<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_C">CHAPTER C<br/> <span class="subhead">PORUS AND HIS ELEPHANT</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">The</span> Macedonians had now for some time been longing to
march homeward rather than into new and unknown lands.
But Alexander’s ambition was not yet satisfied, and in
327 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> he determined to march into India, to add that land
also to his conquests.</p>
<p>The army was laden with booty, and the king saw that
unless it were left behind the men would not be able to
march. It would be no easy matter to make the soldiers
give up their plunder, but Alexander knew well how to
manage men.</p>
<p>He ordered all his own share of plunder, all his unnecessary
clothing, almost all his ornaments, to be burned. His
courtiers did as they saw their king do, and when the soldiers
were ordered to follow Alexander’s example, they did so
without a murmur, while some even cheered.</p>
<p>Without the plunder the soldiers marched easily, and
soon reached the Punjab, where the king of the district
brought to Alexander’s aid five thousand men.</p>
<p>The army marched on unopposed, until it came to the
river Hydaspes, or as we call it now the Jhelum. Here it
was forced to halt, for on the opposite bank was a powerful
Indian king, named Porus, and a large army.</p>
<p>Porus had with him a number of elephants, and when
they trumpeted, the horses of the Macedonians took flight.
The banks of the river were slippery, and the enemy was
ready with arrows, should the king order his army to cross
the river.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">339</span></p>
<p>Alexander had made up his mind to cross the Hydaspes,
but first he wished to put Porus off his guard.</p>
<p>So night after night, by the king’s orders, a trumpet
called the cavalry to march. It advanced always to the
edge of the river, while Porus, thinking the whole army was
going to cross, commanded his elephants to be moved to
the bank, and his great hosts to be drawn up ready for battle.</p>
<p>Hour after hour the Indians waited, but the Macedonians
never attempted to cross, and so they grew listless and each
night less vigilant. Even Porus began to think the Macedonians
must be cowards, and he paid less and less attention
to their movements. This was what Alexander had expected
would happen.</p>
<p>But one stormy night, when the Indians were off their
guard, the king with part of his army crossed to a wooded
island that lay in the middle of the river. It was a terrible
night. Lightning flashed, thunder crashed, and several of
Alexander’s men were killed as they struggled breast high in
the water. With great difficulty the others reached the farther
side, to find that Porus had realised his danger. A thousand
horsemen and sixty armed chariots awaited the daring king.
But Alexander captured the chariots and slew four hundred
of the cavalry.</p>
<p>The whole Macedonian army had now joined the king,
and a desperate battle was fought. Hour after hour the
conflict raged, neither side gaining the victory.</p>
<p>At length, when the elephants were dead or their riders
slain, when the Indians were flying in every direction, Porus
knew that the day was lost.</p>
<p>Yet he disdained to flee and fought on, seated upon an
elephant of enormous size, for he himself was more than six
feet in height. Only when he was wounded in his shoulder,
did he turn to ride away from the field.</p>
<p>It is told that while the battle was raging the elephant
took the greatest care of his master. And when the animal
saw that the king was faint from his wounds, he knelt down<span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">340</span>
carefully that Porus might not fall. Then with his trunk
he drew out the darts that were left in the body of the king.</p>
<p>Alexander had seen how bravely his enemy had fought,
As he watched him riding from the field, he thought he would
like to speak with so great a warrior, and he sent to ask him
to return. He himself went out to meet the king, and was
amazed at his great height and at his beauty.</p>
<p>When Alexander asked Porus how he wished to be
treated, he answered, ‘As a king.’</p>
<p>‘For my own sake I will do that,’ replied the great king;
‘ask a boon for thy sake.’</p>
<p>‘That,’ said Porus, ‘containeth all.’</p>
<p>As was his way, Alexander treated the fallen king right
royally, giving back to him his kingdom and adding to it
new territories.</p>
<p>Two cities were built close to the battlefield. One was
named Bucephala, after Alexander’s famous horse which,
some say, was wounded and died after the battle. But
others tell that Bucephalus had died shortly before the battle
of old age, for he had lived for thirty years. The king
grieved for the loss of his noble steed as for the loss of a
friend.</p>
<p>This terrible battle made the Macedonians still more
unwilling to advance farther into India.</p>
<p>Before them lay a desert which would take eleven days
to cross. The soldiers could not face a long march in a
strange land, without water and without guides.</p>
<p>When Alexander ordered the army to advance, the
Macedonians who had followed him loyally through every
difficulty, refused to obey.</p>
<p>Nothing he could say would make them advance a step
farther.</p>
<p>‘There they stood, looking hard at the ground with tears
trickling down their cheeks, yet resolute still not to go
forward.’</p>
<p>Then Alexander dismissed them in anger. But the next<span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">341</span>
day he sent for them again and told them that he was going
to advance. They, if they chose to forsake him in a hostile
land, could go back to Macedon.</p>
<p>Still in anger the king left them and went to his tent, and
shut himself up for two days, refusing to see any of his
companions.</p>
<p>Perhaps he thought his obstinate Macedonians would
yield. But although it grieved them to thwart their king,
the soldiers remained firm.</p>
<p>On the third day Alexander left his tent and offered
sacrifices to the gods, as he always did before beginning a
new adventure. But the signs were unfavourable, and
against this the king was not proof. So he sent to tell the
army that he had determined to lead them in the direction
of home.</p>
<p>In a transport of joy the faithful Macedonians hastened
to the king’s tent. Some of them wept as they thanked
‘the unconquered king that he had permitted himself to be
conquered for once by his Macedons.’</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">342</span></p>
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