. He left
          only a garrison of 3000 Macedonians at Persepolis, preserving to Tiridates, who
          had surrendered to him the place, the title of satrap.
               Darius was now a fugitive, with the mere title of
          king, and with a simple body-guard rather than an army. On leaving Arbela after
          the defeat, he had struck in an easterly direction across the mountains into
          Media; having only a few attendants round him, and thinking himself too happy
          to preserve his own life from an indefatigable pursuer. He calculated that
          once across these mountains, Alexander would leave him for a time unmolested,
          in haste to march southward for the purpose of appropriating the great and real
          prizes of the campaign— Babylon, Susa, and Persepolis. The last struggles of
          this ill- starred prince will be recounted in another chapter.
           
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