B.C. 490-485
The Persian fleet sails southward. Fate
of Hippias. Omens. The dream
and the sneeze. Hippias falls in battle. Movements
of the Persian fleet. The Persian fleet
returns to Asia. Anxiety of Datis. Datis
finds a stolen statue. Island of Delos. Account
of the sacred island. Its present condition. Disposition
of the army. Darius’s reception of
Datis. Subsequent history of Miltiades. His
great popularity. Miltiades’s influence
at Athens. His ambitious designs. Island
and city of Paros. Appearance of the
modern town. Miltiades’s proposition
to the Athenians. They accept it. Miltiades
marches against Paros. Its resistance. Miltiades
is discouraged. The captive priestess. Miltiades’s
interview with the priestess. Her instructions. Miltiades
attempts to enter the temple of Ceres. He
dislocates a limb. Miltiades returns to
Athens. He is impeached. Miltiades
is condemned. He dies of his wound. The
fine paid. Proposed punishment of Timo. Timo
saved by the Delphic oracle. Another expedition
against Greece. Preparations. Necessity
for settling the succession. Darius’s
two sons. Their claims to the throne. Xerxes
declared heir. Death of Darius. Character
of Darius. Ground of his renown.
The city of Athens and the plain of
Marathon are situated upon a peninsula. The principal
port by which the city was ordinarily approached was
on the southern shore of the peninsula, though the
Persians had landed on the northern side. Of course,
in their retreat from the field of battle, they fled
to the north. When they were beyond the reach
of their enemies and fairly at sea, they were at first
somewhat perplexed to determine what to do. Datis
was extremely unwilling to return to Darius with the
news of such a defeat. On the other hand, there
seemed but little hope of any other result if he were
to attempt a second landing.
Hippias, their Greek guide, was killed
in the battle. He expected to be killed, for
his mind, on the morning of the battle, was in a state
of great despondency and dejection. Until that
time he had felt a strong and confident expectation
of success, but his feelings had then been very suddenly
changed. His confidence had arisen from the influence
of a dream, his dejection from a cause more frivolous
still; so that he was equally irrational in his hope
and in his despair.
The omen which seemed to him to portend
success to the enterprise in which he had undertaken
to act as guide, was merely that he dreamed one night
that he saw, and spent some time in company with, his
mother. In attempting to interpret this dream
in the morning, it seemed to him that Athens, his
native city, was represented by his mother, and that
the vision denoted that he was about to be restored
to Athens again. He was extremely elated at this
supernatural confirmation of his hopes, and would
have gone into the battle certain of victory, had
it not been that another circumstance occurred at the
time of the landing to blast his hopes. He had,
himself, the general charge of the disembarkation.
He stationed the ships at their proper places near
the shore, and formed the men upon the beach as they
landed. While he was thus engaged, standing on
the sand, he suddenly sneezed. He was an old
man, and his teeth those that remained were
loose. One of them was thrown out in the act of
sneezing, and it fell into the sand. Hippias
was alarmed at this occurrence, considering it a bad
omen. He looked a long time for the tooth in vain,
and then exclaimed that all was over. The joining
of his tooth to his mother earth was the event to
which his dream referred, and there was now no hope
of any further fulfillment of it. He went on mechanically,
after this, in marshaling his men and preparing for
battle, but his mind was oppressed with gloomy forebodings.
He acted, in consequence, feebly and with indecision;
and when the Greeks explored the field on the morning
after the battle, his body was found among the other
mutilated and ghastly remains which covered the ground.
As the Persian fleet moved, therefore,
along the coast of Attica, they had no longer their
former guide. They were still, however, very
reluctant to leave the country. They followed
the shore of the peninsula until they came to the
promontory of Sunium, which forms the southeastern
extremity of it. They doubled this cape, and then
followed the southern shore of the peninsula until
they arrived at the point opposite to Athens on that
side. In the mean time, however, the Spartan
troops which had been sent for to aid the Athenians
in the contest, but which had not arrived in time
to take part in the battle, reached the ground; and
the indications which the Persians observed, from
the decks of their galleys, that the country was thoroughly
aroused, and was every where ready to receive them,
deterred them from making any further attempts to land.
After lingering, therefore, a short time near the
shore, the fleet directed its course again toward
the coasts of Asia.
The mind of Datis was necessarily
very ill at ease. He dreaded the wrath of Darius;
for despots are very prone to consider military failures
as the worst of crimes. The expedition had not,
however, been entirely a failure. Datis had conquered
many of the Greek islands, and he had with him, on
board his galleys, great numbers of prisoners, and
a vast amount of plunder which he had obtained from
them. Still, the greatest and most important
of the objects which Darius had commissioned him to
accomplish had been entirely defeated, and he felt,
accordingly, no little anxiety in respect to the reception
which he was to expect at Susa.
One night he had a dream which greatly
disturbed him. He awoke in the morning with an
impression upon his mind, which he had derived from
the dream, that some temple had been robbed by his
soldiers in the course of his expedition, and that
the sacrilegious booty which had been obtained was
concealed somewhere in the fleet. He immediately
ordered a careful search to be instituted, in which
every ship was examined. At length they found,
concealed in one of the galleys, a golden statue of
Apollo. Datis inquired what city it had been taken
from. They answered from Delium. Delium was
on the coast of Attica, near the place where the Persians
had landed, at the time of their advance on Marathon.
Datis could not safely or conveniently go back there
to restore it to its place. He determined, therefore,
to deposit it at Delos for safe keeping, until it
could be returned to its proper home.
Delos was a small but very celebrated
island near the center of the AEgean Sea, and but
a short distance from the spot where the Persian fleet
was lying when Datis made this discovery. It was
a sacred island, devoted to religious rites, and all
contention, and violence, and, so far as was possible,
all suffering and death, were excluded from it.
The sick were removed from it; the dead were not buried
there; armed ships and armed men laid aside their hostility
to each other when they approached it. Belligerent
fleets rode at anchor, side by side, in peace, upon
the smooth waters of its little port, and an enchanting
picture of peace, tranquillity, and happiness was seen
upon its shores. A large natural fountain, or
spring, thirty feet in diameter, and inclosed partly
by natural rocks and partly by an artificial wall,
issued from the ground in the center of the island,
and sent forth a beautiful and fertilizing rill into
a rich and happy valley, through which it meandered,
deviously, for several miles, seeking the sea.
There was a large and populous city near the port,
and the whole island was adorned with temples, palaces,
colonnades, and other splendid architectural structures,
which made it the admiration of all mankind.
All this magnificence and beauty have, however, long
since passed away. The island is now silent, deserted,
and desolate, a dreary pasture, where cattle browse
and feed, with stupid indifference, among the ancient
ruins. Nothing living remains of the ancient
scene of grandeur and beauty but the fountain.
That still continues to pour up its clear and pellucid
waters with a ceaseless and eternal flow.
It was to this Delos that Datis determined
to restore the golden statue. He took it on board
his own galley, and proceeded with it, himself, to
the sacred island. He deposited it in the great
temple of Apollo, charging the priests to convey it,
as soon as a convenient opportunity should occur,
to its proper destination at Delium.
The Persian fleet, after this business
was disposed of, set sail again, and pursued its course
toward the coasts of Asia, where at length the expedition
landed in safety.
The various divisions of the army
were then distributed in the different provinces where
they respectively belonged, and Datis commenced his
march with the Persian portion of the troops, and with
his prisoners and plunder, for Susa, feeling, however,
very uncertain how he should be received on his arrival
there. Despotic power is always capricious; and
the character of Darius, which seems to have been
naturally generous and kind, and was rendered cruel
and tyrannical only through the influence of the position
in which he had been placed, was continually presenting
the most opposite and contradictory phases. The
generous elements of it, fortunately for Datis, seemed
to be in the ascendency when the remnant of the Persian
army arrived at Susa. Darius received the returning
general without anger, and even treated the prisoners
with humanity.
Before finally leaving the subject
of this celebrated invasion, which was brought to
an end in so remarkable a manner by the great battle
of Marathon, it may be well to relate the extraordinary
circumstances which attended the subsequent history
of Miltiades, the great commander in that battle on
the Greek side. Before the conflict, he seems
to have had no official superiority over the other
generals, but, by the resolute decision with which
he urged the plan of giving the Persians battle, and
the confidence and courage which he manifested in
expressing his readiness to take the responsibility
of the measure, he placed himself virtually at the
head of the Greek command. The rest of the officers
acquiesced in his pre-eminence, and, waiving their
claims to an equal share of the authority, they allowed
him to go forward and direct the operations of the
day. If the day had been lost, Miltiades, even
though he had escaped death upon the field, would
have been totally and irretrievably ruined; but as
it was won, the result of the transaction was that
he was raised to the highest pinnacle of glory and
renown.
And yet in this, as in all similar
cases, the question of success or of failure depended
upon causes wholly beyond the reach of human foresight
or control. The military commander who acts in
such contingencies is compelled to stake every thing
dear to him on results which are often as purely hazardous
as the casting of a die.
The influence of Miltiades in Athens
after the Persian troops were withdrawn was paramount
and supreme. Finding himself in possession of
this ascendency, he began to form plans for other military
undertakings. It proved, in the end, that it would
have been far better for him to have been satisfied
with the fame which he had already acquired.
Some of the islands in the AEgean
Sea he considered as having taken part with the Persians
in the invasion, to such an extent, at least, as to
furnish him with a pretext for making war upon them.
The one which he had specially in view, in the first
instance, was Paros. Paros is a large
and important island situated near the center of the
southern portion of the AEgean Sea. It is of an
oval form, and is about twelve miles long. The
surface of the land is beautifully diversified and
very picturesque, while, at the same time, the soil
is very fertile. In the days of Miltiades, it
was very wealthy and populous, and there was a large
city, called also Paros, on the western coast
of the island, near the sea. There is a modern
town built upon the site of the former city, which
presents a very extraordinary appearance, as the dwellings
are formed, in a great measure, of materials obtained
from the ancient ruins. Marble columns, sculptured
capitals, and fragments of what were once magnificent
entablatures, have been used to construct plain walls,
or laid in obscure and neglected pavements all,
however, still retaining, notwithstanding their present
degradation, unequivocal marks of the nobleness of
their origin. The quarries where the ancient
Parian marble was obtained were situated on this island,
not very far from the town. They remain to the
present day in the same state in which the ancient
workmen left them.
In the time of Miltiades the island
and the city of Paros were both very wealthy
and very powerful. Miltiades conceived the design
of making a descent upon the island, and levying an
immense contribution upon the people, in the form
of a fine, for what he considered their treason in
taking part with the enemies of their countrymen.
In order to prevent the people of Paros from
preparing for defense, Miltiades intended to keep
the object of his expedition secret for a time.
He therefore simply proposed to the Athenians that
they should equip a fleet and put it under his command.
He had an enterprise in view, he said, the nature
of which he could not particularly explain, but he
was very confident of its success, and, if successful,
he should return, in a short time, laden with spoils
which would enrich the city, and amply reimburse the
people for the expenses they would have incurred.
The force which he asked for was a fleet of seventy
vessels.
So great was the popularity and influence
which Miltiades had acquired by his victory at Marathon,
that this somewhat extraordinary proposition was readily
complied with. The fleet was equipped, and crews
were provided, and the whole armament was placed under
Miltiades’s command. The men themselves
who were embarked on board of the galleys did not
know whither they were going. Miltiades promised
them victory and an abundance of gold as their reward;
for the rest, they must trust, he said, to him, as
he could not explain the actual destination of the
enterprise without endangering its success. The
men were all satisfied with these conditions, and the
fleet set sail.
When it arrived on the coast of Paros,
the Parians were, of course, taken by surprise,
but they made immediate preparations for a very vigorous
resistance. Miltiades commenced a siege, and sent
a herald to the city, demanding of them, as the price
of their ransom, an immense sum of money, saying,
at the same time, that, unless they delivered up that
sum, or, at least, gave security for the payment of
it, he would not leave the place until the city was
captured, and, when captured, it should be wholly
destroyed. The Parians rejected the demand,
and engaged energetically in the work of completing
and strengthening their defenses. They organized
companies of workmen to labor during the night, when
their operations would not be observed, in building
new walls, and re-enforcing every weak or unguarded
point in the line of the fortifications. It soon
appeared that the Parians were making far more
rapid progress in securing their position than Miltiades
was in his assaults upon it. Miltiades found
that an attack upon a fortified island in the AEgean
Sea was a different thing from encountering the undisciplined
hordes of Persians on the open plains of Marathon.
There it was a contest between concentrated courage
and discipline on the one hand, and a vast expansion
of pomp and parade on the other; whereas now he found
that the courage and discipline on his part were met
by an equally indomitable resolution on the part of
his opponents, guided, too, by an equally well-trained
experience and skill. In a word, it was Greek
against Greek at Paros, and Miltiades began at
length to perceive that his prospect of success was
growing very doubtful and dim.
This state of things, of course, filled
the mind of Miltiades with great anxiety and distress;
for, after the promises which he had made to the Athenians,
and the blind confidence which he had asked of them
in proposing that they should commit the fleet so unconditionally
to his command, he could not return discomfited to
Athens without involving himself in the most absolute
disgrace. While he was in this perplexity, it
happened that some of his soldiers took captive a
Parian female, one day, among other prisoners.
She proved to be a priestess, from one of the Parian
temples. Her name was Timo. The thought
occurred to Miltiades that, since all human means at
his command had proved inadequate to accomplish his
end, he might, perhaps, through this captive priestess,
obtain some superhuman aid. As she had been in
the service of a Parian temple, she would naturally
have an influence with the divinities of the place,
or, at least, she would be acquainted with the proper
means of propitiating their favor.
Miltiades, accordingly, held a private
interview with Timo, and asked her what he should
do to propitiate the divinities of Paros so far
as to enable him to gain possession of the city.
She replied that she could easily point out the way,
if he would but follow her instructions. Miltiades,
overjoyed, promised readily that he would do so.
She then gave him her instructions secretly. What
they were is not known, except so far as they were
revealed by the occurrences that followed.
There was a temple consecrated to
the goddess Ceres near to the city, and so connected
with it, it seems, as to be in some measure included
within the defenses. The approach to this temple
was guarded by a palisade. There were, however,
gates which afforded access, except when they were
fastened from within. Miltiades, in obedience
to Timo’s instructions, went privately, in the
night, perhaps, and with very few attendants, to this
temple. He attempted to enter by the gates, which
he had expected, it seems, to find open. They
were, however, fastened against him. He then
undertook to scale the palisade. He succeeded
in doing this, not, however, without difficulty, and
then advanced toward the temple, in obedience to the
instructions which he had received from Timo.
The account states that the act, whatever it was,
that Timo had directed him to perform, instead
of being, as he supposed, a means of propitiating
the favor of the divinity, was sacrilegious and impious;
and Miltiades, as he approached the temple, was struck
suddenly with a mysterious and dreadful horror of mind,
which wholly overwhelmed him. Rendered almost
insane by this supernatural remorse and terror, he
turned to fly. He reached the palisade, and,
in endeavoring to climb over it, his precipitation
and haste caused him to fall. His attendants
ran to take him up. He was helpless and in great
pain. They found he had dislocated a joint in
one of his limbs. He received, of course, every
possible attention; but, instead of recovering from
the injury, he found that the consequences of it became
more and more serious every day. In a word, the
great conqueror of the Persians was now wholly overthrown,
and lay moaning on his couch as helpless as a child.
He soon determined to abandon the
siege of Paros and return to Athens. He
had been about a month upon the island, and had laid
waste the rural districts, but, as the city had made
good its defense against him, he returned without
any of the rich spoil which he had promised.
The disappointment which the people of Athens experienced
on his arrival, turned soon into a feeling of hostility
against the author of the calamity. Miltiades
found that the fame and honor which he had gained
at Marathon were gone. They had been lost almost
as suddenly as they had been acquired. The rivals
and enemies who had been silenced by his former success
were now brought out and made clamorous against him
by his present failure. They attributed the failure
to his own mismanagement of the expedition, and one
orator, at length, advanced articles of impeachment
against him, on a charge of having been bribed by
the Persians to make his siege of Paros only a
feint. Miltiades could not defend himself from
these criminations, for he was lying, at the time,
in utter helplessness, upon his couch of pain.
The dislocation of the limb had ended in an open wound,
which at length, having resisted all the attempts
of the physicians to stop its progress, had begun
to mortify, and the life of the sufferer was fast
ebbing away. His son Cimon did all in his power
to save his father from both the dangers that threatened
him. He defended his character in the public
tribunals, and he watched over his person in the cell
in the prison. These filial efforts were, however,
in both cases unavailing. Miltiades was condemned
by the tribunal, and he died of his wound.
The penalty exacted of him by the
sentence was a very heavy fine. The sum demanded
was the amount which the expedition to Paros had
cost the city, and which, as it had been lost through
the agency of Miltiades, it was adjudged that he should
refund. This sentence, as well as the treatment
in general which Miltiades received from his countrymen,
has been since considered by mankind as very unjust
and cruel. It was, however, only following out,
somewhat rigidly, it is true, the essential terms
and conditions of a military career. It results
from principles inherent in the very nature of war,
that we are never to look for the ascendency of justice
and humanity in any thing pertaining to it. It
is always power, and not right, that determines possession;
it is success, not merit, that gains honors and rewards;
and they who assent to the genius and spirit of military
rule thus far, must not complain if they find that,
on the same principle, it is failure and not crime
which brings condemnation and destruction.
When Miltiades was dead, Cimon found
that he could not receive his father’s body
for honorable interment unless he paid the fine.
He had no means, himself, of doing this. He succeeded,
however, at length, in raising the amount, by soliciting
contributions from the family friends of his father.
He paid the fine into the city treasury, and then
the body of the hero was deposited in its long home.
The Parians were at first greatly
incensed against the priestess Timo, as it seemed
to them that she had intended to betray the city to
Miltiades. They wished to put her to death, but
they did not dare to do it. It might be considered
an impious sacrilege to punish a priestess. They
accordingly sent to the oracle at Delphi to state the
circumstances of the case, and to inquire if they might
lawfully put the priestess to death. She had
been guilty, they said, of pointing out to an enemy
the mode by which he might gain possession of their
city; and, what was worse, she had, in doing so, attempted
to admit him to those solemn scenes and mysteries
in the temple which it was not lawful for any man
to behold. The oracle replied that the priestess
must not be punished, for she had done no wrong.
It had been decreed by the gods that Miltiades should
be destroyed, and Timo had been employed by them
as the involuntary instrument of conducting him to
his fate. The people of Paros acquiesced
in this decision, and Timo was set free.
But to return to Darius. His
desire to subdue the Greeks and to add their country
to his dominions, and his determination to accomplish
his purpose, were increased and strengthened, not diminished,
by the repulse which his army had met with at the
first invasion. He was greatly incensed against
the Athenians, as if he considered their courage and
energy in defending their country an audacious outrage
against himself, and a crime. He resolved to organize
a new expedition, still greater and more powerful
than the other. Of this armament he determined
to take the command himself in person, and to make
the preparations for it on a scale of such magnitude
as that the expedition should be worthy to be led
by the great sovereign of half the world. He
accordingly transmitted orders to all the peoples,
nations, languages, and realms, in all his dominions,
to raise their respective quotas of troops, horses,
ships, and munitions of war, and prepare to assemble
at such place of rendezvous as he should designate
when all should be ready.
Some years elapsed before these arrangements
were matured, and when at last the time seemed to
have arrived for carrying his plans into effect, he
deemed it necessary, before he commenced his march,
to settle the succession of his kingdom; for he had
several sons, who might each claim the throne, and
involve the empire in disastrous civil wars in attempting
to enforce their claims, in case he should never return.
The historians say that there was a law of Persia
forbidding the sovereign to leave the realm without
previously fixing upon a successor. It is difficult
to see, however, by what power or authority such a
law could have been enacted, or to believe that monarchs
like Darius would recognize an abstract obligation
to law of any kind, in respect to their own political
action. There is a species of law regulating
the ordinary dealings between man and man, that springs
up in all communities, whether savage or civilized,
from custom, and from the action of judicial tribunals,
which the most despotic and absolute sovereigns feel
themselves bound, so far as relates to the private
affairs of their subjects, to respect and uphold;
but, in regard to their own personal and governmental
acts and measures, they very seldom know any other
authority than the impulses of their own sovereign
will.
Darius had several sons, among whom
there were two who claimed the right to succeed their
father on the throne. One was the oldest son of
a wife whom Darius had married before he became king.
His name was Artobazanes. The other was the son
of Atossa, the daughter of Cyrus, whom Darius had
married after his accession to the throne.
His name was Xerxes. Artobazanes claimed that
he was entitled to be his father’s heir, since
he was his oldest son. Xerxes, on the other hand,
maintained that, at the period of the birth of Artobazanes,
Darius was not a king. He was then in a private
station, and sons could properly inherit only what
their fathers possessed at the time when they were
born. He himself, on the other hand, was the oldest
son which his father had had, being a king,
and he was, consequently, the true inheritor of the
kingdom. Besides, being the son of Atossa, he
was the grandson of Cyrus, and the hereditary rights,
therefore, of that great founder of the empire had
descended to him.
Darius decided the question in favor
of Xerxes, and then made arrangements for commencing
his march, with a mind full of the elation and pride
which were awakened by the grandeur of his position
and the magnificence of his schemes. These schemes,
however, he did not live to execute. He suddenly
fell sick and died, just as he was ready to set out
upon his expedition, and Xerxes, his son, reigned in
his stead.
Xerxes immediately took command of
the vast preparations which his father had made, and
went on with the prosecution of the enterprise.
The expedition which followed deserves, probably, in
respect to the numbers engaged in it, the distance
which it traversed, the immenseness of the expenses
involved, and the magnitude of its results, to be
considered the greatest military undertaking which
human ambition and power have ever attempted to effect.
The narrative, however, both of its splendid adventures
and of its ultimate fate, belongs to the history of
Xerxes.
The greatness of Darius was the greatness
of position and not of character. He was the
absolute sovereign of nearly half the world, and,
as such, was held up very conspicuously to the attention
of mankind, who gaze with a strong feeling of admiration
and awe upon these vast elevations of power, as they
do upon the summits of mountains, simply because they
are high. Darius performed no great exploit,
and he accomplished no great object while he lived;
and he did not even leave behind him any strong impressions
of personal character. There is in his history,
and in the position which he occupies in the minds
of men, greatness without dignity, success without
merit, vast and long-continued power without effects
accomplished or objects gained, and universal and perpetual
renown without honor or applause. The world admire
Caesar, Hannibal, Alexander, Alfred, and Napoleon
for the deeds which they performed. They admire
Darius only on account of the elevation on which he
stood. In the same lofty position, they would
have admired, probably, just as much, the very horse
whose neighing placed him there.