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Aristides
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ARISTIDES
IN the life of Themistocles there is a great deal said
concerning the character of Aristides, and comparing
the traits of the two Greek statesmen. They were never
friends. Some historians say that the first ill feeling
between them arose on account of a love-affair, both,
when very young, forming an attachment for the same
girl. She died, but the rival lovers never forgave each
other.
When they grew older and took prominent parts in public
affairs, Aristides was so honest and Themistocles so
tricky that they could never agree on any point. Once
when Aristides had carried a case against Themistocles,
who had fought hard for it, he said, "The affairs of
the Athenians can never prosper unless they throw
Themistocles and me into the Barathrum." This was a
deep pit into which criminals were thrown headlong.
Aristides did not mean to call himself or his opponent
a criminal, but it was his belief that so long as two
men guided by such different principles controlled
Athenian politics there could be no peace or
prosperity.
He was a thoroughly conscientious man, and always put
himself and his personal interests out of the question
in the cause of right. Even when one of his enemies was
about to be condemned for a criminal action, Aristides
stood up and begged the judges to give
[99] the man a chance to defend himself. When he was called
upon at one time to settle a quarrel between two
private citizens, one of them tried to influence him by
telling him what injurious things the other had done to
him. "Tell me rather, good friend," he said, "what
wrong he has done you; for it is your cause, not my
own, that I am judging."
Aristides, upon being appointed treasurer of the public
funds, accused those who had held the office before him
of having stolen some of the money. Thereupon
Themistocles, who was among the accused, turned the
tables upon him, and got him condemned. But the Court
of the Areopagus defended him, and not only secured his
release from the fine imposed, but had him chosen
treasurer again. He then changed his tactics, and
allowed those who were under him to steal the public
money without appearing to
know it. This made him very popular with the few who
were benefited, and when his term of office expired
they begged that he might be reappointed. When this was
about to be done he thus addressed the Athenians:
"While I managed your money like an honest man I was
loaded with abuse, but now when I suffer a lot of
thieves to rob you I become a good citizen; but I
assure you I am more ashamed of the present honor than
I was of the former disgrace, for I see that you prefer
to oblige bad men rather than to take proper care of
the treasury." Thus he turned the dishonest men against
him, but gained the praise and confidence of the
worthy ones.
It was about this time that a Persian fleet arrived at
Marathon and began to destroy all the neighboring
country. Miltiades was appointed first in command of
the Athenian forces to oppose the enemy, and Aristides
second. It was the custom for the generals to serve in
turn, but Aristides cared so much more for the welfare
of his country than he did for personal glory that,
feeling Miltiades to be a more able general than
himself, he gave up his right, and showed the inferior
officers that he considered it no disgrace to submit
to the directions of wise and able men. His example was
followed by the other generals, and Miltiades took the
whole command. Themistocles and Aristides fought
together with such success that the Persians were
driven back to their ships. The Greeks then hurried to
Athens, fearing an attack there while the city was
[100] not properly defended. Aristides was left at Marathon
to watch the prisoners and the spoils, and although
there was much gold and silver scattered about, as well
as rich garments and other booty, he neither touched
them himself nor permitted his men to do so.
In course of time Aristides was called "the Just,"
because it was his love of justice that had more weight
with the common people than any of his other virtues.
Strange to say, this very surname which added to his
popularity at first caused his unhappiness later, for
Themistocles became envious of the weight attached to
his decisions, and raised a report that Aristides was
trying to abolish courts and get supreme power in his
own hands. This made the Athenians so uneasy that
Aristides was banished by ostracism, a proceeding that
we have explained in the life of Themistocles.
When the people were inscribing their names on the
shells for the ostracism, an ignorant countryman, who
did not know Aristides and could not write, handed his
shell to him with the request that he would write
'Aristides' upon it. "Has Aristides ever injured you?"
asked the good man. "No, and I do not even know him,"
answered the countryman, "but it annoys me to hear him
called 'the Just' all the time." Without another word
Aristides wrote his name upon the shell. As he quitted
Athens he raised his hands towards heaven, and prayed
that his countrymen might never see the day which
should force them to remember Aristides.
Three years later he was recalled because Xerxes
marched into Attica, and it was feared that Aristides
might go over to the enemy and induce many of his
countrymen to do likewise. But he was incapable of so
base a deed, and after his recall he risked his life
one night by going to the tent of Themistocles with a
piece of important news. "Let us lay aside our childish
enmity now," he said, "and work together to save
Greece. You may rule, but let me advise you to engage
the enemy in the straits without delay, for the sea all
around us is covered with their fleet; we cannot
escape, so let us fight and prove ourselves men of
courage." Themistocles replied, "I would not be
outdone by you in generosity, Aristides; my future
actions shall be as noble as this one of yours." He
then revealed to him the stratagem he had planned,
which was to send a messenger to inform the Persians
that the Greeks were
[101] going to quit the straits of Salamis, and if they
desired to crush them there was no time to lose.
Aristides gave his hearty approval, and did all he
could to aid Themistocles.
Perceiving a body of the enemy collected on a small
island in the straits near Salamis, he selected the
bravest of his countrymen, and went there in small
boats. Challenging the Persians to battle, he slew all
except a few distinguished persons, whom he took
prisoners and sent to Themistocles. He received high
praise for this great service, and Themistocles sought
his advice still further as soon as the battle was
over. He said, "You have performed a remarkable deed,
Aristides, but much more remains to be done. If we sail
quickly to the Hellespont and destroy the bridge there,
the enemy will not be able to escape, and we can
conquer them completely."
"Let us not think of such a thing," returned Aristides;
"it will be better for us to devise some means of
driving the Persians out of Greece without delay; for
should we destroy their only means of escape, they will
fight so desperately that we shall be made to suffer no
end of misery." Themistocles saw the wisdom of this
advice, and his busy brain soon conceived a plan not
only for getting rid of the enemy, but at the same time
for placing himself in a favorable light before the
king. This is what he did. He sent one of the prisoners
secretly to Xerxes, to inform him that the Greeks were
preparing to advance to the Hellespont and destroy the
bridge, but that out of regard for his royal person
Themistocles was doing the very best he could to
prevent it. The message had the desired effect, for
Xerxes was so terrified that he hurried home, leaving
Mardonius, his commander-in-chief, behind, with a force
of three hundred thousand of his best troops.
Now, although the king was out of the way, the Greeks
still had much to fear, for with such an army at his
command Mardonius was very powerful, and constantly
made his presence felt by the threatening messages he
sent the various Greek tribes. By the king's advice he
tried to win over the Athenians, and offered, if they
would take no further share in the war, to provide them
with plenty of money, rebuild their city, and make them
sole rulers of Greece.
The Lacedæmonians were so afraid they might accept the
tempt- [102] ing proposal that they sent ambassadors to offer protection
and support to their wives and children so long as the
war should last. It is true that the Athenians were in
dire distress, having lost their city, but they
understood the offer, and were so indignant that they
sent the following reply: "We could forgive the
Persians, who worship gold, for supposing that we might
be bought, but we are offended that Lacedæmonians, who
are, like ourselves, Greeks, should imagine us capable
of deserting our country under any pretext whatsoever.
We are poor and wretched, but we would not exchange all
the treasures either above or under ground for the
liberty of Greece." This was dictated by Aristides. To
the Persians he said, pointing to the heavens, "As long
as that sun shines, so long will the Athenians carry on
war with the Persians for their country, which has been
ruined, and for their temples, which have been profaned
and burnt."
When Mardonius entered Attica the second time,
Aristides met him with an army, and in the first
skirmish that ensued Masistius was killed. This was a
terrible blow to the Persians, because Masistius was
their cavalry general, and a man of remarkable courage,
strength, and personal beauty. When he fell and they
saw that he was mortally wounded, they fled and left
the Greeks masters of the field. Their loss had not
been great in numbers, but they could have spared many
in place of their general, for whom they mourned very
deeply. They filled the air with their lamentations,
and as a sign of mourning cut off their hair, as well
as the manes of their horses and mules.
After this engagement there was no fighting for a long
time, because both the Persian and the Greek priests
announced that all the omens promised victory to the
side that stood ready for defence, but defeat to the
one that made the attack. At length Mardonius felt
obliged, in spite of the omens, to fall upon the
Greeks, because his stock of provisions was getting
very low, and he saw fresh troops joining the enemy
every day and increasing their strength. So one night
he gave orders for an attack to be made at break of
day, thus expecting to take the Greeks unawares; and he
would have succeeded had it not been for the warning
the Athenians got in this way: at midnight a man
approached the Grecian camp on horseback, and bade the
sentinels call Aristides,
[103] to whom he had something important to say. Aristides
came immediately, and the man spoke thus: "I am
Alexander, King of Macedon, who for the friendship I
bear you have exposed my life to save you from a
surprise; for Mardonius will give you battle to-morrow,
not because he expects to succeed, but because his
provisions are scarce. The soothsayers give him no
encouragement, but he must either risk a battle or see
his whole army perish from want. Prepare yourself, but
do not reveal what I have said to
you."
Aristides thanked the king, and promised to tell nobody
until after the battle except Pausanias, who was
commander-in-chief.
As Alexander rode off, therefore,
he hastened to the tent of Pausanias, who, on receiving
the warning, summoned his captains and gave orders for
the army to be put in battle-array.
The Athenians felt certain of victory. "Let us fight,"
they said, "not only in defence of our country, but
that the trophies of Marathon and Salamis may belong to
the people of Athens, and not to Miltiades alone." The
first day passed without decisive action, and during
the night the Grecian camp was removed to a spot that
offered greater advantages. The Lacedæmonians made no
alteration in their position, and they were the first
to be attacked. For a while they allowed themselves to
be slain without offering resistance, because
Pausanias, who was sacrificing at a distance, could
get no favorable signs, though he prayed aloud and
entreated the gods with tears in his eyes. Suddenly the
soothsayers announced a change and gave promise of
victory. Then, with shouts and yells of delight, the
Lacedæmonians rushed to the fight like wild beasts, so
furious were their actions. They struck their pikes
into the breasts and faces of the enemy, and killed
many, though they, too, fought desperately.
Meanwhile, the Athenians, hearing of the engagement,
marched back to assist the Lacedæmonians just as they
were beating off the Persians. A Spartan named
Arimnestus killed Mardonius by a blow on the head with
a stone, the Persian camp was taken, and their men were
slain by thousands.
The Greeks had gained a splendid victory, but it nearly
caused their ruin, because both the Athenians and the
Spartans claimed the honor of the day, and would have
settled the question at the
[104] point of the sword. But Aristides did all he could to
pacify the generals, and at last persuaded them to
leave it to the judgment of the whole country. A
council was called, and it was decided that in order to
prevent a civil war the honor should be conferred
neither on the Spartans nor on the Athenians, but on
the Platæans. Aristides yielded at once, and Pausanias
followed his example.
Both the Spartans and the Athenians built temples in
honor of the victory, and sent to consult the oracle at
Delphi as to what sacrifice they should offer. The
answer directed them to build an altar to Jupiter, the
Deliverer, but not to offer any sacrifice upon it until
all the fires in the country had been put out, because
they had been polluted by the barbarians. Pure fire was
then to be brought from Delphi. The Greek generals
visited every part of the country, and caused the fires
to be extinguished, while a man named Euchidas
hastened to Delphi for a fresh supply. On arriving
there he purified himself with water, put a crown of
laurel on his head, took fire from the altar, and
hurried back to Platæa, where he arrived before sunset.
But he had exhausted himself by travelling so fast, and
had only time to salute his fellow-citizens and deliver
the sacred fire, when he fell down dead. A monument was
erected to him in the Temple of Diana, on which was
inscribed, "Here lies Euchidas, who went to Delphi and
back in one day."
When the first general assembly of the Greeks was
called after peace had been restored, Aristides
proposed that priests from all the states should meet
at Platæa each year to offer sacrifices to the gods,
and that every fifth year the Eleutheria, or Games of
Freedom, should be celebrated there; also that ships,
men, and horses should be annually supplied for war
against the Persians, but that the Platæans should
devote themselves to religious services, and never
again stain their hands with human blood. This became a
law, and the yearly procession for the sacrifice began
at break of day. First a trumpeter appeared sounding
the advance; then followed chariots loaded with myrrh
and garlands; next a black bull, followed by young men
carrying wine and milk in large vessels, jars of oil,
and precious ointments. No slaves could appear in this
procession, because it took place in honor of men who
died fighting for freedom. Last of all came the chief
magistrate of Platæa. It was considered unlawful at
other times for this
digni- [105] tary to touch iron or to wear any but a white garment, but
on this occasion his robe was purple, and he carried a
sword and a large jug. Drawing water from a spring, he
washed with his own hands the little pillars of the
monuments over the dead, and rubbed them with essences.
Then he killed the bull upon a pile of wood, brayed to
Jupiter and Mercury, and invited the brave men who had
fallen in the cause of Greece to the banquet, at the
same time filling a bowl with wine, and saying, "I
present this bowl to the men who died for the liberty
of Greece." This was the ceremony observed by the
Platæans.
Another law that Aristides caused to be passed was that
the Archons should be chosen from among all the
Athenians, because he thought that the commons should
have a voice in the government as well as the upper
classes. As we have said, the people had great regard
for the judgment and honesty of Aristides, and were
always willing to refer to his decision. Once when
Themistocles told the assembly that he had a plan to
propose for the benefit of Athens, which ought to be
kept secret, he was requested to tell it to Aristides.
It was to burn the whole fleet of the other Greeks, so
that the Athenians might become supreme rulers.
Aristides was shocked at such a dishonorable
proposition, and assured his countrymen "that nothing
could be more advantageous than the project of
Themistocles, nor anything more unjust." So the matter
was dropped without the particulars being given, simply
because Aristides had pronounced against it.
Eight years later Aristides was sent again to fight the
barbarians, sharing the command with Cimon. His gentle,
courteous manners formed such a striking contrast to
the harshness and severity of the Spartan commanders,
that in course of time several of the Greek nations
placed themselves under him and joined the Athenians.
Aristides made himself more popular still by lessening
the taxes all over the country. Notwithstanding his
great influence and power, he was always poor, but he
was prouder of poverty than of his trophies.
He died at Athens, well advanced in years and greatly
lamented by his countrymen. Great honors were shown to
his memory, and a monument was erected to him after his
death.
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