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Crossing the Hellespont
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CROSSING THE HELLESPONT
[78] ON Alexander's arrival in Macedon, he immediately began to
turn his attention to the subject of the invasion of Asia.
He was full of ardor and enthusiasm to carry this project
into effect. Considering his extreme youth, and the
captivating character of the enterprise, it is strange that
he should have exercised so much deliberation and caution as
his conduct did really evince. He had now settled every
thing in the most thorough manner, both within his dominions
and among the nations on his borders, and, as it seemed to
him, the time had come when he was to commence active
preparations for the great Asiatic campaign.
He brought the subject before his ministers and counselors.
They, in general, concurred with him in opinion. There were,
however, two who were in doubt, or rather who were, in fact,
opposed to the plan, though they expressed their
non-concurrence in the form of doubts. These two persons
were Antipater and
Par- [79] menio, the venerable officers who have been already
mentioned as having served Philip so faithfully, and as
transferring, on the death of the father, their attachment
and allegiance at once to the son.
Antipater and Parmenio represented to Alexander that if he
were to go to Asia at that time, he would put to extreme
hazard all the interests of Macedon. As he had no family,
there was, of course, no direct heir to the crown, and, in
case of any misfortune happening by which his life should be
lost, Macedon would become at once the prey of contending
factions, which would immediately arise, each presenting its
own candidate for the vacant throne. The sagacity and
foresight which these statesmen evinced in these suggestions
were abundantly confirmed in the end. Alexander did die in
Asia, his vast kingdom at once fell into pieces, and it was
desolated with internal commotions and civil wars for a long
period after his death.
Parmenio and Antipater accordingly advised the king to
postpone his expedition. They advised him to seek a wife
among the princesses of Greece, and then to settle down
quietly to the duties of domestic life, and to the
government of his kingdom for a few years; then,
[80] when every thing should have become settled and consolidated
in Greece, and his family was established in the hearts of
his countrymen, he could leave Macedon more safely. Public
affairs would go on more steadily while he lived, and, in
case of his death, the crown would descend, with
comparatively little danger of civil commotion, to his heir.
But Alexander was fully decided against any such policy as
this. He resolved to embark in the great expedition at once.
He concluded to make Antipater his vicegerent in Macedon
during his absence, and to take Parmenio with him into Asia.
It will be remembered that Antipater was the statesman and
Parmenio the general; that is, Antipater had been employed
more by Philip in civil, and Parmenio in military affairs,
though in those days every body who was in public life was
more or less a soldier.
Alexander left an army of ten or twelve thousand men with
Antipater for the protection of Macedon. He organized
another army of about thirty-five thousand to go with him.
This was considered a very small army for such a vast
undertaking. One or two hundred years before this time,
Darius, a king of Persia, had invaded Greece with an army of
five hundred thousand
[81] men, and yet he had been defeated and driven back, and now
Alexander was undertaking to retaliate with a great deal
less than one tenth part of the force.
Of Alexander's army of thirty-five thousand, thirty thousand
were foot soldiers, and about five thousand were horse. More
than half the whole army was from Macedon. The remainder was
from the southern states of Greece. A large body of the
horse was from Thessaly, which, as will be seen on the map,
was a country south of Macedon. It was, in fact, one broad
expanded valley, with mountains all around. Torrents
descended from these mountains, forming streams which flowed
in currents more and more deep and slow as they descended
into the plains, and combining at last into one central
river, which flowed to the eastward, and escaped from the
environage of mountains through a most celebrated dell
called the Vale of Tempe. On the north of this valley is
Olympus, and on the south the two twin mountains Pelion and
Ossa. There was an ancient story of a war in Thessaly
between the giants who were imagined to have lived there in
very early days, and the gods. The giants piled Pelion upon
Ossa to
[82] enable them to get up to heaven in their assault upon their
celestial enemies. The fable has led to a proverb which
prevails in every language in Europe, by which all
extravagant and unheard-of exertions to accomplish an end is
said to be a piling of Pelion upon Ossa.
Thessaly was famous for its horses and its horsemen. The
slopes of the mountains furnished the best of pasturage for
the rearing of the animals, and the plains below afforded
broad and open fields for training and exercising the bodies
of cavalry formed by means of them. The Thessalian horse
were famous throughout all Greece. Bucephalus was reared in
Thessaly.
Alexander, as king of Macedon, possessed extensive estates
and revenues, which were his own personal property, and were
independent of the revenues of the state. Before setting out
on his expedition, he apportioned these among his great
officers and generals, both those who were to go and those
who were to remain. He evinced great generosity in this, but
it was, after all, the spirit of ambition, more than that of
generosity, which led him to do it. The two great impulses
which animated him were the pleasure of doing great deeds,
and the fame and glory of having done them. These
[83] two principles are very distinct in their nature, though
often conjoined. They were paramount and supreme in
Alexander's character, and every other human principle was
subordinate to them. Money was to him, accordingly, only a
means to enable him to accomplish these ends. His
distributing his estates and revenues in the manner above
described was only a judicious appropriation of the money to
the promotion of the great ends he wished to attain; it was
expenditure, not gift. It answered admirably the end he had
in view. His friends all looked upon him as extremely
generous and self-sacrificing. They asked him what he had
reserved for himself. "Hope," said Alexander.
At length all things were ready, and Alexander began to
celebrate the religious sacrifices, spectacles, and shows
which, in those days, always preceded great undertakings of
this kind. There was a great ceremony in honor of Jupiter
and the nine Muses, which had long been celebrated in
Macedon as a sort of annual national festival. Alexander now
caused great preparations for this festival.
In the days of the Greeks, public worship and public
amusement were combined in one and the same series of
spectacles and ceremonies.
[84] All worship was a theatrical show, and almost all shows were
forms of worship. The religious instincts of the human heart
demand some sort of sympathy and aid, real or imaginary,
from the invisible world, in great and solemn undertakings,
and in every momentous crisis in its history. It is true
that Alexander's soldiers, about to leave their homes to go
to another quarter of the globe, and into scenes of danger
and death from which it was very improbable that many of
them would ever return, had no other celestial protection to
look up to than the spirits of ancient heroes, who, they
imagined, had, somehow or other, found their final home in a
sort of heaven among the summits of the mountains, where
they reigned, in some sense, over human affairs; but this,
small as it seems to us, was a great deal to them. They
felt, when sacrificing to these gods, that they were
invoking their presence and sympathy. These deities having
been engaged in the same enterprises themselves, and
animated with the same hopes and fears, the soldiers
imagined that the semi-human divinities invoked by them
would take an interest in their dangers, and rejoice in
their success.
The Muses, in honor of whom, as well as
Ju- [85] piter, this great Macedonian festival was held, were nine
singing and dancing maidens, beautiful in countenance and
form, and enchantingly graceful in all their movements. They
came, the ancients imagined, from Thrace, in the north, and
went first to Jupiter upon Mount Olympus, who made them
goddesses. Afterward they went southward, and spread over
Greece, making their residence, at last, in a palace upon
Mount Parnassus, which will be found upon the map just north
of the Gulf of Corinth and west of Bœotia. They were
worshiped all over Greece and Italy as the goddesses of
music and dancing. In later times particular sciences and
arts were assigned to them respectively, as history,
astronomy, tragedy, &c., though there was no distinction of
this kind in early days.
The festivities in honor of Jupiter and the Muses were
continued in Macedon nine days, a number corresponding with
that of the dancing goddesses. Alexander made very
magnificent preparations for the celebration on this
occasion. He had a tent made, under which, it is said, a
hundred tables could be spread; and here he entertained, day
after day, an enormous company of princes, potentates, and
generals.
[86] He offered sacrifices to such of the gods as he supposed it
would please the soldiers to imagine that they had
propitiated. Connected with these sacrifices and feastings,
there were athletic and military spectacles and shows—races
and wrestlings—and mock contests, with blunted spears. All
these things encouraged and quickened the ardor and
animation of the soldiers. It aroused their ambition to
distinguish themselves by their exploits, and gave them an
increased and stimulated desire for honor and fame. Thus
inspirited by new desires for human praise, and trusting in
the sympathy and protection of powers which were all that
they conceived of as divine, the army prepared to set forth
from their native land, bidding it a long, and, as it proved
to most of them, a final farewell.
By following the course of Alexander's expedition upon the
map at the commencement of chapter iii, it will be seen that his
route lay first along the northern coasts of the Ægean Sea,
He was to pass from Europe into Asia by crossing the
Hellespont between Sestos and Abydos. He sent a fleet of a
hundred and fifty galleys, of three banks of oars each, over
the Ægean Sea, to land at Sestos, and be ready to transport
his army across the straits. The
ar- [87] my, in the mean time, marched by land. They had to cross
the rivers which flow into the Ægean Sea on the northern
side; but as these rivers were in Macedon, and no opposition
was encountered upon the banks of them, there was no serious
difficulty in effecting the passage. When they reached
Sestos, they found the fleet ready there, awaiting their
arrival.
It is very strikingly characteristic of the mingling of
poetic sentiment and enthusiasm with calm and calculating
business efficiency, which shone conspicuously so often in
Alexander's career, that when he arrived at Sestos, and
found that the ships were there, and the army safe, and that
there was no enemy to oppose his landing on the Asiatic
shore, he left Parmenio to conduct the transportation of the
troops across the water, while he himself went away in a
single galley on an excursion of sentiment and romantic
adventure. A little south of the place where his army was to
cross, there lay, on the Asiatic shore, an extended plain,
on which were the ruins of Troy. Now Troy was the city which
was the scene of Homer's poems—those poems which had
excited so much interest in the mind of Alexander in his
early years; and he determined, instead of crossing the
Helles- [88] pont with the main body of his army, to proceed
southward in a single galley, and land, himself, on the
Asiatic shore, on the very spot which the romantic
imagination of his youth had dwelt upon so often and so
long.
Troy was situated upon a plain. Homer describes an island
off the coast, named Tenedos, and a mountain near called
Mount Ida. There was also a river called the Scamander. The
island, the mountain, and the river remain, preserving their
original names to the present day,
[89] except that the river is now called the Mender; but,
although various vestiges of ancient ruins are found
scattered about the plain, no spot can be identified as the
site of the city. Some scholars have maintained that there
probably never was such a city; that Homer invented the
whole, there being nothing real in all that he describes
except the river, the mountain, and the island. His story
is, however, that there was a great and powerful city there,
with a kingdom attached to it, and that this city was
besieged by the Greeks for ten years, at the end of which
time it was taken and destroyed.
The story of the origin of this war is substantially this.
Priam was king of Troy. His wife, a short time before her
son was born, dreamed that at his birth the child turned
into a torch and set the palace on fire. She told this dream
to the soothsayers, and asked them what it meant. They said
it must mean that her son would be the means of bringing
some terrible calamities and disasters upon the family. The
mother was terrified, and, to avert these calamities, gave
the child to a slave as soon as it was born, and ordered him
to destroy it. The slave pitied the helpless babe, and, not
liking to destroy it with his own hand, carried it to Mount
Ida, and left it there in the forests to die.
[90] A she bear, roaming through the woods, found the child, and,
experiencing a feeling of maternal tenderness for it, she
took care of it, and reared it as if it had been her own
offspring. The child was found, at last, by some shepherds
who lived upon the mountain, and they adopted it as their
own, robbing the brute mother of her charge. They named the
boy Paris. He grew in strength and beauty, and gave early
and extraordinary proofs of courage and energy, as if he had
imbibed some of the qualities of his fierce foster mother
with the milk she gave him. He was so remarkable for
athletic beauty and manly courage, that he not only easily
won the heart of a nymph of Mount Ida, named Œnone, whom he
married, but he also attracted the attention of the
goddesses in the heavens.
At length these goddesses had a dispute which they agreed to
refer to him. The origin of the dispute was this. There was
a wedding among them, and one of them, irritated at not
having been invited, had a golden apple made, on which were
engraved the words,
"TO BE GIVEN TO THE MOST BEAUTIFUL." She
threw this apple into the assembly: her object was to make
them quarrel for it. In fact, she was herself the goddess of
discord, and, independently of her cause
[91] of pique in this case, she loved to promote disputes. It is
in allusion to this ancient tale that any subject of
dispute, brought up unnecessarily among friends, is called
to this day an apple of discord.
Three of the goddesses claimed the apple, each insisting
that she was more beautiful than the others, and this was
the dispute which they agreed to refer to Paris. They
accordingly exhibited themselves before him in the
mountains, that he might look at them and decide. They did
not, however, seem willing, either of them, to trust to an
impartial decision of the question, but each offered the
judge a bribe to induce him to decide in her favor. One
promised him a kingdom, another great fame, and the third,
Venus, promised him the most beautiful woman in the world
for his wife. He decided in favor of Venus; whether because
she was justly entitled to the decision, or through the
influence of the bribe, the story does not say.
All this time Paris remained on the mountain, a simple
shepherd and herdsman, not knowing his relationship to the
monarch who reigned over the city and kingdom on the plain
below. King Priam, however, about this time, in some games
which he was celebrating, offered, as a
[92] prize to the victor, the finest bull which could be obtained
on Mount Ida. On making examination, Paris was found to have
the finest bull, and the king, exercising the despotic power
which kings in those days made no scruple of assuming in
respect to helpless peasants, took it away. Paris was very
indignant. It happened, however, that a short time afterward
there was another opportunity to contend for the same bull,
and Paris, disguising himself as a prince, appeared in the
lists, conquered every competitor, and bore away the bull
again to his home in the fastnesses of the mountain.
In consequence of this his appearance at court, the daughter
of Priam, whose name was Cassandra, became acquainted with
him, and, inquiring into his story, succeeded in
ascertaining that he was her brother, the long-lost child,
that had been supposed to be put to death. King Priam was
convinced by the evidence which she brought forward, and
Paris was brought home to his father's house. After becoming
established in his new position, he remembered the promise
of Venus that he should have the most beautiful woman in the
world for his wife, and he began, accordingly, to inquire
where he could find her.
[95] There was in Sparta, one of the cities of Southern Greece, a
certain king Menelaus, who had a youthful bride named Helen,
who was famed far and near for her beauty. Paris came to the
conclusion that she was the most lovely woman in the world,
and that he was entitled, in virtue of Venus's promise, to
obtain possession of her, if he could do so by any means
whatever. He accordingly made a journey into Greece, visited
Sparta, formed an acquaintance with Helen, persuaded her to
abandon her husband and her duty, and elope with him to
Troy.
PARIS AND HELEN
|
Menelaus was indignant at this outrage. He called on all
Greece to take up arms and join him in the attempt to
recover his bride. They responded to this demand. They first
sent to Priam, demanding that he should restore Helen to her
husband. Priam refused to do so, taking part with his son.
The Greeks then raised a fleet and an army, and came to the
plains of Troy, encamped before the city, and persevered for
ten long years in besieging it, when at length it was taken
and destroyed.
These stories relating to the origin of the war, however,
marvelous and entertaining as they are, were not the points
which chiefly interested the mind of Alexander. The portions
of Ho- [96] mer's narratives which most excited his enthusiasm were
those relating to the characters of the heroes who fought,
on one side and on the other, at the siege, their various
adventures, and the delineations of their motives and
principles of conduct, and the emotions and excitements they
experienced in the various circumstances in which they were
placed. Homer described with great beauty and force the
workings of ambition, of resentment, of pride, of rivalry,
and all those other impulses of the human heart which would
excite and control the action of impetuous men in the
circumstances in which his heroes were placed.
Each one of the heroes whose history and adventures he
gives, possessed a well-marked and striking character, and
differed in temperament and action from the rest. Achilles
was one. He was fiery, impetuous, and implacable in
character, fierce and merciless; and, though perfectly
undaunted and fearless, entirely destitute of magnanimity.
There was a river called the Styx, the waters of which were
said to have the property of making any one invulnerable.
The mother of Achilles dipped him into it in his infancy,
holding him by the heel. The heel, not having been
immersed, was the only
[97] part which could be wounded. Thus he was safe in battle, and
was a terrible warrior. He, however, quarreled with his
comrades and withdrew from their cause on slight pretexts,
and then became reconciled again, influenced by equally
frivolous reasons.
ACHILLES
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Agamemnon was the commander-in-chief of the Greek army.
After a certain victory, by which some captives were taken,
and were to be divided among the victors, Agamemnon was
obliged to restore one, a noble lady, who had fallen to his
share, and he took away the one that had been assigned to
Achilles to replace her. This incensed Achilles, and he
withdrew
[98] for a long time from the contest; and, in consequence of his
absence, the Trojans gained great and continued victories
against the Greeks. For a long time nothing could induce
Achilles to return.
At length, however, though he would not go himself, he
allowed his intimate friend, whose name was Patroclus, to
take his armor and go into battle. Patroclus was at first
successful, but was soon killed by Hector, the brother of
Paris. This aroused anger and a spirit of revenge in the
mind of Achilles. He gave up his quarrel with Agamemnon and
returned to the combat. He did not remit his exertions till
he had slain Hector, and then he expressed his brutal
exultation, and satisfied his revenge, by dragging the dead
body at the wheels of his chariot around the walls of the
city. He then sold the body to the distracted father for a
ransom.
It was such stories as these, which are related in the poems
of Homer with great beauty and power, that had chiefly
interested the mind of Alexander. The subjects interested
him; the accounts of the contentions, the rivalries, the
exploits of these warriors, the delineations of their
character and springs of action, and the narrations of the
various incidents and events to
[99] which such a war gave rise, were all calculated to captivate
the imagination of a young martial hero.
Alexander accordingly resolved that his first landing in
Asia should be at Troy. He left his army under the charge of
Parmenio, to cross from Sestos to Abydos, while he himself
set forth in a single galley to proceed to the southward.
There was a port on the Trojan shore where the Greeks had
been accustomed to disembark, and he steered his course for
it. He had a bull on board his galley which he was going to
offer as a sacrifice to Neptune when half way from shore to
shore.
Neptune was the god of the sea. It is true that the
Hellespont is not the open ocean, but it is an arm of the
sea, and thus belonged properly to the dominions which the
ancients assigned to the divinity of the waters. Neptune was
conceived of by the ancients as a monarch dwelling on the
seas or upon the coasts, and riding over the waves seated in
a great shell, or sometimes in a chariot, drawn by dolphins
or sea-horses. In these excursions he was attended by a
train of sea-gods and nymphs, who, half floating, half
swimming, followed him over the billows. Instead of a
scepter Neptune carried
[100] a trident. A trident was a sort of three-pronged harpoon,
such as was used in those days by the fishermen of the
Mediterranean. It was from this circumstance, probably, that
it was chosen as the badge of authority for the god of the
sea.
Alexander took the helm, and steered the galley with his own
hands toward the Asiatic shore. Just before he reached the
land, he took his place upon the prow, and threw a javelin
at the shore as he approached it, a symbol of the spirit of
defiance and hostility with which he advanced to the
frontiers of the eastern world. He was also the first to
land. After disembarking his company, he offered sacrifices
to the gods, and then proceeded to visit the places which
had been the scenes of the events which Homer had described.
Homer had written five hundred years before the time of
Alexander, and there is some doubt whether the ruins and the
remains of cities which our hero found there were really the
scenes of the narratives which had interested him so deeply.
He, however, at any rate, believed them to be so, and he was
filled with enthusiasm and pride as he wandered among them.
He seems to have been most interested in the
[101] character of Achilles, and he said that he envied him his
happy lot in having such a friend as Patroclus to help him
perform his exploits, and such a poet as Homer to celebrate
them.
After completing his visit upon the plain of Troy, Alexander
moved toward the northeast with the few men who had
accompanied him in his single galley. In the mean time
Parmenio had crossed safely, with the main body of the army,
from Sestos to Abydos. Alexander overtook them on their
march, not far from the place of their landing. To the
northward of this place, on the left of the line of march
which Alexander was taking, was the city of Lampsacus.
Now a large portion of Asia Minor, although for the most
part under the dominion of Persia, had been in a great
measure settled by Greeks, and, in previous wars between the
two nations, the various cities had been in possession,
sometimes of one power and sometimes of the other. In these
contests the city of Lampsacus had incurred the high
displeasure of the Greeks by rebelling, as they said, on one
occasion, against them. Alexander determined to destroy it
as he passed. The inhabitants were aware of this intention,
and sent an embassador to Alexander to implore his mercy.
When the embassador
[102] approached, Alexander, knowing his errand, uttered a
declaration in which he bound himself by a solemn oath not
to grant the request he was about to make. "I have come,"
said the ambassador, "to implore you to destroy
Lampascus." Alexander, pleased with the readiness of the
embassador in giving his language such a sudden turn, and
perhaps influenced by his oath, spared the city.
He was now fairly in Asia. The Persian forces were gathering
to attack him, but so unexpected and sudden had been his
invasion that they were not prepared to meet him at his
arrival, and he advanced without opposition till he reached
the banks of the little river Granicus.
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