<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XCIII">CHAPTER XCIII<br/> <span class="subhead">THE BATTLE OF GRANICUS</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">Before</span> Alexander crossed the Hellespont he had seen that
the opposite shore was held by his Macedonians. While the
army landed he himself sailed to the ‘Harbour of the
Achæans.’ Midway in the strait he took a golden dish in
his hand, and flung from it an offering to Poseidon and to
the Nereids. It is said that the king himself steered the
ship in which he sailed to the Mysian shore.</p>
<p>Crossing the plain of Troy, the king climbed the hill of
Ilion, and here in a forsaken little town he found a temple
to Athene, to whom he offered sacrifice. He left his own
armour in the temple, taking in its place an ancient suit
that had once been hung upon the walls, a trophy of war.</p>
<p>On the tomb of his ancestor, Achilles, he laid a garland,
while Hephæstion, his beloved friend, placed one on the grave
of Patroclus. The old Greek stories had entered into the
very fibre of the young king, and in this way he did honour,
as he deemed, to his glorious ancestor. He felt ready now
to do deeds as great as his hero had done.</p>
<p>When Alexander rejoined his army, it had advanced
to the river Granicus, and there, on the opposite bank, was
a great force under Darius, king of Persia. Alexander
would have to conquer this great host before he could
advance into Asia.</p>
<p>One of his officers, named Parmenio, begged the king to
wait to cross the river until early the next morning, when
the enemy would not be drawn up in battle array.</p>
<p>‘I should be ashamed,’ answered the king, ‘having<span class="pagenum" id="Page_316">316</span>
crossed the Hellespont to be detained by a miserable stream
like the Granicus.’ He then ordered the army to advance,
and himself dashed into the river, followed by his horse-guards.</p>
<p>The Granicus was not a river to be despised, for the
current was strong, and the horses kept their feet with
difficulty.</p>
<p>A storm of arrows was poured upon the struggling horses
and their riders, and it seemed as though the attempt to
cross in the face of the foe would be useless. But the king
refused to be daunted, and the soldiers followed their intrepid
leader, until at length they reached the opposite bank.</p>
<p>But to clamber up the bank was no easy matter. The
sides of the river were slippery, and the horses having no
firm foothold, stumbled and fell. Only after great and
repeated efforts did Alexander and those who followed him
reach the top of the bank. Wet and exhausted, they had
no time to form their ranks before the Persians dashed upon
them. A desperate hand-to-hand fight was at once begun.</p>
<p>The enemy was quick to notice Alexander, for he wore
a large plume of white feathers in his helmet, while his
buckler was more splendid than that of any of his soldiers.</p>
<p>Two Persian officers, wishing to win the glory of having
killed the king, attacked him together. One of them, riding
close to Alexander, rose in his stirrups, and brought his
battle-axe down with all his strength upon the helmet of
the king. So fierce was the blow that the crest was torn
away along with one of the plumes, while the axe cut its
way through the helmet, until the edge touched Alexander’s
hair.</p>
<p>Again the officer raised his axe, but ere he could strike,
Clitus, the foster-brother of Alexander, slew the officer with
his sword and the king was saved.</p>
<p>The famous phalanx of the Macedonians now threw itself
upon the enemy, and the Persians tried in vain to repel the
fierceness of the attack. Soon the whole army was put to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_317">317</span>
flight, all save a band of Greek soldiers who were fighting
for Darius.</p>
<p>These withdrew to a height above the battlefield, and
sent to Alexander to ask for quarter. But the king refused
their request, and ordered his men to attack the little
company.</p>
<p>The Greeks fought desperately, and Alexander lost more
men in this struggle than he had lost in all the rest of the
battle. His horse, which was not the famous Bucephalus,
was killed on the field.</p>
<p>While in this great battle, fought in 334 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> on the banks
of the Granicus, the Persians lost a great number of men,
only thirty-four Macedonians, it is said, were slain.</p>
<p>The spoil was enormous, and Alexander determined that
the Greeks should have a generous share. To Athens he
sent three hundred Persian bucklers to be offered to Athene,
with these words inscribed, ‘Alexander, son of Philip, and
the Grecians, except the Lacedæmonians, won these from
the barbarians who inhabit Asia.’</p>
<p>Athens accepted the king’s offering to their goddess, but
they churlishly refused to send ships to help him to conquer
the coast towns which he must now attack.</p>
<p>While dividing the spoil of the Granicus, Alexander did
not forget his mother. To her he sent all the plate he had
taken, as well as beautiful cloth of wonderful purple dye.
For himself he kept but little.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_318">318</span></p>
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