ACCESSION OF CYRUS TO THE THRONE.
B.C. 560
Change in the character of Cyrus--His
ambition--Capriciousness of Astyages--Cyrus
makes great progress in mental and personal accomplishments--Harpagus’s
plans for revenge--Suspicions of Astyages--Condition
of Persia--Discontent in Media--Proceedings
of Harpagus--His deportment toward Astyages--Co-operation
in Media--Harpagus writes to Cyrus--Harpagus’s
singular method of conveying his letter to Cyrus--Contents
of Harpagus’s letter--Excitement
of Cyrus--Cyrus accedes to Harpagus’s
plan--How to raise an army--The
day of toil--The day of festivity--Speech
of Cyrus--Ardor of the soldiers--Defection
of Harpagus--The battle--Rage
of Astyages--His vengeance on the magi--Defeat
and capture of Astyages--Interview with
Harpagus--Cyrus King of Media and Persia--Confinement
of Astyages--Acquiescence of the Mèdes--Death
of Astyages--Suddenness of Cyrus’s
elevation--Harpagus.
While Croesus had thus, on his side
of the River Halys which was the stream
that marked the boundary between the Lydian empire
on the west and the Persian and Assyrian dominions
on the east been employed in building up
his grand structure of outward magnificence and splendor,
and in contending, within, against an overwhelming
tide of domestic misery and woe, great changes had
taken place in the situation and prospects of Cyrus.
From being an artless and generous-minded child, he
had become a calculating, ambitious, and aspiring
man, and he was preparing to take his part in the great
public contests and struggles of the day, with the
same eagerness for self-aggrandizement, and the same
unconcern for the welfare and happiness of others,
which always characterizes the spirit of ambition
and love of power.
Although it is by no means certain
that what Xenophon relates of his visit to his grandfather
Astyages is meant for a true narrative of facts, it
is not at all improbable that such a visit might have
been made, and that occurrences, somewhat similar,
at least, to those which his narrative records, may
have taken place. It may seem strange to the
reader that a man who should, at one time, wish to
put his grandchild to death, should, at another, be
disposed to treat him with such a profusion of kindness
and attention. There is nothing, however, really
extraordinary in this. Nothing is more fluctuating
than the caprice of a despot. Man, accustomed
from infancy to govern those around him by his own
impetuous will, never learns self-control. He
gives himself up to the dominion of the passing animal
emotions of the hour. It may be jealousy, it
may be revenge, it may be parental fondness, it may
be hate, it may be love whatever the feeling
is that the various incidents of life, as they occur,
or the influences, irritating or exhilarating, which
are produced by food or wine, awaken in his mind,
he follows its impulse blindly and without reserve.
He loads a favorite with kindness and caresses at
one hour, and directs his assassination the next.
He imagines that his infant grandchild is to become
his rival, and he deliberately orders him to be left
in a gloomy forest alone, to die of cold and hunger.
When the imaginary danger has passed away, he seeks
amusement in making the same grandchild his plaything,
and overwhelms him with favors bestowed solely for
the gratification of the giver, under the influence
of an affection almost as purely animal as that of
a lioness for her young.
Favors of such a sort can awaken no
permanent gratitude in any heart, and thus it is quite
possible that Cyrus might have evinced, during the
simple and guileless days of his childhood, a deep
veneration and affection for his grandfather, and
yet, in subsequent years, when he had arrived at full
maturity, have learned to regard him simply in the
light of a great political potentate, as likely as
any other potentate around him to become his rival
or his enemy.
This was, at all events, the result.
Cyrus, on his return to Persia, grew rapidly in strength
and stature, and soon became highly distinguished
for his personal grace, his winning manners, and for
the various martial accomplishments which he had acquired
in Media, and in which he excelled almost all his
companions. He gained, as such princes always
do, a vast ascendency over the minds of all around
him. As he advanced toward maturity, his mind
passed from its interest in games, and hunting, and
athletic sports, to plans of war, of conquest, and
of extended dominion.
In the mean time, Harpagus, though
he had, at the time when he endured the horrid punishment
which Astyages inflicted upon him, expressed no resentment,
still he had secretly felt an extreme indignation and
anger, and he had now, for fifteen years, been nourishing
covert schemes and plans for revenge. He remained
all this time in the court of Astyages, and was apparently
his friend. He was, however, in heart a most
bitter and implacable enemy. He was looking continually
for a plan or prospect which should promise some hope
of affording him his long-desired revenge. His
eyes were naturally turned toward Cyrus. He kept
up a communication with him so far as it was possible,
for Astyages watched very closely what passed between
the two countries, being always suspicious of plots
against his government and crown. Harpagus, however,
contrived to evade this vigilance in some degree.
He made continual reports to Cyrus of the tyranny and
misgovernment of Astyages, and of the defenselessness
of the realm of Media, and he endeavored to stimulate
his rising ambition to the desire of one day possessing
for himself both the Median and Persian throne.
In fact, Persia was not then independent
of Media. It was more or less connected with
the government of Astyages, so that Cambyses, the chief
ruler of Persia, Cyrus’s father, is called sometimes
a king and sometimes a satrap, which last title
is equivalent to that of viceroy or governor general.
Whatever his true and proper title may have been,
Persia was a Median dependency, and Cyrus, therefore,
in forming plans for gaining possession of the Median
throne, would consider himself as rather endeavoring
to rise to the supreme command in his own native country,
than as projecting any scheme for foreign conquest.
Harpagus, too, looked upon the subject
in the same light. Accordingly, in pushing forward
his plots toward their execution, he operated in Media
as well as Persia, He ascertained, by diligent and
sagacious, but by very covert inquiries, who were
discontented and ill at ease under the dominion of
Astyages, and by sympathizing with and encouraging
them, he increased their discontent and insubmission.
Whenever Astyages, in the exercise of his tyranny inflicted
an injury upon a powerful subject, Harpagus espoused
the cause of the injured man, condemned, with him,
the intolerable oppression of the king, and thus fixed
and perpetuated his enmity. At the same time,
he took pains to collect and to disseminate among
the Mèdes all the information which he could
obtain favorable to Cyrus, in respect to his talents,
his character, and his just and generous spirit, so
that, at length, the ascendency of Astyages, through
the instrumentality of these measures, was very extensively
undermined, and the way was rapidly becoming prepared
for Cyrus’s accession to power.
During all this time, moreover, Harpagus
was personally very deferential and obsequious to
Astyages, and professed an unbounded devotedness to
his interests. He maintained a high rank at court
and in the army, and Astyages relied upon him as one
of the most obedient and submissive of his servants,
without entertaining any suspicion whatever of his
true designs.
At length a favorable occasion arose,
as Harpagus thought, for the execution of his plans.
It was at a time when Astyages had been guilty of
some unusual acts of tyranny and oppression, by which
he had produced extensive dissatisfaction among his
people. Harpagus communicated, very cautiously,
to the principal men around him, the designs that
he had long been forming for deposing Astyages and
elevating Cyrus in his place. He found them favorably
inclined to the plan. The way being thus prepared,
the next thing was to contrive some secret way of
communicating with Cyrus. As the proposal which
he was going to make was that Cyrus should come into
Media with as great a force as he could command, and
head an insurrection against the government of Astyages,
it would, of course, be death to him to have it discovered.
He did not dare to trust the message to any living
messenger, for fear of betrayal; nor was it safe to
send a letter by any ordinary mode of transmission,
lest the letter should be intercepted by some of Astyages’s
spies, and thus the whole plot be discovered.
He finally adopted the following very extraordinary
plan:
He wrote a letter to Cyrus, and then
taking a hare, which some of his huntsmen had caught
for him, he opened the body and concealed the letter
within. He then sewed up the skin again in the
most careful manner, so that no signs of the incision
should remain. He delivered this hare, together
with some nets and other hunting apparatus, to certain
trustworthy servants, on whom he thought he could rely,
charging them to deliver the hare into Cyrus’s
own hands, and to say that it came from Harpagus,
and that it was the request of Harpagus that Cyrus
should open it himself and alone. Harpagus concluded
that this mode of making the communication was safe;
for, in case the persons to whom the hare was intrusted
were to be seen by any of the spies or other persons
employed by Astyages on the frontiers, they would
consider them as hunters returning from the chase with
their game, and would never think of examining the
body of a hare, in the hands of such a party, in search
after a clandestine correspondence.
The plan was perfectly successful.
The men passed into Persia without any suspicion.
They delivered the hare to Cyrus, with their message.
He opened the hare, and found the letter. It was
in substance as follows:
“It is plain, Cyrus, that you
are a favorite of Heaven, and that you are destined
to a great and glorious career. You could
not otherwise have escaped, in so miraculous a manner,
the snares set for you in your infancy. Astyages
meditated your death, and he took such measures
to effect it as would seem to have made your
destruction sure. You were saved by the
special interposition of Heaven. Yon are aware
by what extraordinary incidents you were preserved
and discovered, and what great and unusual prosperity
has since attended you. You know, too, what
cruel punishments Astyages inflicted upon me,
for my humanity in saving you. The time has
now come for retribution. From this time the authority
and the dominions of Astyages may be yours.
Persuade the Persians to revolt. Put yourself
at the head of an army, and march into Media.
I shall probably myself be appointed to command
the army sent out to oppose you. If so, we will
join our forces when we meet, and I will enter
your service. I have conferred with the
leading nobles in Media, and they are all ready
to espouse your cause. You may rely upon finding
every thing thus prepared for you here; come, therefore,
without any delay.”
Cyrus was thrown into a fever of excitement
and agitation on reading this letter. He determined
to accede to Harpagus’s proposal. He revolved
in his mind for some time the measures by which he
could raise the necessary force. Of course he
could not openly announce his plan and enlist an army
to effect it, for any avowed and public movement of
that kind would be immediately made known to Astyages,
who, by being thus forewarned of his enemies’
designs, might take effectual measures to circumvent
them. He determined to resort to deceit, or,
as he called it, stratagem; nor did he probably have
any distinct perception of the wrongfulness of such
a mode of proceeding. The demon of war upholds
and justifies falsehood and treachery, in all its
forms, on the part of his votaries. He always
applauds a forgery, a false pretense, or a lie:
he calls it a stratagem.
Cyrus had a letter prepared, in the
form of a commission from Astyages, appointing him
commander of a body of Persian forces to be raised
for the service of the king. Cyrus read the fabricated
document in the public assembly of the Persians, and
called upon all the warriors to join him. When
they were organized, he ordered them to assemble on
a certain day, at a place that he named, each one provided
with a woodman’s ax. When they were thus
mustered, he marched them into a forest, and set them
at work to clear a piece of ground. The army
toiled all day, felling the trees, and piling them
up to be burned. They cleared in this way, as
Herodotus states, a piece of ground eighteen or twenty
furlongs in extent. Cyrus kept them thus engaged
in severe and incessant toil all the day, giving them,
too, only coarse food and little rest. At night
he dismissed them, commanding them to assemble again
the second day.
On the second day, when they came
together, they found a great banquet prepared for
them, and Cyrus directed them to devote the day to
feasting and making merry. There was an abundance
of meats of all kinds, and rich wines in great profusion.
The soldiers gave themselves up for the whole day
to merriment and revelry. The toils and the hard
fare of the day before had prepared them very effectually
to enjoy the rest and the luxuries of this festival.
They spent the hours in feasting about their camp-fires
and reclining on the grass, where they amused themselves
and one another by relating tales, or joining in merry
songs and dances. At last, in the evening, Cyrus
called them together, and asked them which day they
had liked the best. They replied that there was
nothing at all to like in the one, and nothing to
be disliked in the other. They had had, on the
first day, hard work and bad fare, and on the second,
uninterrupted ease and the most luxurious pleasures.
“It is indeed so,” said
Cyrus, “and you have your destiny in your own
hands to make your lives pass like either of these
days, just as you choose. If you will follow
me, you will enjoy ease, abundance, and luxury.
If you refuse, you must remain as you are, and toil
on as you do now, and endure your present privations
and hardships to the end of your days.”
He then explained to them his designs. He told
them that although Media was a great and powerful
kingdom, still that they were as good soldiers as
the Mèdes, and with the arrangements and preparations
which he had made, they were sure of victory.
The soldiers received this proposal
with great enthusiasm and joy. They declared
themselves ready to follow Cyrus wherever he should
lead them, and the whole body immediately commenced
making preparations for the expedition. Astyages
was, of course, soon informed of these proceedings.
He sent an order to Cyrus, summoning him immediately
into his presence. Cyrus sent back word, in reply,
that Astyages would probably see him sooner than he
wished, and went on vigorously with his preparations.
When all was ready, the army marched, and, crossing
the frontiers, they entered into Media.
In the mean time, Astyages had collected
a large force, and, as had been anticipated by the
conspirators, he put it under the command of Harpagus.
Harpagus made known his design of going over to Cyrus
as soon as he should meet him, to as large a portion
of the army as he thought it prudent to admit to his
confidence; the rest knew nothing of the plan; and
thus the Median army advanced to meet the invaders,
a part of the troops with minds intent on resolutely
meeting and repelling their enemies, while the rest
were secretly preparing to go over at once to their
side.
When the battle was joined, the honest
part of the Median army fought valiantly at first,
but soon, thunderstruck and utterly confounded at
seeing themselves abandoned and betrayed by a large
body of their comrades, they were easily overpowered
by the triumphant Persians. Some were taken prisoners;
some fled back to Astyages; and others, following
the example of the deserters, went over to Cyrus’s
camp and swelled the numbers of his train. Cyrus,
thus re-enforced by the accessions he had received,
and encouraged by the flight or dispersion of all
who still wished to oppose him, began to advance toward
the capital.
Astyages, when he heard of the defection
of Harpagus and of the discomfiture of his army, was
thrown into a perfect phrensy of rage and hate.
The long-dreaded prediction of his dream seemed now
about to be fulfilled, and the magi, who had taught
him that when Cyrus had once been made king of the
boys in sport, there was no longer any danger of his
aspiring to regal power, had proved themselves false.
They had either intentionally deceived him, or they
were ignorant themselves, and in that case they were
worthless impostors. Although the danger from
Cyrus’s approach was imminent in the extreme,
Astyages could not take any measures for guarding
against it until he had first gratified the despotic
cruelty of his nature by taking vengeance on these
false pretenders. He directed to have them all
seized and brought before him, and then, having upbraided
them with bitter reproaches for their false predictions,
he ordered them all to be crucified.
He then adopted the most decisive
measures for raising an army. He ordered every
man capable of bearing arms to come forward, and then,
putting himself at the head of the immense force which
he had thus raised, he advanced to meet his enemy.
He supposed, no doubt, that he was sure of victory;
but he under-rated the power which the discipline,
the resolution, the concentration, and the terrible
energy of Cyrus’s troops gave to their formidable
array. He was defeated. His army was totally
cut to pieces, and he himself was taken prisoner.
Harpagus was present when he was taken,
and he exulted in revengeful triumph over the fallen
tyrant’s ruin. Astyages was filled with
rage and despair. Harpagus asked him what he
thought now of the supper in which he had compelled
a father to feed on the flesh of his child. Astyages,
in reply, asked Harpagus whether he thought that the
success of Cyrus was owing to what he had done.
Harpagus replied that it was, and exultingly explained
to Astyages the plots he had formed, and the preparations
which he had made for Cyrus’s invasion, so that
Astyages might see that his destruction had been effected
by Harpagus alone, in terrible retribution for the
atrocious crime which he had committed so many years
before, and for which the vengeance of the sufferer
had slumbered, during the long interval, only to be
more complete and overwhelming at last.
Astyages told Harpagus that he was
a miserable wretch, the most foolish and most wicked
of mankind. He was the most foolish, for having
plotted to put power into another’s hands which
it would have been just as easy for him to have secured
and retained in his own; and he was the most wicked,
for having betrayed his country, and delivered it
over to a foreign power, merely to gratify his own
private revenge.
The result of this battle was the
complete overthrow of the power and kingdom of Astyages,
and the establishment of Cyrus on the throne of the
united kingdom of Media and Persia. Cyrus treated
his grandfather with kindness after his victory over
him. He kept him confined, it is true, but it
was probably that indirect and qualified sort of confinement
which is all that is usually enforced in the case of
princes and kings. In such cases, some extensive
and often sumptuous residence is assigned to the illustrious
prisoner, with grounds sufficiently extensive to afford
every necessary range for recreation and exercise,
and with bodies of troops for keepers, which have much
more the form and appearance of military guards of
honor attending on a prince, than of jailers confining
a prisoner. It was probably in such an imprisonment
as this that Astyages passed the remainder of his
days. The people, having been wearied with his
despotic tyranny, rejoiced in his downfall, and acquiesced
very readily in the milder and more equitable government
of Cyrus.
Astyages came to his death many years
afterward, in a somewhat remarkable manner. Cyrus
sent for him to come into Persia, where he was himself
then residing. The officer who had Astyages in
charge, conducted him, on the way, into a desolate
wilderness, where he perished of fatigue, exposure,
and hunger. It was supposed that this was done
in obedience to secret orders from Cyrus, who perhaps
found the charge of such a prisoner a burden.
The officer, however, was cruelly punished for the
act; but even this may have been only for appearances,
to divert the minds of men from all suspicion that
Cyrus could himself have been an accomplice in such
a crime.
The whole revolution which has been
described in this chapter, from its first inception
to its final accomplishment, was effected in a very
short period of time, and Cyrus thus found himself
very unexpectedly and suddenly elevated to a throne.
Harpagus continued in his service,
and became subsequently one of his most celebrated
generals.