<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XLVII">CHAPTER XLVII<br/> <span class="subhead">THE BATTLE OF THERMOPYLAE</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">Xerxes</span> looked on while his soldiers fought at the entrance
to the pass. And they did their best, for they were unwilling
that their king should see them beaten back by men
who had spent their days in games or in bedecking their hair.
But they could not stand against the fierce attacks of the
Spartans, and at length, when many of their number had been
slain, they withdrew.</p>
<p>The king then ordered his own chosen bodyguard, the
ten thousand famous Immortals, to advance against the
gallant defenders of the pass.</p>
<p>Even at the approach of these renowned warriors, the
Spartans did not waver. They pretended to flee, only to
turn and slay the barbarians who had followed them into
the pass. At length after a furious conflict, the Immortals
were forced to give way and return to their camp.</p>
<p>Three times as he watched his Immortals, Xerxes sprang
from his throne, thinking that all was lost. But the next
day he sent them against the foe once more, for now he
believed that the Spartans would be too weary to fight.</p>
<p>But Leonidas was careful of the little band he commanded.
It was easy to hold the pass with only a small
number of men. As each company grew tired, the king
ordered it to withdraw and sent a fresh one to take its place.
Soon the entrance to the pass was choked with the dead
bodies of the barbarians.</p>
<p>Some of the most valiant of Xerxes’ warriors were next
sent against the enemy. But they were cowed by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span>
bravery of the Spartans, and as they saw their comrades
falling around them, they turned to flee. Then their officers
drove them back with lashes.</p>
<p>For two days, the terrible slaughter never ceased, and
Xerxes was almost ready to leave the pass to its brave
defenders, so hopeless seemed the task of taking it.</p>
<p>But that night, a Greek named Ephialtes came to the
great king, and for a large sum of money, he offered to show
the Persians a path which led over the hill down to the pass
of Thermopylae. The path was the tiny track that was
guarded by the Phocians.</p>
<p>The offer of the traitor was at once accepted, and at midnight
Xerxes sent his officer Hydarmes, at the head of his
Immortals, to follow Ephialtes.</p>
<p>‘All night long they followed the path with the mountains
on the right and on the left. The day was dawning when
they reached the peak of the mountain, and there the
thousand Phocians were keeping watch and guarding the
pathway. While the Persians were climbing the hill, the
Phocians knew not of their coming, for the whole hill was
covered with oak trees, but they knew what had happened
when the Persians reached the summit. Not a breath of
wind was stirring, and they heard the trampling of their
feet as they trod on the fallen oak leaves.’</p>
<p>No sooner had they heard than the arrows of the
Immortals were pouring in upon them. They fell back,
leaving the pathway free, while they hastily put on their
armour and prepared to fight to the death. They did not
dream that the Immortals had no wish to fight with them.
But so it was, for the Persians took no more notice of them,
but finding the hill path free, they sped downward to the pass
to take the Spartans in the rear. The Phocians were left
alone on the heights almost before they were aware.</p>
<p>Leonidas had heard of the treachery of Ephialtes soon
after the traitor left the Persian king. He knew that to try
to hold the pass now that he would be attacked in the rear<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
was certain death. Yet the brave king did not hesitate, for
his orders had been to hold the pass at all costs.</p>
<p>Nor did he waver as he remembered the ominous words
of the oracle, ‘Sparta must be overthrown or one of her
kings must perish.’ It seemed that he was the king who was
doomed to die, but what of that if his country was saved?</p>
<p>He resolved that to Sparta alone should belong the glory
of the defence of Thermopylae. So while there was still
time, he sent away all his allies, keeping with him only his
three hundred Spartans, seven hundred Thespians who
refused to leave him, and four hundred Boeotians, lest they
should join the enemy.</p>
<p>Then ‘when the sun arose, Xerxes poured out wine to
the gods and the barbarians arose for the onset, and the
men of Leonidas knew now that they must die.’ But they
would die fighting, and before they were attacked in the rear
they would do great deeds.</p>
<p>Fierce and desperate was their defence, and before the
fury of their blows the barbarians fell in heaps. Once again,
the Persian officers, armed with whips, had to drive their
men forward to face the small but undaunted band.</p>
<p>In the confusion many of the great host of Xerxes were
pushed into the sea, while many more were trampled to
death by their comrades.</p>
<p>So furious was the struggle, that at length the spears of
the Spartans were broken in their hands. In a moment,
they had seized their swords and hundreds of the Persians
fell before their terrible thrusts.</p>
<p>But now the worst that could befall the Spartans
happened. Leonidas, their brave king Leonidas, was slain
where he fought in the forefront of the battle. A terrible
struggle at once began for the body of the king.</p>
<p>Four times the Spartans drove back the Persians, and
then with one tremendous effort they carried away the
body of their king.</p>
<p>It was at this moment that the Immortals, led by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>
traitor, Ephialtes, reached the pass. The Spartans hastily
withdrew behind the wall, which had been repaired by the
order of their king. Here, on a hillock, ‘they defended themselves
to the last, such as had swords using them, and the
others resisting with their hands and teeth; till the barbarians,
who had in part pulled down the wall and attacked
them in front, in part had gone round and now encircled them
upon every side, overwhelmed and buried the remnant which
was left, beneath showers of missile weapons.’</p>
<p>As you read the story of the brave defence of Thermopylae,
you do not wonder that Leonidas and his three hundred
Spartans have won for themselves immortal fame.</p>
<p>On the hillock where the little band took their last stand,
a stone lion was placed in honour of king Leonidas, while in
the pass itself a pillar was erected on which were written these
<span class="locked">words:—</span></p>
<div class="poetry-container">
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse indentsq">‘Go, tell the Spartans, thou that passest by,</div>
<div class="verse indent0">That here obedient to their laws we lie.’</div>
</div></div>
</div>
<p>When the battle was over, Xerxes ordered his men to
search for the body of Leonidas. When it was found he
ordered the head to be cut off and the body to be hung upon
a cross.</p>
<p>It was the custom of the Persians to honour the bodies of
those who had fallen fighting bravely against them. This
unusual and cruel treatment was but a proof of the fear the
brave Spartan had inspired in the heart of Xerxes. Nor
could the king forget that he had been on the point of leaving
the pass in the hands of its brave defenders.</p>
<p>Demaratus could not look at the slaughter of his countrymen
unmoved. He had seemed to be a friend of the great
king, yet now he longed to warn the Spartans who had
stayed at home that the Persians were ready to march
against them.</p>
<p>But how could he send a message unknown to the
Persians. He soon thought of a strange and less cruel way<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
than had Histiaeus, who, you remember, branded his secret
on the head of his slave.</p>
<p>The exiled king took a writing tablet and scraped away
the wax on which letters were usually engraved. On the
wood beneath he scratched the message he wished to send.
He then poured melted wax on the top of what he had
written, and the tablet looked as any other tablet looked.</p>
<p>When it reached Sparta, the peopled studied it with
amazement. There was a tablet, but where was the
message? They turned it this way and that, they peered
at it now on one side, now on another—nothing was to
be seen.</p>
<p>Then Gorgo, whom you heard of last as a little maiden
of eight years old, gave the people advice as wise as she had
given to her royal father long before. She was grown up
since those days and had been married to brave king
Leonidas.</p>
<p>‘Scrape off the wax,’ she said to the people, ‘and see if
the message lies on the wood beneath.’</p>
<p>And when this was done, there stood the warning words
of Demaratus, so that all might read.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span></p>
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