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from Lives of The Noble Greeks and
Romans
By Plutarch
Written 75 AD.
Translated by John Dryden and others 1683-1686 AD
It is agreed on by all hands, that on the father's side, Alexander descended
from Heracles by Caranus, and from Aeacus by Neoptolemus on the mother's side.
His father Philip, being in Samothrace, when he was quite young,
fell in love there with Olympias, in company with whom he was initiated in the
religious ceremonies of the country, and her father and mother being both
dead, soon after, with the consent of her brother, Arymbas, he married her.
The night before the consummation of their marriage, she dreamed that a
thunderbolt fell upon her body, which kindled a great fire, whose divided
flames dispersed themselves all about, and then were extinguished. And Philip,
some time after he was married, dreamt that he sealed up his wife's body with
a seal, whose impression, as be fancied, was the figure of a lion. Some of the
diviners interpreted this as a warning to Philip to look narrowly to his wife;
but Aristander of Telmessus, considering how unusual it was to seal up
anything that was empty, assured him the meaning of his dream was that the
queen was with child of a boy, who would one day prove as stout and courageous
as a lion.
Once, moreover, a serpent was found
lying by Olympias as she slept, which more than anything else, it is said,
abated Philip's passion for her; and whether he feared her as an enchantress,
or thought she had commerce with some god, and so looked on himself as
excluded, he was ever after less fond of her conversation. Others say, that
the women of this country having always been extremely addicted to the
enthusiastic Orphic rites, and the wild worship of Bacchus (upon which
account they were called Clodones, and Mimallones), imitated in many things
the practices of the Edonian and Thracian women about Mount Haemus, from whom
the word threskeuein seems to have been derived, as a special term for
superfluous and over-curious forms of adoration; and that Olympias, zealously,
affecting these fanatical and enthusiastic inspirations, to perform them with
more barbaric dread, was wont in the dances proper to these ceremonies to have
great tame serpents about her, which sometimes creeping out
of the ivy in the mystic fans, sometimes winding themselves about the sacred
spears, and the women's chaplets, made a spectacle which men could not look
upon without terror.
Philip, after this vision, sent Chaeron of Megalopolis to consult the oracle
of Apollo at Delphi, by which he was commanded to perform sacrifice, and
henceforth pay particular honor,
above all other gods, to Ammon; and was told he should one day lose
that eye with which he presumed to peep through that chink of the door, when
he saw the god, under the form of a serpent, in the company of his wife.
Eratosthenes says that Olympias, when she attended Alexander on his way to the
army in his first expedition, told him the secret of his birth, and bade him
behave himself with courage suitable to his divine extraction. Others again
affirm that she wholly disclaimed any pretensions of the kind, and was wont to
say, "When will Alexander leave off slandering me to Hera?"
Alexander was born the sixth of Hecatombaeon, which month the Macedonians call
Lous, the same day that the temple of Artemis at Ephesus was burnt; which
Hegesias of Magnesia makes the occasion of a conceit, frigid enough to have
stopped the conflagration. The temple, he says, took fire and was burnt while
its mistress was absent, assisting at the birth of Alexander. And all the
Eastern soothsayers who
happened to be then at Ephesus, looking upon the ruin of this temple to be the
forerunner of some other calamity, ran about the town, beating their faces,
and crying that this day had brought forth something that would prove fatal
and destructive to all Asia.
Just after Philip had taken Potidaea, he received these three messages at one
time, that Parmenio had overthrown the Illyrians in a great battle, that his
race-horse had won the course at the Olympic games, and that his wife had
given birth to Alexander; with which being naturally well pleased, as an
addition to his satisfaction, he was assured by the
diviners that a son, whose birth was accompanied with three such
successes, could not fail of being invincible.
The statues that gave the best
representation of Alexander's person were those of Lysippus (by whom
alone he would suffer his image to be made), those peculiarities which many of
his successors afterwards and his friends used to affect to imitate, the
inclination of his head a little on one side towards his left shoulder, and
his melting eye, having been expressed by this artist with great exactness.
But Apelles, who drew him with thunderbolts in his hand, made his complexion
browner and darker than it was naturally; for he was fair and of a light
color, passing into ruddiness in his face and upon his breast. Aristoxenus in
his Memoirs tells us that a most agreeable odor exhaled from his skin, and
that his breath and body all over was so fragrant as to perfume the clothes
which he wore next him; the cause of which might probably be the hot and adust
temperament of his body. For sweet smells, Theophrastus conceives, are
produced by the concoction of moist humors by heat, which is the reason that
those parts of the world which are driest and most burnt up afford spices of
the best kind and in the greatest quantity; for the heat of the sun exhausts
all the superfluous moisture which lies in the surface of bodies, ready to
generate putrefaction. And this hot constitution, it may be, rendered
Alexander so addicted to drinking, and so choleric. His temperance, as to the
pleasures of the body, was apparent in him in his very childhood, as he was
with much difficulty incited to them, and always used them with great
moderation; though in other things be was extremely eager and vehement, and in
his love of glory, and the pursuit of it, he showed a solidity of high spirit
and magnanimity far above his age. For he neither sought nor valued it upon
every occasion, as his father Philip did (who affected to show his eloquence
almost to a degree of pedantry, and took care to have the victories of his
racing chariots at the Olympic games engraven on his coin), but when he was
asked by some about him, whether he would run a race in the Olympic games, as
he was very swift-footed, he answered, he would, if he might have kings to run
with him. Indeed, he seems in general to have looked with indifference, if not
with dislike, upon the professed athletes. He often appointed prizes, for
which not only tragedians and musicians, pipers and harpers, but rhapsodists
also, strove to outperform one another; and delighted in all manner of hunting and
cudgel-playing, but never gave any encouragement to contests either of boxing
or of the pancratium.
While he was yet very young, he entertained the ambassadors from the King of
Persia, in the absence of his father, and entering much into conversation with
them, gained so much upon them by his affability, and the questions he asked
them, which were far from being childish or trifling (for he inquired of them
the length of the ways, the nature of the road into inner Asia, the character
of their king, how he carried himself to his enemies, and what forces he was
able to bring into the field), that they were struck with admiration of him,
and looked upon the ability so much famed of Philip to be nothing in
comparison with the forwardness and high purpose that appeared thus early in
his son.
Whenever he heard Philip had taken any town of importance, or won any
signal victory, instead of rejoicing at it altogether, he would tell his
companions that his father would anticipate everything, and leave him and them
no opportunities of performing great and illustrious actions. For being more
bent upon action and glory than either upon pleasure or riches, he esteemed
all that he should receive from his father as a diminution and prevention of
his own future achievements; and would have chosen rather to succeed to a
kingdom involved in troubles and wars, which would have afforded him frequent
exercise of his courage, and a large field of honor, than to one already
flourishing and settled, where his inheritance would be an inactive life, and
the mere enjoyment of wealth and luxury.
The care of his education, as it might be presumed, was committed to a great
many attendants, preceptors, and teachers, over the whole of whom Leonidas, a
near kinsman of Olympias, a man of an austere temper, presided, who did not
indeed himself decline the name of what in reality is a noble and honorable
office, but in general his dignity, and his near relationship, obtained him
from other people the title of Alexander's foster-father and governor. But he
who took upon him the actual place and style of his teacher was Lysimachus
the Acarnanian, who had nothing to recommend him, but his lucky
fancy of calling himself Phoenix,
Alexander Achilles and Philip Peleus, and was therefore well enough
esteemed, and ranked in the next degree after Leonidas.
Philonicus the Thessalian brought the horse Bucephalus
to Philip, offering to sell him for thirteen talents; but when they went into
the field to try him, they found him so very vicious and unmanageable, that he
reared up when they endeavored to mount him, and would not so much as endure
the voice of any of Philip's attendants. Upon which, as they were leading him
away as wholly useless and untractable, Alexander, who stood by, said,
"What an excellent horse do they lose for want of address and boldness to
manage him!" Philip at first took no notice of what he said; but when he
heard him repeat the same thing several times, and saw he was much vexed to
see the horse sent away, "Do you reproach," said he to him,
"those who are older than yourself, as if you knew more, and were better
able to manage him than they?" "I could manage this horse,"
replied he, "better than others do." "And if you do not,"
said Philip, "what will you forfeit for your rashness?" "I will
pay," answered Alexander, "the whole price of the horse." At
this the whole company fell a-laughing; and as soon as the wager was settled
amongst them, he immediately ran to the horse, and taking hold of the bridle,
turned him directly towards the sun, having, it seems, observed that he was
disturbed at and afraid of the motion of his own shadow; then letting him go
forward a little, still keeping the reins in his hands, and stroking him
gently when he found him begin to grow eager and fiery, he let fall his upper
garment softly, and with one nimble leap securely mounted him, and when he was
seated, by little and little drew in the bridle, and curbed him without either
striking or spurring him. Presently, when he found him free from all
rebelliousness, and only impatient for the course, he let him go at full
speed, inciting him now with a commanding voice, and urging him also with his
heel. Philip and his friends looked on at first in silence and anxiety for the
result, till seeing him turn at the end of his career, and come back rejoicing
and triumphing for what he had performed, they all burst out into acclamations
of applause; and his father shedding tears, it is said, for joy, kissed him as
he came down from his horse, and in his transport said, "O my son, look
thee out a kingdom equal to and worthy of thyself, for Macedonia is too little
for thee."
After this, considering him to be of a temper easy to be led to his duty by
reason, but by no means to be compelled, he always endeavored to persuade
rather than to command or force him to anything; and now looking upon the
instruction and tuition of his youth to be of greater difficulty and
importance than to be wholly trusted to the ordinary masters in music and
poetry, and the common school subjects, and to require, as Sophocles says-
"The bridle and the rudder too," he
sent for Aristotle, the most learned and most celebrated philosopher of
his time, and rewarded him with a munificence proportionable to and becoming
the care he took to instruct his son. For he repeopled his native city Stagira,
which he had caused to be demolished a little before, and restored all the
citizens, who were in exile or slavery, to their habitations. As a place for
the pursuit of their studies and exercise, he assigned the temple of the
Nymphs, near Mieza, where, to this very day, they show you Aristotle's stone
seats, and the shady walks which he was wont to frequent.
It would appear that Alexander received from him not only his doctrines of
Morals and of Politics, but also something of those more abstruse and profound
theories which these philosophers, by the very names they gave them, professed
to reserve for oral communication to the initiated, and did not allow many to
become acquainted with. For when he was in Asia, and heard Aristotle had
published some treatises of that kind, he wrote to him, using very plain
language to him in behalf of philosophy, the following letter. "Alexander
to Aristotle, greeting. You have not done well to publish your books of oral
doctrine; for what is there now that we excel others in, if those things which
we have been particularly instructed in be laid open to all? For my part, I
assure you, I had rather excel others in the knowledge of what is excellent,
than in the extent of my power and dominion. Farewell." And Aristotle,
soothing this passion for pre-eminence, speaks, in his excuse for himself, of
these doctrines as in fact both published and not published: as indeed, to say
the truth, his books on metaphysics are written in a style which makes them
useless for ordinary teaching, and instructive only, in the way of memoranda,
for those who have been already conversant in that sort of learning.
Doubtless also it was to Aristotle that he owed the inclination he had, not to
the theory only, but likewise to the practice of the art of medicine. For when
any of his friends were sick, he would often prescribe them their course of
diet, and medicines proper to their disease, as we may find in his epistles.
He was naturally a great lover of
all kinds of learning and reading; and Onesicritus informs us that he
constantly laid Homer's Iliads, according to the copy corrected by Aristotle,
called the casket copy, with his dagger under his pillow, declaring that he
esteemed it a perfect portable treasure of all military virtue and knowledge.
When he was in the upper Asia, being destitute of other books, he ordered
Harpalus to send him some; who furnished him with Philistus's History, a great
many of the plays of Euripides, Sophocles, and
Aeschylus, and some dithyrambic
odes, composed by Telestes and Philoxenus. For a while he loved and cherished
Aristotle no less, as he was wont to say himself, than if he had been his
father, giving this reason for it, that as he had received life from the one,
so the other had taught him to live well. But afterwards, upon some mistrust
of him, yet not so great as to make him do him any hurt, his familiarity and
friendly kindness to him abated so much of its former force and
affectionateness, as to make it evident he was alienated from him. However,
his violent thirst after and passion for learning, which were once implanted,
still grew up with him, and never decayed; as appears by his veneration of
Anaxarchus, by the present of fifty talents which he sent to Xenocrates, and
his particular care and esteem of Dandamis and Calanus.
While Philip went on his expedition against the Byzantines, he left Alexander,
then sixteen years old, his lieutenant in Macedonia, committing the charge of
his seal to him; who, not to sit idle, reduced the rebellious Maedi, and
having taken their chief town by storm, drove out the barbarous inhabitants,
and planting a colony of several nations in their room, called the place after
his own name, Alexandropolis. At the
battle of Chaeronea, which his father fought against the Grecians, he
is said to have been the first man that charged the Thebans' sacred band. And
even in my remembrance, there stood an old oak near the river Cephisus, which
people called Alexander's oak, because his tent was pitched under it. And not
far off are to be seen the graves of the Macedonians who fell in that battle.
This early bravery made Philip so fond of him, that nothing pleased him more
than to hear his subjects call himself their general and Alexander their king.
But the disorders of his family, chiefly caused by his new marriages and
attachments (the troubles that began in the women's chambers spreading, so to
say, to the whole kingdom), raised various complaints and differences between
them, which the violence of Olympias, a woman of a jealous and implacable
temper, made wider, by exasperating Alexander against his father. Among the
rest, this accident contributed most to their falling out. At the
wedding of Cleopatra, whom Philip fell in love with and married, she
being much too young for him, her uncle Attalus in his drink desired the
Macedonians would implore the gods to give them a lawful successor to the
kingdom by his niece. This so irritated Alexander, that throwing one of the
cups at his head, "You villain," said he, "what, am I then a
bastard?" Then Philip, taking Attalus's part, rose up and would have run
his son through; but by good fortune for them both, either his over-hasty
rage, or the wine he had drunk, made his foot slip, so that he fell down on
the floor. At which Alexander reproachfully insulted over him: "See
there," said he, "the man who makes preparations to pass out of
Europe into Asia, overturned in passing from one seat to another." After
this debauch, he and his mother Olympias withdrew from Philip's company, and
when he had placed her in Epirus, he himself retired into Illyria.
About this time, Demaratus the Corinthian, an old friend of the family, who
had the freedom to say anything among them without offence, coming to visit
Philip, after the first compliments and embraces were over, Philip asked him
whether the Grecians were at amity with one another. "It ill becomes
you," replied Demaratus, "to be so solicitous about Greece, when you
have involved your own house in so many dissensions and calamities." He
was so convinced by this seasonable reproach, that he immediately sent for his
son home, and by Demaratus's mediation prevailed with him to return. But this
reconciliation lasted not long; for when Pixodorus, viceroy of Caria, sent
Aristocritus to treat for a match between his eldest daughter and Philip's
son, Arrhidaeus, hoping by this alliance to secure his assistance upon
occasion, Alexander's mother, and some who pretended to be his friends,
presently filled his head with tales and calumnies, as if Philip, by a
splendid marriage and important alliance, were preparing the way for settling
the kingdom upon Arrhidaeus. In alarm at this, he despatched Thessalus, the
tragic actor, into Caria, to dispose Pixodorus to slight Arrhidaeus, both
illegitimate and a fool, and rather to accept of himself for his son-in-law.
This proposition was much more agreeable to Pixodorus than the former. But
Philip, as soon as he was made acquainted with this transaction, went to his
son's apartment, taking with him Philotas, the son of Parmenio, one of
Alexander's intimate friends and companions, and there reproved him severely,
and reproached him bitterly, that he should be so degenerate, and unworthy of
the power he was to leave him, as to desire the alliance of a mean Carian, who
was at best but the slave of a barbarous prince. Nor did this satisfy his
resentment, for he wrote to the Corinthians to send Thessalus to him in
chains, and banished Harpalus, Nearchus, Erigyius, and Ptolemy, his son's
friends and favorites, whom Alexander afterwards recalled and raised to great
honor and preferment.
Not long after this, Pausanias,
having had an outrage done to him at the instance of Attalus and Cleopatra,
when he found he could get no reparation for his disgrace at Philip's hands,
watched his opportunity and murdered him. The guilt of which fact was laid for
the most part upon Olympias, who was said to have encouraged and exasperated
the enraged youth to revenge; and some
sort of suspicion attached even to Alexander himself, who, it was said,
when Pausanias came and complained to him of the injury he had received,
repeated the verse out of Euripides's Medea- "On husband, and on father,
and on bride." However, he took care to find out and punish the
accomplices of the conspiracy severely, and was very angry with Olympias for
treating Cleopatra inhumanly in his absence.
Alexander was but twenty years old when his father was murdered, and succeeded
to a kingdom, beset on all sides with great dangers and rancorous enemies. For
not only the barbarous nations that bordered on Macedonia were impatient of
being governed by any but their own native princes, but Philip likewise,
though he had been victorious over the Grecians, yet, as the time had not been
sufficient for him to complete his conquest and accustom them to his sway, had
simply left all things in a general disorder and confusion. It seemed to the
Macedonians a very critical time; and some would have persuaded Alexander to
give up all thought of retaining the Grecians in subjection by force of arms,
and rather to apply himself to win back by gentle means the allegiance of the
tribes who were designing revolt, and try the effect of indulgence in
arresting the first motions towards revolution. But he rejected this counsel
as weak and timorous, and looked upon it to be more prudence to secure himself
by resolution and magnanimity, than, by seeming to truckle to any, to
encourage all to trample on him. In pursuit of this opinion, he reduced the
barbarians to tranquility, and put an end to all fear of war from them, he
gave rapid expedition into their country as far as the river Danube, where he
gave Syrmus, King of the Triballians, an entire overthrow. And hearing the
Thebans were in revolt, and the Athenians in correspondence with them, he
immediately marched through the pass of Thermopylae, saying that to
Demosthenes, who had called him a child while he was in Illyria and in the
country of the Triballians, and a youth when he was in Thessaly, he would
appear a man before the walls of Athens.
When he came to Thebes, to show
how willing he was to accept of their repentance for what was past, he only
demanded of them Phoenix and Prothytes, the authors of the rebellion, and
proclaimed a general pardon to those who would come over to him. But when the
Thebans merely retorted by demanding Philotas and Antipater to be delivered
into their hands, and by a proclamation on their part invited all who would
assert the liberty of Greece to come over to them, he presently applied
himself to make them feel the last extremities of war. The Thebans indeed
defended themselves with a zeal and courage beyond their strength, being much
outnumbered by their enemies. But when the Macedonian garrison sallied out
upon them from the citadel, they were so hemmed in on all sides that the
greater part of them fell in the battle; the city itself being taken by storm,
was sacked and razed. Alexander's hope being that so severe an example might
terrify the rest of Greece into obedience, and also in order to gratify the
hostility of his confederates, the Phocians and Plataeans. So that, except the
priests, and some few who had heretofore been the friends and connections of
the Macedonians, the family of the poet Pindar, and those who were known to
have opposed the public vote for the war, all
the rest, to the number of thirty thousand, were publicly sold for slaves; and
it is computed that upwards of six thousand were put to the sword.
Among the other calamities that befell the city, it happened that some
Thracian soldiers, having broken into the house of a matron of high character
and repute, named Timoclea, their captain, after he had used violence with
her, to satisfy his avarice as well as lust, asked her, if she knew of any
money concealed; to which she readily answered she did, and bade him follow
her into a garden, where she showed him a well, into which, she told him, upon
the taking of the city, she had thrown what she had of most value. The greedy
Thracian presently stooping down to view the place where he thought the
treasure lay, she came behind him and pushed him into the well, and then flung
great stones in upon him, till she had killed him. After which, when the
soldiers led her away bound to Alexander, her very mien and gait showed her to
be a woman of dignity, and of a mind no less elevated, not betraying the least
sign of fear or astonishment. And when the king asked her who she was, "I
am," said she, "the sister of Theagenes, who fought the battle of
Chaeronea with your father Philip, and fell there in command for the liberty
of Greece." Alexander was so surprised, both at what she had done and
what she said, that he could not choose but give her and her children their
freedom to go whither they pleased.
After this he received the Athenians into favor, although they had shown
themselves so much concerned at the calamity of Thebes that out of sorrow they
omitted the celebration of the Mysteries, and entertained those who escaped
with all possible humanity. Whether it were, like the lion, that his passion
was now satisfied, or that, after an example of extreme cruelty, he had a mind
to appear merciful, it happened well for the Athenians; for he not only
forgave them all past offences, but bade them look to their affairs with
vigilance, remembering that if he should miscarry, they were likely to be the
arbiters of Greece. Certain it is, too, that in
aftertime he often repented of his severity to the Thebans, and his
remorse had such influence on his temper as to make him ever after less
rigorous to all others. He imputed
also the murder of Clitus, which he committed in his wine, and the
unwillingness of the Macedonians to follow him against the Indians, by which
his enterprise and glory was left imperfect, to the wrath and vengeance of
Dionysus, the protector of Thebes. And it was observed that whatsoever
any Theban, who had the good fortune to survive this victory, asked of him, he
was sure to grant without the least difficulty.
Soon after, the Grecians, being assembled at the Isthmus, declared their
resolution of joining with Alexander in the war against the Persians, and
proclaimed him their general. While he stayed here, many public ministers and
philosophers came from all parts to visit him and congratulated him on his
election, but contrary to his expectation, Diogenes
of Sinope, who then was living at Corinth, thought so little of him, that
instead of coming to compliment him, he never so much as stirred out of the
suburb called the Cranium, where Alexander found him lying alone in the sun.
When he saw so much company near him, he raised himself a little, and
vouchsafed to look upon Alexander; and when he kindly asked him whether he
wanted anything, "Yes," said he, "I would have you stand from
between me and the sun." Alexander was so struck at this answer, and
surprised at the greatness of the man, who had taken so little notice of him,
that as he went away he told his followers, who were laughing at the
moroseness of the philosopher, that if
he were not Alexander, he would choose to be Diogenes.
Then he went to Delphi, to consult Apollo concerning the success of the war he
had undertaken, and happening to come on one of the forbidden days, when it
was esteemed improper to give any answer from the oracle, he sent messengers
to desire the priestess to do her office; and when she refused, on the plea of
a law to the contrary, he went up himself, and began to draw her by force into
the temple, until tired and overcome with his importunity, "My son,"
said she, "thou art invincible." Alexander taking hold of what she
spoke, declared he had received such an answer as he wished for, and that it
was needless to consult the god any further. Among other prodigies that
attended the departure of his army, the image of Orpheus at Libethra, made of
cypress-wood, was seen to sweat in great abundance, to the discouragement of
many. But Aristander told him that, far from presaging any ill to him, it
signified he should perform acts so important and glorious as would make the
poets and musicians of future ages labor and sweat to describe and celebrate
them.
His army, by their computation
who make the smallest amount, consisted of thirty thousand foot and four
thousand horse; and those who make the most of it, speak but of forty-three
thousand foot and three thousand horse. Aristobulus says, he had not a fund of
above seventy talents for their pay, nor had he more than thirty days'
provision, if we may believe Duris; Onesicritus tells us he was two hundred
talents in debt. However narrow and disproportionable the beginnings of so
vast an undertaking might seem to be, yet he would not embark his army until
he had informed himself particularly what means his friends had to enable them
to follow him, and supplied what they wanted, by giving good farms to some, a
village to one, and the revenue of some hamlet or harbor-town to another. So
that at last he had portioned out or engaged almost all the royal property;
which giving Perdiccas an occasion to ask him what he would leave himself, he
replied, his hopes. "Your soldiers," replied Perdiccas, "will
be your partners in those," and refused to accept of the estate he had
assigned him. Some others of his friends did the like, but to those who
willingly received or desired assistance of him, he liberally granted it, as
far as his patrimony in Macedonia would reach, the most part of which was
spent in these donations.
With such vigorous resolutions, and his mind thus disposed, he
passed the Hellespont, and at Troy sacrificed to Athena, and honored the
memory of the heroes who were buried there, with solemn libations; especially
Achilles, whose gravestone he anointed, and with his friends, as the ancient
custom is, ran naked about his sepulchre, and crowned it with garlands,
declaring how happy he esteemed him, in having while he lived so faithful a
friend, and when he was dead, so famous a poet to proclaim his actions. While
he was viewing the rest of the antiquities and curiosities of the place, being
told he might see Paris's harp, if he pleased, he said he thought it not worth
looking on, but he should be glad to see that of Achilles, to which he used to
sing the glories and great actions of brave men.
In the meantime, Darius's captains, having collected large forces, were
encamped on the further bank of the
river Granicus, and it was necessary to fight, as it were, in the gate
of Asia for an entrance into it. The depth of the river, with the unevenness
and difficult ascent of the opposite bank, which was to be gained by main
force, was apprehended by most, and some pronounced it an improper time to
engage, because it was unusual for the kings of Macedonia to march with their
forces in the month called Daesius. But Alexander broke through these
scruples, telling them they should call it a second Artemisius. And when
Parmenio advised him not to attempt anything that day, because it was late, he
told him that he should disgrace the Hellespont should he fear the Granicus.
And so, without more saying, he immediately took the river with thirteen
troops of horse, and advanced against whole showers of darts thrown from the
steep opposite side, which was covered with armed multitudes of the enemy's
horse and foot, notwithstanding the disadvantage of the ground and the
rapidity of the stream; so that the action seemed to have more frenzy and
desperation in it, than of prudent conduct. However, he persisted obstinately
to gain the passage, and at last with much ado making his way up the banks,
which were extremely muddy and slippery, he had instantly to join in a mere
confused hand-to-hand combat with the enemy, before he could draw up his men,
who were still passing over, into any order. For the enemy pressed upon him
with loud and warlike outcries; and charging horse against horse, with their
lances, after they had broken and spent these, they fell to it with their
swords. And Alexander, being easily known by his buckler, and a large plume of
white feathers on each side of his helmet, was attacked on all sides, yet
escaped wounding, though his cuirass was pierced by a javelin in one of the
joinings. And Rhoesaces and Spithridates, two Persian commanders, falling upon
him at once, he avoided one of them, and struck at Rhoesaces, who had a good
cuirass on, with such force that, his spear breaking in his hand, he was glad
to betake himself to his dagger. While they were thus engaged, Spithridates
came up on one side of him, and raising himself upon his horse, gave him such
a blow with his battle-axe on the helmet that he cut off the crest of it, with
one of his plumes, and the helmet was only just so far strong enough to save
him, that the edge of the weapon touched the hair of his head. But as he was
about to repeat his stroke, Clitus, called the black Clitus, prevented him, by
running him through the body with his spear. At the same time Alexander
despatched Rhoesaces with his sword. While the horse were thus dangerously
engaged, the Macedonian phalanx passed the river, and the foot on each side
advanced to fight. But the enemy hardly sustaining the first onset soon gave
ground and fled, all but the mercenary
Greeks, who, making a stand upon a
rising ground, desired quarter, which Alexander, guided rather by passion than
judgment, refused to grant, and charging them himself first, had his horse
(not Bucephalus, but another) killed under him. And this obstinacy of his to
cut off these experienced desperate men cost him the lives of more of his own
soldiers than all the battle before, besides those who were wounded. The
Persians lost in this battle twenty thousand foot and two thousand five
hundred horse. On Alexander's side, Aristobulus says there were not wanting
above four-and-thirty, of whom nine were foot-soldiers; and in memory of them
he caused so many statues of brass, of Lysippus's
making, to be erected. And
that the Grecians might participate in the honor of his victory he sent a
portion of the spoils home to them particularly to the Athenians three hundred
bucklers, and upon all the rest he ordered this inscription to be set:
"Alexander the son of Philip, and the Grecians, except the Lacedaemonians,
won these from the barbarians who inhabit Asia." All the plate and purple
garments, and other things of the same kind that he took from the Persians,
except a very small quantity which he reserved for himself, he sent as a
present to his mother.
This battle presently made a great change of affairs to Alexander's advantage.
For Sardis itself, the chief seat of the barbarian's power in the maritime
provinces, and many other considerable places, were surrendered to him; only
Halicarnassus and Miletus stood out, which he took by force, together with the
territory about them. After which he was a little unsettled in his opinion how
to proceed. Sometimes he thought it best to find out Darius as soon as he
could, and put all to the hazard of a battle; another while he looked upon it
as a more prudent course to make an entire reduction of the sea-coast, and not
to seek the enemy till he had first exercised his power here and made himself
secure of the resources of these provinces.
While he was thus deliberating
what to do, it happened that a spring
of water near the city of Xanthus in Lycia, of its own accord, swelled
over its banks, and threw up a copper plate, upon the margin of which was
engraven in ancient characters, that the time would come when the Persian
empire should be destroyed by the Grecians. Encouraged by this accident, he
proceeded to reduce the maritime parts of Cilicia and Phoenicia, and passed
his army along the sea-coasts of Pamphylia with such expedition that many
historians have described and extolled it with that height of admiration, as
if it were no less than a miracle, and an extraordinary effect of divine favor, that the waves which usually come rolling in violently from the main,
and hardly ever leave so much as a narrow beach under the steep, broken cliffs
at any time uncovered, should on a sudden retire to afford him passage.
Menander,
in one of his comedies, alludes to this marvel when he says-
"Was Alexander ever favored
more?
Each man I wish for meets me at my door,
And should I ask for passage through the sea,
The sea I doubt not would retire for me."
But Alexander himself in his epistles mentions nothing unusual in this at all,
but says he went from Phaselis, and passed through what they call the Ladders.
At Phaselis he stayed some time, and finding the statue of Theodectes, who was
a native of this town and was now dead, erected in the market-place, after he
had supped, having drunk pretty plentifully, he went and danced about it, and
crowned it with garlands, honoring not ungracefully, in his sport, the memory
of a philosopher whose conversation he had formerly enjoyed when he was
Aristotle's scholar.
Then he subdued the Pisidians who made head against him, and conquered the
Phrygians, at whose chief city, Gordium, which is said to be the seat of the
ancient Midas, he saw the famous
chariot fastened with cords made of the rind of the cornel-tree, which
whosoever should untie, the inhabitants had a tradition, that for him was
reserved the empire of the world. Most authors tell the story that
Alexander finding himself unable to untie the knot, the ends of which were
secretly twisted round and folded up within it, cut it asunder with his sword.
But Aristobulus tells us it was easy for him to undo it, by only pulling the
pin out of the pole, to which the yoke was tied, and afterwards drawing off
the yoke itself from below. From hence he advanced into Paphlagonia and
Cappadocia, both which countries he soon reduced to obedience, and then
hearing of the death of Memnon, the best commander Darius had upon the
sea-coasts, who, if he had lived, might, it was supposed, have put many
impediments and difficulties in the way of the progress of his arms, he was
the rather encouraged to carry the war into the upper provinces of Asia.
Darius was by this time upon
his march from Susa, very confident, not only in the number of his men, which
amounted to six hundred thousand,
but likewise in a dream, which the Persian soothsayers interpreted rather in
flattery to him than according to the natural probability. He
dreamed that he saw the Macedonian phalanx all on fire, and Alexander waiting
on him, clad in the same dress which he himself had been used to wear when he
was courier to the late king; after which, going into the temple of Belus, he
vanished out of his sight. The dream would appear to have supernaturally
signified to him the illustrious actions the Macedonians were to perform, and
that as he, from a courier's place, had risen to the throne, so Alexander
should come to be master of Asia, and not long surviving his conquests,
conclude his life with glory.
Darius's confidence increased the more, because Alexander spent so much
time in Cilicia, which he imputed to his cowardice. But it was sickness
that detained him there, which some say he contracted from his fatigues,
others from bathing in the river Cydnus, whose waters were exceedingly cold.
However it happened, none of his physicians would venture to give him any
remedies, they thought his case so desperate, and were so afraid of the
suspicions and ill-will of the Macedonians if they should fail in the cure;
till Philip, the Acarnanian, seeing how critical his case was, but relying on
his own well-known friendship for him, resolved to try the last efforts of his
art, and rather hazard his own credit and life than suffer him to perish for
want of physic, which he confidently administered to him, encouraging him to
take it boldly, if he desired a speedy recovery, in order to prosecute the
war. At this very time, Parmenio wrote to Alexander from the camp, bidding him
have a care of Philip, as one who was bribed by Darius to kill him, with great
sums of money, and a promise of his daughter in marriage. When he had perused
the letter, he put it under his pillow, without showing it so much as to any
of his most intimate friends, and when Philip came in with the potion, he took
it with great cheerfulness and assurance, giving him meantime the letter to
read. This was a spectacle well worth being present at, to see Alexander take
the draught and Philip read the letter at the same time, and then turn and
look upon one another, but with different sentiments; for Alexander's looks
were cheerful and open, to show his kindness to and confidence in his
physician, while the other was full of surprise and alarm at the accusation,
appealing to the gods to witness his innocence, sometimes lifting up his hands
to heaven, and then throwing himself down by the bedside, and beseeching
Alexander to lay aside all fear, and follow his directions without
apprehension. For the medicine at first worked so strongly as to drive, so to
say, the vital forces into the interior; he lost his speech, and falling into
a swoon, had scarce any sense or pulse left. However in no long time, by
Philip's means, his health and strength returned, and he showed himself in
public to the Macedonians, who were in continual fear and dejection until they
saw him abroad again.
There was at this time in Darius's army a Macedonian refugee, named Amyntas,
one who was pretty well acquainted with Alexander's character. This man, when
he saw Darius intended to fall upon the enemy in the passes and defiles,
advised him earnestly to keep where he was, in the open and extensive plains,
it being the advantage of a numerous army to have field-room enough when it
engaged with a lesser force. Darius, instead of taking his counsel, told him
he was afraid the enemy would endeavor to run away, and so Alexander would
escape out of his hands. "That fear," replied Amyntas, "is
needless, for assure yourself that far from avoiding you, he will make all the
speed he can to meet you, and is now most likely on his march toward
you." But Amyntas's counsel was to no purpose, for Darius immediately
decamping, marched into Cilicia
at the same time that Alexander advanced into Syria to meet him; and missing
one another in the night, they both turned back again. Alexander, greatly
pleased with the event, made all the haste he could to fight in the defiles,
and Darius to recover his former ground, and draw his army out of so
disadvantageous a place. For now he began to perceive his error in engaging
himself too far in a country in which the sea, the mountains, and the river
Pinarus running through the midst of it, would necessitate him to divide his
forces, render his horse almost unserviceable, and only cover and support the
weakness of the enemy. Fortune was not kinder to Alexander in the choice of
the ground, than he was careful to improve it to his advantage. For being much
inferior in numbers, so far from allowing himself to be outflanked, he
stretched his right wing much further out than the left wing of his enemies,
and fighting there himself in the very
foremost ranks, put the barbarians to flight. In this battle he was
wounded in the thigh, Chares says, by Darius, with whom he fought
hand-to-hand. But in the account which he gave Antipater of the battle, though
indeed he owns he was wounded in the thigh with a sword, though not
dangerously, yet he takes no notice who it was that wounded him.
Nothing was wanting to complete this victory, in which he overthrew above an
hundred and ten thousand of his enemies, but the taking the person of Darius,
who escaped very narrowly by flight. However, having taken his chariot and his
bow, he returned from pursuing him, and found his own men busy in pillaging
the barbarians' camp, which (though to disburden themselves they had left most
of their baggage at Damascus) was exceedingly rich. But Darius's tent, which
was full of splendid furniture and quantities of gold and silver, they
reserved for Alexander himself, who, after he had put off his arms, went to
bathe himself saying, "Let us now cleanse ourselves from the toils of war
in the bath of Darius." "Not so," replied one of his followers,
"but in Alexander's rather; for the property of the conquered is and
should be called the conqueror's." Here, when he beheld the bathing
vessels, the water-pots, the pans, and the ointment boxes, all of gold
curiously wrought, and smelt the fragrant odors with which the whole place
was exquisitely perfumed, and from thence passed into a pavilion of great size
and height, where the couches and tables and preparations for an entertainment
were perfectly magnificent, he turned to those about him and said, "This,
it seems, is royalty."
But as he was going to supper, word was brought him that Darius's
mother and wife and two unmarried daughters, being taken among the rest
of the prisoners, upon the sight of his chariot and bow, were all in mourning
and sorrow, imagining him to be dead. After a little pause, more lively
affected with their affliction than with his own success, he sent Leonnatus to
them, to let them know Darius was not dead, and that they need not fear any
harm from Alexander, who made war upon him only for dominion; they should
themselves be provided with everything they had been used to receive from
Darius. This kind message could not but be very welcome to the captive ladies,
especially being made good by actions no less humane and generous. For he gave
them leave to bury whom they pleased of the Persians, and to make use for this
purpose of what garments and furniture they thought fit out of the booty. He
diminished nothing of their equipage, or of the attentions and respect
formerly paid them, and allowed larger pensions for their maintenance than
they had before. But the noblest and most royal part of their usage was, that
he treated these illustrious prisoners according to their virtue and
character, not suffering them to hear, or receive, or so much as to apprehend
anything that was unbecoming. So that they seemed rather lodged in some
temple, or some holy virgin chambers, where they enjoyed their privacy sacred
and uninterrupted, than in the camp of an enemy.
Nevertheless Darius's wife was accounted the most beautiful princess then
living, as her husband the tallest and handsomest man of his time, and the
daughters were not unworthy of their parents. But Alexander, esteeming it more
kingly to govern himself than to conquer his enemies, sought no intimacy with
any one of them, nor indeed with any other women before marriage, except
Barsine, Memnon's widow, who was taken prisoner at Damascus. She had been
instructed in the Grecian learning, was of a gentle temper, and by her father,
Artabazus, royally descended, with good qualities, added to the solicitations
and encouragement of Parmenio, as Aristobulus tells us, made him the more
willing to attach himself to so agreeable and illustrious a woman. Of the rest
of the female captives, though remarkably handsome and well proportioned, he
took no further notice than to say jestingly that Persian women were terrible
eyesores. And he himself, retaliating, as it were, by the display of the
beauty of his own temperance and self-control, bade them be removed, as he
would have done so many lifeless images.
When Philoxenus, his lieutenant on the sea-coast, wrote to him to know if
he would buy two young boys of
great beauty, whom one Theodorus, a Tarentine, had to sell, he was so offended
that he often expostulated with his friends what baseness Philoxenus had ever
observed in him that he should presume to make him such a reproachful offer.
And he immediately wrote him a very sharp letter, telling him Theodorus and
his merchandise might go with his good-will to destruction. Nor was he less
severe to Hagnon, who sent him word he would buy a Corinthian youth named
Crobylus, as a present for him. And hearing that Damon and Timotheus, two of
Parmenio's Macedonian soldiers, had abused the wives of some strangers who
were in his pay, he wrote to Parmenio, charging him strictly, if he found them
guilty, to put them to death, as wild beasts that were only made for the
mischief of mankind. In the same letter he added, that he had not so much as
seen or desired to see the wife of Darius, nor suffered anybody to speak of
her beauty before him. He was wont to say that sleep and the act of generation
chiefly made him sensible that he was mortal; as much as to say, that
weariness and pleasure proceed both from the same frailty and imbecility of
human nature.
In his diet, also, he was most temperate, as appears, omitting many other circumstances, by what he said to
Ada, whom he adopted, with the title of mother, and afterwards created Queen
of Caria. For when she, out of kindness, sent him every day many curious
dishes and sweetmeats, and would have furnished him with some cooks and
pastry-men, who were thought to have great skill, he told her he wanted none
of them, his preceptor, Leonidas, having already given him the best, which
were a night march to prepare for breakfast, and a moderate breakfast to
create an appetite for supper. Leonidas also, he added, used to open and
search the furniture of his chamber and his wardrobe, to see if his mother had
left him anything that was delicate or superfluous. He was much less
addicted to wine than was generally believed; that which gave people
occasion to think so of him was, that when he had nothing else to do, he loved
to sit long and talk, rather than drink, and over every cup hold a long
conversation. For when his affairs called upon him, he would not be detained,
as other generals often were, either by wine, or sleep, nuptial solemnities,
spectacles, or any other diversion whatsoever; a convincing argument of which
is, that in the short time he lived, he accomplished so many and so great
actions.
When he was free from employment, after he was up, and had sacrificed to
the gods he used to sit down to breakfast, and then spend the rest of the day
in hunting, or writing memoirs, giving
decisions on some military questions, or reading. In marches that
required no great haste, he would practice shooting as he went along, or to
mount a chariot and alight from it in full speed. Sometimes, for sport's sake,
as his journals tell us, he would hunt foxes and go fowling. When he came in
for the evening, after he had bathed and was anointed, he would call for his
bakers and chief cooks, to know if they had his dinner ready. He never cared
to dine till it was pretty late and beginning to be dark, and was wonderfully
circumspect at meals that every one who sat with him should be served alike
and with proper attention: and his love of talking, as was said before, made
him delight to sit long at his wine. And then, though
otherwise no prince's conversation was ever so agreeable, he would fall into a
temper of ostentation and soldierly
boasting, which gave his flatterers a
great advantage to ride him, and made his better friends very uneasy.
For though they thought it too base to strive who
should flatter him most, yet they found it hazardous not to do it; so
that between the shame and the danger, they were in a great strait how to
behave themselves. After such an entertainment, he was wont to bathe, and then
perhaps he would sleep till noon, and sometimes all day long. He was so very
temperate in his eating, that when any rare fish or fruits were sent him, he
would distribute them among his friends, and often reserve nothing for
himself. His table, however, was always magnificent, the expense of it still
increasing with his good fortune, till it amounted to ten thousand drachmas a
day, to which sum he limited it, and beyond this he would suffer none to lay
out in any entertainment where he himself was the guest.
After the battle of Issus, he sent to Damascus to seize upon the money
and baggage, the wives and children, of the Persians, of which spoil the
Thessalian horsemen had the greatest share; for he had taken particular notice
of their gallantry in the fight, and sent them thither on purpose to
make their reward suitable to their courage. Not but that the rest of the
army had so considerable a part of the booty as was sufficient to enrich them
all. This first gave the Macedonians such a taste of the Persian wealth
and
women and barbaric splendor of living, that they were ready to pursue and
follow upon it with all the eagerness of hounds upon a scent.
But Alexander,
before
he proceeded any further, thought it necessary to assure himself of
the sea-coast. Those who governed in Cyprus put that island into his possession,
and Phoenicia, Tyre only excepted, was surrendered to him.
During
the siege of this city, which, with mounds of earth cast up, and battering
engines, and two hundred galleys by sea, was carried on for seven months
together, he dreamt that he saw Hercules upon the walls, reaching out
his hands, and calling to him. And many of the Tyrians in their sleep fancied
that Apollo told them he was displeased with their actions, and was
about to leave them and go over to Alexander. Upon which, as if the god
had been a deserting soldier, they seized him, so to say, in the act, tied
down the statue with ropes, and nailed it to the pedestal, reproaching him
that he was a favorer of Alexander. Another time Alexander dreamed he
saw a satyr mocking him at a distance, and when he endeavored to catch him,
he still escaped from him, till at last with much perseverance, and running
about after him, he got him into his power. The soothsayers, making two
words of Satyrus, assured him that Tyre should be his own. The inhabitants at
this time show a spring of water, near which they say Alexander slept when
he fancied the satyr appeared to him.
While the body of the army lay before Tyre, he made an excursion against
the Arabians who inhabit the Mount Antilibanus, in which he hazarded
his
life extremely to bring off his master Lysimachus, who would needs
go
along with him, declaring he was neither older nor inferior in courage to
Phoenix, Achilles's guardian. For when, quitting their horses, they began
to march up the hills on foot, the rest of the soldiers outwent them a
great deal, so that night drawing on, and the enemy near, Alexander was fain
to stay behind so long, to encourage and help up the lagging and tired old
man, that before he was aware he was left behind, a great way from his
soldiers, with a slender attendance, and forced to pass an extremely cold
night in the dark, and in a very inconvenient place; till seeing a great
many scattered fires of the enemy at some distance, and trusting to
his agility of body, and as he was always wont by undergoing toils and labors
himself to cheer and support the Macedonians in any distress, he ran
straight to one of the nearest fires, and with his dagger dispatching two
of the barbarians that sat by it, snatched up a lighted brand, and returned
with it to his own men. They immediately made a great fire, which so
alarmed the enemy that most of them fled, and those that assaulted them were
soon routed and thus they rested securely the remainder of the night. Thus
Chares writes.
But to return to the siege, it had this issue. Alexander, that he
might refresh his army, harassed with many former encounters, had led only
a small party towards the walls, rather to keep the enemy busy than with
any prospect of much advantage. It happened at this time that Aristander,
the
soothsayer, after he had sacrificed, upon view of the entrails, affirmed
confidently
to those who stood by that the city should be certainly taken that
very month, upon which there was a laugh and some mockery among the soldiers,
as this was the last day of it. The king, seeing him in perplexity, and
always anxious to support the credit of the predictions, gave order that
they should not count it as the thirtieth, but as the twenty-third of
the month, and ordering the trumpets to sound, attacked the walls more seriously
than he at first intended. The sharpness of the assault so inflamed the
rest of his forces who were left in the camp, that they could not hold from
advancing to second it, which they performed with so much vigor that the
Tyrians retired, and the town was carried that very day.
The next place he
sat down before was Gaza, one of the largest cities of Syria, when this accident
befell him. A large bird flying over him let a clod of earth fall upon
his shoulder, and then settling upon one of the battering engines, was
suddenly entangled and caught in the nets, composed of sinews, which protected
the ropes with which the machine was managed. This fell out exactly according
to Aristander's prediction, which was, that Alexander should
be
wounded and the city reduced.
From hence he sent great part of the spoils to Olympias, Cleopatra, and
the rest of his friends, not omitting his preceptor Leonidas, on whom he
bestowed five hundred talents' weight of frankincense and an hundred of
myrrh, in remembrance of the hopes he had once expressed of him when he
was but a child. For Leonidas, it seems, standing by him one day while he
was sacrificing, and seeing him take both his hands full of incense to
throw into the fire, told him it became him to be more sparing in his offerings,
and not to be so profuse till he was master of the countries which
those sweet gums and saying, come from. So Alexander now wrote to him,
saying, "We have sent you abundance of myrrh and frankincense, that for
the future you may not be stingy to the gods."
Among the treasures
and
other booty that was taken from Darius, there was a very precious
casket, which
being brought to Alexander for a great rarity, he asked those about him
what they thought fittest to be laid up in it; and when they had delivered their
various opinions, he told them he should keep Homer's Iliad in
it. This
is attested by many credible authors, and if what those of Alexandria tell
us, relying upon the authority of Heraclides, be true, Homer was neither an
idle nor an unprofitable companion to him in his expedition. For when he
was master of Egypt, designing to settle a colony of Grecians there, he
resolved to build a large and populous city, and give it his own name. In
order to which, after he had measured and staked out the ground with the
advice of the best architects, he chanced one night in his sleep to see
a wonderful vision; a grey-headed old man, of a venerable aspect, appeared to
stand by him, and pronounce these verses:-
"An island lies, where loud the billows roar,
Pharos they call it, on the Egyptian shore."
Alexander upon this immediately rose up and went to Pharos, which, at
that time, was an island lying a little above the Canobic mouth of the river
Nile, though it has now been joined to the mainland by a mole. As soon
as he saw the commodious situation of the place, it being a long neck of
land, stretching like an isthmus between large lagoons and shallow waters on
one side and the sea on the other, the latter at the end of it making a
spacious harbor, he said, Homer, besides his other excellences, was a
very good architect, and ordered the plan of a city to be drawn out answerable
to the place. To do which, for want of chalk, the soil being
black, they laid out their lines with flour, taking in a
pretty large compass of ground in a semi-circular figure,
and drawing into the inside of the circumference equal
straight lines from each end, thus giving it something of the form of
a cloak or cape; while he was pleasing himself with his design, on a sudden
an infinite number of great birds of several kinds, rising like a
black cloud out of the river and the lake, devoured every morsel of the flour
that had been used in setting out the lines; at which omen even Alexander himself
was troubled, till the augurs restored his confidence again by telling
him it was a sign the city he was about to build would not only abound
in all things within itself, but also be the nurse and feeder of many
nations.
He commanded the workmen to proceed, while he went to visit
the
temple of Ammon.
This was a long and painful, and, in two respects, a dangerous journey;
first, if they should lose their provision of water, as for several days
none could be obtained; and, secondly, if a violent south wind should rise
upon them, while they were traveling through the wide extent of deep sands,
as it is said to have done when Cambyses led his army that way, blowing
the sand together in heaps, and raising, as it were, the whole desert
like a sea upon them, till fifty thousand were swallowed up and destroyed
by it. All these difficulties were weighed and represented to him;
but Alexander was not easily to be diverted from anything he was bent upon.
For fortune having hitherto seconded him in his designs, made him resolute
and firm in his opinions, and the boldness of his temper raised a
sort of passion in him for surmounting difficulties; as if it were not enough
to be always victorious in the field, unless places and seasons and
nature herself submitted to him. In this journey, the relief and assistance the
gods afforded him in his distresses were more remarkable, and obtained greater
belief than the oracles he received afterwards, which, however, were
valued and credited the more on account of those occurrences. For first,
plentiful rains that fell preserved them from any fear of perishing by
drought, and, allaying the extreme dryness of the sand, which now became moist
and firm to travel on, cleared and purified the air. Besides this, when
they were out of their way, and were wandering up and down, because the
marks which were wont to direct the guides were disordered and lost, they
were set right again by some ravens, which flew before them when on their
march, and waited for them when they lingered and fell behind; and the
greatest miracle, as Callisthenes tells us, was that if any of the company
went astray in the night, they never ceased croaking and making a
noise till by that means they had brought them into the right way again.
Having
passed through the wilderness, they came to the place where the
high
priest, at the first salutation, bade Alexander welcome from his father
Ammon.
And being asked by him whether any of his father's murderers had escaped
punishment, he charged him to speak with more respect, since his was
not a mortal father. Then Alexander, changing his expression, desired to
know of him if any of those who murdered Philip were yet unpunished, and
further concerning dominion, whether the empire of the world was reserved for
him? This, the god answered, he should obtain, and that Philip's death was
fully revenged, which gave him so much satisfaction that he made splendid offerings
to Zeus, and gave the priests very rich presents. This is what
most authors write concerning the oracles. But Alexander, in a letter to
his mother, tells her there were some secret answers, which at his return he
would communicate to her only. Others say that the priest, desirous as
a piece of courtesy to address him in Greek, "O Paidion," by a slip in
pronunciation ended with the s instead of the n, and said "O Paidios,"
which mistake Alexander was well enough pleased with, and it
went for current that the oracle had called him so.
Among the sayings of one Psammon, a philosopher, whom he heard in
Egypt, he most approved of this, that all men are governed by God, because in
everything, that which is chief and commands is divine. But what he pronounced
himself upon this subject was even more like a philosopher, for
he said God was the common father of us all, but more particularly of
the best of us. To the barbarians he carried himself very haughtily,
as
if he were fully persuaded of his divine birth and parentage; but to the
Grecians more moderately, and with less affectation of divinity, except
it
were once in writing to the Athenians about Samos, when he tells them that
he should not himself have bestowed upon them that free and glorious city;
"You received it," he says, "from the bounty of him who at that
time was called my lord and father," meaning Philip.
However, afterwards being wounded with an arrow, and feeling
much pain, he turned to those about him, and told them,
"This, my friends, is real flowing blood, not Ichor- Such as immortal gods are wont to shed."
And another time, when
it
thundered so much that everybody was afraid, and Anaxarchus, the sophist, asked
him if he who was Zeus's son could do anything like this, "Nay," said
Alexander, laughing, "I have no desire to be formidable to my friends, as
you would have me, who despised my table for being furnished with fish, and
not with the heads of governors of provinces." For in fact it is related as
true, that Anaxarchus, seeing a present of small fishes, which the king sent
to Hephaestion, had used this expression, in a sort of irony, and disparagement
of those who undergo vast labors and encounter great hazards in
pursuit of magnificent objects which after all bring them little more pleasure
or enjoyment than what others have. From what I have said upon this
subject, it is apparent that Alexander in himself was not foolishly
affected,
or had the vanity to think himself really a god, but merely used his
claims to divinity as a means of maintaining among other people the sense
of his superiority.
At his return out of Egypt into Phoenicia, he sacrificed and made solemn
processions, to which were added shows of lyric dances and tragedies, remarkable
not merely for the splendor of the equipage and decorations, but
for the competition among those who exhibited them. For the kings of Cyprus
were here the exhibitors, just in the same manner as at Athens those who
are chosen by lot out of the tribes. And, indeed, they showed the greatest emulation
to outvie each other; especially Nicocreon, King of Salamis, and
Pasicrates of Soli, who furnished the chorus, and defrayed the expenses of
the two most celebrated actors, Athenodorus and Thessalus, the former performing
for Pasicrates, and the latter for Nicocrean. Thessalus was most
favoured by Alexander, though it did not appear till Athenodorus was declared
victor by the plurality of votes. For then at his going away, he
said the judges deserved to be commended for what they had done, but that
he would willingly have lost part of his kingdom rather than to have seen
Thessalus overcome. However, when he understood Athenodorus was fined by
the Athenians for being absent at the festivals of Bacchus, though he refused
his request that he would write a letter in his behalf, he gave him
a sufficient sum to satisfy the penalty. Another time, when Lycon of Scarphia
happened to act with great applause in the theatre, and in a verse which
he introduced into the comic part which he was acting, begged for a
present of ten talents, he laughed and gave him the money.
Darius wrote him a letter, and sent friends to intercede with him, requesting
him to accept as a ransom of his captives the sum of a thousand talents,
and offering him in exchange for his amity and alliance all the countries
on this side the river Euphrates, together with one of his daughters in
marriage. These propositions he communicated to his friends, and when Parmenio
told him that, for his part, if he were Alexander, he should readily embrace
them, "So would I," said Alexander, "if I were Parmenio."
Accordingly, his answer to Darius was, that if he would come
and yield himself up into his power he would treat him with
all possible kindness; if not, he was resolved immediately
to go himself and seek him. But the death of Darius's
wife
in childbirth made him soon after regret one part of this answer, and
he showed evident marks of grief at thus deprived of a further opportunity of
exercising his clemency and good nature, which he manifested, however, as
far as he could, by giving her a most sumptuous
funeral.
Among the eunuchs who waited in the queen's chamber, and were taken prisoners
with the women, there was one Tireus, who, getting out of the camp,
fled away on horseback to Darius, to inform him of his wife's death. He,
when he heard it, beating his head, and bursting into tears and lamentations, said,
"Alas! how great is the calamity of the Persians! Was it not enough that
their king's consort and sister was a prisoner in her lifetime, but she
must, now she is dead, also be but meanly and obscurely buried?" "O king,"
replied the eunuch, "as to her funeral rites, or any respect or honor
that should have been shown in them, you have not the least reason to
accuse the ill fortune of your country; for to my knowledge neither your
queen Statira when alive, nor your mother, nor children, wanted anything of
their former happy condition, unless it were the light of your countenance, which
I doubt not but the lord Oromasdes will yet restore to its former glory.
And after her decease, I assure you, she had not only all due funeral ornaments,
but was honored also with the tears of your very enemies; for Alexander
is as gentle after victory as he is terrible in the field." At the
bearing of these words, such was the grief and emotion of Darius's mind,
that they carried him into extravagant suspicions; and taking Tireus aside
into a more private part of his tent, "Unless thou likewise," said he
to him, "hast deserted me, together with the good fortune of Persia, and
art become a Macedonian in thy heart; if thou yet ownest me for thy master
Darius, tell me, I charge thee, by the veneration thou payest the light
of Mithras, and this right hand of thy king, do I not lament the least
of Statira's misfortunes in her captivity and death? Have I not suffered something
more injurious and deplorable in her lifetime? And had I not been
miserable with less dishonor if I had met with a more severe and inhuman
enemy? For how is it possible a young man as he is should treat the
wife of his opponent with so much distinction, were it not from some motive
that does me disgrace?" Whilst he was yet speaking, Tireus threw himself
at his feet, and besought him neither to wrong Alexander so much, nor
his dead wife and sister, as to give utterance to any such thoughts, which
deprived him of the greatest consolation left him in his adversity, the
belief that he was overcome by a man whose virtues raised him above human
nature; that he ought to look upon Alexander with love and admiration, who
had given no less proofs of his continence towards the Persian women, than
of his valor among the men. The eunuch confirmed all he said with solemn
and dreadful oaths, and was further enlarging upon Alexander's moderation and
magnanimity on other occasions, when Darius, breaking away from him into
the other division of the tent, where his friends and courtiers were, lifted
up his hands to heaven and uttered this prayer, "Ye gods," said he,
"of my family, and of my kingdom, if it be possible, I beseech you to
restore the declining affairs of Persia, that I may leave them in as flourishing
a condition as I found them, and have it in my power to make a
grateful return to Alexander for the kindness which in my adversity he has
shown to those who are dearest to me. But if, indeed, the fatal time
be
come, which is to give a period to the Persian monarchy, if our ruin be
a debt that must be paid to the divine jealousy and the vicissitude of
things, then I beseech you grant that no other man but Alexander may sit
upon the throne of Cyrus." Such is the narrative given by the greater
number
of the historians.
But to return to Alexander. After he had reduced all Asia on this side
the Euphrates, he advanced towards Darius, who was coming down against him
with a million of men. In his march a very ridiculous passage happened. The
servants who followed the camp for sport's sake divided themselves into
two parties, and named the commander of one of them Alexander, and the
other Darius. At first they only pelted one another with clods of earth, but
presently took to their fists, and at last, heated with contention, they
fought in good earnest with stones and clubs, so that they had much ado
to part them; till Alexander, upon hearing of it, ordered the two captains to
decide the quarrel by single combat, and armed him who bore his name himself,
while Philotas did the same to him who represented Darius. The whole
army were spectators of this encounter, willing from the event of it
to derive an omen of their own future success. After they had fought stoutly
a pretty long while, at last he who was called Alexander had the better,
and for a reward of his prowess had twelve villages given him, with
leave to wear the Persian dress. So we are told by Eratosthenes.
But the great battle of all that was fought with Darius was not, as
most writers tell us, at Arbela, but at Gaugamela, which, in their language,
signifies
the camel's house, forasmuch as one of their ancient kings having escaped
the pursuit of his enemies on a swift camel, in gratitude to his beast,
settled him at this place, with an allowance of certain villages and
rents for his maintenance. It came to pass that in the month Boedromion, about
the beginning of the feast of Mysteries at Athens, there was an eclipse of
the moon, the eleventh night after which, the two armies being now in view
of one another, Darius kept his men in arms, and by torchlight took a
general review of them. But Alexander, while his soldiers slept, spent the
night before his tent with his diviner, Aristander, performing certain mysterious
ceremonies, and sacrificing to the god Fear.
In the meanwhile the
oldest of his commanders, and chiefly Parmenio, when they beheld all the
plain between Niphates and the Gordyaean mountains shining with the lights
and fires which were made by the barbarians, and heard the uncertain and
confused sounds of voices out of their camp, like the distant roaring of
a vast ocean, were so amazed at the thoughts of such a multitude, that after
some conference among themselves, they concluded it an enterprise too
difficult and hazardous for them to engage so numerous an enemy in the
day, and therefore meeting the king as he came from sacrificing, besought him
to attack Darius by night, that the darkness might conceal the danger of
the ensuing battle. To this he gave them the celebrated answer, "I will
not
steal a victory," which though some at the time thought a boyish and inconsiderate
speech, as if he played with danger. Others, however, regarded as
an evidence that he confided in his present condition, and acted on a
true judgment of the future, not wishing to leave Darius, in case he were
worsted, the pretext of trying his fortune again, which he might suppose himself
to have, if he could impute his overthrow to the disadvantage of the
night, as he did before to the mountains, the narrow passages, and the
sea. For while he had such numerous forces and large dominions still remaining,
it was not any want of men or arms that could induce him to give
up the war, but only the loss of all courage and hope upon the conviction of
an undeniable and manifest defeat.
After they were gone from him with this answer, he laid himself down
in his tent and slept the rest of the night more soundly than was usual
with him, to the astonishment of the commanders, who came to him early
in the morning, and were fain themselves to give order that the soldiers should
breakfast. But at last, time not giving them leave to wait any longer, Parmenio
went to his bedside, and called him twice or thrice by his name, till
he waked him, and then asked him how it was possible, when he was to
fight the most important battle of all, he could sleep as soundly as if
he were already victorious. "And are we not so, indeed," replied
Alexander, smiling, "since we are at last relieved
from the trouble of wandering in pursuit of Darius through
a wide and wasted country, hoping in vain that he would
fight us?" And not only before the battle, but in the height of the
danger, he showed himself great, and manifested the self-possession of
a just foresight and confidence.
For the battle for some time fluctuated and
was dubious. The left wing, where Parmenio commanded, was so impetuously charged
by the Bactrian horse that it was disordered and forced to give ground,
at the same time that Mazaeus had sent a detachment round about to
fall upon those who guarded the baggage, which so disturbed Parmenio that
he sent messengers to acquaint Alexander that the camp and baggage would
be all lost unless he immediately relieved the rear by a considerable reinforcement
drawn out of the front. This message being brought him just as
he was giving the signal to those about him for the onset, he bade them tell
Parmenio that he must have surely lost the use of his reason, and had
forgotten, in his alarm, that soldiers, if victorious, became masters of
their enemies' baggage; and if defeated, instead of taking care of their wealth
or their slaves, have nothing more to do but to fight gallantly and
die with honor.
When he had said this, he put on
his helmet, having the
rest of his arms on before he came out of his tent, which were a coat of
the Sicilian make, girt close about him, and over that a breast-piece of
thickly quilted linen, which was taken among other booty at the battle of
Issus. The helmet, which was made by Theophilus, though of iron, was so
well wrought and polished that it was as bright as the most refined silver.
To this was fitted a gorget of the same metal, set with precious stones.
His sword, which was the weapon he most used in fight, was given him
by the King of the Citieans, and was of an admirable temper and lightness. The
belt which he also wore in all engagements was of much richer workmanship than
the rest of his armor. It was a work of the ancient Helicon, and had
been presented to him by the Rhodians, as a mark of their respect to him.
So long as he was engaged in drawing up his men, or riding about to give
orders or directions, or to view them, he spared Bucephalus, who was now
growing old, and made use of another horse; but when he was actually to
fight, he sent for him again, and as soon as he was mounted, commenced the
attack.
He made the longest address that day to the Thessalians and other Greeks,
who answered him with loud shouts, desiring him to lead them on against
the barbarians, upon which he shifted his javelin into his left hand,
and with his right lifted up towards heaven, besought the gods, as Callisthenes
tells us, that if he was of a truth the son of Zeus, they would
be pleased to assist and strengthen the Grecians. At the same time the
augur Aristander, who had a white mantle about him, and a crown of gold
on his head, rode by and showed them an eagle that soared just over Alexander,
and directed his flight towards the enemy; which so animated the
beholders, that after mutual encouragements and exhortations, the horse charged
at full speed, and were followed in a mass by the whole phalanx of
the foot.
But before they could well come to blows with the first ranks, the
barbarians shrunk back, and were hotly pursued by Alexander, who drove
those
that fled before him into the middle of the battle, where Darius himself
was in person, whom he saw from a distance over the foremost ranks, conspicuous
in the midst of his life-guard, a tall and fine-looking man, drawn
in a lofty chariot, defended by an abundance of the best horse, who stood
close in order about it ready to receive the enemy. But Alexander's approach
was so terrible, forcing those who gave back upon those who yet maintained
their ground, that he beat down and dispersed them almost all. Only
a few of the bravest and valiantest opposed the pursuit, who were slain
in their king's presence, falling in heaps upon one another, and in
the very pangs of death striving to catch hold of the horses. Darius now
seeing all was lost, that those who were placed in front to defend him
were broken and beat back upon him, that he could not turn or disengage his
chariot without great difficulty, the wheels being clogged and entangled among
the dead bodies, which lay in such heaps as not only stopped, but almost
covered the horses, and made them rear and grow so unruly that the frightened
charioteer could govern them no longer, in this extremity was glad
to quit his chariot and his arms, and mounting, it is said, upon a mare
that had been taken from her foal, betook himself to flight. But he had
not escaped so either, if Parmenio had not sent fresh messengers to Alexander,
to desire him to return and assist him against a considerable body
of the enemy which yet stood together, and would not give ground. For,
indeed, Parmenio is on all hands accused of having been sluggish and unserviceable
in this battle, whether age had impaired his courage, or that,
as Callisthenes says, he secretly disliked and envied Alexander's growing
greatness. Alexander, though he was not a little vexed to be so recalled
and hindered from pursuing his victory, yet concealed the true reason
from his men, and causing a retreat to be sounded, as if it were too
late to continue the execution any longer, marched back towards the place
of danger, and by the way met the news of the enemy's total overthrow and
flight.
This battle being thus over, seemed to put a period to the Persian empire;
and Alexander, who was now proclaimed King of
Asia, returned thanks to
the gods in magnificent sacrifices, and rewarded his friends and followers with
great sums of money, and places, and governments of provinces. Eager
to
gain honor with the Grecians, he wrote to them that he would have all tyrannies
abolished, that they might live free according to their own laws, and
specially to the Plataeans, that their city should be rebuilt, because their
ancestors had permitted their countrymen of old to make their territory the
seat of the war when they fought with the barbarians for their common liberty.
He sent also part of the spoils into Italy, to the Crotoniats, to honor the zeal and courage of their citizen Phayllus, the wrestler, who,
in the Median war, when the other Grecian colonies in Italy disowned Greece,
that he might have a share in the danger, joined the fleet at Salamis, with
a vessel set forth at his own charge. So affectionate was Alexander to
all kind of virtue, and so desirous to preserve the memory of laudable actions.
From hence he marched through the province of Babylon, which immediately submitted
to him, and in Ecbatana was much surprised at the sight of the
place
where fire issues in a continuous stream, like a spring of water, out
of a cleft in the earth, and the stream of naphtha, which, not far from
this spot, flows out so abundantly as to form a sort of lake. This naphtha,
in other respects resembling bitumen, is so subject to take fire, that
before it touches the flame it will kindle at the very light that surrounds
it, and often inflame the intermediate air also. The barbarians, to
show the power and nature of it, sprinkled the street that led to the king's
lodgings with little drops of it, and when it was almost night, stood
at the further end with torches, which being applied to the moistened places,
the first at once taking fire, instantly, as quick as a man could think
of it, it caught from one end to another, in such a manner that the whole
street was one continued flame.
Among those who used to wait on the king
and find occasion to amuse him when he anointed and washed himself there
was one Athenophanes, an Athenian, who desired him to make an experiment of
the naphtha upon Stephanus, who stood by in the bathing place, a youth with
a ridiculously ugly face, whose talent was singing well, "For," said
he, "if it take hold of him and is not put out, it
must undeniably be allowed to be of the most invincible
strength." The youth, as it happened, readily consented
to undergo the trial, and as soon as he was anointed and rubbed with
it, his whole body broke out into such a flame, and was so seized by
the fire, that Alexander was in the greatest perplexity and alarm for him,
and not without reason; for nothing could have prevented his being consumed
by it, if by good chance there had not been people at hand with a
great many vessels of water for the service of the bath, with all which they
had much ado to extinguish the fire; and his body was so burned all over
that he was not cured of it for a good while after. Thus it is not without
some plausibility that they endeavor to reconcile the fable to truth,
who say this was the drug in the tragedies with which Medea anointed the
crown and veil which she gave to Creon's daughter. For neither the things
themselves, nor the fire, could kindle of its own accord, but being prepared
for it by the naphtha, they imperceptibly attracted and caught a
flame which happened to be brought near them. For the rays and emanations of
fire at a distance have no other effect upon some bodies than bare light and
heat, but in others, where they meet with airy dryness, and also sufficient rich
moisture, they collect themselves and soon kindle and create a transformation.
The manner, however, of the production of naphtha admits of
a diversity of opinion... of whether this liquid substance
that feeds the flame does not rather proceed from a soil
that is unctuous and productive of fire, as that of the
province of Babylon is, where the ground is so very hot that
oftentimes the grains of barley leap up and are thrown out, as if the
violent inflammation had made the earth throb; and in the extreme heats the
inhabitants are wont to sleep upon skins filled with water. Harpalus, who
was left governor of this country, and was desirous to adorn the palace gardens
and walks with Grecian plants, succeeding in raising all but ivy, which
the earth would not bear, but constantly killed. For being a plant that
loves a cold soil, the temper of this hot and fiery earth was improper for
it. But such digressions as these the impatient reader will be more willing
to pardon if they are kept within a moderate compass.
At the taking of Susa, Alexander found in the palace forty thousand talents
in money ready coined, besides an unspeakable quantity of other furniture
and treasure; amongst which was five thousand talents' worth of
Hermionian purple, that had been laid up there an hundred and ninety years,
and yet kept its color as fresh and lively as at first. The reason of
which, they say, is that in dyeing the purple they made use of honey, and
of white oil in the white tincture, both which after the like space of
time preserve the clearness and brightness of their luster. Dinon also relates
that the Persian kings had water fetched from the Nile and the Danube,
which they laid up in their treasuries as a sort of testimony of the
greatness of their power and universal empire.
The entrance into Persia was through a most difficult country, and
was guarded by the noblest of the Persians, Darius himself having escaped further.
Alexander, however, chanced to find a guide in exact correspondence with
what the Pythia had foretold when he was a child, that a lycus should conduct
him into Persia. For by such an one, whose father was a Lycian, and
his mother a Persian, and who spoke both languages, he was now led into
the country, by a way something about, yet without fetching any considerable compass.
Here a great many of the prisoners were put to the sword, of which
himself
gives this account, that he commanded them to be killed in the belief
that it would be for his advantage. Nor was the money found here less,
he says, than at Susa, besides other movables and treasure, as much as
ten thousand pair of mules and five thousand camels could well carry away.
Amongst other things he happened to observe a large statue of Xerxes
thrown
carelessly down to the ground in the confusion made by the multitude of
soldiers pressing into the palace. He stood still, and accosting it as
if it had been alive, "Shall we," said he, "neglectfully pass
thee by, now thou art prostrate on the ground because thou
once invadedst Greece, or shall we erect thee again in
consideration of the greatness of thy mind and thy other
virtues?" But at last, after he had paused some time, and silently
considered with himself, he went on without taking any further notice
of it. In this place he took up his winter quarters, and stayed four
months to refresh his soldiers.
It is related that the first time he
sat on the royal throne of Persia under the canopy of gold, Demaratus the
Corinthian, who was much attached to him and had been one of his father's friends,
wept, in an old man's manner, and deplored the misfortune of those Greeks
whom death had deprived of the satisfaction of seeing Alexander seated
on the throne of Darius.
From hence designing to march against Darius, before he set out he
diverted himself with his officers at an entertainment of drinking and other
pastimes, and indulged so far as to let every one's mistress sit by
and drink with them. The most celebrated of them was Thais, an Athenian, mistress
of Ptolemy, who was afterwards King of Egypt. She, partly as a sort
of well-turned compliment to Alexander, partly out of sport, as the drinking
went on, at last was carried so far as to utter a saying, not misbecoming
her native country's character, though somewhat too lofty for her
own condition. She said it was indeed some recompense for the toils she
had undergone in following the camp all over Asia, that she was that day
treated in, and could insult over, the stately palace of the Persian
monarchies.
But, she added, it would please her much better if, while the king
looked on, she might in sport, with her own hands, set fire to the court
of that Xerxes who reduced the city of Athens to ashes, that it might be
recorded to posterity that the women who followed Alexander had taken a
severer revenge on the Persians for the suffering, and affronts of Greece, than
all the famed commanders had been able to do by sea or land. What she
said was received with such universal liking and murmurs of applause, and
so seconded by the encouragement and eagerness of the company, that the
king himself, persuaded to be of the party, started from his seat, and
with a chaplet of flowers on his head and a lighted torch in his hand, led
them the way, while they went after him in a riotous manner, dancing and
making loud cries about the place; which when the rest of the Macedonians perceived,
they also in great delight ran thither with torches; for they
hoped
the burning and destruction of the royal palace was an argument that he
looked homeward, and had no design to reside among the barbarians. Thus
some
writers give their account of this action, while others say it was done
deliberately; however, all agree that he soon repented of it, and gave
order to put out the fire.
Alexander was naturally most munificent, and grew more so as his
fortune
increased, accompanying what he gave with that courtesy and freedom which,
to speak truth, is necessary to make a benefit really obliging. I
will give a few instances of this kind. Ariston, the captain of the Paeonians,
having killed an enemy, brought his head to show him, and
told him that in his country such a present was recompensed
with a cup of gold. "With an empty one," said
Alexander, smiling, "but I drink to you in this, which I
give you full of wine." Another time, as one of the common soldiers was driving
a mule laden with some of the king's treasure, the beast grew tired, and
the soldier took it upon his own back, and began to march with it, till
Alexander seeing the man so overcharged asked what was the matter; and
when he was informed, just as he was ready to lay down his burden for weariness,
"Do not faint now," said he to him, "but finish the journey, and
carry what you have there to your own tent for yourself." He was always more
displeased with those who would not accept of what he gave than with those
who begged of him. And therefore he wrote to Phocion, that he would not
own him for his friend any longer if he refused his presents. He had never
given anything to Serapion, one of the youths that played at ball with
him, because he did not ask of him, till one day, it coming to Serapion's turn
to play, he still threw the ball to others, and when the king asked him
why he did not direct it to him, "Because you do not ask for it,"
said he; which answer pleased him so that he was very
liberal to him afterwards. One Proteas, a pleasant,
jesting, drinking fellow, having incurred his displeasure,
got his friends to intercede for him, and begged his pardon himself
with tears, which at last prevailed, and Alexander declared he was
friends with him. "I cannot believe it," said Proteas, "unless
you first give me some pledge of it." The king
understood his meaning, and presently ordered five talents
to be given him. How magnificent he was in enriching his
friends, and those who attended on his person, appears by a
letter which Olympias wrote to him, where she tells him he should reward
and honor those about him in a more moderate way. "For now," said she,
"you make them all equal to kings, you give them power and opportunity of
making many friends of their own, and in the meantime you leave yourself destitute."
She often wrote to him to this purpose, and he never communicated her
letters to anybody, unless it were one which he opened when Hephaestion was
by, whom he permitted, as his custom was, to read it along with him; but
then as soon as he had done, he took off his ring, and set the seal upon
Hephaestion's lips.
Mazaeus, who was the most considerable man in Darius's
court, had a son who was already governor of a province. Alexander bestowed
another upon him that was better; he, however, modestly refused, and
told him, instead of one Darius, he went the way to make many Alexanders. To
Parmenio he gave Bagoas's house, in which he found a wardrobe of apparel worth
more than a thousand talents. He wrote to Antipater, commanding him to
keep a life-guard about him for the security of his person against
conspiracies. To his mother he sent many presents, but
would never suffer her to meddle with matters of state or
war, not indulging her busy temper, and when she fell out
with him on this account, he bore her ill-humor very patiently. Nay
more, when he read a long letter from Antipater full of accusations against
her, "Antipater," he said, "does not know that one tear of a
mother effaces a thousand such letters as these."
But when he perceived his favorites grow so luxurious and extravagant in
their way of living and expenses that Hagnon, the Teian, wore silver nails
in his shoes, that Leonnatus employed several camels only to bring him
powder out of Egypt to use when he wrestled, and that Philotas had hunting
nets a hundred furlongs in length, that more used precious ointment than
plain oil when they went to bathe, and that they carried about servants everywhere
with them to rub them and wait upon them in their chambers, he
reproved them in gentle and reasonable terms, telling them he wondered that
they who had been engaged in so many single battles did not know by experience,
that those who labor sleep more sweetly and soundly than those
who
are labored for, and could fail to see by comparing the Persians'
manner
of living with their own that it was the most abject and slavish condition
to be voluptuous, but the most noble and royal to undergo pain and labor. He argued with them further, how it was possible for any one
who
pretended to be a soldier, either to look well after his horse, or to
keep his armor bright and in good order, who thought it much to let his
hands be serviceable to what was nearest to him, his own body. "Are you
still to learn," said he, "that the end and perfection of our
victories is to avoid the vices and infirmities of those
whom we subdue? And to strengthen his precepts by example,
he applied himself now more vigorously than ever to hunting
and warlike expeditions, embracing all opportunities of hardship and
danger, insomuch that a Lacedaemonian, who was there on an embassy to
him and chanced to be by when he encountered with and mastered a huge lion,
told him he had fought gallantly with the beast, which of the two should
be king. Craterus caused a representation to be made of this adventure, consisting
of the lion and the dogs, of the king engaged with the lion, and
himself coming in to his assistance, all expressed in figures of brass, some
of which were by Lysippus, and the rest by Leochares; and had it dedicated in
the temple of Apollo at Delphi. Alexander exposed his person to danger in
this manner, with the object both of inuring himself and inciting others to
the performance of brave and virtuous actions.
But his followers, who were grown rich, and consequently proud, longed
to indulge themselves in pleasure and idleness, and were weary of marches
and expeditions, and at last went on so far as to censure and speak ill
of him. All which at first he bore very patiently, saying it became a
king well to do good to others, and be evil spoken of. Meantime, on the smallest
occasions that called for a show of kindness to his friends, there was
every indication on his part of tenderness and respect. Hearing Peucestes was
bitten by a bear, he wrote to him that he took it unkindly he should send
others notice of it and not make him acquainted with it; "But now," said
he, "since it is so, let me know how you do, and whether any of your companions
forsook you when you were in danger, that I may punish them."
He
sent Hephaestion, who was absent about some business, word how, while they
were fighting for their diversion with an ichneumon, Craterus was by
chance run through both thighs with Perdiccas's javelin. And upon Peucestes's recovery
from a fit of sickness, he sent a letter of thanks to his physician Alexippus.
When Craterus was ill, he saw a vision in his sleep, after which he
offered sacrifices for his health, and bade him do so likewise. He wrote also
to Pausanias, the physician, who was about to purge Craterus with hellebore,
partly out of an anxious concern for him, and partly to give him
a caution how he used that medicine. He was so tender of his friends' reputation
that he imprisoned Ephialtes and Cissus, who brought him the first
news of Harpalus's flight and withdrawal from his service, as if they
had falsely accused him. When he sent the old and infirm soldiers home,
Eurylochus, a citizen of Aegae, got his name enrolled among the sick, though
he ailed nothing, which being discovered, he confessed he was in love
with a young woman named Telesippa, and wanted to go along with her to
the sea-side. Alexander inquired to whom the woman belonged, and being told
she was a free courtesan, "I will assist you," said he to Eurylochus,
"in your amour if your mistress be to be gained either
by presents or persuasions; but we must use no other means,
because she is free-born."
It is surprising to consider upon what slight occasions he would write
letters to serve his friends. As when he wrote one in which he gave order
to search for a youth that belonged to Seleucus, who was run away into Cilicia; and in another thanked and commanded Peucestes for apprehending
Nicon,
a servant of Craterus; and in one to Megabyzus, concerning a slave that
had taken sanctuary in a temple, gave direction that he should not meddle
with him while he was there, but if he could entice him out by fair means,
then he gave him leave to seize him. It is reported of him that when
he first sat in judgment upon capital causes he would lay his hand upon
one of his ears while the accuser spoke, to keep it free and unprejudiced in
behalf of the party accused. But afterwards such a multitude of accusations were
brought before him, and so many proved true, that he lost his tenderness of
heart, and gave credit to those also that were false; and especially when
anybody spoke ill of him, he would be transported out of his reason, and
show himself cruel and inexorable, valuing his glory and reputation beyond
his life or kingdom.
He now, as we said, set forth to seek
Darius, expecting he should be
put to the hazard of another battle, but heard he was taken and secured by Bessus, upon which news he sent home the
Thessalians, and gave them
a
largess of two thousand talents over and above the pay that was due to them.
This long and painful pursuit of Darius- for in eleven days he marched thirty-three
hundred furlongs- harassed his soldiers so that most of them were
ready to give it up, chiefly for want of water. While they were in this
distress, it happened that some Macedonians who had fetched water in
skins upon their mules from a river they had found out came about noon to
the place where Alexander was, and seeing him almost choked with thirst, presently
filled an helmet and offered it him. He asked them to whom they were
carrying the water, they told him to their children, adding, that if
his life were but saved, it was no matter for them, they should be able well
enough to repair that loss, though they all perished. Then he took the
helmet into his hands, and looking round about, when he saw all those who
were near him stretching their heads out and looking earnestly after the
drink, he returned it again with thanks without tasting a drop of it. "For,"
said he, "if I alone drink, the rest will be out of heart." The soldiers
no sooner took notice of his temperance and magnanimity upon this occasion,
but they one and all cried out to him to lead them forward boldly, and
began whipping on their horses. For whilst they had such a king they said
they defied both weariness and thirst, and looked upon themselves to
be little less than immortal. But though they were all equally cheerful and
willing, yet not above three-score horse were able, it is said, to keep
up, and to fall in with Alexander upon the enemy's camp, where they rode
over abundance of gold and silver that lay scattered about, and passing by
a great many chariots full of women that wandered here and there for want
of drivers, they endeavored to overtake the first of those that fled, in
hopes to meet with Darius among them.
And at last, after much trouble, they
found him lying in a chariot, wounded all over with darts, just at the
point of death. However, he desired they would give him some drink, and
when he had drunk a little cold water, he told Polystratus, who gave it
him, that it had become the last extremity of his ill fortune to receive benefits
and not be able to return them. "But Alexander," said he,
"whose kindness to my mother, my wife, and my children
I hope the gods will recompense, will doubtless thank you
for your humanity to me. Tell him, therefore, in token of
my acknowledgment, I give him this right hand," with which words
he took hold of Polystratus's hand and died. When Alexander came
up
to them, he showed manifest tokens of sorrow, and taking off his own cloak,
threw it upon the body to cover it. And some time afterwards, when Bessus
was taken, he ordered him to be torn in pieces in this manner. They fastened
him to a couple of trees which were bound down so as to meet, and
then being let loose, with a great force returned to their places, each
of them carrying that part of the body along with it that was tied to
it. Darius's body was laid in state, and sent to his mother with pomp suitable
to his quality. His brother Exathres, Alexander received into the
number of his intimate friends.
And now with the flower of his army he marched into Hyrcania, where he
saw a large bay of an open sea, apparently not much less than the Euxine, with
water, however, sweeter than that of other seas, but could learn nothing of
certainty concerning it, further than that in all probability it seemed to
him to be an arm issuing from the lake of Maeotis. However, the naturalists were
better informed of the truth, and had given an account of it many years
before Alexander's expedition; that of four gulfs which out of the main
sea enter into the continent, this, known indifferently as the Caspian and
as the Hyrcanian Sea, is the most northern. Here the barbarians, unexpectedly meeting
with those who led Bucephalus, took them prisoners, and carried the
horse away with them. at which Alexander was so much vexed that he sent
an herald to let them know he would put them all to the sword, men, women,
and children, without mercy, if they did not restore him. But on their
doing so, and at the same time surrendering their cities into his hands,
he not only treated them kindly, but also paid a ransom for his horse
to those who took him.
From hence he marched into Parthia, where not having much to do, he
first put on the barbaric dress, perhaps with the view of making the work
of civilizing them the easier, as nothing gains more upon men than a
conformity to their fashions and customs. Or it may have been as a first
trial,
whether the Macedonians might be brought to adore as the Persians did
their kings, by accustoming them by little and little to bear with the
alteration of his rule and course of life in other things. However, he
followed not the Median fashion, which was altogether foreign and uncouth, and
adopted neither the trousers nor the sleeved vest, nor the tiara for the
head, but taking a middle way between the Persian mode and the Macedonian, so
contrived his habit that it was not so flaunting as the one, and yet more
pompous and magnificent than the other.
At first he wore this habit
only
when he conversed with the barbarians, or within doors, among his intimate
friends and companions, but afterwards he appeared in it abroad, when
he rode out, and at public audiences, a sight which the Macedonians beheld
with grief; but they so respected his other virtues and good qualities that
they felt it reasonable in some things to gratify his fancies and his
passion of glory, in pursuit of which he hazarded himself so far, that,
besides
his other adventures, he had but lately been wounded in the leg by
an arrow, which had so shattered the shank-bone that splinters were taken
out. And on another occasion he received a violent blow with a stone upon
the nape of the neck, which dimmed his sight for a good while afterwards. And
yet all this could not hinder him from exposing himself freely to any dangers,
insomuch that he passed the river Orexartes, which he took to be
the Tanais, and putting the Scythians to flight, followed them above a
hundred furlongs, though suffering all the time from a diarrhoea.
Here many affirm that the Amazon came to give him a visit. So Clitarchus,
Polyclitus, Onesicritus, Antigenes, and Ister tell us. But Aristobulus and
Chares, who held the office of reporter of requests, Ptolemy and Anticlides, Philon
the Theban, Philip of Theangela, Hecataeus the Eretrian, Philip the Chalcidian, and Duris the
Samian, say it is wholly a fiction. And truly
Alexander
himself seems to confirm the latter statement, for in a letter in
which he gives Antipater an account of all that happened, he tells him that
the King of Scythia offered him his daughter in marriage, but makes no
mention at all of the Amazon. And many years after, when Onesicritus read
this story in his fourth book to Lysimachus, who then reigned, the king
laughed quietly and asked, "Where could I have been at that time?" But it signifies little to Alexander whether this be credited or no.
Certain it is, that apprehending the Macedonians would be weary of pursuing
the war, he left the greater part of them in their quarters; and having
with him in Hyrcania the choice of his men only, amounting to twenty thousand
foot and three thousand horse, he spoke to them to this effect: That
hitherto the barbarians had seen them no otherwise than as it were in
a dream, and if they should think of returning when they had only alarmed Asia,
and not conquered it, their enemies would set upon them as upon so many
women. However he told them he would keep none of them with him against their
will, they might go if they pleased; he should merely enter his protest, that
when on his way to make the Macedonians the masters of the world, he
was left alone with a few friends and volunteers. This is almost word for
word as he wrote in a letter to Antipater, where he adds, that when he
had thus spoken to them, they all cried out, they would go along with him
whithersoever it was his pleasure to lead them. After succeeding with these,
it was no hard matter for him to bring over the multitude, which easily
followed the example of their betters.
Now, also, he more and more accommodated
himself in his way of living to that of the natives, and tried to
bring them also as near as he could to the Macedonian customs, wisely considering
that whilst he was engaged in an expedition which would carry him
far from thence, it would be wiser to depend upon the good-will which might
arise from intermixture and association as a means of maintaining tranquility,
than upon force and compulsion. In order to this, he chose out
thirty thousand boys, whom he put under masters to teach them the Greek tongue,
and to train them up to arms in the Macedonian discipline. As for his
marriage with Roxana, whose youthfulness and beauty had charmed him at
a drinking entertainment, where he first happened to see her taking part
in a dance, it was, indeed a love affair, yet it seemed at the same time
to be conducive to the object he had in hand. For it gratified the conquered
people to see him choose a wife from among themselves, and it made
them feel the most lively affection for him, to find that in the only passion
which he, the most temperate of men, was overcome by, he yet forbore till
he could obtain her in a lawful and honorable way.
Noticing also that among his chief friends and favorites, Hephaestion most
approved all that he did, and complied with and imitated him in his change
of habits, while Craterus continued strict in the observation of the
customs and fashions of his own country, he made it his practice to employ
the first in all transactions with the Persians, and the latter when
he had to do with the Greeks or Macedonians. And in general he showed more
affection for Hephaestion, and more respect for Craterus; Hephaestion, as
he used to say, being Alexander's, and Craterus the king's friend. And so
these two friends always bore in secret a grudge to each other, and at
times quarreled openly, so much so that once in India they drew upon one
another, and were proceeding in good earnest, with their friends on each
side to second them, when Alexander rode up and publicly reproved Hephaestion,
calling him fool and madman, not to be sensible that without his favor he was nothing. He rebuked Craterus also in private, severely, and
then causing them both to come into his presence, he reconciled them, at
the same time swearing by Ammon and the rest of the gods that he loved them
two above all other men, but if ever he perceived them fall out again he
would be sure to put both of them to death, or at least the aggressor. After
which they neither ever did or said anything, so much as in jest, to
offend one another.
There was scarcely any one who had greater repute among the Macedonians than Philotas, the son of Parmenio. For besides that he was valiant and able
to endure any fatigue of war, he was also next to Alexander himself the
most munificent, and the greatest lover of his friends, one of whom asking
him for some money, he commanded his steward to give it him; and when
he told him he had not wherewith, "Have you not any plate, then," said
he, "or any clothes of mine to sell?" But he carried his arrogance and
his pride of wealth and his habits of display and luxury to a degree of
assumption unbecoming a private man; and affecting all the loftiness without
succeeding in showing any of the grace or gentleness of true greatness, by
this mistaken and spurious majesty he gained so much envy and ill-will, that
Parmenio would sometimes tell him, "My son, to be not quite so great would
be better." For he had long before been complained of, and accused to
Alexander. Particularly when Darius was defeated in Cilicia, and an immense
booty was taken at Damascus, among the rest of the prisoners who were
brought into the camp, there was one Antigone of Pydna, a very handsome woman,
who fell to Philotas's share. The young man one day in his cups, in
the vaunting, outspoken, soldier's manner, declared to his mistress, that
all the great actions were performed by him and his father, the glory and
benefit of which, he said, together with the title of king, the boy Alexander
reaped and enjoyed by their means. She could not hold, but discovered what
he had said to one of her acquaintance, and he, as is usual in such cases,
to another, till at last the story came to the ears of Craterus, who
brought the woman secretly to the king. When Alexander had heard what she
had to say, he commanded her to continue her intrigue with Philotas, and
give him an account from time to time of all that should fall from him
to this purpose. He, thus unwittingly caught in a snare, to gratify sometimes
a fit of anger, sometimes a love of vainglory, let himself utter numerous
foolish, indiscreet speeches against the king in Antigone's hearing, of
which, though Alexander was informed and convinced by strong evidence, yet
he would take no notice of it at present, whether it was that he confided in
Parmenio's affection and loyalty, or that he apprehended their authority and
interest in the army.
But about this time, one
Limnus, a Macedonian
of Chalastra, conspired against Alexander's
life, and communicated his design
to a youth whom he was fond of, named Nicomachus, inviting him to be
of the party. But he not relishing the thing, revealed it to his brother
Balinus,
who immediately addressed himself to Philotas, requiring him to introduce
them both to Alexander, to whom they had something of great moment to
impart which very nearly concerned him. But he, for what reason is uncertain, went
not with them, professing that the king was engaged with affairs of more
importance. And when they had urged him a second time, and were still slighted
by him, they applied themselves to another, by whose means being admitted
into Alexander's presence, they first told about Limnus' conspiracy, and
by the way let Philotas's negligence appear who had twice disregarded their
application to him.
Alexander was greatly incensed, and upon finding that
Limnus had defended himself, and had been killed by the soldier who was
sent to seize him, he was still more discomposed, thinking he had thus lost
the means of detecting the plot. As soon as his displeasure against Philotas
began to appear, presently all his old enemies showed themselves, and
said openly, the king was too easily imposed on, to imagine that one so
inconsiderable as Limnus, a Chalastrian, should of his own head undertake such
an enterprise; that in all likelihood he was but subservient to the design,
an instrument that was moved by some greater spring; that those ought
to be more strictly examined about the matter whose interest it was so
much to conceal it. When they had once gained the king's ear for insinuations of
this sort, they went on to show a thousand grounds of suspicion against
Philotas,
till at last they prevailed to have him seized and put to the torture,
which was done in the presence of the principal officers, Alexander himself
being placed behind some tapestry to understand what passed. Where, when
he heard in what a miserable tone, and with what abject submissions Philotas
applied himself to Hephaestion, he broke out, it is said, in this manner:
"Are you so mean-spirited and effeminate, Philotas, and yet can engage
in so desperate a design?"
After Philotas' death,
Alexander presently sent into Media,
and put also Parmenio, his father, to death, who had done brave
service
under Philip, and was the only man of his older friends and counselors who
had encouraged Alexander to invade Asia. Of three sons whom he had had
in the army, he had already lost two, and now was himself put to death with
the third. These actions rendered Alexander an object of terror to
many
of his friends, and chiefly to Antipater, who, to strengthen himself, sent
messengers privately to treat for an alliance with the Aetolians, who
stood in fear of Alexander, because they had destroyed the town of the
Oeniadae; on being informed of which, Alexander had said the children of
the Oeniadae need not revenge their father's quarrel, for he would himself take
care to punish the Aetolians.
Not long after this happened, the deplorable end of
Clitus, which, to
those who barely hear the matter, may seem more inhuman than that of Philotas;
but if we consider the story with its circumstance of time, and weigh
the cause, we shall find it to have occurred rather through a sort of
mischance of the king's, whose anger and over-drinking offered an occasion to
the evil genius of Clitus. The king had a present of Grecian fruit brought him
from the sea-coast, which was so fresh and beautiful that he was surprised at
it, and called Clitus to him to see it, and to give him a share of it. Clitus
was then sacrificing, but he immediately left off and came, followed by
three sheep, on whom the drink-offering had been already poured preparatory to
sacrificing them. Alexander, being informed of this, told his diviners, Aristander
and Cleomantis the Lacedaemonian, and asked them what it meant; on
whose assuring him it was an ill omen, he commanded them in all haste to
offer sacrifices for Clitus' safety, forasmuch as three days before he
himself had seen a strange vision in his sleep, of Clitus all in mourning, sitting
by Parmenio's sons who were dead. Clitus, however, stayed not to finish
his devotions, but came straight to supper with the king, who had sacrificed
to Castor and Pollux. And when they had drunk pretty hard, some of
the company fell a-singing the verses of one Pranichus, or as others say
of Pierion, which were made upon those captains who had been lately worsted
by the barbarians, on purpose to disgrace and turn them to ridicule. This
gave offence to the older men who were there, and they upbraided both the
author and the singer of the verses, though Alexander and the younger men
about him were much amused to hear them, and encouraged them to go on,
till at last Clitus, who had drunk too much, and was besides of a forward and
willful temper, was so nettled that he could hold no longer, saying it
was not well done to expose the Macedonians before the barbarians and their
enemies, since though it was their unhappiness to be overcome, yet they
were much better men than those who laughed at them. And when Alexander remarked,
that Clitus was pleading his own cause, giving cowardice the name
of misfortune, Clitus started up: "This cowardice, as you are pleased to
term it," said he to him, "saved the life of a son of the gods, when
in flight from Spithridates's sword; it is by the expense
of Macedonian blood, and by these wounds, that you are now
raised to such a height as to be able to disown your father
Philip, and call yourself the son of Ammon."
"Thou
base fellow," said Alexander, who was now thoroughly exasperated, "dost
thou think to utter these things everywhere of me, and stir up the Macedonians
to sedition, and not be punished for it?"
"We are sufficiently
punished
already," answered Clitus, "if this be the recompense of our toils, and
we must esteem theirs a happy lot who have not lived to see their countrymen scourged
with Median rods and forced to sue to the Persians to have access to
their king."
While he talked thus at random, and those near Alexander
got
up from their seats and began to revile him in turn, the elder men did
what they could to compose the disorder. Alexander, in the meantime turning
about to Xenodochus, the Pardian, and Artemius, the Colophonian, asked
him if they were not of opinion that the Greeks, in comparison with the
Macedonians, behaved themselves like so many demigods among wild beasts. But
Clitus for all this would not give over, desiring Alexander to speak out
if he had anything more to say, or else why did he invite men who were freeborn
and accustomed to speak their minds openly without restraint to sup
with him. He had better live and converse with barbarians and slaves who
would not scruple to bow the knee to his Persian girdle and his white tunic.
Which words so provoked Alexander that, not able to suppress his anger
any longer, he threw one of the apples that lay upon the table at him,
and hit him, and then looked about for his sword. But Aristophanes, one
of his life-guard, had hid that out of the way, and others came about him
and besought him, but in vain; for, breaking from them, he called out aloud
to his guards in the Macedonian language, which was a certain sign of
some great disturbance in him, and commanded a trumpeter to sound, giving him
a blow with his clenched fist for not instantly obeying him; though afterwards
the same man was commended for disobeying an order which would have
put the whole army into tumult and confusion.
Clitus still refusing to
yield, was with much trouble forced by his friends out of the room. But
he came in again immediately at another door, very irreverently and confidently
singing the verses out of Euripides's Andromache,
"In Greece, alas! how ill things ordered are."
Upon this, at last, Alexander,
snatching a spear from one of the soldiers met Clitus as he was
coming forward and was putting by the curtain that hung before the door,
and ran him through the body. He fell at once with a cry and a groan. Upon
which the king's anger immediately vanishing, he came perfectly to himself,
and when he saw his friends about him all in a profound silence, he
pulled the spear out of the dead body, and would have thrust it into his
own throat, if the guards had not held his hands and by main force carried
him away into his chamber, where all that night and the next day he
wept bitterly, till being quite spent with lamenting and exclaiming, he
lay as it were speechless, only fetching deep sighs. His friends apprehending some
harm from his silence, broke into the room, but he took no notice of
what any of them said, till Aristander putting him in mind of the vision he
had seen concerning Clitus, and the prodigy that followed, as if all had
come to pass by an unavoidable fatality, he then seemed to moderate his
grief.
They now brought Callisthenes, the
philosopher, who was the
near
friend of Aristotle, and Anaxarchus of Abdera, to him. Callisthenes used
moral language, and gentle and soothing means, hoping to find access for
words of reason, and get a hold upon the passion. But Anaxarchus, who had
always taken a course of his own in philosophy, and had a name for despising
and slighting his contemporaries, as soon as he came in, cried aloud,
"Is this the Alexander whom the whole world looks to, lying here weeping
like a slave, for fear of the censure and reproach of men, to whom he
himself ought to be a law and measure of equity, if he would use the right
his conquests have given him as supreme lord and governor of all, and
not be the victim of a vain and idle opinion? Do not you know," said he,
"that Zeus is represented to have Justice and Law on each hand of him,
to signify that all the actions of a conqueror are lawful and just?"
With
these and the like speeches, Anaxarchus indeed allayed the king's
grief,
but withal corrupted his character, rendering him more audacious and
lawless than he had been. Nor did he fail these means to insinuate himself
into his favor, and to make Callisthenes's company, which at all times,
because of his austerity, was not very acceptable, more uneasy and disagreeable
to him.
It happened that these two philosophers met at an entertainment where
conversation turned on the subject of climate and the temperature of
the air. Callisthenes joined with their opinion, who held that those countries
were colder, and the winter sharper there than in Greece. Anaxarchus would
by no means allow this, but argued against it with some heat.
"Surely," said Callisthenes, "you cannot but
admit this country to be colder than Greece, for there you
used to have but one threadbare cloak to keep out the
coldest winter, and here you have three good warm mantles one over another."
This piece of raillery irritated Anaxarchus and the other pretenders to
learning, and the crowd of flatterers in general could not endure to see
Callisthenes so much admired and followed by the youth, and no less esteemed
by the older men for his orderly life and his gravity and for being
contented with his condition; and confirming what he had professed about
the object he had in his journey to Alexander, that it was only to get
his countrymen recalled from banishment, and to rebuild and repeople his
native town. Besides the envy which his great reputation raised, he also,
by his own deportment, gave those who wished him ill opportunity to
do him mischief. For when he was invited to public entertainments, he would
most times refuse to come, or if he were present at any, he put a constraint
upon the company by his austerity and silence, which seemed to
intimate his disapproval of what he saw. So that Alexander himself said in
application to him,
"That vain pretence to wisdom I detest,
Where a man's blind to his own interest."
Being with many more invited to
sup with the king, he was called upon when the cup came to him, to make an
oration extempore in praise of the Macedonians; and he did it with such a
flow of eloquence, that all who heard it rose from their seats to clap and
applaud him, and threw their garland upon him; only Alexander told him
out of Euripides,
"I wonder not that you have spoke so well, 'Tis easy on good subjects to excel."
"Therefore," said he,
"if you will show the force of your eloquence, tell my
Macedonians their faults, and dispraise them, that by
hearing their errors they may learn to be better for the
future."
Callisthenes presently obeyed him, retracting all he had said
before, and, inveighing against the Macedonians with great freedom, added,
that Philip thrived and grew powerful, chiefly by the discord of the
Grecians, applying this verse to him,
"In civil strife e'en villains rise to fame;" which so offended the
Macedonians, that he was odious to them ever after. And Alexander said, that
instead of his eloquence, he had only made his ill-will appear in what
he had spoken.
Hermippus assures us that one Stroebus, a servant whom Callisthenes
kept to read to him, gave this account of these passages afterwards to
Aristotle; and that when he perceived the king grow more and more averse to
him, two or three times, as he was going away, he repeated the verses,
"Death seiz'd at last on great Patroclus too,
Though he in virtue far exceeded you." Not without reason, therefore, did
Aristotle give this character of Callisthenes, that he was, indeed, a
powerful speaker, but had no judgment. He acted certainly a true philosopher's
part in positively refusing, as he did, to pay adoration;
and by speaking out openly against that which the best and
gravest of the Macedonians only repined at in secret, he
delivered the Grecians and Alexander himself from a great
disgrace, when the practice was given up. But he ruined himself by
it, because he went too roughly to work, as if he would have forced the
king to that which he should have effected by reason and persuasion.
Chares
of Mitylene writes, that at a banquet Alexander, after he had drunk, reached
the cup to one of his friends, who, on receiving it, rose up towards the
domestic altar, and when he had drunk, first adored and then kissed Alexander,
and afterwards laid himself down at the table with the rest. Which
they all did one after another, till it came to Callisthenes's turn, who
took the cup and drank, while the king, who was engaged in conversation with
Hephaestion, was not observing, and then came and offered to kiss him.
But Demetrius, surnamed Phidon, interposed, saying, "Sir, by no means let
him kiss you, for he only of us all has refused to adore
you." upon which
the king declined it, and all the concern Callisthenes showed was, that
he said aloud, "Then I go away with a kiss less than the rest."
The displeasure
he incurred by this action procured credit for Hephaestion's declaration
that he had broken his word to him in not paying the king the same
veneration that others did, as he had faithfully promised to do. And to
finish his disgrace, a number of such men as Lysimachus and Hagnon now came
in with their asseverations that the sophist went about everywhere boasting
of his resistance to arbitrary power, and that the young men all ran
after him, and honored him as the only man among so many thousands who
had the courage to preserve his liberty. Therefore when Hermolaus's conspiracy
came to be discovered, the charges which his enemies brought against
him were the more easily believed, particularly that when the young man
asked him what he should do to be the most illustrious person on earth, he
told him the readiest way was to kill him who was already so, and that to
incite him to commit the deed, he bade him not be awed by the golden couch,
but remember Alexander was a man equally infirm and vulnerable as another.
However, none of Hermolaus's accomplices, in the utmost extremity, made
any mention of Callisthenes's being engaged in the design. Nay, Alexander himself,
in the letters which he wrote soon after to Craterus, Attalus, and Alcetas, tells them that the young men who were put to the torture
declared
they had entered into the conspiracy of themselves, without any others
being privy to or guilty of it. But yet afterwards, in a letter to Antipater, he accuses
Callisthenes. "The young men," he says,
"were stoned to death by the Macedonians, but for the
sophist" (meaning Callisthenes), "I will take
care to punish him with them too who sent him to me, and who harbor
those in their cities who conspire against my life," an unequivocal declaration
against Aristotle, in whose house Callisthenes, for his relationship's sake,
being his niece Hero's son, had been educated.
Callisthenes' death is variously related.
Some say he was hanged by Alexander's orders; others, that he died
of sickness in prison; but Chares writes he was kept in chains seven months
after he was apprehended, on purpose that he might be proceeded against
in full council, when Aristotle should be present; and that growing very
fat, and contracting a disease of vermin, he there died, about the time
that Alexander was wounded in India, in the country of the Malli Oxydracae, all
which came to pass afterwards.
For to go on in order, Demaratus of Corinth, now quite an old man, had
made a great effort, about this time, to pay Alexander a visit; and when
he had seen him, said he pitied the misfortune of those Grecians, who
were so unhappy as to die before they had beheld Alexander seated on the
throne of Darius. But he did not long enjoy the benefit of the king's kindness
for him, any otherwise than that soon after falling sick and dying, he
had a magnificent funeral, and the army raised him a monument of earth fourscore
cubits high, and of a vast circumference. His ashes were conveyed in
a very rich chariot, drawn by four horses, to the seaside.
Alexander, now intent upon his expedition into
India, took notice that
his soldiers were so charged with booty that it hindered their marching. Therefore,
at break of day, as soon as the baggage wagons were laden first he
set fire to his own, and to those of his friends, and then commanded those
to be burnt which belonged to the rest of the army. An act which in
the deliberation of it had seemed more dangerous and difficult than it
proved in the execution, with which few were dissatisfied for most of the
soldiers, as if they had been inspired, uttering loud outcries and warlike
shoutings, supplied one another with what was absolutely necessary, and
burnt and destroyed all that was superfluous, the sight of which redoubled Alexander's
zeal and eagerness for his design. And, indeed, he was now
grown
very severe and inexorable in punishing those who committed any fault. For
he put Menander, one of his friends, to death for deserting a fortress where
he had placed him in garrison, and shot Orsodates, one of the barbarians who
revolted from him, with his own hand.
At this time a sheep happened to yean a lamb, with the perfect shape
and color of a tiara upon the head, and testicles on each side; which
portent Alexander regarded with such dislike, that he immediately caused
his Babylonian priests, whom he usually carried about with him for such
purposes, to purify him, and told his friends he was not so much concerned for
his own sake as for theirs, out of an apprehension that after his death the
divine power might suffer his empire to fall into the hands of some degenerate,
impotent person.
But this fear was soon removed by a wonderful thing
that happened not long after, and was thought to presage better. For
Proxenus, a Macedonian, who was the chief of those who looked to the king's
furniture, as he was breaking up the ground near the river Oxus, to
set up the royal pavilion, discovered a spring of a fat oily liquor, which,
after the top was taken off, ran pure, clear
oil, without any difference either
of taste or smell, having exactly the same smoothness and brightness, and
that, too, in a country where no olives grew. The water, indeed, of the
river Oxus, is said to be the smoothest to the feeling of all waters, and
to leave a gloss on the skins of those who bathe themselves in it. Whatever
might be the cause, certain it is that Alexander was wonderfully pleased
with it, as appears by his letters to Antipater, where he speaks of
it as one of the most remarkable presages that God had ever
favored him with. The diviners told him it signified his expedition would be glorious in
the event, but very painful and attended with many difficulties; for oil,
they said, was bestowed on mankind by God as a refreshment of their labors.
Nor did they judge amiss, for he exposed himself to many hazards in
the battles which he fought, and received very severe wounds, but the greatest
loss in his army was occasioned through the unwholesomeness of the
air and the want of necessary provisions. But he still applied himself to
overcome fortune and whatever opposed him, by resolution and virtue, and
thought nothing impossible to true intrepidity, and on the other hand nothing
secure or strong for cowardice.
It is told of him that when he besieged
Sisimithres, who held an inaccessible, impregnable rock against him,
and his soldiers began to despair of taking it, he asked Oxyartes whether
Sisimithres was a man of courage, who assuring him he was the greatest coward
alive, "Then you tell me," said he, "that the place may easily
be taken, since what is in command of it is weak." And
in a little time he so terrified Sisimithres that he took
it without any difficulty. At an attack which he made upon
such another precipitous place with some of his Macedonian
soldiers, he called to one whose name was Alexander, and told him
he at any rate must fight bravely if it were but for his name's sake. The
youth fought gallantly and was killed in the action, at which he was sensibly
afflicted. Another time, seeing his men march slowly and unwillingly to
the siege of the place called Nysa, because of a deep river between them
and the town, he advanced before them, and standing upon the bank, "What
a miserable man," said he, "am I, that I have not learned to
swim!" and then was hardly dissuaded from endeavoring
to pass it upon his shield. Here, after the assault was
over, the ambassadors who from several towns which he had
blocked up came to submit to him and make their peace, were surprised
to find him still in his armor, without any one in waiting or attendance
upon him, and when at last some one brought him a cushion, he made
the eldest of them, named Acuphis, take it and sit down upon it. The old
man, marveling at his magnanimity and courtesy, asked him what his countrymen
should do to merit his friendship. "I would have them," said Alexander,
"choose you to govern them, and send one hundred of the most worthy
men among them to remain with me as hostages." Acuphis laughed and answered,
"I shall govern them with more ease, sir, if I send you so many of
the worst, rather than the best of my subjects."
The extent of King Taxiles's dominions in India was thought to
be
as large as Egypt, abounding in good pastures, and producing beautiful fruits.
The king himself had the reputation of a wise
man, and at his first interview
with Alexander he spoke to him in these terms: "To what purpose," said
he, "should we make war upon one another, if the design of your coming into
these parts be not to rob us of our water or our necessary food, which are
the only things that wise men are indispensably obliged to fight for? As
for other riches and possessions, as they are accounted in the eye of the
world, if I am better provided of them than you, I am ready to let you
share with me; but if fortune has been more liberal to you than me, I
have no objection to be obliged to you." This discourse pleased Alexander
so much that, embracing him, "Do you think," said
he to him, "your kind words and courteous behavior
will bring you off in this interview without a contest? No,
you shall not escape so. I shall contend and do battle with you
so far, that how obliging soever you are, you shall not have the better of
me." Then receiving some presents from him, he returned him others of greater
value, and to complete his bounty gave him in money ready coined one
thousand talents; at which his old friends were much displeased, but it
gained him the hearts of many of the barbarians.
But the best soldiers of
the Indians now entering into the pay of several of the cities, undertook to
defend them, and did it so bravely, that they put Alexander to a great deal
of trouble, till at last, after a capitulation, upon the surrender of
the place, he fell upon them as they were marching away, and put them all
to the sword. This one breach of his word remains as a blemish upon
his
achievements in war, which he otherwise had performed throughout with that
justice and honor that became a king. Nor was he less incommoded by
the Indian philosophers, who inveighed against those princes who joined his
party, and solicited the free nations to oppose him. He took several of
these also and caused them to be hanged.
Alexander, in his own letters, has given us an account of his war
with
Porus. He says the two armies were separated by the river Hydaspes, on
whose opposite bank Porus continually kept his elephants in order of battle,
with their heads towards their enemies, to guard the passage; that he,
on the other hand, made every day a great noise and clamor in his camp,
to dissipate the apprehensions of the barbarians; that one stormy dark
night he passed the river, at a distance from the place where the enemy
lay, into a little island, with part of his foot and the best of his
horse. Here there fell a most violent storm of rain, accompanied with lightning
and whirlwinds, and seeing some of his men burnt and dying with the
lightning, he nevertheless quitted the island and made over to the other
side. The Hydaspes, he says, now after the storm, was so swollen and
grown so rapid as to have made a breach in the bank, and a part of the
river was now pouring in here, so that when he came across it was with difficulty
he got a footing on the land, which was slippery and unsteady, and
exposed to the force of the currents on both sides. This is the occasion when
he is related to have said, "O ye Athenians, will ye believe what dangers
I incur to merit your praise?" This, however, is Onesicritus's story.
Alexander says, here the men left their boats, and passed the breach in
their armor, up to the breast in water, and that then he advanced with his
horse about twenty furlongs before his foot, concluding that if the enemy
charged him with their cavalry he should be too strong for them; if
with their foot, his own would come up time enough to his assistance. Nor
did he judge amiss; for being charged by a thousand horse and sixty armed
chariots, which advanced before their main body, he took all the chariots,
and killed four hundred horse upon the place.
Porus, by this time,
guessing that Alexander himself had crossed over, came on with his whole
army, except a party which he left behind, to hold the rest of the Macedonians
in play, if they should attempt to pass the river. But he, apprehending
the multitude of the enemy, and to avoid the shock of their elephants,
dividing his forces, attacked their left wing himself, and commanded Coenus
to fall upon the right, which was performed with good success. For by
this means both wings being broken, the enemies fell back in their retreat upon
the center, and crowded in upon their elephants. There rallying, they fought
a hand-to-hand battle, and it was the eighth hour of the day before they
were entirely defeated. This description the conqueror himself has left
us in his own epistles.
Almost all the historians agree in relating that Porus was four cubits
and a span high, and that when he was upon his elephant, which was of
the largest size, his stature and bulk were so answerable, that he appeared to
be proportionately mounted, as a horseman on his horse. This elephant, during
the whole battle, gave many singular proofs of sagacity and of particular care
of the king, whom as long as he was strong and in a condition to fight, he
defended with great courage, repelling those who set upon him; and as soon
as he perceived him overpowered with his numerous wounds and the multitude of
darts that were thrown at him, to prevent his falling off, he softly knelt
down and began to draw out the darts with his proboscis.
When Porus was
taken prisoner, and Alexander asked him how he expected to be used, he
answered, "As a king." For that expression, he said, when the same
question was put to him a second time, comprehended
everything. And Alexander, accordingly,
not only suffered
him to govern his own kingdom as satrap under himself, but
gave him also the additional territory of various independent tribes whom
he subdued, a district which, it is said, contained fifteen several nations,
and five thousand considerable towns, besides abundance of villages. To
another government, three times as large as this, he appointed Philip, one
of his friends.
Some little time after the battle with Porus, Bucephalus died,
as
most of the authorities state, under cure of his wounds, or, as Onesicritus says,
of fatigue and age, being thirty years old. Alexander was no less concerned
at his death than if he had lost an old companion or an intimate friend,
and built a city, which he named Bucephalia, in memory of him, on
the bank of the river Hydaspes. He also, we are told, built another city,
and called it after the name of a favorite dog, Peritas, which he had
brought up himself. So Sotion assures us he was informed by Potamon of
Lesbos.
But this last combat with Porus took off the edge of the Macedonians' courage,
and stayed their further progress into India. For having found it
hard enough to defeat an enemy who brought but twenty thousand foot and
two thousand horse into the field, they thought they had reason to
oppose
Alexander's design of leading them on to pass the Ganges, too, which they
were told was thirty-two furlongs broad and as many fathoms deep, and the banks
on the further side covered with multitudes of enemies. For they were
told the kings of the Gandaritans and Praesians expected them there with
eighty thousand horse, two hundred thousand foot, eight thousand armed chariots,
and six thousand fighting elephants. Nor was this a mere vain report,
spread to discourage them. For Androcottus, who not long after reigned
in those parts, made a present of five hundred elephants at once to
Seleucus, and with an army of six hundred thousand men subdued all India.
Alexander
at first was so grieved and enraged at his men's reluctance that he
shut himself up in his tent and threw himself upon the ground, declaring, if
they would not pass the Ganges, he owed them no thanks for anything they
had hitherto done, and that to retreat now was plainly to confess himself
vanquished. But at last the reasonable persuasions of his friends and
the cries and lamentations of his soldiers, who in a suppliant manner crowded
about the entrance of his tent, prevailed with him to think of returning.
Yet he could not refrain from leaving behind him various deceptive
memorials
of his expedition, to impose upon aftertimes, and to exaggerate his
glory with posterity, such as arms larger than were really worn, and mangers
for horses, with bits and bridles above the usual size, which he set
up, and distributed in several places. He erected altars, also, to the
gods, which the kings of the Praesians even in our time do honor to when
they pass the river, and offer sacrifice upon them after the Grecian manner.
Androcottus, then a boy, saw Alexander there, and is said often afterwards
to have been heard to say, that he missed but little of making himself
master of those countries; their king, who then reigned, was so hated
and despised for the viciousness of his life and the meanness of his
extraction.
Alexander was now eager to see the ocean. To which purpose he caused a
great many tow-boats and rafts to be built, in which he fell gently down the
rivers at his leisure, yet so that his navigation was neither unprofitable nor
inactive. For by several descents upon the bank, he made himself master of
the fortified towns, and consequently of the country on both sides. But
at a siege of a town of the Mallians, who have the repute of being the
bravest people of India, he ran in great danger of his life. For having beaten
off the defendants with showers of arrows, he was the first man
that
mounted the wall by a scaling-ladder, which, as soon as he was up, broke
and left him almost alone, exposed to the darts which the barbarians threw
at him in great numbers from below. In this distress, turning himself as
well as he could, he leaped down in the midst of his enemies, and had the
good fortune to light upon his feet. The brightness and clattering
of
his armor when he came to the ground made the barbarians think they saw
rays of light, or some bright phantom playing before his body, which frightened
them so at first that they ran away and dispersed. Till seeing him
seconded but by two of his guards, they fell upon him hand-to-hand, and
some, while he bravely defended himself, tried to wound him through his armor with their swords and spears. And one who stood further off drew
a bow with such strength that the arrow, finding its way through his cuirass,
stuck in his ribs under the breast. This stroke was so violent that
it made him give back, and set one knee to the ground, upon which the
man ran up with his drawn scimitar, thinking to despatch him, and had done
it, if Peucestes and Limnaeus had not interposed, who were both wounded, Limnaeus
mortally, but Peucestes stood his ground, while Alexander killed the
barbarians. But this did not free him from danger; for, besides many other
wounds, at last he received so weighty a stroke of a club upon his neck
that he was forced to lean his body against the wall, still, however, facing
the enemy. At this extremity, the Macedonians made their way in and
gathered round him. They took him up, just as he was fainting away, having
lost all sense of what was done near him, and conveyed him to his tent,
upon which it was presently reported all over the camp that he was dead.
But when they had with great difficulty and pains sawed off the shaft of
the arrow, which was of wood, and so with much trouble got off his cuirass, they
came to cut the head of it, which was three fingers broad and four long,
and stuck fast in the bone. During the operation he was taken with almost
mortal swooning, but when it was out he came to himself again. Yet
though all danger was past, he continued very weak, and confined himself a
great while to a regular diet and the method of his cure, till one day hearing
the Macedonians clamoring outside in their eagerness to see him, he
took his cloak and went out. And having sacrificed to the gods, without more
delay he went on board again, and as he coasted along subdued a great deal
of the country on both sides, and several considerable cities.
In this voyage he took ten of the Indian philosophers prisoners who
had been most active in persuading Sabbas to revolt, and had caused the
Macedonians a great deal of trouble. These men, called Gymnosophists,
were
reputed to be extremely ready and succinct in their answers, which he
made trial of, by putting difficult questions to them, letting them know
that those whose answers were not pertinent should be put to death, on
which he made the eldest of them judge. The first being asked which he
thought the most numerous, the dead or the living, answered, "The living because
those who are dead are not at all." Of the second, he desired to know
whether the earth or the sea produced the largest beasts; who told him,
"The earth, for the sea is but a part of it." His question to the third
was, Which is the cunningest of beasts? "That," said he, "which
men have not yet found out." He bade the fourth tell
him what argument he used to Sabbas to persuade him to
revolt. "No other," said he, "than that he should
either live or die nobly." Of the fifth he asked, Which was the eldest,
night or day? The philosopher replied, "Day was eldest, by one day
at least." But perceiving Alexander not well satisfied with that account,
he added, that he ought not to wonder if strange questions
had as strange answers made to them. Then he went on and
inquired of the next, what a man should do to be
exceedingly beloved. "He must be very powerful," said he,
"without making himself too much feared." The answer of the seventh to
his question, how a man might become a god, was, "By doing that which
was
impossible for men to do." The eighth told him, "Life is stronger
than death, because it supports so many miseries." And
the last being asked, how long he thought it decent for a
man to live, said, "Till death appeared more desirable
than life." Then Alexander turned to him whom he had made judge,
and commanded him to give sentence. "All that I can determine," said
he, "is, that they have every one answered worse than another."
"Nay," said the king, "then you shall die
first, for giving such a sentence." "Not so, O
king," replied the gymnosophist, "unless you said falsely that he
should die first who made the worst answer." In conclusion he gave them presents
and dismissed them.
But to those who were in greatest reputation among them, and lived a
private quiet life, he sent Onesicritus, one of Diogenes the Cynic's
disciples,
desiring them to come to him. Calanus, it is said, very arrogantly and
roughly commanded him to strip himself and hear what he said naked, otherwise
he would not speak a word to him, though he came from Zeus himself.
But Dandamis received him with more civility, and hearing him discourse
of Socrates, Pythagoras, and Diogenes, told him he thought them men
of great parts and to have erred in nothing so much as in having too great
respect for the laws and customs of their country. Others say Dandamis only
asked him the reason why Alexander undertook so long a journey to come
into those parts. Taxiles, however, persuaded Calanus to wait upon Alexander.
His proper name was Sphines, but because he was wont to say Cale,
which in the Indian tongue is a form of salutation to those he met with
anywhere, the Greeks called him Calanus.
He is said to have shown Alexander
an instructive emblem of government, which was this. He threw a
dry shriveled bide upon the ground, and trod upon the edges of it. The skin
when it was pressed in one place still rose up in another, wheresoever he
trod round about it, till he set his foot in the middle, which made all
the parts lie even and quiet. The meaning of this similitude being that
he ought to reside most in the middle of his empire, and not spend too
much time on the borders of it.
His voyage down the rivers took up seven months' time, and when he
came to the sea, he sailed to an island which he himself called Scillustis, others
Psiltucis, where going ashore, he sacrificed, and made what observations he
could as to the nature of the sea and the sea-coast. Then having besought
the
gods that no other man might ever go beyond the bounds of this expedition, he
ordered his fleet, of which he made Nearchus admiral and Onesicritus pilot,
to sail round about, keeping the Indian shore on the right hand, and
returned himself by land through the country of the Orites, where he was
reduced to great straits for want of provisions, and lost a vast number of
his men, so that of an army of one hundred and twenty thousand foot and
fifteen thousand horse, he scarcely brought back above a fourth part out
of India, they were so diminished by disease, ill diet, and the scorching heats,
but most by famine. For their march was through an uncultivated country
whose inhabitants fared hardly, possessing only a few sheep, and those
of a wretched kind, whose flesh was rank and unsavory, by their continual
feeding upon sea-fish.
After sixty days' march he came into Gedrosia, where he found great plenty
of all things, which the neighboring kings and governors of provinces, hearing
of his approach, had taken care to provide. When he had here refreshed his
army, he continued his march through Carmania, feasting all the way for
seven days together. He with his most intimate friends banqueted and reveled
night and day upon a platform erected on a lofty, conspicuous scaffold,
which was slowly drawn by eight horses. This was followed by a
great many chariots, some covered with purple and embroidered canopies, and
some with green boughs, which were continually supplied afresh, and in
them the rest of his friends and commanders drinking, and crowned with garlands
of flowers. Here was now no target or helmet or spear to be seen; instead
of armor, the soldiers handled nothing but cups and goblets and Thericlean
drinking vessels, which, along the whole way, they dipped into large
bowls and jars, and drank healths to one another, some seating themselves to
it, others as they went along. All places resounded with music of pipes and
flutes, with harping and singing, and women dancing as in the rites of
Bacchus. For this disorderly, wandering march, besides the drinking part
of it, was accompanied with all the sportiveness and insolence of bacchanals,
as much as if the god himself had been there to countenance and
lead the procession. As soon as he came to the royal palace of Gedrosia, he
again refreshed and feasted his army; and one day after he had drunk pretty
hard, it is said, he went to see a prize of dancing contended for, in
which his favourite Bagoas, having gained the victory, crossed the theatre in
his dancing habit, and sat down close by him, which so pleased the Macedonians
that they made loud acclamations for him to kiss Bagoas,
and never stopped clapping their hands and shouting till
Alexander put his arms round him and kissed him.
Here his admiral, Nearchus, came to him, and delighted him so with the
narrative of his voyage, that he resolved himself to sail out of the mouth
of the Euphrates with a great fleet, with which he designed to go round
by Arabia and Africa, and so by Hercules's Pillars into the Mediterranean; in
order for which, he directed all sorts of vessels to be built at Thapsacus, and
made great provisions everywhere of seamen and pilots. But the tidings of
the difficulties he had gone through in his Indian expedition, the danger of
his person among the Mallians, the reported loss of a considerable part of
his forces, and a general doubt as to his own safety, had begun to give occasion
for revolt among many of the conquered
nations, and for acts of great
injustice, avarice, and insolence on the part of the satraps and commanders
in the provinces, so that there seemed to be an universal fluctuation and
disposition to change. Even at home, Olympias and Cleopatra had raised a
faction against Antipater, and divided his government between them, Olympias seizing
upon Epirus, and Cleopatra upon Macedonia. When Alexander was told of
it, he said his mother had made the best choice, for the Macedonians would
never endure to be ruled by a woman. Upon this he despatched Nearchus again
to his fleet, to carry the war into the maritime provinces, and as he
marched that way himself he punished those commanders who had behaved ill,
particularly Oxyartes, one of the sons of Abuletes, whom he killed with
his own hand, thrusting him through the body with his spear. And when Abuletes,
instead of the necessary provisions which he ought to have furnished, brought
him three thousand talents in coined money, he ordered it to be thrown
to his horses, and when they would not touch it, "What good," he said,
"will this provision do us?" and sent him away to prison.
When he came into Persia, he distributed money among the women, as
their own kings had been wont to do, who as often as they came thither gave
every one of them a piece of gold; on account of which custom, some of
them, it is said, had come but seldom, and Ochus was so sordidly covetous that,
to avoid this expense, he never visited his native country once in all
his reign. Then finding Cyrus's sepulchre opened and rifled, he put Polymachus,
who did it, to death, though he was a man of some distinction, a
born Macedonian of Pella. And after he had read the inscription, he caused it
to be cut again below the old one in Greek characters; the words being these:
"O man, whosoever thou art, and from whencesoever thou comest (for I
know thou wilt come), I am Cyrus, the founder of the Persian empire; do
not grudge me this little earth which covers my body." The reading of
this
sensibly touched Alexander, filling him with the thought of the uncertainty and
mutability of human affairs.
At the same time Calanus, having been
a
little while troubled with a disease in the bowels, requested that he might
have a funeral pile erected, to which he came on horseback, and, after
he had said some prayers and sprinkled himself and cut off some of his
hair to throw into the fire, before he ascended it, he embraced and took
leave of the Macedonians who stood by, desiring them to pass that day
in mirth and good-fellowship with their king, whom in a little time, he
said, he doubted not to see again at Babylon. Having this said, he lay down,
and covering up his face, he stirred not when the fire came near him,
but continued still in the same posture as at first, and so sacrificed
himself,
as it was the ancient custom of the philosophers in those countries to do. The same thing was done long after by another Indian who came with
Caesar
to Athens, where they still show you, "the Indian's monument."
At his
return from the funeral pile, Alexander invited a great many of his friends
and principal officers to supper, and proposed a drinking match, in
which the victor should receive a crown. Promachus drank twelve quarts of
wine, and won the prize, which was a talent from them all; but he survived his
victory but three days, and was followed, as Chares says, by forty-one more,
who died of the same debauch, some extremely cold weather having set
in shortly after.
At Susa, he married Darius's daughter Statira, and celebrated also the
nuptials of his friends, bestowing the noblest of the Persian ladies upon
the worthiest of them, at the same time making it an entertainment in honor of the other Macedonians whose marriages had already taken place.
At
this magnificent festival, it is reported, there were no less than nine thousand
guests, to each of whom he gave a golden cup for the libations. Not
to mention other instances of his wonderful magnificence, he paid the debts
of his army, which amounted to nine thousand eight hundred and seventy talents.
But Antigenes, who had lost one of his eyes, though he owed nothing, got
his name set down in the list of those who were in debt, and bringing one
who pretended to be his creditor, and to have supplied him from the bank,
received the money. But when the cheat was found out, the king was so
incensed at it, that he banished him from court, and took away his command, though
he was an excellent soldier and a man of great courage. For when he
was but a youth, and served under Philip at the siege of Perinthus, where
he was wounded in the eye by an arrow shot out of an engine, he would neither
let the arrow be taken out nor be persuaded to quit the field till he
had bravely repulsed the enemy and forced them to retire into the town. Accordingly
he was not able to support such a disgrace with any patience, and
it was plain that grief and despair would have made him kill himself, but
the king fearing it, not only pardoned him, but let him also enjoy the
benefit of his deceit.
The thirty thousand boys whom he left behind him to be taught and disciplined
were so improved at his return, both in strength and beauty, and
performed their exercises with such dexterity and wonderful agility, that
he was extremely pleased with them, which grieved the Macedonians and
made them fear he would have the less value for them. And when he proceeded
to
send down the infirm and maimed soldiers to the sea, they said they were
unjustly and infamously dealt with, after they were worn out in his service
upon all occasions, now to be turned away with disgrace and sent home
into their country among their friends and relations in a worse condition than
when they came out; therefore they desired him to dismiss them one and
all, and to account his Macedonians useless, now he was so well furnished with
a set of dancing boys, with whom, if he pleased, he might go on and conquer
the world. These speeches so incensed Alexander that, after he
had
given them a great deal of reproachful language in his passion, he drove
them away, and committed the watch to Persians, out of whom he chose his
guards and attendants.
When the Macedonians saw him escorted by these men,
and themselves excluded and shamefully disgraced, their high spirits fell,
and conferring with one another, they found that jealousy and rage had
almost distracted them. But at last coming to themselves again, they went
without their arms, with only their under garments on, crying and weeping
to offer themselves at his tent, and desired him to deal with them as
their baseness and ingratitude deserved. However, this would not prevail; for
though his anger was already something mollified, yet he would not admit
them into his presence, nor would they stir from thence, but continued two
days and nights before his tent, bewailing themselves, and imploring him
as their lord to have compassion on them. But the third day he came out
to them, and seeing them very humble and penitent, he wept himself a
great while, after a gentle reproof spoke kindly to them, and dismissed those
who were unserviceable with magnificent rewards, and with his recommendation to
Antipater, that when they came home, at all public shows and in the theatres,
they should sit on the best and foremost seats, crowned with chaplets
of flowers. He ordered, also, that the children of those who had lost
their lives in his service should have their father's pay continued to
them.
When he came to Ecbatana in Media, and had dispatched his most urgent
affairs, he began to divert himself again with spectacles and public entertainments,
to carry on which he had a supply of three thousand actors and artists, newly arrived out of Greece. But they were soon interrupted by
Hephaestion's falling sick of a fever, in which, being a young man and a
soldier, too, he could not confine himself to so exact a diet as was necessary;
for whilst his physician, Glaucus, was gone to the theatre, he
ate a fowl for his dinner, and drank a large draught of wine, upon which he
became very ill, and shortly after died. At this misfortune, Alexander was
so beyond all reason transported that, to express his sorrow, he immediately
ordered
the manes and tails of all his horses and mules to be cut, and threw
down the battlements of the neighboring cities. The poor physician he
crucified, and forbade playing on the flute or any other musical instrument in
the camp a great while, until directions came from the oracle of Ammon, and
enjoined him to honor Hephaestion, and sacrifice to him as a
hero. Then
seeking to alleviate his grief in war, he set out, as it were, to a
hunt and chase of men, for he fell upon the Cossaeans, and put the whole nation
to the sword. This was called a sacrifice to Hephaestion's
ghost. In
his sepulchre and monument and the adorning of them he intended to bestow ten
thousand talents; and designing that the excellence of the workmanship and
the singularity of the design might outdo the expense, his wishes turned, above
all other artists, to Stasicrates, because he always promised something very
bold, unusual, and magnificent in his projects. Once when they had met
before, he had told him that, of all the mountains he knew, that of Athos
in Thrace was the most capable of being adapted to represent the shape
and lineaments of a man; that if he pleased to command him, he would make
it the noblest and most durable statue in the world, which in its left
hand should hold a city of ten thousand inhabitants, and out of its right
should pour a copious river into the sea. Though Alexander declined this
proposal, yet now he spent a great deal of time with workmen to invent and
contrive others even more extravagant and sumptuous.
As he was upon his way to Babylon, Nearchus, who had sailed back out
of the ocean up the mouth of the river Euphrates, came to tell him he
had met with some Chaldaean diviners, who had warned him against Alexander's
going thither. Alexander, however, took no thought of it, and went on, and
when he came near the walls of the place, he saw a great many crows fighting
with one another, some of whom fell down just by him. After this, being
privately informed that Apollodorus, the governor of Babylon, had sacrificed,
to know what would become of him, he sent for Pythagoras, the soothsayer,
and on his admitting the thing, asked him in what condition he
found the victim; and when he told him the liver was defective in its lobe,
"A great presage indeed!" said Alexander. However, he offered
Pythagoras no injury, but was sorry that he had neglected
Nearchus's advice, and stayed for the most part outside the
town, removing his tent from place to place, and sailing up
and down the Euphrates.
Besides this, he was disturbed by
many
other prodigies. A tame ass fell upon the biggest and handsomest lion
that
he kept, and killed him by a kick. And one day after he had undressed himself
to be anointed, and was playing at ball, just as they were going to
bring his clothes again, the young men who played with him perceived a
man clad in the king's robes with a diadem upon his head, sitting silently upon
his throne. They asked him who he was, to which he gave no answer a
good while, till at last, coming to himself, he told them his name was Dionysius
that he was of Messenia, that for some crime of which he was accused
he was brought thither from the seaside, and had been kept long in
prison, that Serapis appeared to him, had freed him from his chains, conducted
him to that place, and commanded him to that place, and commanded him
to put on the king's robe and diadem, and to sit where they found him, and
to say nothing. Alexander, when he heard this, by the direction of his
soothsayers, put the fellow to death, but he lost his spirits, and grew
diffident of the protection and assistance of the gods, and suspicious of
his friends.
His greatest apprehension was of Antipater and his sons, one
of whom, Iolaus, was his chief cupbearer; and Cassander, who had lately
arrived,
and had been bred up in Greek manners, the first time he saw some of
the barbarians adore the king could not forbear laughing at it aloud, which
so incensed Alexander he took him by the hair with both hands and dashed
his head against the wall. Another time, Cassander would have said something
in defence of Antipater to those who accused him, but Alexander interrupting
him, said, "What is it you say? Do you think people, if they had
received no injury, would come such a journey only to calumniate your father?"
To which when Cassander replied, that their coming so far from the
evidence was a great proof of the falseness of their charges, Alexander smiled,
and said those were some of Aristotle's sophisms, which would serve equally
on both sides; and added, that both he and his father should be severely
punished, if they were found guilty of the least injustice towards those
who complained. All which made such a deep impression of terror in Cassander's
mind that, long after, when he was King of Macedonia and master of
Greece, as he was walking up and down at Delphi, and looking at the statues,
at the sight of that of Alexander he was suddenly struck with alarm,
and shook all over, his eyes rolled, his head grew dizzy, and it was
long before he recovered himself.
When once Alexander had given way to fears of supernatural
influence, his
mind grew so disturbed and so easily alarmed that, if the least unusual
or
extraordinary thing happened, he thought it a prodigy or a presage, and
his court was thronged with diviners and priests whose business was to
sacrifice and purify and foretell the future. So miserable a thing is incredulity
and contempt of divine power on the one hand, and so miserable, also,
superstition on the other, which like water, where the level has been
lowered, flowing in and never stopping, fills the mind with slavish fears
and follies, as now in Alexander's case. But upon some answers which were
brought him from the oracle concerning Hephaestion, he laid aside his
sorrow, and fell again to sacrificing and drinking; and having given Nearchus
a splendid entertainment, after he had bathed, as was his custom, just
as he was going to bed, at Medius's request he went to supper with him.
Here he drank all the next day, and was attacked with a fever, which seized
him, not as some write, after he had drunk of the bowl of Hercules, nor
was he taken with any sudden pain in his back, as if he had been struck with
a lance, for these are the inventions of some authors who thought it
their duty to make the last scene of so great an action as tragical and
moving as they could. Aristobulus tells us, that in the rage of his fever
and a violent thirst, he took a draught of wine, upon which he fell into
delirium, and died on the thirtieth day of the month Daesius.
But the journals give the following record. On the eighteenth day of
the month he slept in the bathing-room on account of his fever. The next
day he bathed and removed into his chamber, and spent his time in playing
at dice with Medius. In the evening he bathed and sacrificed, and ate
freely, and had the fever on him through the night. On the twentieth, after
the usual sacrifices and bathing, he lay in the bathing-room and heard
Nearchus's narrative of his voyage, and the observations he had made in
the great sea. The twenty-first he passed in the same manner, his fever still
increasing, and suffered much during the night. The next day the fever
was very violent, and he had himself removed and his bed set by the great
bath, and discoursed with his principal officers about finding fit men
to fill up the vacant places in the army. On the twenty-fourth he was much
worse, and was carried out of his bed to assist at the sacrifices, and
gave order that the general officers should wait within the court, whilst
the inferior officers kept watch without doors. On the twenty-fifth he
was removed to his palace on the other side the river, where he slept a
little, but his fever did not abate, and when the generals came into his
chamber he was speechless and continued so the following day. The Macedonians,
therefore, supposing he was dead, came with great clamors
to the gates, and menaced his friends so that they were
forced to admit them, and let them all pass through unarmed
by his bedside. The same day Python and Seleucus were dispatched to the temple of Serapis to inquire if they should bring Alexander
thither, and were answered by the god that they should not remove him.
On the twenty-eighth, in the evening, he died. This account is most of
it word for word as it is written in the diary.
At the time, nobody had any suspicion of his being
poisoned, but upon
some information given six years after, they say Olympias put many to death, and scattered the ashes of Iolaus, then dead, as if he had given it
him. But those who affirm that Aristotle counseled Antipater to do it,
and that by his means the poison was brought, adduced one Hagnothemis as
their authority, who, they say, heard King Antigonus speak of it, and tell
us that the poison was water, deadly cold as ice, distilled from a rock
in the district of Nonacris, which they gathered like a thin dew, and
kept in an ass's hoof; for it was so very cold and penetrating that no
other vessel would hold it. However, most are of opinion that all this is
a mere made-up story, no slight evidence of which is, that during the dissensions
among the commanders, which lasted several days, the body continued
clear
and fresh, without any sign of such taint or corruption, though it lay
neglected in a close sultry place.
Roxana, who was now with child, and upon that account much honored by
the Macedonians, being jealous of Statira, sent for her by a counterfeit letter,
as if Alexander had been still alive; and when she had her in her power,
killed her and her sister, and threw their bodies into a well, which they
filled up with earth, not without the privity and assistance of Perdiccas, who
in the time immediately following the king's death, under cover of the
name of Arrhidaeus, whom he carried about him as a sort of guard to his
person, exercised the chief authority. Arrhidaeus, who was Philip's son
by an obscure woman of the name of Philinna, was himself of weak intellect, not
that he had been originally deficient either in body or mind, on the contrary,
in his childhood, he had showed a happy and promising character enough.
But a diseased habit of body, caused by drugs which Olympias gave him,
had ruined, not only his health, but his understanding.
Powers of
Literature
home
Instructor:
gutchess@englishare.net
Copyright ©
2001
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READINGS
for Powers of Literature
(with Lesson numbers):
1. Genesis
1
Creation Story
1. Genesis
11
Babel Story
2. Odyssey
8
Odysseus' voyage 1
3. Iliad
1-2
Achilles' anger
4. Iliad
9
Mission to Achilles
4. Peleus
& Thetis
ancient sources
5. Iliad
15 ff
Death of Patroklos
6. Iliad
20 ff
Burial of Hektor
7. Odyssey
13-18
Return of Odysseus
8. Odyssey
20-24
City of Dreams
9. Life
of Alexander
the Homeric king
10. Origins
of writing
ancient sources
11. Plato,
Euthyphro
Socrates gets busted
12. Plato,
Apology
Socrates on trial
13. Plato,
Crito
Socrates in jail
14. Plato,
Phaedo
Socrates in heaven
15.
Luke,
Acts
Paul does Christ
16.
Saint
Francis
gospel without text
17.
Chretien,
The Knight of the Cart
Sire Lance's genes
18. Virgil, Aeneid
Aeneas & Dido
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