<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XCIV">CHAPTER XCIV<br/> <span class="subhead">THE GORDIAN KNOT</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">After</span> the battle of Granicus, many Persian towns submitted
to the conqueror. Those along the coast of Asia
Minor that refused to open their gates, the king quickly
subdued.</p>
<p>During the winter he reached a city called Gordion,
about which a strange story is told.</p>
<p>In the citadel of Gordion was an old, roughly built wagon,
which had once belonged to a peasant named Gordius.
Long, long ago Gordius had ridden into the town in his
wagon, and the oracle had declared that this peasant had
been chosen by the gods to be king of Phrygia, in which
country Gordion stood.</p>
<p>When Gordius was made king, almost the first thing he
did was to dedicate his wagon to the gods, tying the yoke
to the pole with fibre taken from the bark of a tree. The
Gordion knot, as it was named, was twisted and tangled in
a bewildering way, and looked as though it would defy the
most skilful fingers to untie. Yet an oracle had said that
whoever should succeed in undoing this wonderful knot
would become king over all Asia.</p>
<p>Many men who wished to wear a crown came to Gordion
to try to undo the knot, but not one of them had been able
to unravel the twisted fibre.</p>
<p>When Alexander, with his victorious army, rode into
Gordion, every one wondered if the king would be able
to untie the famous knot.</p>
<p>Alexander was not long in going to see the ancient wagon.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">319</span>
He looked at the puzzling knot and soon saw that he would
not be able to untie it.</p>
<p>But he did not mean to be beaten. He would solve the
problem in his own way. So taking his sword in his impatient
hands, with one swift stroke he cut the formidable
knot in two.</p>
<p>The onlookers, both Phrygians and Macedonians, shouted
with delight, for lo! the oracle was fulfilled, and Alexander
would become monarch of Asia.</p>
<p>As the knot was cut in twain, a great thunderstorm raged
over the town, and the people said, ‘It is Zeus who sends
the storm to show that he is pleased that the prophecy is
fulfilled.’</p>
<p>While Alexander had been conquering the towns along
the coast of Asia, Darius had been gathering together another
great army, which numbered, so it was said, six hundred
thousand men. The king himself commanded the vast
army, and in the spring of 333 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> he set out to find
Alexander.</p>
<p>Darius was not a skilful general, nor was he a brave king,
but he had no doubt that he would conquer Alexander.</p>
<p>When Alexander still lingered in one of the coast towns,
Darius deemed that it was cowardice that kept him there,
so little did he know of the character of his foe. It was illness
alone that kept Alexander from advancing against the
great king.</p>
<p>Some said that it was the hardships of the battlefield
that had made the king ill, others that while he was still
heated after a long march he had bathed in a river, the waters
of which were very cold.</p>
<p>To the dismay of his soldiers, who adored their brave
leader, the king grew worse and worse. He was so ill that
it seemed that he must die.</p>
<p>His physicians were afraid to give the king medicine, for
should he die they would be accused of giving him poison.</p>
<p>At length one of the physicians, named Philip, to whom<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">320</span>
Alexander had shown great kindness, determined that whatever
happened to him, he would do his utmost to save the
king’s life.</p>
<p>Alexander himself was content to take what Philip
ordered, so impatient was he to be well and at the head of
his army once again.</p>
<p>So Philip left the king for a few moments to prepare
the medicine that he believed would cure him.</p>
<p>While he was absent, a letter was brought to Alexander
from his officer Parmenio. It besought the king not to trust
Philip, as he had been bribed by Darius to poison him. Vast
sums of money and the hand of the great king’s daughter,
said Parmenio, were to be the reward of the physician.</p>
<p>When Alexander had read the letter, he put it under his
pillow, showing it to no one, not even to his beloved friend
Hephæstion. He had no sooner done so than Philip returned
with the medicine. The king took it without hesitation.
Then, drawing the letter from beneath his pillow, he bade
his physician read it.</p>
<p>Philip was horrified as he read the false accusation, and
flinging himself down by the bed, he entreated the king to
trust him and to fear nothing.</p>
<p>The drug was a powerful one, and after taking it the
king was unconscious for hours. His nurses whispered to
one another that he was dead.</p>
<p>But after a time he opened his eyes, weak indeed, but
no longer in danger. Philip tended him until his strength
returned, and he was at length able to go out to show himself
to his Macedonians. For they had been in constant fear
lest aught should befall their king, and nothing would satisfy
them until they had seen his face.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">321</span></p>
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