<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLV">CHAPTER XLV<br/> <span class="subhead">XERXES ORDERS THE HELLESPONT TO BE SCOURGED</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">In</span> the autumn of 481 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Xerxes led his vast hosts to Sardis.
His warriors were of many different races, and each was clad
in the dress of the country from which he came. Each,
too, was armed with his own weapon, and each talked his
own language. So you can picture to yourself with what a
strange army Xerxes set out to conquer Greece.</p>
<p>From Sardis he sent heralds, with an interpreter, into
Greece, to demand from the people earth and water, the signs
of their subjection to the great king of Persia.</p>
<p>Themistocles was so angry with the interpreter, who was
a barbarian, for daring to utter the demands of Xerxes in the
Greek language, that he ordered him to be put to death.</p>
<p>Another messenger was then sent by Xerxes, and he
brought with him gold to bribe the Athenians to join the
Persians. Him also Themistocles punished.</p>
<p>Now that danger was near, the Athenians recalled
Aristides from exile. They were afraid lest he should join
the Persians, for they knew that if he did so, many of his
friends would go over to the enemy with him. But it was a
needless fear, and the citizens might well have trusted the
exile not to betray his country. Even before he knew that
his banishment was over, Aristides had begun to stir up the
Greeks that were with him to fight against the Persians.</p>
<p>Themistocles, too, was using all his influence to persuade
the different States to lay aside the quarrels they had with
one another and to fight together against the force that was
coming to invade their land.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span></p>
<p>Meanwhile Xerxes, to avoid sailing across the Hellespont
with his vast army, ordered a bridge to be built across it.
But soon after the bridge was finished, a violent storm
dashed it into fragments.</p>
<p>When Xerxes heard of the disaster, his cruel and childish
temper was roused. He ordered the engineers who had
planned the bridge to be beheaded, and that was a cruel act.
He also commanded that the Hellespont should be scourged
with three hundred stripes and that a pair of fetters should
be cast into the sea, and these were foolish acts. ‘He sent
branders, too, as some say, to brand the Hellespont; and he
charged them to rebuke the water and cry unto it, “O bitter
water, thus doth the king punish thee, because without wrong
from him thou hast done him harm.”’</p>
<p>Before long a new bridge was built, with hedges planted
on either side, so that the horses as they passed across might
not be frightened by seeing the water.</p>
<p>First of the great host came a thousand gallant Persian
troops, followed by a thousand spearmen. The points of
their lances were turned downward; on the handles, which
were held aloft, shone golden pomegranates.</p>
<p>Ten sacred horses, with splendid trappings, stepped
behind the spearmen, while after the horses came a chariot,
dedicated to Zeus, and drawn by eight white horses. No
driver was allowed to mount the sacred chariot, he might
only walk behind, holding the reins in his hands.</p>
<p>Xerxes himself was in another chariot, surrounded by a
thousand guards, bearing spears, upon which glistened
apples of gold. Ten thousand of the king’s own bodyguard
were named the Immortals, for, if one of their number was
slain or if one died, his place was at once filled, so that
the number of the Immortals might never become less.</p>
<p>As I told you, the Persian army was made up of many
different tribes.</p>
<p>‘Æthiopians from beyond Egypt were there, clad in
leopard skins, and carrying bows made of the central rib of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
the palm leaf, while their arrows were reeds tipped with
sharp fragments of stone. They carried as well spears,
pointed with gazelles’ horns or knotted clubs. Half their
body they painted white and half red before going into
battle.’ Some had no arms but only a lasso and a long
knife; others bore staves that had had their points hardened
in the fire.</p>
<p>From Caucasus came wild tribes that had no armour to
protect their bodies, and only wooden hats to guard their
heads.</p>
<p>Xerxes’s army was indeed vast, but with so many half-clad
and but poorly armed barbarians in his ranks, he
would, had he been wise, have feared to face the small but
well-armed and well-trained forces of the Greeks.</p>
<p>On the shore of the Hellespont a throne of white stone
or marble was placed, and here Xerxes took his seat to
watch his army cross the bridge which led from Asia into
Europe.</p>
<p>But before the vast host began to move ‘Xerxes poured
wine from a golden cup into the sea and prayed to the Sun
that no harm might happen to him, which might prevent
him from conquering all Europe. Then he threw the cup
into the Hellespont with a golden goblet and a Persian
dagger.’</p>
<p>It is said that the king called himself a happy man as he
watched the countless numbers of his troops crossing the
bridge. But soon after Artabanus was amazed to see him
burst into tears.</p>
<p>‘O king,’ he said, ‘thou doest strange things; even now
thou didst call thyself happy and yet thou weepest.’</p>
<p>‘Thought came upon me and sorrow for the shortness of
the life of man,’ answered Xerxes, ‘because after a hundred
years, of all this great host not one shall remain alive.’</p>
<p>When the army had crossed the bridge, it marched on
toward the plain of Thessaly, while the fleet, sailing round the
south-east point of the same country, anchored near the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>
promontory of Magnesia. Here it was as near to the army
as it was possible for it to be. Not long after the fleet had
anchored, a sudden storm arose, and for three days did much
damage to the ships.</p>
<p>The Greeks meanwhile had been preparing to fight the
invaders. They had sent spies to Sardis to find out, not
only the numbers of the Persian host, but its mettle.</p>
<p>As it chanced, the spies were captured and were on the
point of being put to death, when Xerxes ordered them to be
brought before him.</p>
<p>When they stood in his presence, he demanded why they
had ventured into the camp of the enemy. On hearing the
reason he bade an officer show them the strength of his army
and then send them back unharmed to their own country,
‘For,’ said the king, ‘if the spies had been killed, the Greeks
could not have heard beforehand of all my great might, yet it
would do them but little hurt to slay three men. But now
will I have no trouble by marching against them, when the
spies have already told of my mighty army.’</p>
<p>So confident was the king that he would conquer the
enemy without difficulty, that when vessels filled with corn
sailed past his fleet on the way to Athens, he would not allow
any of his ships to pursue them.</p>
<p>‘Whither are they sailing?’ asked Xerxes when the corn
ships were pointed out to him.</p>
<p>‘To thy enemies, O king, laden with corn,’ answered his
anxious councillors.</p>
<p>‘Why, we are going thither also,’ said the king. ‘What
harm do they do by taking corn for me?’</p>
<p>Now that the Persians were actually at hand the Spartans
and Athenians summoned the Greek states to a council of
war to be held at the Isthmus of Corinth. But some of the
states were afraid, and instead of attending the council they
sent earth and water to Xerxes.</p>
<p>Thessaly, in the north, would be the first to suffer from
the invading army. So a Greek force was sent to the Pass<span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span>
of Tempe, between Mount Olympus and Mount Ossa, to try
to stop the advance of the Persians.</p>
<p>But there were other ways by which the enemy could
slip past the Greeks, so after a time they determined to withdraw
from Thessaly. The northern people, being thus left
defenceless, hastened to submit to Xerxes while there was
still time.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span></p>
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