<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLIV">CHAPTER XLIV<br/> <span class="subhead">THE DREAM OF XERXES</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">Xerxes,</span> the new ruler of Persia, looked every inch a king.
He was tall and handsome, standing head and shoulders
above the great warriors he led to battle. But although he
looked a king among men, in character he was most unkingly,
for he was both weak and foolish. It is true that he was
sometimes good-natured, but it was not wise for his people
to trust his temper, for he was often seized by sudden fits
of rage, when he would do deeds of terrible cruelty.</p>
<p>In 483 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Xerxes put down a revolt in Egypt. Then
his captain and kinsman, Mardonius, begged the king to go
to Greece to avenge the Persian defeat at Marathon.</p>
<p>‘O king,’ said Mardonius, ‘it is not seemly that the
Athenians, who have done much wrong to the Persians,
should not suffer for their doings.... And now, will any
one dare to face thee, O king, with thy great army from Asia
and all thy ships? Sure I am that the Greeks are not so
desperate. But if I am wrong and in their rash folly they
come out to battle, they will find that of all men we are the
bravest.’</p>
<p>To tempt Xerxes yet farther to do as he wished,
Mardonius told him how fair a country Europe was, how
rich in fruit and trees. ‘Such a country,’ said the subtle
flatterer, ‘should belong to none save to thee, O king.’
Mardonius hoped that if Greece was made a province of
Persia, he himself would become her ruler.</p>
<p>But while Mardonius urged one thing, Artabanus the
king’s uncle urged another.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span></p>
<p>‘Thou, O king,’ said Artabanus, ‘art going against men ... who
are said to be most brave and strong both by sea
and land. And it is right I should say why we ought to fear
them. Thou sayest that thou wilt make a bridge over the
Hellespont and carry thine army through Europe against
Hellas: and so we may be beaten either by land or by sea
or by both; for the men are said to be strong, and it would
seem that they are, if by themselves alone the Athenians
destroyed the great host that landed at Marathon.’</p>
<p>Now Xerxes was, as I told you, a timid king. So as he
listened now to one, now to another of his counsellors, he did
not know what to do. First he thought that he would go
to Greece, then he thought that he would not go. One night,
while he still hesitated, the king had a strange dream. In
his dream a man fair and tall stood over him, who said,
‘Dost thou repent, O Persian, from leading an army against
Hellas, when thou hast charged thy people to gather their
hosts together? Thou doest not well in thy change of
counsel, neither is there any one who will forgive thee. Go
thou on the road in which thou didst purpose to walk on the
day that is past.’</p>
<p>When Xerxes awoke he tried to thrust away the memory
of his dream, for he now wished to follow the advice of
Artabanus and stay at home.</p>
<p>But the next night, as he slept, he saw the same fair, tall
man, who chided him for putting aside his words ‘as though
they had never been spoken.’ ‘But be thou sure,’ he said,
‘that if thou set not out forthwith, as thou hast become great
and mighty in a little while, so in a little while shalt thou be
made low.’</p>
<p>The king awoke from this second dream in sudden fear,
and springing from his bed, he bade his servants bring
Artabanus to him without delay.</p>
<p>When his uncle stood before him, Xerxes told his vision
in feverish haste.</p>
<p>‘Now if it be a god who sends it,’ said the king, ‘and if it<span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span>
must be that an army go against Hellas, then the same vision
will come to thee.’</p>
<p>The foolish king then begged Artabanus to put on his
clothes, to sit upon his throne, and afterwards to lie down
upon his bed.</p>
<p>At first Artabanus refused to do as the king wished. For
he said, ‘If the vision must come, it ought to come to me no
more if I put on thy dress than if I wear my own, and if I
rest on thy couch than if I sleep on my own. For that which
comes to thee in thy sleep, whatever it be, is surely not so
silly as to think on seeing me that it looks upon thee, judging
by thy vesture.’</p>
<p>But at length Artabanus was persuaded to do as the king
wished, and lo! when he had lain down on the royal couch,
‘the dream of Xerxes came and stood over him, saying,
“Neither now nor hereafter shalt thou go unscathed, if
thou seekest to turn aside that which must be.”’ Then the
dream appeared as though it were about to sear out his eyes
with hot irons.</p>
<p>Artabanus awoke in great fear, and leaping from the couch
he told Xerxes what he had seen and heard. From that
night Artabanus was as ready as Mardonius to urge the king
to invade Greece.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span></p>
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