Page images
PDF
EPUB

committed through ignorance or imprudence. We may venture, I think, to say, that it is more glorious. to rise in this manner, than it would be never to have fallen. Certainly there is nothing greater, and at the same time more rare and uncommon, than to see a mighty and powerful prince, and that in the time of his greatest prosperity, acknowledge his faults, when he happens to commit any, without seeking pretexts or excuses to cover them; pay homage to truth, even when it is against him, and condemns him; and leave other princes, who have a false delicacy concerning their grandeur, the shame of always abounding with errors and defects, and of never owning that they have

any.

The night following, the same phantom, if we may believe Herodotus, appeared again to the king, and repeated the same solicitations, with new menaces and threatenings. Xerxes communicated what passed to his uncle; and, in order to find out whether this vision was divine or not, entreated him earnestly to put on the royal robes, to ascend the throne, and afterwards to take his place in his bed for the night. Artabanes hereupon discoursed very sensibly and rationally with the king upon the vanity of dreams; and then coming to what personally regarded him, "I look upon it," says he, "almost equally commendable to think well one's self, or to hearken with docility to the good counsels of others. You have both these qualities, great prince; and if you follow the natural bent of your own temper, it would lead you entirely to sentiments of

I This thought is in Hesiod, Opera et Dies, v. 293; Cic. pro Cluent. n. 84, et Tit. Liv. I. xxii. n. 19. Sæpe ego audivi, milites, eum primum esse virum, qui ipse consulat quid in rem sit; secundum eum, qui bene monenti obediat: qui nec ipse consulere, nec alteri parere sciat, eum extremi ingenii esse.

.

wisdom and moderation. You never take any violent measures or resolutions, but when the arts of evil counsellors draw you into them, or the poison of flattery mis. leads you; in the same manner as the ocean, which of itself is calm and serene, and never disturbed but by the extraneous impulse of other bodies. What afflicted

me in the answer you made me the other day, when I delivered my sentiments freely in council, was not the personal affront to me, but the injury you did yourself, by making so wrong a choice between the different counsels that were offered; rejecting that which led you to sentiments of moderation and equity; and embracing the other, which, on the contrary, tended only to nourish pride, and to inflame ambition.".

Artabanes, through complaisance, passed the night in the king's bed, and had the same vision which Xerxes had before; that is, in his sleep he saw a man, who made him severe reproaches, and threatened him with the greatest misfortunes, if he continued to oppose the king's intentions. This so much affected him, that he came over to the king's first opinion, believing that there was something divine in these repeated visions; and the war against the Grecians was resolved upon. These circumstances I relate, as I find them in Herodotus.

Xerxes, in the sequel, did but ill support this character of moderation. We shall find that he had but very short intervals of wisdom and reason, which shone out only for a moment, and then gave way to the most culpable and extravagant excesses. We may judge, however, even from thence, that he had very good natural parts and inclinations. But the most excellent qualites are soon spoiled and corrupted by the poison

of flattery, and the possession of absolute and unlimited power: Vi dominationis convulsus.

It is a fine sentiment in a minister of state, to be less affected with an affront to himself, than with the wrong done his master by giving him evil and pernicious counsel.

Mardonius' counsel was pernicious; because, as Artabanes observes, it tended, only to nourish and increase that spirit of haughtiness and violence in the prince, which was but too prevalent in him already;" and in that it disposed and accustomed his mind still to carry his views and desires beyond his present fortune, still to be aiming at something farther, and to set no bounds to his ambition. This is the predominant passion of those men whom we usually call conquerors; and whom, according to the language of the holy scripture, we might call, with greater propriety,

" robbers of nations." If you consider and examine the whole succession of Persian kings, says Seneca, will you find any one of them that ever stopped his career of his own accord? that was ever satisfied with his past conquests; or that was not forming some new project or enterprise, when death surprised him? Nor ought we to be astonished at such a disposition, adds the same author; for ambition is a gulph and a bot

[blocks in formation]

• Ως κακον ειν διδασκειν την ψυχην πλέον τι δίζεσθαι αιει έχειν τε παρέοντος. Nec hoc Alexandri tantum vitium fuit, quem per Liberi Herculis. que vestigia felix temeritas egit; sed omnium, quos fortuna irritavit implendo. Totum regni Persici stemma percense: quem invenies, cui modum imperii satietas fecerit ? qui non vitam in aliqua ulterius proce. dendi cogitatione finierit? Nec id mirum est. Quicquid cupiditati contigit, penitus hauritur et conditur ; nec interest quantum eo, qued inexplebile est, congeras. Senec, 1. vii. de benef. c. 3.

9 Jer. iv. 7.

tomless abyss, wherein every thing is lost that is thrown in, and where, though you were to heap province upon province, and kingdom upon kingdom, you would never be able to fill up the mighty void.

SECTION II.

XERXES BEGINS HIS MARCH, AND PASSES FROM ASIA INTO EUROPE,

BY CROSSING THE STRAITS OF THE HELLESPONT

UPON A BRIDGE OF BOATS.

THE war being resolved upon,' Xerxes, that he might omit nothing which might contribute to the success of his undertaking, entered into a confederacy with the Carthaginians, who were at that time the most potent people of the west, and made an agreement with them, that whilst the Persian forces should attack Greece, the Carthaginians should fall upon the Grecian colonies that were settled in Sicily and Italy, in order to hinder them from coming to the aid of the other Grecians. The Carthaginians made Amilcar their general, who did not content himself with raising as many troops as he could in Africa, but with the money that Xerxes had sent him, engaged a great number of soldiers out of Spain, Gaul, and Italy, in his service; so that he collected an army of three hundred thousand men, and a proportionate number of ships, in order to execute the projects and stipulations of the league.

Thus Xerxes, agreeably to the prophet Daniel's prediction, "having, through his power and his great riches, stirred up all the nations of the then known world against the realm of Greece;" that is to say, of all the west, under the command of Amilcar, and of all the

A. M. 3523. Ant. J. C. 481.

$ Dan. xi. 2.

t

east, that was under his own banner, set out from Susa, in order to enter upon this war, in the fifth year of his reign, which was the tenth after the battle of Marathon, and marched towards Sardis, the place of rendezvous for the whole land army, whilst the fleet advanced along the coasts of Asia Minor towards the Hellespont.

Xerxes had given orders to have a passage cut through mount Athos. This is a mountain in Macedonia, now a province of Turkey in Europe, which extends a great way into the Archipelago, in the form of a Peninsula. It is joined to the land only by an isthmus of about half a league over. We have already taken notice, that the sea in this place was very tempestuous, and occasioned frequent shipwrecks. Xerxes made this his pretext for the orders he gave for cutting through the mountain: but the true reason was the vanity of signalizing himself by an extraordinary enterprise, and by doing a thing that was extremely difficult: as Tacitus says of Nero, Erat incredibilium cupitor. Accordingly, Herodotus observes, that this undertaking was more vain glorious than useful, since he might, with less trouble and expense, have had his vessels carried over the isthmus, as was the practice in those days. The passage he caused to be cut through the mountain was broad enough to let two gallies with three banks of oars each pass through it abreast. This prince, who was extravagant enough to believe, that all nature, and the very elements, were under his command, in consequence of that opinion, writ a letter to mount Athos, in the following terms: "Athos, thou

Herod. l. vii. c. 26. A. M. 3523. Ant. J. C. 481.
Herod. 1. vii. c. 21, 24.

Plut. de ira, cohib. p. 455.

[blocks in formation]
« PreviousContinue »