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The Death of Cyrus
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THE DEATH OF CYRUS
[270] AFTER having made the conquest of the Babylonian empire,
Cyrus found himself the sovereign of nearly all of
Asia, so
far as it was then known. Beyond his dominions there
lay, on every side, according to the opinions which
then
prevailed, vast tracts of uninhabitable territory,
desolate and impassable. These wildernesses were
rendered
unfit for man, sometimes by excessive heat, sometimes
by excessive cold, sometimes from being parched by
perpetual drought, which produced bare and desolate
deserts, and sometimes by incessant rains, which
drenched
the country and filled it with morasses and fens. On
the north was the great Caspian Sea, then almost wholly
unexplored, and extending, as the ancients believed, to
the Polar Ocean.
On the west side of the Caspian Sea were the Caucasian
Mountains, which were supposed, in those days, to be
the
highest on the globe. In the neighborhood of these
mountains there was a
[271] country, inhabited by a wild and half-savage people,
who were called Scythians. This was, in fact, a sort of
generic term, which was applied, in those days, to
almost all the aboriginal tribes beyond the confines of
civilization. The Scythians, however, if such they can
properly be called, who lived on the borders of the
Caspian Sea, were not wholly uncivilized. They
possessed many of those mechanical arts which are the
first to
be matured among warlike nations. They had no iron or
steel, but they were accustomed to work other metals,
particularly gold and brass. They tipped their spears
and javelins with brass, and made brazen plates for
defensive armor, both for themselves and for their
horses. They made, also, many ornaments and decorations
of
gold. These they attached to their helmets, their
belts, and their banners. They were very formidable in
war,
being, like all other northern nations, perfectly
desperate and reckless in battle. They were excellent
horsemen, and had an abundance of horses with which to
exercise their skill; so that their armies consisted,
like those of the Cossacks of modern times, of great
bodies of cavalry.
The various campaigns and conquests by
[272] which Cyrus obtained possession of his extended
dominions occupied an interval of about thirty years.
It was
near the close of this interval, when he was, in fact,
advancing toward a late period of life, that he formed
the plan of penetrating into these northern regions,
with a view of adding them also to his domains.
He had two sons, Cambyses and Smerdis. His wife is said
to have been a daughter of Astyages, and that he
married her soon after his conquest of the kingdom of
Media, in order to reconcile the Medians more easily to
his sway, by making a Median princess their queen.
Among the western nations of Europe such a marriage
would be
abhorred, Astyages having been Cyrus's grandfather; but
among the Orientals, in those days, alliances of this
nature were not uncommon. It would seem that this queen
was not living at the time that the events occurred
which are to be related in this chapter. Her sons had
grown up to maturity, and were now princes of great
distinction.
One of the Scythian or northern nations to which we
have referred were called the Massagetæ. They formed a
very
extensive and powerful realm. They were governed, at
this time, by a queen named Tomyris. She was a
[273] widow, past middle life. She had a son named
Spargapizes, who had, like the sons of Cyrus, attained
maturity,
and was the heir to the throne. Spargapizes was,
moreover, the commander-in-chief of the armies of the
queen.
The first plan which Cyrus formed for the annexation of
the realm of the Massagetæ to his own dominions was by
a matrimonial alliance. He accordingly raised an army
and commenced a movement toward the north, sending, at
the same time, embassadors before him into the country
of the Massagetæ, with offers of marriage to the queen.
The queen knew very well that it was her dominions, and
not herself, that constituted the great attraction for
Cyrus, and, besides, she was of an age when ambition is
a stronger passion than love. She refused the offers,
and sent back word to Cyrus forbidding his approach.
Cyrus, however, continued to move on. The boundary
between his dominions and those of the queen was at the
River Araxes, a stream flowing from west to east,
through the central parts of Asia, toward the Caspian
Sea. As
Cyrus advanced, he found the country growing more and
more wild and desolate. It was inhabited by savage
tribes, who lived on roots and
[274] herbs, and who were elevated very little, in any
respect, above the wild beasts that roamed in the
forests
around them. They had one very singular custom,
according to Herodotus. It seems that there was a plant
which
grew among them, that bore a fruit, whose fumes, when
it was roasting on a fire, had an exhilarating effect,
like that produced by wine. These savages, therefore,
Herodotus says, were accustomed to assemble around a
fire, in their convivial festivities, and to throw some
of this fruit in the midst of it. The fumes emitted by
the fruit would soon begin to intoxicate the whole
circle, when they would throw on more fruit, and become
more
and more excited, until, at length, they would jump up,
and dance about, and sing, in a state of complete
inebriation.
Among such savages as these, and through the forests
and wildernesses in which they lived, Cyrus advanced
till
he reached the Araxes. Here, after considering, for
some time, by what means he could best pass the river,
he
determined to build a floating bridge, by means of
boats and rafts obtained from the natives on the banks,
or
built for the purpose. It would be obviously much
easier to transport the army by using these boats and
rafts
to float the men
[275] across, instead of constructing a bridge with them; but
this would not have been safe, for the transportation
of the army by such a means would be gradual and slow;
and if the enemy were lurking in the neighborhood, and
should make an attack upon them in the midst of the
operation, while a part of the army were upon one bank
and
a part upon the other, and another portion still,
perhaps, in boats upon the stream, the defeat and
destruction
of the whole would be almost inevitable. Cyrus planned
the formation of the bridge, therefore, as a means of
transporting his army in a body, and of landing them on
the opposite bank in solid columns, which could be
formed into order of battle without any delay.
While Cyrus was engaged in the work of constructing the
bridge, embassadors appeared, who said that they had
been sent from Tomyris. She had commissioned them, they
said, to warn Cyrus to desist entirely from his designs
upon her kingdom, and to return to his own. This would
be the wisest course, too, Tomyris said, for himself,
and she counseled him, for his own welfare, to follow
it. He could not foresee the result, if he should
invade
her dominions and encounter her armies. Fortune had
favored
[276] him thus far, it was true, but fortune might change,
and he might find himself, before he was aware, at the
end
of his victories. Still, she said, she had no
expectation that he would be disposed to listen to this
warning
and advice, and, on her part, she had no objection to
his persevering in his invasion. She did not fear him.
He
need not put himself to the expense and trouble of
building a bridge across the Araxes. She would agree to
withdraw all her forces three days' march into her own
country, so that he might cross the river safely and at
his leisure, and she would await him at the place where
she should have encamped; or, if he preferred it, she
would cross the river and meet him on his own side. In
that case, he must retire three days' march from the
river, so as to afford her the same opportunity to make
the passage undisturbed which she had offered him. She
would then come over and march on to attack him. She
gave Cyrus his option which branch of this alternative
to
choose.
Cyrus called a council of war to consider the question.
He laid the case before his officers and generals, and
asked for their opinion. They were unanimously agreed
that it would be best for him to accede to the last of
the two
propo- [277] sals made to him, viz., to draw back three days' journey
toward his own dominions, and wait for Tomyris to come
and
attack him there.
There was, however, one person present at this
consultation, though not regularly a member of the
council, who
gave Cyrus different advice. This was Crœsus, the
fallen king of Lydia. Ever since the time of his
captivity,
he had been retained in the camp and in the household
of Cyrus, and had often accompanied him in his
expeditions and campaigns. Though a captive, he seems
to have been a friend; at least, the most friendly
relations appeared to subsist between him and his
conqueror; and he often figures in history as a wise
and
honest counselor to Cyrus, in the various emergencies
in which he was placed. He was present on this
occasion,
and he dissented from the opinion which was expressed
by the officers of the army.
"I ought to apologize, perhaps," said he, "for
presuming to offer any counsel, captive as I am; but I
have
derived, in the school of calamity and misfortune in
which I have been taught, some advantages for learning
wisdom which you have never enjoyed. It seems to me
that it will be much better for you not to
[278] fall back, but to advance and attack Tomyris in her own
dominions; for, if you retire in this manner, in the
first place, the act itself is discreditable to you:
it is a retreat. Then, if, in the battle that follows,
Tomyris conquers you, she is already advanced three
days' march into your dominions, and she may go on,
and,
before you can take measures for raising another army,
make herself mistress of your empire. On the other
hand,
if, in the battle, you conquer her, you will be then
six days' march back of the position which you would
occupy if you were to advance now.
"I will propose," continued Crœsus, "the following plan:
Cross the river according to Tomyris's offer, and
advance the three days' journey into her country. Leave
a small part of your force there, with a great
abundance of your most valuable baggage and
supplies—luxuries of all kinds, and rich wines,
and such articles
as the enemy will most value as plunder. Then fall back
with the main body of your army toward the river again,
in a secret manner, and encamp in an ambuscade. The
enemy will attack your advanced detachment. They will
conquer them. They will seize the stores and supplies,
and will suppose that your whole army
[279] is vanquished. They will fall upon the plunder in
disorder, and the discipline of their army will be
overthrown. They will go to feasting upon the
provisions and to drinking the wines, and then, when
they are in
the midst of their festivities and revelry, you can
come back suddenly with the real strength of your army,
and
wholly overwhelm them."
Cyrus determined to adopt the plan which Crœsus thus
recommended. He accordingly gave answer to the
embassadors
of Tomyris that he would accede to the first of her
proposals. If she would draw back from the river three
days' march, he would cross it with his army as soon as
practicable, and then come forward and attack her. The
embassadors received this message, and departed to
deliver it to their queen. She was faithful to her
agreement, and drew her forces bank to the place
proposed, and left them there, encamped under the
command of
her son.
Cyrus seems to have felt some forebodings in respect to
the manner in which this expedition was to end. He was
advanced in life, and not now as well able as he once
was to endure the privations and hardships of such
campaigns. Then, the incursion which he was to make was
[280] into a remote, and wild, and dangerous country and he
could not but be aware that he might never return.
Perhaps he may have had some compunctions of
conscience, too, at thus wantonly disturbing the peace
and
invading the territories of an innocent neighbor, and
his mind may have been the less at ease on that
account.
At any rate, he resolved to settle the affairs of his
government before he set out, in order to secure both
the
tranquility of the country while he should be absent,
and the regular transmission of his power to his
descendants in case he should never return.
Accordingly, in a very formal manner, and in the
presence of all his army, he delegated his power to
Cambyses,
his son, constituting him regent of the realm during
his absence. He committed Crœsus to his son's special
care, charging him to pay him every attention and
honor. It was arranged that these persons, as well as a
considerable portion of the army, and a large number of
attendants that had followed the camp thus far, were
not to accompany the expedition across the river, but
were to remain behind and return to the capital. These
arrangements being all thus finally made, Cyrus took
leave of his son and of Crœsus, crossed the
[281] river with that part of the army which was to proceed,
and commenced his march.
The uneasiness and anxiety which Cyrus seems to have
felt in respect to his future fate on this memorable
march
affected even his dreams. It seems that there was among
the officers of his army a certain general named
Hystaspes. He had a son named Darius, then a youth of
about twenty years of age, who had been left at home,
in
Persia, when the army marched, not being old enough to
accompany them. Cyrus dreamed, one night, immediately
after crossing the river, that he saw this young Darius
with wings on his shoulders, that extended, the one
over Asia and the other over Europe, thus overshadowing
the world. When Cyrus awoke and reflected upon his
dream, it seemed to him to portend that Darius might be
aspiring to the government of his empire. He considered
it a warning intended to put him on his guard.
When he awoke in the morning, he sent for Hystaspes,
and related to him his dream. "I am satisfied," said
he,
"that it denotes that your son is forming ambitious and
treasonable designs. Do you therefore, return home, and
arrest him in this fatal course. Secure him,
[282] and let him be ready to give me an account of his
conduct when I shall return."
Hystaspes, having received this commission, left the
army and returned. The name of this Hystaspes acquired
a
historical immortality in a very singular way, that is,
by being always used as a part of the appellation by
which to designate his distinguished son. In after
years Darius did attain to a very extended power. He
became
Darius the Great. As, however, there were several other Persian monarchs called Darius, some of whom were
nearly as great as this the first of the name, the
usage was gradually established of calling him Darius
Hystaspes; and thus the name of the father has become
familiar to all mankind, simply as a consequence and
pendant to the celebrity of the son.
After sending off Hystaspes, Cyrus went on. He
followed, in all respects, the plan of Crœsus. He
marched his
army into the country of Tomyris, and advanced until he
reached the point agreed upon. Here he stationed a
feeble portion of his army, with great stores of
provisions and wines, and abundance of such articles as
would,
be prized by the barbarians as booty. He then drew back
with the main body of his army toward the Araxes, and
concealed his
[283] forces in a hidden encampment. The result was as Crœsus
had anticipated. The body which he had left was
attacked by the troops of Tomyris, and effectually
routed. The provisions and stores fell into the hands
of the
victors. They gave themselves up to the most unbounded
joy, and their whole camp was soon a universal scene of
rioting and excess. Even the commander, Spargapizes,
Tomyris's son, became intoxicated with the wine.
While things were in this state, the main body of the
army of Cyrus returned suddenly and unexpectedly, and
fell upon their now helpless enemies with a force which
entirely overwhelmed them. The booty was recovered,
large numbers of the enemy were slain, and others were
taken prisoners. Spargapizes himself was captured; his
hands were bound; he was taken into Cyrus's camp, and
closely guarded.
The result of this stratagem, triumphantly successful
as it was, would have settled the contest, and made
Cyrus
master of the whole realm, if as he, at the time,
supposed was the case, the main body of Tomyris's
forces had
been engaged in this battle; but it seems that Tomyris
had learned, by reconnoiterers and spies, how large a
force there was in Cyrus's
[284] camp, and had only sent a detachment of her own troops
to attack them, not judging it necessary to call out
the
whole. Two thirds of her army remained still uninjured.
With this large force she would undoubtedly have
advanced without any delay to attack Cyrus again, were
it not for her maternal concern for the safety of her
son. He was in Cyrus's power, a helpless captive, and
she did not know to what cruelties he would be exposed
if
Cyrus were to be exasperated against her. While her
heart, therefore, was burning with resentment and
anger,
and with an almost uncontrollable thirst for revenge,
her hand was restrained. She kept back her army, and
sent
to Cyrus a conciliatory message.
She said to Cyrus that he had no cause to be specially
elated at his victory; that it was only one third of
her
forces that had been engaged, and that with the
remainder she held him completely in her power. She
urged him,
therefore, to be satisfied with the injury which he had
already inflicted upon her by destroying one third of
her army, and to liberate her son, retire from her
dominions, and leave her in peace. If he would do so,
she
would not molest him in his departure; but if he would
not, she
[285] swore by the sun, the great god which she and her
countrymen adored, that, insatiable as he was for
blood, she
would give it to him till he had his fill.
Of course Cyrus was not to be frightened by such
threats as these. He refused to deliver up the captive
prince,
or to withdraw from the country, and both parties began
to prepare again for war.
Spargapizes was intoxicated when he was taken, and was
unconscious of the calamity which had befallen him.
When
at length he awoke from his stupor, and learned the
full extent of his misfortune, and of the indelible
disgrace which he had incurred, he was overwhelmed with
astonishment, disappointment, and shame. The more he
reflected upon his condition, the more hopeless it
seemed. Even if his life were to be spared, and if he
were
to recover his liberty, he never could recover his
honor. The ignominy of such a defeat and such a
captivity,
he knew well, must be indelible.
He begged Cyrus to loosen his bonds and allow him
personal liberty within the camp. Cyrus, pitying,
perhaps,
his misfortunes, and the deep dejection and distress
which they occasioned, acceded to this request.
Spargapizes
watched
watch- [286] ed an opportunity to seize a weapon when he was not
observed by his guards, and killed himself.
His mother Tomyris, when she heard of his fate, was
frantic with grief and rage. She considered Cyrus as
the
wanton destroyer of the peace of her kingdom and the
murderer of her son, and she had now no longer any
reason
for restraining her thirst for revenge. She immediately
began to concentrate her forces, and to summon all the
additional troops that she could obtain from every part
of her kingdom. Cyrus, too, began in earnest to
strengthen his lines, and to prepare for the great
final struggle.
At length the armies approached each other, and the
battle began. The attack was commenced by the archers
on
either side, who shot showers of arrows at their
opponents as they were advancing. When the arrows were
spent,
the men fought hand to hand, with spears, and javelins,
and swords. The Persians fought desperately, for they
fought for their lives. They were in the heart of an
enemy's country, with a broad river behind them to cut
off
their retreat, and they were contending with a wild and
savage foe, whose natural barbarity was rendered still
more ferocious and terrible than
[287] ever by the exasperation which they felt, in sympathy
with their injured queen. For a long time it was wholly
uncertain which side would win the day. The advantage,
here and there along the lines, was in some places on
one side, and in some places on the other; but, though
overpowered and beaten, the several bands, whether of
Persians or Scythians, would neither retreat nor
surrender, but the survivors, when their comrades had
fallen,
continued to fight on till they were all slain. It was
evident, at last, that the Scythians were gaining the
day. When night came on, the Persian army was found to
be almost wholly destroyed; the remnant dispersed. When
all was over, the Scythians, in exploring the field,
found the dead body of Cyrus among the other ghastly
and
mutilated remains which covered the ground. They took
it up with a ferocious and exulting joy, and carried it
to Tomyris.
Tomyris treated it with every possible indignity. She
cut and mutilated the lifeless form, as if it could
still
feel the injuries inflicted by her insane revenge.
"Miserable wretch!" said she; "though I am in the end
your
conqueror, you have ruined my peace and happiness
forever. You have murdered my son.
[288] But I promised you your fill of blood, and you shall
have it." So saying, she filled a can with Persian
blood,
obtained, probably, by the execution of her captives,
and, cutting off the head of her victim from the body,
she plunged it in, exclaiming, "Drink there, insatiable
monster, till your murderous thirst is satisfied."
This was the end of Cyrus. Cambyses, his son, whom he
had appointed regent during his absence, succeeded
quietly to the government of his vast dominions.
In reflecting on this melancholy termination of this
great conqueror's history, our minds naturally revert
to
the scenes of his childhood, and we wonder that so
amiable, and gentle, and generous a boy should become
so
selfish, and unfeeling, and overbearing as a man. But
such are the natural and inevitable effects of ambition
and an inordinate love of power. The history of a
conqueror is always a tragical and melancholy tale. He
begins
life with an exhibition of great and noble qualities,
which awaken in us, who read his history, the same
admiration that was felt for him, personally, by his
friends and countrymen while he lived, and on which the
vast ascendency which he acquired over the minds of his
fellow-men, and which led
[289] to his power and fame, was, in a great measure,
founded. On the other hand, he ends life neglected,
hated, and
abhorred. His ambition has been gratified, but the
gratification has brought with it no substantial peace
or
happiness; on the contrary, it has filled his soul with
uneasiness, discontent, suspiciousness, and misery. The
histories of heroes would be far less painful in the
perusal if we could reverse this moral change of
character, so as to have the cruelty, the selfishness,
and the oppression exhaust themselves in the
comparatively unimportant transactions of early life,
and the spirit of kindness, generosity, and beneficence
blessing and beautifying its close. To be generous,
disinterested, and noble, seems to be necessary as the
precursor of great military success; and to be
hard-hearted, selfish, and cruel is the almost
inevitable
consequence of it. The exceptions to this rule, though
some of them are very splendid, are yet very few.
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