Evans Experientialism
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| ANABASIS | ||||
| XENOPHON In Eight Parts - Part One |
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| ANABASIS BY XENOPHON Translation by H. G. Dakyns Dedicated To Rev. B. Jowett, M. A. Master
of Balliol College Regius Professor
of Greek
in the University of Oxford BOOK I Darius and Parysatis had two sons: the elder
was named Artaxerxes, and 1 the younger
Cyrus.
Now, as Darius lay sick and felt that
the
end of life drew near, he wished both
his
sons to be with him. The elder, as
it chanced,
was already there, but Cyrus he must
needs
send for from the province over which
he
had made him satrap, having appointed
him
general moreover of all the forces
that muster
in the plain of the Castolus. Thus
Cyrus
went up, taking with him Tissaphernes
as
his friend, and accompanied also by
a body
of Hellenes, three hundred heavy armed
men,
under the command of Xenias the Parrhasian[1].
[1] Parrhasia, a district and town in the
south-west of Arcadia.
Now when Darius was dead, and Artaxerxes
was established in the kingdom, Tissaphernes
brought slanderous accusations against
Cyrus
before his brother, the king, of harbouring
designs against him. And Artaxerxes,
listening
to the words of Tissaphernes, laid
hands
upon Cyrus, desiring to put him to
death;
but his mother made intercession for
him,
and sent him back again in safety to
his
province. He then, having so escaped
through
peril and dishonour, fell to considering,
not only how he might avoid ever again
being
in his brother's power, but how, if
possible,
he might become king in his stead.
Parysatis,
his mother, was his first resource;
for she
had more love for Cyrus than for Artaxerxes
upon his throne. Moreover Cyrus's behaviour
towards all who came to him from the
king's
court was such that, when he sent them
away
again, they were better friends to
himself
than to 5 the king his brother. Nor
did he
neglect the barbarians in his own service;
but trained them, at once to be capable
as
warriors and devoted adherents of himself.
Lastly, he began collecting his Hellenic
armament, but with the utmost secrecy,
so
that he might take the king as far
as might
be at unawares.
The manner in which he contrived the levying
of the troops was as follows: First,
he sent
orders to the commandants of garrisons
in
the cities (so held by him), bidding
them
to get together as large a body of
picked
Peloponnesian troops as they severally
were
able, on the plea that Tissaphernes
was plotting
against their cities; and truly these
cities
of Ionia had originally belonged to
Tissaphernes,
being given to him by the king; but
at this
time, with the exception of Miletus,
they
had all revolted to Cyrus. In Miletus,
Tissaphernes,
having become aware of similar designs,
had
forestalled the conspirators by putting
some
to death and banishing the remainder.
Cyrus,
on his side, welcomed these fugitives,
and
having collected an army, laid siege
to Miletus
by sea and land, endeavouring to reinstate
the exiles; and this gave him another
pretext
for collecting an armament. At the
same time
he sent to the king, and claimed, as
being
the king's brother, that these cities
should
be given to himself rather than that
Tissaphernes
should continue to govern them; and
in furtherance
of this end, the queen, his mother,
co-operated
with him, so that the king not only
failed
to see the design against himself,
but concluded
that Cyrus was spending his money on
armaments
in order to make war on Tissaphernes.
Nor
did it pain him greatly to see the
two at
war together, and the less so because
Cyrus
was careful to remit the tribute due
to the
king from the cities which belonged
to Tissaphernes.
A third army was being collected for him
in the Chersonese, over against Abydos,
the
origin of which was as follows: There
was
a Lacedaemonian exile, named Clearchus,
with
whom Cyrus had become associated. Cyrus
admired
the man, and made him a present of
ten thousand
darics[2]. Clearchus took the gold,
and with
the money raised 9 an army, and using
the
Chersonese as his base of operations,
set
to work to fight the Thracians north
of the
Hellespont, in the interests of the
Hellenes,
and with such happy result that the
Hellespontine
cities, of their own accord, were eager
to
contribute funds for the support of
his troops.
In this way, again, an armament was
being
secretly maintained for Cyrus.
[2] A Persian gold coin = 125.55 grains of
gold.
Then there was the Thessalian Aristippus,
Cyrus's friend[3], who, under pressure
of
the rival political party at home,
had come
to Cyrus and asked him for pay for
two thousand
mercenaries, to be continued for three
months,
which would enable him, he said, to
gain
the upper hand of his antagonists.
Cyrus
replied by presenting him with six
months'
pay for four thousand mercenaries--only
stipulating
that Aristippus should not come to
terms
with his antagonists without final
consultation
with himself. In this way he secured
to himself
the secret maintenance of a fourth
armament.
[3] Lit. "guest-friend." Aristippus
was, as we learn from the "Meno"
of Plato, a native of Larisa, of the
family
of the Aleuadae, and a pupil of Gorgias.
He was also a lover of Menon, whom
he appears
to have sent on this expedition instead
of
himself.
Further, he bade Proxenus, a Boeotian, who
was another friend, get together as
many
men as possible, and join him in an
expedition
which he meditated against the Pisidians[4],
who were causing annoyance to his territory.
Similarly two other friends, Sophaenetus
the Stymphalian[5], and Socrates the
Achaean,
had orders to get together as many
men as
possible and come to him, since he
was on
the point of opening a campaign, along
with
Milesian exiles, against Tissaphernes.
These
orders were duly carried out by the
officers
in question.
[4] Lit. "into the country of the Pisidians."
[5] Of Stymphalus in Arcadia.
II
But when the right moment seemed to him to
have come, at which he 1 should begin
his
march into the interior, the pretext
which
he put forward was his desire to expel
the
Pisidians utterly out of the country;
and
he began collecting both his Asiatic
and
his Hellenic armaments, avowedly against
that people. From Sardis in each direction
his orders sped: to Clearchus, to join
him
there with the whole of his army; to
Aristippus,
to come to terms with those at home,
and
to despatch to him the troops in his
employ;
to Xenias the Arcadian, who was acting
as
general-in-chief of the foreign troops
in
the cities, to present himself with
all the
men available, excepting only those
who were
actually needed to garrison the citadels.
He next summoned the troops at present
engaged
in the siege of Miletus, and called
upon
the exiles to follow him on his intended
expedition, promising them that if
he were
successful in his object, he would
not pause
until he had reinstated them in their
native
city. To this invitation they hearkened
gladly;
they believed in him; and with their
arms
they presented themselves at Sardis.
So,
too, Xenias arrived at Sardis with
the contingent
from the cities, four thousand hoplites;
Proxenus, also, with fifteen hundred
hoplites
and five hundred light-armed troops;
Sophaenetus
the Stymphalian, with one thousand
hoplites;
Socrates the Achaean, with five hundred
hoplites;
while the Megarion Pasion came with
three
hundred hoplites and three hundred
peltasts[1].
This latter officer, as well as Socrates,
belonged to the force engaged against
Miletus.
These all joined him at Sardis.
[1] "Targeteers" armed with a light
shield instead of the larger one of
the hoplite,
or heavy infantry soldier. Iphicrates
made
great use of this arm at a later date.
But Tissaphernes did not fail to note these
proceedings. An equipment so large
pointed
to something more than an invasion
of Pisidia:
so he argued; and with what speed he
might,
he set off to the king, attended by
about
five hundred horse. The king, on his
side,
had no sooner heard from Tissaphernes
of
Cyrus's great armament, than he began
to
make counter-preparations.
Thus Cyrus, with the troops which I have
named, set out from Sardis, and marched
on
and on through Lydia three stages,
making
two-and-twenty parasangs[2], to the
river
Maeander. That river is two hundred
feet[3]
broad, and was spanned by a bridge
consisting
of seven boats. Crossing it, he marched
through
Phrygia a single stage, of eight parasangs,
to Colossae, an inhabited city[4],
prosperous
and 6 large. Here he remained seven
days,
and was joined by Menon the Thessalian,
who
arrived with one thousand hoplites
and five
hundred peltasts, Dolopes, Aenianes,
and
Olynthians. From this place he marched
three
stages, twenty parasangs in all, to
Celaenae,
a populous city of Phrygia, large and
prosperous.
Here Cyrus owned a palace and a large
park[5]
full of wild beasts, which he used
to hunt
on horseback, whenever he wished to
give
himself or his horses exercise. Through
the
midst of the park flows the river Maeander,
the sources of which are within the
palace
buildings, and it flows through the
city
of Celaenae. The great king also has
a palace
in Celaenae, a strong place, on the
sources
of another river, the Marsyas, at the
foot
of the acropolis. This river also flows
through
the city, discharging itself into the
Maeander,
and is five-and-twenty feet broad.
Here is
the place where Apollo is said to have
flayed
Marsyas, when he had conquered him
in the
contest of skill. He hung up the skin
of
the conquered man, in the cavern where
the
spring wells forth, and hence the name
of
the river, Marsyas. It was on this
site that
Xerxes, as tradition tells, built this
very
palace, as well as the citadel of Celaenae
itself, on his retreat from Hellas,
after
he had lost the famous battle. Here
Cyrus
remained for thirty days, during which
Clearchus
the Lacedaemonian arrived with one
thousand
hoplites and eight hundred Thracian
peltasts
and two hundred Cretan archers. At
the same
time, also, came Sosis the Syracusian
with
three thousand hoplites, and Sophaenetus
the Arcadian[6] with one thousand hoplites;
and here Cyrus held a review, and numbered
his Hellenes in the park, and found
that
they amounted in all to eleven thousand
hoplites
and about two thousand peltasts.
[2] The Persian "farsang" = 30
stades, nearly 1 league, 3 1/2 statute
miles,
though not of uniform value in all
parts
of Asia.
[3] "Two plethra": the plethron
= about 101 English feet.
[4] Lit. "inhabited," many of the
cities of Asia being then as now deserted,
but the suggestion is clearly at times
"thickly
inhabited," "populous."
[5] Lit. "paradise," an oriental
word = park or pleasure ground.
[6] Perhaps this should be Agias the Arcadian,
as Mr. Macmichael suggests. Sophaenetus
has
already been named above.
From this place he continued his march two
stages--ten parasangs--to 10 the populous
city of Peltae, where he remained three
days;
while Xenias, the Arcadian, celebrated
the
Lycaea[7] with sacrifice, and instituted
games. The prizes were headbands of
gold;
and Cyrus himself was a spectator of
the
contest. From this place the march
was continued
two stages--twelve parasangs--to Ceramon-agora,
a populous city, the last on the confines
of Mysia. Thence a march of three stages--thirty
parasangs--brought him to Caystru-pedion[8],
a populous city. Here Cyrus halted
five days;
and the soldiers, whose pay was now
more
than three months in arrear, came several
times to the palace gates demanding
their
dues; while Cyrus put them off with
fine
words and expectations, but could not
conceal
his vexation, for it was not his fashion
to stint payment, when he had the means.
At this point Epyaxa, the wife of Syennesis,
the king of the Cilicians, arrived
on a visit
to Cyrus; and it was said that Cyrus
received
a large gift of money from the queen.
At
this date, at any rate, Cyrus gave
the army
four months' pay. The queen was accompanied
by a bodyguard of Cilicians and Aspendians;
and, if report speaks truly, Cyrus
had intimate
relations with the queen.
[7] The Lycaea, an Arcadian festival in honour
of Zeus {Arcaios}, akin to the Roman
Lupercalia,
which was originally a shepherd festival,
the introduction of which the Romans
ascribe
to the Arcadian Evander.
[8] Lit. "plain of the Cayster,"
like Ceramon-agora, "the market
of the
Ceramians" above, the name of
a town.
From this place he marched two stages--ten
parasangs--to Thymbrium, a populous
city.
Here, by the side of the road, is the
spring
of Midas, the king of Phrygia, as it
is called,
where Midas, as the story goes, caught
the
satyr by drugging the spring with wine.
From
this place he marched two stages--ten
parasangs--to
Tyriaeum, a populous city. Here he
halted
three days; and the Cilician queen,
according
to the popular account, begged Cyrus
to exhibit
his armament for her amusement. The
latter
being only too glad to make such an
exhibition,
held a review of the Hellenes and barbarians
in the plain. He ordered the Hellenes
to
draw up their lines and post themselves
in
their customary battle order, each
general
marshalling his own battalion. Accordingly
they drew up four-deep. The right was
held
by Menon and those with him; the 15
left
by Clearchus and his men; the centre
by the
remaining generals with theirs. Cyrus
first
inspected the barbarians, who marched
past
in troops of horses and companies of
infantry.
He then inspected the Hellenes; driving
past
them in his chariot, with the queen
in her
carriage. And they all had brass helmets
and purple tunics, and greaves, and
their
shields uncovered[9].
[9] I. e. ready for action, c. f. "bayonets
fixed".
After he had driven past the whole body,
he drew up his chariot in front of
the centre
of the battle-line, and sent his interpreter
Pigres to the generals of the Hellenes,
with
orders to present arms and to advance
along
the whole line. This order was repeated
by
the generals to their men; and at the
sound
of the bugle, with shields forward
and spears
in rest, they advanced to meet the
enemy.
The pace quickened, and with a shout
the
soldiers spontaneously fell into a
run, making
in the direction of the camp. Great
was the
panic of the barbarians. The Cilician
queen
in her carriage turned and fled; the
sutlers
in the marketing place left their wares
and
took to their heels; and the Hellenes
meanwhile
came into camp with a roar of laughter.
What
astounded the queen was the brilliancy
and
order of the armament; but Cyrus was
pleased
to see the terror inspired by the Hellenes
in the hearts of the Asiatics.
From this place he marched on three stages--twenty
parasangs--to Iconium, the last city
of Phrygia,
where he remained three days. Thence
he marched
through Lycaonia five stages--thirty
parasangs.
This was hostile country, and he gave
it
over to the Hellenes to pillage. At
this
point Cyrus sent back the Cilician
queen
to her own country by the quickest
route;
and to escort her he sent the soldiers
of
Menon, and Menon himself. With the
rest of
the troops he continued his march through
Cappadocia four stages--twenty-five
parasangs--to
Dana, a populous city, large and flourishing.
Here they halted three days, within
which
interval Cyrus put to death, on a charge
of conspiracy, a Persian nobleman named
Megaphernes,
a wearer of the royal purple; and along
with
him another high dignitary among his
subordinate
commanders.
From this place they endeavoured to force
a passage into Cilicia. Now 21 the
entrance
was by an exceedingly steep cart-road,
impracticable
for an army in face of a resisting
force;
and report said that Syennesis was
on the
summit of the pass guarding the approach.
Accordingly they halted a day in the
plain;
but next day came a messenger informing
them
that Syenesis had left the pass; doubtless,
after perceiving that Menon's army
was already
in Cilicia on his own side of the mountains;
and he had further been informed that
ships
of war, belonging to the Lacedaemonians
and
to Cyrus himself, with Tamos on board
as
admiral, were sailing round from Ionia
to
Cilicia. Whatever the reason might
be, Cyrus
made his way up into the hills without
let
or hindrance, and came in sight of
the tents
where the Cilicians were on guard.
From that
point he descended gradually into a
large
and beautiful plain country, well watered,
and thickly covered with trees of all
sorts
and vines. This plain produces sesame
plentifully,
as also panic and millet and barley
and wheat;
and it is shut in on all sides by a
steep
and lofty wall of mountains from sea
to sea.
Descending through this plain country,
he
advanced four stages--twenty-five parasangs--to
Tarsus, a large and prosperous city
of Cilicia.
Here stood the palace of Syennesis,
the king
of the country; and through the middle
of
the city flows a river called the Cydnus,
two hundred feet broad. They found
that the
city had been deserted by its inhabitants,
who had betaken themselves, with Syennesis,
to a strong place on the hills. All
had gone,
except the tavern-keepers. The sea-board
inhabitants of Soli and Issi also remained.
Now Epyaxa, Syennesis's queen, had
reached
Tarsus five days in advance of Cyrus.
During
their passage over the mountains into
the
plain, two companies of Menon's army
were
lost. Some said they had been cut down
by
the Cilicians, while engaged on some
pillaging
affair; another account was that they
had
been left behind, and being unable
to overtake
the main body, or discover the route,
had
gone astray and perished. However it
was,
they numbered one hundred hoplites;
and when
the rest arrived, being in a fury at
the
destruction of their fellow soldiers,
they
vented their spleen by pillaging the
city
of Tarsus and the palace to boot. Now
when
Cyrus had marched into the city, he
sent
for Syennesis to come to him; but 26
the
latter replied that he had never yet
put
himself into the hands of any one who
was
his superior, nor was he willing to
accede
to the proposal of Cyrus now; until,
in the
end, his wife persuaded him, and he
accepted
pledges of good faith. After this they
met,
and Syennesis gave Cyrus large sums
in aid
of his army; while Cyrus presented
him with
the customary royal gifts--to wit,
a horse
with a gold bit, a necklace of gold,
a gold
bracelet, and a gold scimitar, a Persian
dress, and lastly, the exemption of
his territory
from further pillage, with the privilege
of taking back the slaves that had
been seized,
wherever they might chance to come
upon them.
III
At Tarsus Cyrus and his army halted for twenty
days; the soldiers 1 refusing to advance
further, since the suspicion ripened
in their
minds, that the expedition was in reality
directed against the king; and as they
insisted,
they had not engaged their services
for that
object. Clearchus set the example of
trying
to force his men to continue their
march;
but he had no sooner started at the
head
of his troops than they began to pelt
him
and his baggage train, and Clearchus
had
a narrow escape of being stoned to
death
there and then. Later on, when he perceived
that force was useless, he summoned
an assembly
of his own men; and for a long while
he stood
and wept, while the men gazed in silent
astonishment.
At last he spoke as follows: "Fellow
soldiers, do not marvel that I am sorely
distressed on account of the present
troubles.
Cyrus has been no ordinary friend to
me.
When I was in banishment he honoured
me in
various ways, and made me also a present
of ten thousand darics. These I accepted,
but not to lay them up for myself for
private
use; not to squander them in pleasure,
but
to expend them on yourselves. And,
first
of all, I went to war with the Thracians,
and with you to aid, I wreaked vengeance
on them in behalf of Hellas; driving
them
out of the Chersonese, when they wanted
to
deprive its Hellenic inhabitants of
their
lands. But as soon as Cyrus summoned
me,
I took you with me and set out, so
that,
if my benefactor had any need of me,
I might
requite him for the good treatment
I myself
had received at his hands. . . . But
since
you are not minded to continue the
march
with me, one of two things is left
to 5 me
to do; either I must renounce you for
the
sake of my friendship with Cyrus, or
I must
go with you at the cost of deceiving
him.
Whether I am about to do right or not,
I
cannot say, but I choose yourselves;
and,
whatever betide, I mean to share your
fate.
Never shall it be said of me by any
one that,
having led Greek troops against the
barbarians[1],
I betrayed the Hellenes, and chose
the friendship
of the barbarian. No! since you do
not choose
to obey and follow me, I will follow
after
you. Whatever betide, I will share
your fate.
I look upon you as my country, my friends,
my allies; with you I think I shall
be honoured,
wherever I be; without you I do not
see how
I can help a friend or hurt a foe.
My decision
is taken. Wherever you go, I go also."
[1] Lit. "into the country of the barbarian."
Such were his words. But the soldiers, not
only his own, but the rest also, when
they
heard what he said, and how he had
scouted
the idea of going up to the great king's
palace[2], expressed their approval;
and
more than two thousand men deserted
Xenias
and Pasion, and took their arms and
baggage-train,
and came and encamped with Clearchus.
But
Cyrus, in despair and vexation at this
turn
of affairs, sent for Clearchus. He
refused
to come; but, without the knowledge
of the
soldiers, sent a message to Cyrus,
bidding
him keep a good heart, for that all
would
arrange itself in the right way; and
bade
him keep on sending for him, whilst
he himself
refused to go. After that he got together
his own men, with those who had joined
him,
and of the rest any who chose to come,
and
spoke as follows: "Fellow soldiers,
it is clear that the relations of Cyrus
to
us are identical with ours to him.
We are
no longer his soldiers, since we have
ceased
to follow him; and he, on his side,
is no
longer our paymaster. He, however,
no doubt
considers himself wronged by us; and
though
he goes on sending for me, I cannot
bring
myself to go to him: for two reasons,
chiefly
from a sense of shame, for I am forced
to
admit to myself that I have altogether
deceived
him; but partly, too, because I am
afraid
of his seizing me and inflicting a
penalty
on the wrongs which he conceives 11
that
I have done him. In my opinion, then,
this
is no time for us to go to sleep and
forget
all about ourselves, rather it is high
time
to deliberate on our next move; and
as long
as we do remain here, we had better
bethink
us how we are to abide in security;
or, if
we are resolved to turn our backs at
once,
what will be the safest means of retreat;
and, further, how we are to procure
supplies,
for without supplies there is no profit
whatsoever
in the general or the private soldier.
The
man with whom we have to deal is an
excellent
friend to his friends, but a very dangerous
enemy to his foes. And he is backed
by a
force of infantry and cavalry and ships
such
as we all alike very well see and know,
since
we can hardly be said to have posted
ourselves
at any great distance from him. If,
then,
any one has a suggestion to make, now
is
the time to speak." With these
words
he ceased.
[2] Or "how he insisted that he was
not going up."
Then various speakers stood up; some of their
own motion to propound their views;
others
inspired by Clearchus to dilate on
the hopeless
difficulty of either staying, or going
back
without the goodwill of Cyrus. One
of these,
in particular, with a make-believe
of anxiety
to commence the homeward march without
further
pause, called upon them instantly to
choose
other generals, if Clearchus were not
himself
prepared to lead them back: "Let
them
at once purchase supplies" (the
market
being in the heart of the Asiatic camp),
"let them pack up their baggage:
let
them," he added, "go to Cyrus
and
ask for some ships in order to return
by
sea: if he refused to give them ships,
let
them demand of him a guide to lead
them back
through a friendly district; and if
he would
not so much as give them a guide, they
could
but put themselves, without more ado,
in
marching order, and send on a detachment
to occupy the pass--before Cyrus and
the
Cilicians, whose property," the
speaker
added, "we have so plentifully
pillaged,
can anticipate us." Such were
the remarks
of that speaker; he was followed by
Clearchus,
who merely said: "As to my acting
personally
as general at this season, pray do
not propose
it: I can see numerous obstacles to
my doing
so. Obedience, in the fullest, I can
render
to the man of 15 your choice, that
is another
matter: and you shall see and know
that I
can play my part, under command, with
the
best of you."
After Clearchus another spokesman stood up,
and proceeded to point out the simplicity
of the speaker, who proposed to ask
for vessels,
just as if Cyrus were minded to renounce
the expedition and sail back again.
"And
let me further point out," he
said,
"what a simple-minded notion it
is to
beg a guide of the very man whose designs
we are marring. If we can trust any
guide
whom Cyrus may vouchsafe to us, why
not order
Cyrus at once to occupy the pass on
our behoof?
For my part, I should think twice before
I set foot on any ships that he might
give
us, for fear lest he should sink them
with
his men-of-war; and I should equally
hesitate
to follow any guide of his: he might
lead
us into some place out of which we
should
find it impossible to escape. I should
much
prefer, if I am to return home against
the
will of Cyrus at all, to give him the
slip,
and so begone: which indeed is impossible.
But these schemes are simply nonsensical.
My proposal is that a deputation of
fit persons,
with Clearchus, should go to Cyrus:
let them
go to Cyrus and ask him: what use he
proposes
to make of us? and if the business
is at
all similar to that on which he once
before
employed a body of foreigners--let
us by
all means follow: let us show that
we are
the equals of those who accompanied
him on
his much up formerly. But if the design
should
turn out to be of larger import than
the
former one--involving more toil and
more
danger--we should ask him, either to
give
us good reasons for following his lead,
or
else consent to send us away into a
friendly
country. In this way, whether we follow
him,
we shall do so as friends, and with
heart
and soul, or whether we go back, we
shall
do so in security. The answer to this
shall
be reported to us here, and when we
have
heard it, we will advise as to our
best course."
This resolution was carried, and they chose
and sent a deputation with Clearchus,
who
put to Cyrus the questions which had
been
agreed upon by the army. Cyrus replied
as
follows: That he had received news
that Abrocomas,
an enemy of his, was posted on the
Euphrates,
twelve stages 20 off; his object was
to march
against this aforesaid Abrocomas: and
if
he were still there, he wished to inflict
punishment on him, "or if he be
fled"
(so the reply concluded), "we
will there
deliberate on the best course."
The
deputation received the answer and
reported
it to the soldiers. The suspicion that
he
was leading them against the king was
not
dispelled; but it seemed best to follow
him.
They only demanded an increase of pay,
and
Cyrus promised to give them half as
much
again as they had hitherto received--that
is to say, a daric and a half a month
to
each man, instead of a daric. Was he
really
leading them to attack the king? Not
even
at this moment was any one apprised
of the
fact, at any rate in any open and public
manner.
IV
From this point he marched two stages--ten
parasangs--to the river 1 Psarus, which
is
two hundred feet broad, and from the
Psarus
he marched a single stage--five parasangs--to
Issi, the last city in Cilicia. It
lies on
the seaboard--a prosperous, large and
flourishing
town. Here they halted three days,
and here
Cyrus was joined by his fleet. There
were
thirty-five ships from Peloponnesus,
with
the Lacedaemonian admiral Pythagoras
on board.
These had been piloted from Ephesus
by Tamos
the Egyptian, who himself had another
fleet
of twenty-five ships belonging to Cyrus.
These had formed Tamos's blockading
squadron
at Miletus, when that city sided with
Tissaphernes;
he had also used them in other military
services
rendered to Cyrus in his operations
against
that satrap. There was a third officer
on
board the fleet, the Lacedaemonian
Cheirisophus,
who had been sent for by Cyrus, and
had brought
with him seven hundred hoplites, over
whom
he was to act as general in the service
of
Cyrus. The fleet lay at anchor opposite
Cyrus's
tent. Here too another reinforcement
presented
itself. This was a body of four hundred
hoplites,
Hellenic mercenaries in the service
of Abrocomas,
who 3 deserted him for Cyrus, and joined
in the campaign against the king.
From Issi, he marched a single stage--five
parasangs--to the gates of Cilicia
and Syria.
This was a double fortress: the inner
and
nearer one, which protects Cilicia,
was held
by Syennesis and a garrison of Cilicians;
the outer and further one, protecting
Syria,
was reported to be garrisoned by a
body of
the king's troops. Through the gap
between
the two fortresses flows a river named
the
Carsus, which is a hundred feet broad,
and
the whole space between was scarcely
more
than six hundred yards. To force a
passage
here would be impossible, so narrow
was the
pass itself, with the fortification
walls
stretching down to the sea, and precipitous
rocks above; while both fortresses
were furnished
with gates. It was the existence of
this
pass which had induced Cyrus to send
for
the fleet, so as to enable him to lead
a
body of hoplites inside and outside
the gates;
and so to force a passage through the
enemy,
if he were guarding the Syrian gate,
as he
fully expected to find Abrocomas doing
with
a large army. This, however, Abrocomas
had
not done; but as soon as he learnt
that Cyrus
was in Cilicia, he had turned round
and made
his exit from Phoenicia, to join the
king
with an army amounting, as report said,
to
three hundred thousand men.
From this point Cyrus pursued his march,
through Syria a single stage--five
parasangs--to
Myriandus, a city inhabited by Phoenicians,
on the sea-coast. This was a commercial
port,
and numerous merchant vessels were
riding
at anchor in the harbour. Here they
halted
seven days, and here Xenias the Arcadian
general, and Pasion the Megarian got
on board
a trader, and having stowed away their
most
valuable effects, set sail for home;
most
people explained the act as the outcome
of
a fit of jealousy, because Cyrus had
allowed
Clearchus to retain their men, who
had deserted
to him, in hopes of returning to Hellas
instead
of marching against the king; when
the two
had so vanished, a rumour spread that
Cyrus
was after them with some ships of war,
and
some hoped the cowards might be caught,
others
pitied them, if that should be their
fate.
But Cyrus summoned the generals and addressed
them: "Xenias and 8 Pasion,"
he
said, "have taken leave of us;
but they
need not flatter themselves that in
so doing
they have stolen into hiding. I know
where
they are gone; nor will they owe their
escape
to speed; I have men-of-war to capture
their
craft, if I like. But heaven help me!
if
I mean to pursue them: never shall
it be
said of me, that I turn people to account
as long as they stay with me, but as
soon
as they are minded to be off, I seize
and
maltreat them, and strip them of their
wealth.
Not so! let them go with the consciousness
that our behaviour to them is better
than
theirs to us. And yet I have their
children
and wives safe under lock and key in
Tralles;
but they shall not be deprived even
of these.
They shall receive them back in return
for
their former goodness to me."
So he
spoke, and the Hellenes, even those
who had
been out of heart at the thought of
marching
up the country, when they heard of
the nobleness
of Cyrus, were happier and more eager
to
follow him on his path.
After this Cyrus marched onwards four stages--twenty
parasangs--to the river Chalus. That
river
is a hundred feet broad, and is stocked
with
tame fish which the Syrians regard
as gods,
and will not suffer to be injured--and
so
too the pigeons of the place. The villages
in which they encamped belonged to
Parysatis,
as part of her girdle money[1]. From
this
point he marched on five stages--thirty
parasangs--to
the sources of the river Dardas, which
is
a hundred feet broad. Here stood the
palace
of Belesys, the ruler of Syria, with
its
park--which was a very large and beautiful
one, and full of the products of all
the
seasons in their course. But Cyrus
cut down
the park and burnt the palace. Thence
he
marched on three stages--fifteen parasangs--to
the river Euphrates, which is nearly
half
a mile broad. A large and 11 flourishing
city, named Thapsacus, stands on its
banks.
Here they halted five days, and here
Cyrus
sent for the generals of the Hellenes,
and
told them that the advance was now
to be
upon Babylon, against the great king;
he
bade them communicate this information
to
the soldiers and persuade them to follow.
The generals called an assembly, and
announced
the news to the soldiers. The latter
were
indignant and angry with the generals,
accusing
them of having kept secret what they
had
long known; and refused to go, unless
such
a bribe of money were given them as
had been
given to their predecessors, when they
went
up with Cyrus to the court of his father,
not as now to fight a battle, but on
a peaceful
errand--the visit of a son to his father
by invitation. The demand was reported
to
Cyrus by the generals, and he undertook
to
give each man five silver minae as
soon as
Babylon was reached, and their pay
in full,
until he had safely conveyed them back
to
Ionia again. In this manner the Hellenic
force were persuaded--that is to say,
the
majority of them. Menon, indeed, before
it
was clear what the rest of the soldiers
would
do--whether, in fact they would follow
Cyrus
or not--collected his own troops apart
and
made them the following speech; "Men,"
he said, "if you will listen to
me,
there is a method by which, without
risk
or toil, you may win the special favour
of
Cyrus beyond the rest of the soldiers.
You
ask what it is I would have you to
do? I
will tell you. Cyrus at this instant
is begging
the Hellenes to follow him to attack
the
king. I say then: Cross the Euphrates
at
once, before it is clear what answer
the
rest will make; if they vote in favour
of
following, you will get the credit
of having
set the example, and Cyrus will be
grateful
to you. He will look upon you as being
the
heartiest in his cause; he will repay,
as
of all others he best knows how; while,
if
the rest vote against crossing, we
shall
go back again; but as the sole adherents,
whose fidelity he can altogether trust,
it
is you whom Cyrus will turn to account,
as
commandants of garrisons or captains
of companies.
You need only ask him for whatever
you want,
and you will get it from him, as being
the
friends of Cyrus.
[1] Cf. Plat. "Alcib." i. 123 B.
"Why, I have been informed by
a credible
person, who went up to the king (at
Susa),
that he passed through a large tract
of excellent
land, extending for nearly a day's
journey,
which the people of the country called
the
queen's girdle, and another which they
called
her veil," etc. Olympiodorus and
the
Scholiast both think that Plato here
refers
to Xenophon and this passage of the
"Anabasis."
Grote thinks it very probable that
Plato
had in his mind Xenophon (either his
"Anabasis"
or personal communications with him).
The men heard and obeyed, and before the
rest had given their answer, they were
already
across. But when Cyrus perceived that
Menon's
troops 16 had crossed, he was well
pleased,
and he sent Glus to the division in
question,
with this message: "Soldiers,
accept
my thanks at present; eventually you
shall
thank me. I will see to that, or my
name
is not Cyrus." The soldiers therefore
could not but pray heartily for his
success;
so high their hopes ran. But to Menon,
it
was said, he sent gifts with lordly
liberality.
This done, Cyrus proceeded to cross;
and
in his wake followed the rest of the
armament
to a man. As they forded, never a man
was
wetted above the chest: nor ever until
this
moment, said the men of Thapascus,
had the
river been so crossed on foot, boats
had
always been required; but these, at
the present
time, Abrocomas, in his desire to hinder
Cyrus from crossing, had been at pains
to
burn. Thus the passage was looked upon
as
a thing miraculous; the river had manifestly
retired before the face of Cyrus, like
a
courtier bowing to his future king.
From
this place he continued his march through
Syria nine stages--fifty parasangs--and
they
reached the river Araxes. Here were
several
villages full of corn and wine; in
which
they halted three days, and provisioned
the
army.
V
Thence he marched on through Arabia, keeping
the Euphrates on the 1 right, five
desert
stages--thirty-five parasangs. In this
region
the ground was one long level plain,
stretching
far and wide like the sea, full of
absinth;
whilst all the other vegetation, whether
wood or reed, was sweet scented like
spice
or sweet herb; there were no trees;
but there
was wild game of all kinds--wild asses
in
greatest abundance, with plenty of
ostriches;
besides these, there were bustards
and antelopes.
These creatures were occasionally chased
by the cavalry. The asses, when pursued,
would run forward a space, and then
stand
still--their pace being much swifter
than
that of horses; and as soon as the
horses
came close, they went through the same
performance.
The only way to catch them was for
the riders
to post themselves at intervals, and
to hunt
them in relays, as it were. The flesh
of
those they captured was not unlike
venison,
only more tender. No one was lucky
enough
to capture an ostrich. Some of the
troopers
did give chase, but it had soon to
be abandoned;
for the bird, in its effort to escape,
speedily
put a long interval between itself
and its
3 pursuers; plying its legs at full
speed,
and using its wings the while like
a sail.
The bustards were not so hard to catch
when
started suddenly; for they only take
short
flights, like partridges, and are soon
tired.
Their flesh is delicious.
As the army wended its way through this region,
they reached the river Mascas, which
is one
hundred feet in breadth. Here stood
a big
deserted city called Corsote, almost
literally
environed by the stream, which flows
round
it in a circle. Here they halted three
days
and provisioned themselves. Thence
they continued
their march thirteen desert stages--ninety
parasangs--with the Euphrates still
on their
right, until they reached the Gates.
On these
marches several of the baggage animals
perished
of hunger, for there was neither grass
nor
green herb, or tree of any sort; but
the
country throughout was barren. The
inhabitants
make their living by quarrying millstones
on the river banks, which they work
up and
take to Babylon and sell, purchasing
corn
in exchange for their goods. Corn failed
the army, and was not to be got for
money,
except in the Lydian market open in
Cyrus's
Asiatic army; where a kapithe of wheat
or
barley cost four shekels; the shekel
being
equal to seven and a half Attic obols,
whilst
the kapithe is the equivalent of two
Attic
choeneces[1], dry measure, so that
the soldiers
subsisted on meat alone for the whole
period.
Some of the stages were very long,
whenever
they had to push on to find water or
fodder;
and once they found themselves involved
in
a narrow way, where the deep clay presented
an obstacle to the progress of the
wagons.
Cyrus, with the nobles about him, halted
to superintend the operation, and ordered
Glus and Pigres to take a body of barbarians
and to help in extricating the wagons.
As
they seemed to be slow about the business,
he turned round angrily to the Persian
nobles
and bade them lend a hand to force
the wagons
out. Then, if ever, what goes to constitute
one branch of good discipline, was
to be
witnessed. Each of those addressed,
just
where he chanced to be 8 standing,
threw
off his purple cloak, and flung himself
into
the work with as much eagerness as
if it
had been a charge for victory. Down
a steep
hill side they flew, with their costly
tunics
and embroidered trousers--some with
the circlets
round their necks, and bracelets on
their
arms--in an instant, they had sprung
into
the miry clay, and in less time than
one
could have conceived, they had landed
the
wagons safe on terra firma.
[1] The choenix = about 1 quart (or, according
to others, 1 1/2 pint). It was the
minimum
allowance of corn for a man, say a
slave,
per diem. The Spartan was allowed at
the
public table 2 choenices a day.
Altogether it was plain that Cyrus was bent
on pressing on the march, and averse
to stoppages,
except where he halted for the sake
of provisioning
or some other necessary object; being
convinced
that the more rapidly he advanced,
the less
prepared for battle would he find the
king;
while the slower his own progress,
the larger
would be the hostile army which he
would
find collected. Indeed, the attentive
observer
could see, at a glance, that if the
king's
empire was strong in its extent of
territory
and the number of inhabitants, that
strength
is compensated by an inherent weakness,
dependent
upon the length of roads and the inevitable
dispersion of defensive forces, where
an
invader insists upon pressing home
the war
by forced marches.
On the opposite side of the Euphrates to
the point reached on one of these desert
stages, was a large and flourishing
city
named Charmande. From this town the
soldiers
made purchases of provisions, crossing
the
river on rafts, in the following fashion:
They took the skins which they used
as tent
coverings, and filled them with light
grass;
they then compressed and stitched them
tightly
together by the ends, so that the water
might
not touch the hay. On these they crossed
and got provisions: wine made from
the date-nut,
and millet or panic-corn, the common
staple
of the country. Some dispute or other
here
occurred between the soldiers of Menon
and
Clearchus, in which Clearchus sentenced
one
of Menon's men, as the delinquent,
and had
him flogged. The man went back to his
own
division and told them. Hearing what
had
been done to their comrade, his fellows
fretted
and fumed, and were highly incensed
against
Clearchus. The same day Clearchus visited
the passage of the river, and after
inspecting
the market there, was returning with
a few
followers, on horseback, to his tent,
and
had to 12 pass through Menon's quarters.
Cyrus had not yet come up, but was
riding
up in the same direction. One of Menon's
men, who was splitting wood, caught
sight
of Clearchus as he rode past, and aimed
a
blow at him with his axe. The aim took
no
effect; when another hurled a stone
at him,
and a third, and then several, with
shouts
and hisses. Clearchus made a rapid
retreat
to his own troops, and at once ordered
them
to get under arms. He bade his hoplites
remain
in position with their shields resting
against
their knees, while he, at the head
of his
Thracians and horsemen, of which he
had more
than forty in his army--Thracians for
the
most part--advanced against Menon's
soldiers,
so that the latter, with Menon himself,
were
panic-stricken, and ran to seize their
arms;
some even stood riveted to the spot,
in perplexity
at the occurrence. Just then Proxenus
came
up from behind, as chance would have
it,
with his division of hoplites, and
without
a moment's hesitation marched into
the open
space between the rival parties, and
grounded
arms; then he fell to begging Clearchus
to
desist. The latter was not too well
pleased
to hear his trouble mildly spoken of,
when
he had barely escaped being stoned
to death;
and he bade Proxenus retire and leave
the
intervening space open. At this juncture
Cyrus arrived and inquired what was
happening.
There was no time for hesitation. With
his
javelins firmly grasped in his hands
he galloped
up--escorted by some of his faithful
bodyguard,
who were present--and was soon in the
midst,
exclaiming: "Clearchus, Proxenus,
and
you other Hellenes yonder, you know
not what
you do. As surely as you come to blows
with
one another, our fate is sealed--this
very
day I shall be cut to pieces, and so
will
you: your turn will follow close on
mine.
Let our fortunes once take an evil
turn,
and these barbarians whom you see around
will be worse foes to us than those
who are
at present serving the king."
At these
words Clearchus came to his senses.
Both
parties paused from battle, and retired
to
their quarters: order reigned.
VI
As they advanced from this point (opposite
Charmande), they came upon 1 the hoof-prints
and dung of horses at frequent intervals.
It looked like the trail of some two
thousand
horses. Keeping ahead of the army,
these
fellows burnt up the grass and everything
else that was good for use. Now there
was
a Persian, named Orontas; he was closely
related to the king by birth: and in
matters
pertaining to war reckoned among the
best
of Persian warriors. Having formerly
been
at war with Cyrus, and afterwards reconciled
to him, he now made a conspiracy to
destroy
him. he made a proposal to Cyrus: if
Cyrus
would furnish him with a thousand horsemen,
he would deal with these troopers,
who were
burning down everything in front of
them;
he would lay an ambuscade and cut them
down,
or he would capture a host of them
alive;
in any case, he would put a stop to
their
agressiveness and burnings; he would
see
to it that they did not ever get a
chance
of setting eyes on Cyrus's army and
reporting
its advent to the king. The proposal
seemed
plausible to Cyrus, who accordingly
authorised
Orontas to take a detachment from each
of
the generals, and be gone. He, thinking
that
he had got his horsemen ready to his
hand,
wrote a letter to the king, announcing
that
he would ere long join him with as
many troopers
as he could bring; he bade him, at
the same
time, instruct the royal cavalry to
welcome
him as a friend. The letter further
contained
certain reminders of his former friendship
and fidelity. This despatch he delivered
into the hands of one who was a trusty
messenger,
as he thought; but the bearer took
and gave
it to Cyrus. Cyrus read it. Orontas
was arrested.
Then Cyrus summoned to his tent seven
of
the noblest Persians among his personal
attendants,
and sent orders to the Hellenic generals
to bring up a body of hoplites. These
troops
were to take up a position round his
tent.
This the generals did; bringing up
about
three thousand hoplites. Clearchus
was also
invited inside, to assist at the court-martial;
a compliment due to the position he
held
among the other generals, in the opinion
not only of Cyrus, but also of the
rest of
the court. When he came out, he reported
the circumstances of the trial (as
to which,
indeed, there was no mystery) to his
friends.
He said that Cyrus opened the inquiry
with
these words: "I have invited you
hither,
my friends, that I may take advice
with you,
and carry out whatever, in the sight
of God
and man, it is right for me to do,
as concerning
the man before you, Orontas. The 6
prisoner
was, in the first instance, given to
me by
my father, to be my faithful subject.
In
the next place, acting, to use his
own words,
under the orders of my brother, and
having
hold of the acropolis of Sardis, he
went
to war with me. I met war with war,
and forced
him to think it more prudent to desist
from
war with me: whereupon we shook hands,
exchanging
solemn pledges. After that," and
at
this point Cyrus turned to Orontas,
and addressed
him personally--"after that, did
I do
you any wrong?" Answer, "Never."
Again another question: "Then
later
on, having received, as you admit,
no injury
from me, did you revolt to the Mysians
and
injure my territory, as far as in you
lay?"--"I
did," was the reply. "Then,
once
more having discovered the limits of
your
power, did you flee to the altar of
Artemis,
crying out that you repented? and did
you
thus work upon my feelings, that we
a second
time shook hands and made interchange
of
solemn pledges? Are these things so?"
Orontas again assented. "Then
what injury
have you received from me," Cyrus
asked,
"that now for the third time,
you have
been detected in a treasonous plot
against
me?"--"I must needs do so,"
he answered. Then Cyrus put one more
question:
"But the day may come, may it
not, when
you will once again be hostile to my
brother,
and a faithful friend to myself?"
The
other answered: "Even if I were,
you
could never be brought to believe it,
Cyrus."
At this point Cyrus turned to those who were
present and said: "Such has been
the
conduct of the prisoner in the past:
such
is his language now. I now call upon
you,
and you first, Clearchus, to declare
your
opinion--what think you?" And
Clearchus
answered: "My advice to you is
to put
this man out of the way as soon as
may be,
so that we may be saved the necessity
of
watching him, and have more leisure,
as far
as he is concerned, to requite the
services
of those whose friendship is sincere."--"To
this opinion," he told us, "the
rest of the court adhered." After
that,
at the bidding of Cyrus, each of those
present,
10 in turn, including the kinsmen of
Orontas,
took him by the girdle; which is as
much
as to say, "Let him die the death,"
and then those appointed led him out;
and
they who in old days were wont to do
obeisance
to him, could not refrain, even at
that moment,
from bowing down before him, albeit
they
knew he was being led forth to death.
After they had conducted him to the tent
of Artapates, the trustiest of Cyrus's
wand-bearers,
none set eyes upon him ever again,
alive
or dead. No one, of his own knowledge,
could
declare the manner of his death; though
some
conjectured one thing and some another.
No
tomb to mark his resting-place, either
then
or since, was ever seen.
VII
From this place Cyrus marched through Babylonia
three stages--twelve 1 parasangs. Now,
on
the third stage, about midnight, Cyrus
held
a review of the Hellenes and Asiatics
in
the plain, expecting that the king
would
arrive the following day with his army
to
offer battle. He gave orders to Clearchus
to take command of the right wing,
and to
Menon the Thessalian of the left, while
he
himself undertook to the disposition
of his
own forces in person. After the review,
with
the first approach of day, deserters
from
the great king arrived, bringing Cyrus
information
about the royal army. Then Cyrus summoned
the generals and captains of the Hellenes,
and held a council of war to arrange
the
plan of battle. He took this opportunity
also to address the following words
of compliment
and encouragement to the meeting: "Men
of Hellas," he said, "it
is certainly
not from dearth of barbarians to fight
my
battles that I put myself at your head
as
my allies; but because I hold you to
be better
and stronger than many barbarians.
That is
why I took you. See then that you prove
yourselves
to be men worthy of the liberty which
you
possess, and which I envy you. Liberty--it
is a thing which, be well assured,
I would
choose in preference to all my other
possessions,
multiplied many times. But I would
like you
to know into what sort of struggle
you are
going: learn its nature from one who
knows.
Their numbers are great, and they come
on
with much noise; but if you can hold
out
against these two things, I confess
I am
ashamed to think, what a sorry set
of folk
you will 4 find the inhabitants of
this land
to be. But you are men, and brave you
must
be, being men: it is agreed; then if
you
wish to return home, any of you, I
undertake
to send you back, in such sort that
your
friends at home shall envy you; but
I flatter
myself I shall persuade many of you
to accept
what I will offer you here, in lieu
of what
you left at home."
Here Gaulites, a Samian exile, and a trusty
friend of Cyrus, being present, exclaimed:
"Ay, Cyrus, but some say you can
afford
to make large promises now, because
you are
in the crisis of impending danger;
but let
matters go well with you, will you
recollect?
They shake their heads. Indeed, some
add
that, even if you did recollect, and
were
ever so willing, you would not be able
to
make good all your promises, and repay."
When Cyrus heard that, he answered:
"You
forget, sirs, my father's empire stretches
southwards to a region where men cannot
dwell
by reason of the heat, and northwards
to
a region uninhabitable through cold;
but
all the intervening space is mapped
out in
satrapies belonging to my brother's
friends:
so that if the victory be ours, it
will be
ours also to put our friends in possession
in their room. On the whole my fear
is, not
that I may not have enough to give
to each
of my friends, but lest I may not have
friends
enough on whom to bestow what I have
to give,
and to each of you Hellenes I will
give a
crown of gold."
So they, when they heard these words, were
once more elated than ever themselves,
and
spread the good news among the rest
outside.
And there came into his presence both
the
generals and some of the other Hellenes
also,
claiming to know what they should have
in
the event of victory; and Cyrus satisfied
the expectations of each and all, and
so
dismissed them. Now the advice and
admonition
of all who came into conversation with
him
was, not to enter the battle himself,
but
to post himself in rear of themselves;
and
at this season Clearchus put a question
to
him: "But do you think that your
brother
will give battle 9 to you, Cyrus?"
and
Cyrus answered: "Not without a
battle,
be assured, shall the prize be won;
if he
be the son of Darius and Parysatis,
and a
brother of mine."
In the final arming for battle at this juncture,
the numbers were as follows: Of Hellenes
there were ten thousand four hundred
heavy
infantry with two thousand five hundred
targeteers,
while the barbarians with Cyrus reached
a
total of one hundred thousand. He had
too
about twenty scythe-chariots. The enemy's
forces were reported to number one
million
two hundred thousand, with two hundred
scythe-chariots,
besides which he had six thousand cavalry
under Artagerses. These formed the
immediate
vanguard of the king himself. The royal
army
was marshalled by four generals or
field-marshals,
each in command of three hundred thousand
men. Their names were Abrocomas, Tissaphernes,
Gobryas, and Arbaces. (But of this
total
not more than nine hundred thousand
were
engaged in the battle, with one hundred
and
fifty scythe-chariots; since Abrocomas,
on
his march from Phoenicia, arrived five
days
too late for the battle.) Such was
the information
brought to Cyrus by deserters who came
in
from the king's army before the battle,
and
it was corroborated after the battle
by those
of the enemy who were taken prisoners.
From this place Cyrus advanced one stage--three
parasangs--with the whole body of his
troops,
Hellenic and barbarian alike in order
of
battle. He expected the king to give
battle
the same day, for in the middle of
this day's
march a deep sunk trench was reached,
thirty
feet broad, and eighteen feet deep.
The trench
was carried inland through the plain,
twelve
parasang's distance, to the wall of
Media[1].
[Here are canals, flowing from the
river
Tigris; they are four in number, each
a hundred
feet broad, and very deep, with corn
ships
plying upon 15 them; they empty themselves
into the Euphrates, and are at intervals
of one parasang apart, and are spanned
by
bridges.]
[1] For "the wall of Media" see
Grote, "Hist. of Greece,"
vol.
ix. p. 87 and foll. note 1 (1st ed.), and various
authorities there quoted or referred
to.
The next passage enclosed in [] may
possibly
be a commentator's or editor's note,
but,
on the whole, I have thought it best
to keep
the words in the text instead of relegating
them, as heretofore, to a note. Perhaps
some
future traveller may clear up all difficulties.
Between the Euphrates and the trench was
a narrow passage, twenty feet only
in breadth.
The trench itself had been constructed
by
the great king upon hearing of Cyrus's
approach,
to serve as a line of defence. Through
this
narrow passage then Cyrus and his army
passed,
and found themselves safe inside the
trench.
So there was no battle to be fought
with
the king that day; only there were
numerous
unmistakable traces of horse and infantry
in retreat. Here Cyrus summoned Silanus,
his Ambraciot soothsayer, and presented
him
with three thousand darics; because
eleven
days back, when sacrificing, he had
told
him that the king would not fight within
ten days, and Cyrus had answered: "Well,
then, if he does not fight within that
time,
he will not fight at all; and if your
prophecy
comes true, I promise you ten talents."
So now, that the ten days were passed,
he
presented him with the above sum.
But as the king had failed to hinder the
passage of Cyrus's army at the trench,
Cyrus
himself and the rest concluded that
he must
have abandoned the idea of offering
battle,
so that next day Cyrus advanced with
less
than his former caution. On the third
day
he was conducting the march, seated
in his
carriage, with only a small body of
troops
drawn up in front of him. The mass
of the
army was moving on in no kind of order:
the
soldiers having consigned their heavy
arms
to be carried in the wagons or on the
backs
of beasts.
VIII
It was already about full market time[1]
and the halting-place at 1 which the
army
was to take up quarters was nearly
reached,
when Pategyas, a Persian, a trusty
member
of Cyrus's personal staff, came galloping
up at full speed on his horse, which
was
bathed in sweat, and to every one he
met
he shouted in Greek and Persian, as
fast
as he could ejaculate the words: "The
king is advancing with a large army
ready
for battle." Then ensued a scene
of
wild confusion. The Hellenes and all
alike
were expecting to be attacked on the
instant,
and before they could form their lines.
Cyrus
sprang from his carriage and donned
his corselet;
then leaping on to his charger's back,
with
the javelins firmly clutched, he passed
the
order to the rest, to arm themselves
and
fall into their several ranks.
[1] I. e. between 9 and 10 A. M.
The orders were carried out with alacrity;
the ranks shaped themselves. Clearchus
held
the right wing resting on the Euphrates,
Proxenus was next, and after him the
rest,
while Menon with his troops held the
Hellenic
left. Of the Asiatics, a body of Paphlagonian
cavalry, one thousand strong, were
posted
beside Clearchus on the right, and
with them
stood the Hellenic peltasts. On the
left
was Ariaeus, Cyrus's second in command,
and
the rest of the barbarian host. Cyrus
was
with his bodyguard of cavalry about
six hundred
strong, all armed with corselets like
Cyrus,
and cuirasses and helmets; but not
so Cyrus:
he went into battle with head unhelmeted[2].
So too all the horses with Cyrus wore
forehead-pieces
and breast-pieces, and the troopers
carried
short Hellenic swords.
[2] The MSS. add, "to expose oneself
to the risks of war bareheaded is,
it is
said, a practice common to the Persians,"
which I regard as a commentator's note,
if
not an original marginal note of some
early
editor, possibly of the author himself.
The
"Cyropaedeia" is full of
such comments,
"pieces justificatives" inserted
into the text.
It was now mid-day, and the enemy was not
yet in sight; but with the approach
of afternoon
was seen dust like a white cloud, and
after
a considerable interval a black pall
as it
were spread far and high above the
plain.
As they came nearer, very soon was
seen here
and there a glint of bronze and spear-points;
and the ranks could plainly be distinguished.
On the left were troopers wearing white
cuirasses.
That is Tissaphernes in command, they
said,
and next to these a body of men bearing
wicker-shields,
and next again heavy-armed infantry,
with
long wooden shields reaching to the
feet.
These were the Egyptians, they said,
and
then other cavalry, other bowmen; all
were
in national divisions, each nation
marching
in densely-crowded 10 squares. And
all along
their front was a line of chariots
at considerable
intervals from one another--the famous
scythe-chariots,
as they were named--having their scythes
fitted to the axle-trees and stretching
out
slantwise, while others protruded under
the
chariot-seats, facing the ground, so
as to
cut through all they encountered. The
design
was to let them dash full speed into
the
ranks of the Hellenes and cut them
through.
Curiously enough the anticipation of Cyrus,
when at the council of war he admonished
the Hellenes not to mind the shouting
of
the Asiatics, was not justified. Instead
of shouting, they came on in deep silence,
softly and slowly, with even tread.
At this
instant, Cyrus, riding past in person,
accompanied
by Pigres, his interpreter, and three
or
four others, called aloud to Clearchus
to
advance against the enemy's centre,
for there
the king was to be found: "And
if we
strike home at this point," he
added,
"our work is finished." Clearchus,
though he could see the compact body
at the
centre, and had been told by Cyrus
that the
king lay outside the Hellenic left
(for,
owing to numerical superiority, the
king,
while holding his own centre, could
well
overlap Cyrus's extreme left), still
hesitated
to draw off his right wing from the
river,
for fear of being turned on both flanks;
and he simply replied, assuring Cyrus
that
he would take care all went well.
At this time the barbarian army was evenly
advancing, and the Hellenic division
was
still riveted to the spot, completing
its
formation as the various contingents
came
up. Cyrus, riding past at some distance
from
the lines, glanced his eye first in
one direction
and then in the other, so as to take
a complete
survey of friends and foes; when Xenophon
the Athenian, seeing him, rode up from
the
Hellenic quarter to meet him, asking
him
whether he had any orders to give.
Cyrus,
pulling up his horse, begged him to
make
the announcement generally known that
the
omens from the victims, internal and
external
alike, were good[3]. While he was still
speaking,
he heard a confused murmur 16 passing
through
the ranks, and asked what it meant.
The other
replied that it was the watchword being
passed
down for the second time. Cyrus wondered
who had given the order, and asked
what the
watchword was. On being told it was
"Zeus
our Saviour and Victory," he replied,
"I accept it; so let it be,"
and
with that remark rode away to his own
position.
And now the two battle lines were no
more
than three or four furlongs apart,
when the
Hellenes began chanting the paean,
and at
the same time advanced against the
enemy.
[3] I. e. the omens from inspecting the innards
of the victims, and the omens from
the acts
and movements of the victims.
But with the forward movement a certain portion
of the line curved onwards in advance,
with
wave-like sinuosity, and the portion
left
behind quickened to a run; and simultaneously
a thrilling cry burst from all lips,
like
that in honour of the war-god--eleleu!
eleleu!
and the running became general. Some
say
they clashed their shields and spears,
thereby
causing terror to the horses[4]; and
before
they had got within arrowshot the barbarians
swerved and took to flight. And now
the Hellenes
gave chase with might and main, checked
only
by shouts to one another not to race,
but
to keep their ranks. The enemy's chariots,
reft of their charioteers, swept onwards,
some through the enemy themselves,
others
past the Hellenes. They, as they saw
them
coming, opened a gap and let them pass.
One
fellow, like some dumbfoundered mortal
on
a racecourse, was caught by the heels,
but
even he, they said, received no hurt,
nor
indeed, with the single exception of
some
one on the left wing who was said to
have
been wounded by an arrow, did any Hellene
in this battle suffer a single hurt.
[4] Some critics regard this sentence as
an editor's or commentator's note.
Cyrus, seeing the Hellene's conquering, as
far as they at any rate were concerned,
and
in hot pursuit, was well content; but
in
spite of his joy and the salutations
offered
him at that moment by those about 21
him,
as though he were already king, he
was not
led away to join in the pursuit, but
keeping
his squadron of six hundred horsemen
in cloe
order, waited and watched to see what
the
king himself would do. The king, he
knew,
held the centre of the Persian army.
Indeed
it is the fashion for the Asiatic monarch
to occupy that position during action,
for
this twofold reason: he holds the safest
place, with his troops on either side
of
him, while, if he has occasion to despatch
any necessary rider along the lines,
his
troops will receive the message in
half the
time. The king accordingly on this
occasion
held the centre of his army, but for
all
that, he was outside Cyrus's left wing;
and
seeing that no one offered him battle
in
front, nor yet the troops in front
of him,
he wheeled as if to encircle the enemy.
It
was then that Cyrus, in apprehension
lest
the king might get round to the rear
and
cut to pieces the Hellenic body, charged
to meet him. Attacking with his six
hundred,
he mastered the line of troops in front
of
the king, and put to flight the six
thousand,
cutting down, as is said, with his
own hand
their general, Artagerses.
But as soon as the rout commenced, Cyrus's
own six hundred themselves, in the
ardour
of pursuit, were scattered, with the
exception
of a handful who were left with Cyrus
himself--chiefly
his table companions, so-called. Left
alone
with these, he caught sight of the
king,
and the close throng about him. Unable
longer
to contain himself, with a cry, "I
see
the man," he rushed at him and
dealt
a blow at his chest, wounding him through
the corselet. This, according to the
statement
of Ctesias the surgeon[5], who further
states
that he himself healed the wound. As
Cyrus
delivered the blow, some one struck
him with
a javelin under the eye severely; and
in
the struggle which then ensued between
the
king and Cyrus and those about them
to protect
one or other, we have the statement
of Ctesias
as to the number slain 27 on the king's
side,
for he was by his side. On the other,
Cyrus
himself fell, and eight of his bravest
companions
lay on the top of him. The story says
that
Artapes, the trustiest among his wand-wearers,
when he saw that Cyrus had fallen to
the
ground, leapt from his horse and threw
his
arms about him. Then, as one account
says,
the king bade one slay him as a worthy
victim
to his brother: others say that Artapates
drew his scimitar and slew himself
by his
own hand. A golden scimitar it is true,
he
had; he wore also a collar and bracelets
and the other ornaments such as the
noblest
Persians wear; for his kindliness and
fidelity
had won him honours at the hands of
Cyrus.
[5] "Ctesias, the son of Ctesiochus,
was a physician of Cnidos. Seventeen
years
of his life were passed at the court
of Persia,
fourteen in the service of Darios,
three
in that of Artaxerxes; he returned
to Greece
in 398 B. C.," and "was employed
by Artaxerxes in diplomatic services."
See Mure; also Ch. Muller, for his
life and
works. He wrote (1) a history on Persian
affairs in three parts--Assyrian, Median,
Persian--with a chapter "On Tributes;" (2) a history of Indian affairs (written
in the vein of Sir John Maundeville,
Kt.);
(3) a Periplus; (4) a treatise on Mountains; (5) a treatise on Rivers.
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