<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XXXV">CHAPTER XXXV<br/> <span class="subhead">THE BRIDGE OF BOATS</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">Along</span> the western shore of Asia Minor there were many
Greek colonies. One of these was called Ionia, and the chief
city of the Ionian state was Miletus.</p>
<p>The Greeks who lived in these colonies owned, often
against their will, the King of Persia as their overlord. In
time of war they were forced to fight for him.</p>
<p>In 521 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> a great monarch, named Darius, became King
of Persia. He added many kingdoms to his dominions during
the first nine years of his reign. In 512 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> he determined
to conquer Greece and add it also to his possessions.</p>
<p>So he assembled a great army and crossed the Bosphorus,
but instead of going west to Thessaly which lies in the north-east
of Greece, Darius turned first toward the north, and
crossing the Balkans, he reached the river Danube. Beyond
the river lay a wild and desolate country, the home of the
Scythians, who wandered up and down the land, settling
now here, now there, as their fancy pleased.</p>
<p>The ‘great king,’ as the Persian monarchs were often called,
bade the Ionian Greeks, who formed part of his army, throw
a bridge of boats across the river. When this was done he
bade them stay to guard the bridge, while he marched with
the main body of his men into the wild Scythian country.
Should he not return in sixty days, Darius told the Ionians
that they might break up the bridge and go back to their
homes.</p>
<p>No sooner had the great king crossed the bridge and
marched into Scythia, than his difficulties began.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span></p>
<p>The foe he had come to seek was not to be found. Knowing
that they were not strong enough to face Darius in battle,
the Scythians had driven their herds far into the desert,
while they themselves, like shadows, dogged the steps of
the Persian army.</p>
<p>Two months passed, and still the king had not been able
to make the enemy fight. Their shadowy forms were sometimes
seen, but they were never near enough to be attacked.</p>
<p>Darius was unwilling to own that his expedition had been
useless. Yet his men were sick from cold, and their provisions
were nearly at an end, so he had almost made up his
mind to order the retreat. But while he still hesitated, the
story tells that the Scythians sent one of their number to
the great king, carrying with him as gifts a bird, a mouse, a
frog, and five arrows.</p>
<p>The Persians demanded the meaning of these strange
gifts, but the messenger had no answer to give. He had
been but bidden to give them to the great king and return to
his people.</p>
<p>Then Darius called together his council to consider what
the offering might betoken.</p>
<p>The king himself thought that the presents were to show
that the Scythians were ready to surrender their land, for
on it the mouse found its home; their water, for in it dwelt
the frog. The bird was a symbol of their war-steeds, and with
the arrows showed that they were willing to lay down their
arms. Darius was satisfied with his own explanation, but
one of his councillors thought that the gifts had quite a
different meaning.</p>
<p>‘O Persians,’ he cried, ‘listen to my words and be wise.
For unless ye become as birds and fly up into heaven, or go
down like mice beneath the earth, or, becoming frogs, leap
into the lake, ye will not escape being shot by these arrows.’</p>
<p>As he listened to these alarming words, the king thought
that after all perhaps this was the true meaning of the gifts,
so he determined to return to the Danube. But the sick<span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span>
men and the beasts of burden were left behind when the army
set out, for they could not march as quickly as Darius
wished. The groanings of these miserable men and the cries
of the animals were heard by the Scythians, who soon discovered
what had happened and set out in pursuit of Darius
and his army.</p>
<p>Now the Ionians in charge of the bridge had long been
tired of waiting for the return of the great king. He had
perished, they said one to the other, and it would be well for
them to break up the bridge and return to their homes.</p>
<p>Those who longed most to throw off their allegiance to
the Persians muttered that even if the king had not already
perished, he would soon do so, if he reached the Danube
without provisions, to find the bridge was no longer there.</p>
<p>Miltiades, an Athenian, was strongly in favour of withdrawing,
but Histiaeus, tyrant of Miletus, begged the Ionians
to remain, for Darius would come back, of that he felt certain.
Then turning to the other tyrants, he cried, ‘O ye tyrants,
be sure of this, that if we leave the Persians to perish, the
men of our cities will rise up against us, because it is the king
who strengthens us in our power; and if he die, neither shall
I be able to rule in Miletus, nor you in those cities of which
ye are tyrants.’ Then the other tyrants agreed with
Histiaeus that it would be for their own good to wait for the
king.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />