Book 3 - THALIA
                  
              
[3.1] The above-mentioned Amasis was the   Egyptian king against whom Cambyses, son of Cyrus, made his expedition; and with   him went an army composed of the many nations under his rule, among them being   included both Ionic and Aeolic Greeks. The reason of the invasion was the   following. Cambyses, by the advice of a certain Egyptian, who was angry with   Amasis for having torn him from his wife and children and given him over to the   Persians, had sent a herald to Amasis to ask his daughter in marriage. His   adviser was a physician, whom Amasis, when Cyrus had requested that he would   send him the most skilful of all the Egyptian eye-doctors, singled out as the   best from the whole number. Therefore the Egyptian bore Amasis a grudge, and his   reason for urging Cambyses to ask the hand of the king's daughter was, that if   he complied, it might cause him annoyance; if he refused, it might make Cambyses   his enemy. When the message came, Amasis, who much dreaded the power of the   Persians, was greatly perplexed whether to give his daughter or no; for that   Cambyses did not intend to make her his wife, but would only receive her as his   concubine, he knew for certain. He therefore cast the matter in his mind, and   finally resolved what he would do. There was a daughter of the late king Apries,   named Nitetis, a tall and beautiful woman, the last survivor of that royal   house. Amasis took this woman, and decking her out with gold and costly   garments, sent her to Persia as if she had been his own child. Some time   afterwards, Cambyses, as he gave her an embrace, happened to call her by her   father's name, whereupon she said to him, "I see, O king, thou knowest not how   thou has been cheated by Amasis; who took me, and, tricking me out with gauds,   sent me to thee as his own daughter. But I am in truth the child of Apries, who   was his lord and master, until he rebelled against him, together with the rest   of the Egyptians, and put him to death." It was this speech, and the cause of   quarrel it disclosed, which roused the anger of Cambyses, son of Cyrus, and   brought his arms upon Egypt. Such is the Persian story. 
              [3.2] The Egyptians, however, claim Cambyses   as belonging to them, declaring that he was the son of this Nitetis. It was   Cyrus, they say, and not Cambyses, who sent to Amasis for his daughter. But here   they mis-state the truth. Acquainted as they are beyond all other men with the   laws and customs of the Persians, they cannot but be well aware, first, that it   is not the Persian wont to allow a bastard to reign when there is a legitimate   heir; and next, that Cambyses was the son of Cassandane, the daughter of  Pharnaspes, an Achaemenian, and not of this Egyptian. But the fact is that they   pervert history in order to claim relationship with the house of Cyrus. Such is   the truth of this matter. 
              [3.3] I have also heard another account, which   I do not at all believe: that a Persian lady came to visit the wives of Cyrus,   and seeing how tall and beautiful were the children of Cassandane, then standing   by, broke out into loud praise of them, and admired them exceedingly. But  Cassandane, wife of Cyrus, answered, "Though such the children I have borne him,   yet Cyrus slights me and gives all his regard to the new-comer from Egypt." Thus   did she express her vexation on account of Nitetis: whereupon Cambyses, the   eldest of her boys, exclaimed, "Mother, when I am a man, I will turn Egypt   upside down for you." He was but ten years old, as the tale runs, when he said   this, and astonished all the women, yet he never forgot it afterwards; and on   this account, they say, when he came to be a man, and mounted the throne, he   made his expedition against Egypt. 
              [3.4] There was another matter, quite   distinct, which helped to bring about the expedition. One of the mercenaries of   Amasis, a Halicarnassian, Phanes by name, a man of good judgment, and a brave   warrior, dissatisfied for some reason or other with his master, deserted the   service, and taking ship, fled to Cambyses, wishing to get speech with him. As   he was a person of no small account among the mercenaries, and one who could   give very exact intelligence about Egypt, Amasis, anxious to recover him,   ordered that he should be pursued. He gave the matter in charge to one of the   most trusty of the eunuchs, who went in quest of the Halicarnassian in a vessel   of war. The eunuch caught him in Lycia, but did not contrive to bring him back   to Egypt, for Phanes outwitted him by making his guards drunk, and then escaping   into Persia. Now it happened that Cambyses was meditating his attack on Egypt,   and doubting how he might best pass the desert, when Phanes arrived, and not   only told him all the secrets of Amasis, but advised him also how the desert   might be crossed. He counselled him to send an ambassador to the king of the   Arabs, and ask him for safe-conduct through the region. 
              [3.5] Now the only entrance into Egypt is by   this desert: the country from Phoenicia to the borders of the city Cadytis   belongs to the people called the Palaestine Syrians; from Cadytis, which it   appears to me is a city almost as large as Sardis, the marts upon the coast till   you reach Jenysus are the Arabian king's; after Jenysus the Syrians again come   in, and extend to Lake Serbonis, near the place where Mount Casius juts out into   the sea. At Lake Serbonis, where the tale goes that Typhon hid himself, Egypt   begins. Now the whole tract between Jenysus on the one side, and Lake Serbonis   and Mount Casius on the other, and this is no small space, being as much as   three days' journey, is a dry desert without a drop of water. 
              [3.6] I shall now mention a thing of which few   of those who sail to Egypt are aware. Twice a year wine is brought into Egypt   from every part of Greece, as well as from Phoenicia, in earthen jars; and yet   in the whole country you will nowhere see, as I may say, a single jar. What   then, every one will ask, becomes of the jars? This, too, I will clear up. The   burgomaster of each town has to collect the wine-jars within his district, and   to carry them to Memphis, where they are all filled with water by the Memphians,   who then convey them to this desert tract of Syria. And so it comes to pass that   all the jars which enter Egypt year by year, and are there put up to sale, find   their way into Syria, whither all the old jars have gone before them. 
              [3.7] This way of keeping the passage into   Egypt fit for use by storing water there, was begun by the Persians so soon as   they became masters of that country. As, however, at the time of which we speak   the tract had not yet been so supplied, Cambyses took the advice of his   Halicarnassian guest, and sent messengers to the Arabian to beg a safe-conduct   through the region. The Arabian granted his prayer, and each pledged faith to   the other. 
              [3.8] The Arabs keep such pledges more   religiously than almost any other people. They plight faith with the forms   following. When two men would swear a friendship, they stand on each side of a   third: he with a sharp stone makes a cut on the inside of the hand of each near   the middle finger, and, taking a piece from their dress, dips it in the blood of   each, and moistens therewith seven stones lying in the midst, calling the while   on Bacchus and Urania. After this, the man who makes the pledge commends the   stranger (or the citizen, if citizen he be) to all his friends, and they deem   themselves bound to stand to the engagement. They have but these two gods, to   wit, Bacchus and Urania; and they say that in their mode of cutting the hair,   they follow Bacchus. Now their practice is to cut it in a ring, away from the   temples. Bacchus they call in their language Orotal, and Urania, Alilat. 
              [3.9] When therefore the Arabian had pledged   his faith to the messengers of Cambyses, he straightway contrived as follows:-   he filled a number of camels' skins with water, and loading therewith all the   live camels that he possessed, drove them into the desert, and awaited the   coming of the army. This is the more likely of the two tales that are told. The   other is an improbable story, but, as it is related, I think that I ought not to   pass it by. There is a great river in Arabia, called the Corys, which empties   itself into the Erythraean sea. The Arabian king, they say, made a pipe of the   skins of oxen and other beasts, reaching from this river all the way to the   desert, and so brought the water to certain cisterns which he had dug in the   desert to receive it. It is a twelve days' journey from the river to this desert   tract. And the water, they say, was brought through three different pipes to   three separate places. 
              [3.10] Psammenitus, son of Amasis, lay   encamped at the mouth of the. Nile, called the Pelusiac, awaiting Cambyses. For  Cambyses, when he went up against Egypt, found Amasis no longer in life: he had   died after ruling Egypt forty and four years, during all which time no great   misfortune had befallen him. When he died, his body was embalmed, and buried in   the tomb which he had himself caused to be made in the temple. After his son   Psammenitus had mounted the throne, a strange prodigy occurred in Egypt - rain   fell at Egyptian Thebes, a thing which never happened before, and which, to the   present time, has never happened again, as the Thebans themselves testify. In   Upper Egypt it does not usually rain at all; but on this occasion, rain fell at   Thebes in small drops. 
              [3.11] The Persians crossed the desert, and,   pitching their camp close to the Egyptians, made ready for battle. Hereupon the   mercenaries in the pay of Psammenitus, who were Greeks and Carians, full of   anger against Phanes for having brought a foreign army upon Egypt, bethought   themselves of a mode whereby they might be revenged on him. Phanes had left sons   in Egypt. The mercenaries took these, and leading them to the camp, displayed   them before the eyes of their father; after which they brought out a bowl, and,   placing it in the space between the two hosts, they led the sons of Phanes, one   by one, to the vessel, and slew them over it. When the last was dead, water and   wine were poured into the bowl, and all the soldiers tasted of the blood, and so   they went to the battle. Stubborn was the fight which followed, and it was not   till vast numbers had been slain upon both sides, that the Egyptians turned and   fled. 
              [3.12] On the field where this battle was   fought I saw a very wonderful thing which the natives pointed out to me. The   bones of the slain lie scattered upon the field in two lots, those of the   Persians in one place by themselves, as the bodies lay at the first - those of   the Egyptians in another place apart from them. If, then, you strike the Persian   skulls, even with a pebble, they are so weak, that you break a hole in them; but   the Egyptian skulls are so strong, that you may smite them with a stone and you   will scarcely break them in. They gave me the following reason for this   difference, which seemed to me likely enough:- The Egyptians (they said) from   early childhood have the head shaved, and so by the action of the sun the skull   becomes thick and hard. The same cause prevents baldness in Egypt, where you see   fewer bald men than in any other land. Such, then, is the reason why the skulls   of the Egyptians are so strong. The Persians, on the other hand, have feeble   skulls, because they keep themselves shaded from the first, wearing turbans upon   their heads. What I have here mentioned I saw with my own eyes, and I observed   also the like at Papremis, in the case of the Persians who were killed with  Achaeamenes, the son of Darius, by Inarus the Libyan. 
              [3.13] The Egyptians who fought in the   battle, no sooner turned their backs upon the enemy, than they fled away in   complete disorder to Memphis, where they shut themselves up within the walls.   Hereupon Cambyses sent a Mytilenaean vessel, with a Persian herald on board, who   was to sail up the Nile to Memphis, and invite the Egyptians to a surrender.   They, however, when they saw the vessel entering the town, poured forth in   crowds from the castle, destroyed the ship, and, tearing the crew limb from   limb, so bore them into the fortress. After this Memphis was besieged, and in   due time surrendered. Hereon the Libyans who bordered upon Egypt, fearing the   fate of that country, gave themselves up to Cambyses without a battle, made an   agreement to pay tribute to him, and forthwith sent him gifts. The Cyrenaeans   too, and the Barcaeans, having the same fear as the Libyans, immediately did the   like. Cambyses received the Libyan presents very graciously, but not so the   gifts of the Cyrenaeans. They had sent no more than five hundred minx of silver,   which Cambyses, I imagine, thought too little. He therefore snatched the money   from them, and with his own hands scattered it among his soldiers. 
              [3.14] Ten days after the fort had fallen,   Cambyses resolved to try the spirit of Psammenitus, the Egyptian king, whose   whole reign had been but six months. He therefore had him set in one of the   suburbs, and many other Egyptians with him, and there subjected him to insult.   First of all he sent his daughter out from the city, clothed in the garb of a   slave, with a pitcher to draw water. Many virgins, the daughters of the chief   nobles, accompanied her, wearing the same dress. When the damsels came opposite   the place where their fathers sate, shedding tears and uttering cries of woe,   the fathers, all but Psammenitus, wept and wailed in return, grieving to see   their children in so sad a plight; but he, when he had looked and seen, bent his   head towards the ground. In this way passed by the water-carriers. Next to them   came Psammenitus' son, and two thousand Egyptians of the same age with him - all   of them having ropes round their necks and bridles in their mouths - and they   too passed by on their way to suffer death for the murder of the Mytilenaeans   who were destroyed, with their vessel, in Memphis. For so had the royal judges   given their sentence for each Mytilenaean ten of the noblest Egyptians must   forfeit life." King Psammenitus saw the train pass on, and knew his son was   being led to death, but while the other Egyptians who sate around him wept and   were sorely troubled, he showed no further sign than when he saw his daughter.   And now, when they too were gone, it chanced that one of his former   boon-companions, a man advanced in years, who had been stripped of all that he   had and was a beggar, came where Psammenitus, son of Amasis, and the rest of the   Egyptians were, asking alms from the soldiers. At this sight the king burst into   tears, and weeping out aloud, called his friend by his name, and smote himself   on the head. Now there were some who had been set to watch Psammenitus and see   what he would do as each train went by; so these persons went and told Cambyses   of his behaviour. Then he, astonished at what was done, sent a messenger to  Psammenitus, and questioned him, saying, "Psammenitus, thy lord Cambyses asketh   thee why, when thou sawest thy daughter brought to shame, and thy son on his way   to death, thou didst neither utter cry nor shed tear, while to a beggar, who is,   he hears, a stranger to thy race, thou gavest those marks of honour." To this   question Psammenitus made answer, "O son of Cyrus, my own misfortunes were too   great for tears; but the woe of my friend deserved them. When a man falls from   splendour and plenty into beggary at the threshold of old age, one may well weep   for him." When the messenger brought back this answer, Cambyses owned it was   just; Croesus, likewise, the Egyptians say, burst into tears - for he too had   come into Egypt with Cambyses - and the Persians who were present wept. Even   Cambyses himself was touched with pity, and he forthwith gave an order that the   son of Psammenitus should be spared from the number of those appointed to die,   and Psammenitus himself brought from the suburb into his presence. 
              [3.15] The messengers were too late to save   the life of Psammenitus' son, who had been cut in pieces the first of all; but   they took Psammenitus himself and brought him before the king. Cambyses allowed   him to live with him, and gave him no more harsh treatment; nay, could he have   kept from intermeddling with affairs, he might have recovered Egypt, and ruled   it as governor. For the Persian wont is to treat the sons of kings with honour,   and even to give their fathers' kingdoms to the children of such as revolt from   them. There are many cases from which one may collect that this is the Persian   rule, and especially those of Pausiris and Thannyras. Thannyras was son of   Inarus the Libyan, and was allowed to succeed his father, as was also Pausiris,   son of Amyrtaeus; yet certainly no two persons ever did the Persians more damage   than Amyrtaeus and Inarus. In this case Psammenitus plotted evil, and received   his reward accordingly. He was discovered to be stirring up revolt in Egypt,   wherefore Cambyses, when his guilt clearly appeared, compelled him to drink   bull's blood, which presently caused his death. Such was the end of Psammenitus. 
              [3.16] After this Cambyses left Memphis, and   went to Sais, wishing to do that which he actually did on his arrival there. He   entered the palace of Amasis, and straightway commanded that the body of the   king should be brought forth from the sepulchre. When the attendants did   according to his commandment, he further bade them scourge the body, and prick   it with goads, and pluck the hair from it, and heap upon it all manner of   insults. The body, however, having been embalmed, resisted, and refused to come   apart, do what they would to it; so the attendants grew weary of their work;   whereupon Cambyses bade them take the corpse and burn it. This was truly an   impious command to give, for the Persians hold fire to be a god, and never by   any chance burn their dead. Indeed this practice is unlawful, both with them and   with the Egyptians - with them for the reason above mentioned, since they deem   it wrong to give the corpse of a man to a god; and with the Egyptians, because   they believe fire to be a live animal, which eats whatever it can seize, and   then, glutted with the food, dies with the matter which it feeds upon. Now to   give a man's body to be devoured by beasts is in no wise agreeable to their   customs, and indeed this is the very reason why they embalm their dead; namely,   to prevent them from being eaten in the grave by worms. Thus Cambyses commanded   what both nations accounted unlawful. According to the Egyptians, it was not   Amasis who was thus treated, but another of their nation who was of about the   same height. The Persians, believing this man's body to be the king's, abused it   in the fashion described above. Amasis, they say, was warned by an oracle of   what would happen to him after his death: in order, therefore, to prevent the   impending fate, he buried the body, which afterwards received the blows, inside   his own tomb near the entrance, commanding his son to bury him, when he died, in   the furthest recess of the same sepulchre. For my own part I do not believe that   these orders were ever given by Amasis; the Egyptians, as it seems to me,   falsely assert it, to save their own dignity. 
              [3.17] After this Cambyses took counsel with   himself, and planned three expeditions. One was against the Carthaginians,   another against the Ammonians, and a third against the long-lived Ethiopians,   who dwelt in that part of Libya which borders upon the southern sea. He judged   it best to despatch his fleet against Carthage and to send some portion of his   land army to act against the Ammonians, while his spies went into Ethiopia,   under the pretence of carrying presents to the king, but in reality to take note   of all they saw, and especially to observe whether there was really what is   called "the table of the Sun" in Ethiopia. 
              [3.18] Now the table of the Sun according to   the accounts given of it may be thus described:- It is a meadow in the skirts of   their city full of the boiled flesh of all manner of beasts, which the   magistrates are careful to store with meat every night, and where whoever likes   may come and eat during the day. The people of the land say that the earth   itself brings forth the food. Such is the description which is given of this   table. 
              [3.19] When Cambyses had made up his mind   that the spies should go, he forthwith sent to Elephantine for certain of the   Icthyophagi who were acquainted with the Ethiopian tongue; and, while they were   being fetched, issued orders to his fleet to sail against Carthage. But the   Phoenicians said they would not go, since they were bound to the Carthaginians   by solemn oaths, and since besides it would be wicked in them to make war on   their own children. Now when the Phoenicians refused, the rest of the fleet was   unequal to the undertaking; and so it was that the Carthaginians escaped, and   were not enslaved by the Persians. Cambyses thought it not right to force the   war upon the Phoenicians, because they had yielded themselves to the Persians,   and because upon the Phoenicians all his sea-service depended. The Cyprians had   also joined the Persians of their own accord, and took part with them in the   expedition against Egypt. 
              [3.20] As soon as the Icthyophagi arrived   from Elephantine, Cambyses, having told them what they were to say, forthwith   despatched them into Ethiopia with these following gifts: to wit, a purple robe,   a gold chain for the neck, armlets, an alabaster box of myrrh, and a cask of   palm wine. The Ethiopians to whom this embassy was sent are said to be the   tallest and handsomest men in the whole world. In their customs they differ   greatly from the rest of mankind, and particularly in the way they choose their   kings; for they find out the man who is the tallest of all the citizens, and of   strength equal to his height, and appoint him to rule over them. 
              [3.21] The Icthyophagi on reaching this   people, delivered the gifts to the king of the country, and spoke as follows:-  "Cambyses, king of the Persians, anxious to become thy ally and sworn friend,   has sent us to hold converse with thee, and to bear thee the gifts thou seest,   which are the things wherein he himself delights the most." Hereon the   Ethiopian, who knew they came as spies, made answer:- "The king of the Persians   sent you not with these gifts because he much desired to become my sworn friend   - nor is the account which ye give of yourselves true, for ye are come to search   out my kingdom. Also your king is not a just man - for were he so, he had not   coveted a land which is not his own, nor brought slavery on a people who never   did him any wrong. Bear him this bow, and say - 'The king of the Ethiops thus   advises the king of the Persians when the Persians can pull a bow of this   strength thus easily, then let him come with an army of superior strength   against the long-lived Ethiopians - till then, let him thank the gods that they   have not put it into the heart of the sons of the Ethiops to covet countries   which do not belong to them.' 
              [3.22] So speaking, he unstrung the bow, and   gave it into the hands of the messengers. Then, taking the purple robe, he asked   them what it was, and how it had been made. They answered truly, telling him   concerning the purple, and the art of the dyer - whereat he observed "that the   men were deceitful, and their garments also." Next he took the neck-chain and   the armlets, and asked about them. So the Icthyophagi explained their use as   ornaments. Then the king laughed, and fancying they were fetters, said, "the   Ethiopians had much stronger ones." Thirdly, he inquired about the myrrh, and   when they told him how it was made and rubbed upon the limbs, he said the same   as he had said about the robe. Last of all he came to the wine, and having   learnt their way of making it, he drank a draught, which greatly delighted him;   whereupon he asked what the Persian king was wont to eat, and to what age the   longest-lived of the Persians had been known to attain. They told him that the   king ate bread, and described the nature of wheat - adding that eighty years was   the longest term of man's life among the Persians. Hereat he remarked, "It did   not surprise him, if they fed on dirt, that they died so soon; indeed he was   sure they never would have lived so long as eighty years, except for the   refreshment they got from that drink (meaning the wine), wherein he confessed   the Persians surpassed the Ethiopians." 
              [3.23] The Icthyophagi then in their turn   questioned the king concerning the term of life, and diet of his people, and   were told that most of them lived to be a hundred and twenty years old, while   some even went beyond that age - they ate boiled flesh, and had for their drink   nothing but milk. When the Icthyophagi showed wonder at the number of the years,   he led them to a fountain, wherein when they had washed, they found their flesh   all glossy and sleek, as if they had bathed in oil - and a scent came from the   spring like that of violets. The water was so weak, they said, that nothing   would float in it, neither wood, nor any lighter substance, but all went to the   bottom. If the account of this fountain be true, it would be their constant use   of the water from it which makes them so long-lived. When they quitted the   fountain the king led them to a prison, where the prisoners were all of them   bound with fetters of gold. Among these Ethiopians copper is of all metals the   most scarce and valuable. After they had seen the prison, they were likewise   shown what is called "the table of the Sun." 
              [3.24] Also, last of all, they were allowed   to behold the coffins of the Ethiopians, which are made (according to report) of   crystal, after the following fashion:- When the dead body has been dried, either   in the Egyptian, or in some other manner, they cover the whole with gypsum, and   adorn it with painting until it is as like the living man as possible. Then they   place the body in a crystal pillar which has been hollowed out to receive it,   crystal being dug up in great abundance in their country, and of a kind very   easy to work. You may see the corpse through the pillar within which it lies;   and it neither gives out any unpleasant odour, nor is it in any respect   unseemly; yet there is no part that is not as plainly visible as if the body   were bare. The next of kin keep the crystal pillar in their houses for a full   year from the time of the death, and give it the first fruits continually, and   honour it with sacrifice. After the year is out they bear the pillar forth, and   set it up near the town. 
              [3.25] When the spies had now seen   everything, they returned back to Egypt, and made report to Cambyses, who was   stirred to anger by their words. Forthwith he set out on his march against the   Ethiopians without having made any provision for the sustenance of his army, or   reflected that he was about to wage war in the uttermost parts of the earth.   Like a senseless madman as he was, no sooner did he receive the report of the   Icthyophagi than he began his march, bidding the Greeks who were with his army   remain where they were, and taking only his land force with him. At Thebes,   which he passed through on his way, he detached from his main body some fifty   thousand men, and sent them against the Ammonians with orders to carry the   people into captivity, and burn the oracle of Jupiter. Meanwhile he himself went   on with the rest of his forces against the Ethiopians. Before, however, he had   accomplished one-fifth part of the distance, all that the army had in the way of   provisions failed; whereupon the men began to eat the sumpter beasts, which   shortly failed also. If then, at this time, Cambyses, seeing what was happening,   had confessed himself in the wrong, and led his army back, he would have done   the wisest thing that he could after the mistake made at the outset; but as it   was, he took no manner of heed, but continued to march forwards. So long as the   earth gave them anything, the soldiers sustained life by eating the grass and   herbs; but when they came to the bare sand, a portion of them were guilty of a   horrid deed: by tens they cast lots for a man, who was slain to be the food of   the others. When Cambyses heard of these doings, alarmed at such cannibalism, he   gave up his attack on Ethiopia, and retreating by the way he had come, reached   Thebes, after he had lost vast numbers of his soldiers. From Thebes he marched   down to Memphis, where he dismissed the Greeks, allowing them to sail home. And   so ended the expedition against Ethiopia. 
              [3.26] The men sent to attack the Ammonians,   started from Thebes, having guides with them, and may be clearly traced as far   as the city Oasis, which is inhabited by Samians, said to be of the tribe  Aeschrionia. The place is distant from Thebes seven days' journey across the   sand, and is called in our tongue "the Island of the Blessed." Thus far the army   is known to have made its way; but thenceforth nothing is to be heard of them,   except what the Ammonians, and those who get their knowledge from them, report.   It is certain they neither reached the Ammonians, nor even came back to Egypt.   Further than this, the Ammonians relate as follows:- That the Persians set forth   from Oasis across the sand, and had reached about half way between that place   and themselves when, as they were at their midday meal, a wind arose from the   south, strong and deadly, bringing with it vast columns of whirling sand, which   entirely covered up the troops and caused them wholly to disappear. Thus,   according to the Ammonians, did it fare with this army. 
              [3.27] About the time when Cambyses arrived   at Memphis, Apis appeared to the Egyptians. Now Apis is the god whom the Greeks   call Epaphus. As soon as he appeared, straightway all the Egyptians arrayed   themselves in their gayest garments, and fell to feasting and jollity: which   when Cambyses saw, making sure that these rejoicings were on account of his own   ill success, he called before him the officers who had charge of Memphis, and   demanded of them - "Why, when he was in Memphis before, the Egyptians had done   nothing of this kind, but waited until now, when he had returned with the loss   of so many of his troops?" The officers made answer, "That one of their gods had   appeared to them, a god who at long intervals of time had been accustomed to   show himself in Egypt - and that always on his appearance the whole of Egypt   feasted and kept jubilee." When Cambyses heard this, he told them that they   lied, and as liars he condemned them all to suffer death. 
              [3.28] When they were dead, he called the   priests to his presence, and questioning them received the same answer;   whereupon he observed, "That he would soon know whether a tame god had really   come to dwell in Egypt" - and straightway, without another word, he bade them   bring Apis to him. So they went out from his presence to fetch the god. Now this  Apis, or Epaphus, is the calf of a cow which is never afterwards able to bear   young. The Egyptians say that fire comes down from heaven upon the cow, which   thereupon conceives Apis. The calf which is so called has the following marks:-   He is black, with a square spot of white upon his forehead, and on his back the   figure of an eagle; the hairs in his tail are double, and there is a beetle upon   his tongue. 
              [3.29] When the priests returned bringing   Apis with them, Cambyses, like the harebrained person that he was, drew his   dagger, and aimed at the belly of the animal, but missed his mark, and stabbed   him in the thigh. Then he laughed, and said thus to the priests:- "Oh!   blockheads, and think ye that gods become like this, of flesh and blood, and   sensible to steel? A fit god indeed for Egyptians, such an one! But it shall   cost you dear that you have made me your laughing-stock." When he had so spoken,   he ordered those whose business it was to scourge the priests, and if they found   any of the Egyptians keeping festival to put them to death. Thus was the feast   stopped throughout the land of Egypt, and the priests suffered punishment. Apis,   wounded in the thigh, lay some time pining in the temple; at last he died of his   wound, and the priests buried him secretly without the knowledge of Cambyses. 
              [3.30] And now Cambyses, who even before had   not been quite in his right mind, was forthwith, as the Egyptians say, smitten   with madness for this crime. The first of his outrages was the slaying of  Smerdis, his full brother, whom he had sent back to Persia from Egypt out of   envy, because he drew the bow brought from the Ethiopians by the Icthyophagi   (which none of the other Persians were able to bend) the distance of two   fingers' breadth. When Smerdis was departed into Persia, Cambyses had a vision   in his sleep - he thought a messenger from Persia came to him with tidings that   Smerdis sat upon the royal throne and with his head touched the heavens. Fearing   therefore for himself, and thinking it likely that his brother would kill him   and rule in his stead, Cambyses sent into Persia Prexaspes, whom he trusted   beyond all the other Persians, bidding him put Smerdis to death. So this   Prexaspes went up to Susa and slew Smerdis. Some say he killed him as they   hunted together, others, that he took him down to the Erythraean Sea, and there   drowned him. 
              [3.31] This, it is said, was the first   outrage which Cambyses committed. The second was the slaying of his sister, who   had accompanied him into Egypt, and lived with him as his wife, though she was   his full sister, the daughter both of his father and his mother. The way wherein   he had made her his wife was the following:- It was not the custom of the   Persians, before his time, to marry their sisters, but Cambyses, happening to   fall in love with one of his and wishing to take her to wife, as he knew that it   was an uncommon thing, called together the royal judges, and put it to them,   "whether there was any law which allowed a brother, if he wished, to marry his   sister?" Now the royal judges are certain picked men among the Persians, who   hold their office for life, or until they are found guilty of some misconduct.   By them justice is administered in Persia, and they are the interpreters of the   old laws, all disputes being referred to their decision. When Cambyses,   therefore, put his question to these judges, they gave him an answer which was   at once true and safe - "they did not find any law," they said, "allowing a   brother to take his sister to wife, but they found a law, that the king of the   Persians might do whatever he pleased." And so they neither warped the law   through fear of Cambyses, nor ruined themselves by over stiffly maintaining the   law; but they brought another quite distinct law to the king's help, which   allowed him to have his wish. Cambyses, therefore, married the object of his   love, and no long time afterwards he took to wife another sister. It was the   younger of these who went with him into Egypt, and there suffered death at his   hands. 
              [3.32] Concerning the manner of her death, as   concerning that of Smerdis, two different accounts are given. The story which   the Greeks tell is that Cambyses had set a young dog to fight the cub of a   lioness - his wife looking on at the time. Now the dog was getting the worse,   when a pup of the same litter broke his chain, and came to his brother's aid -   then the two dogs together fought the lion, and conquered him. The thing greatly   pleased Cambyses, but his sister who was sitting by shed tears. When Cambyses   saw this, he asked her why she wept: whereon she told him, that seeing the young   dog come to his brother's aid made her think of Smerdis, whom there was none to   help. For this speech, the Greeks say, Cambyses put her to death. But the   Egyptians tell the story thus:- The two were sitting at table, when the sister   took a lettuce, and stripping the leaves off, asked her brother "when he thought   the lettuce looked the prettiest - when it had all its leaves on, or now that it   was stripped?" He answered, "When the leaves were on." "But thou," she rejoined,   "hast done as I did to the lettuce, and made bare the house of Cyrus." Then   Cambyses was wroth, and sprang fiercely upon her, though she was with child at   the time. And so it came to pass that she miscarried and died. 
              [3.33] Thus mad was Cambyses upon his own   kindred, and this either from his usage of Apis, or from some other among the   many causes from which calamities are wont to arise. They say that from his   birth he was afflicted with a dreadful disease, the disorder which some call   "the sacred sickness." It would be by no means strange, therefore, if his mind   were affected in some degree, seeing that his body laboured under so sore a   malady. 
              [3.34] He was mad also upon others besides   his kindred; among the rest, upon Prexaspes, the man whom he esteemed beyond all   the rest of the Persians, who carried his messages, and whose son held the   office - an honour of no small account in Persia - of his cupbearer. Him   Cambyses is said to have once addressed as follows:- "What sort of man,  Prexaspes, do the Persians think me? What do they say of me?" Prexaspes   answered, "Oh! sire, they praise thee greatly in all things but one - they say   thou art too much given to love of wine." Such Prexaspes told him was the   judgment of the Persians; whereupon Cambyses, full of rage, made answer, "What?   they say now that I drink too much wine, and so have lost my senses, and am gone   out of my mind! Then their former speeches about me were untrue." For once, when   the Persians were sitting with him, and Croesus was by, he had asked them, "What   sort of man they thought him compared to his father Cyrus?" Hereon they had   answered, "That he surpassed his father, for he was lord of all that his father   ever ruled, and further had made himself master of Egypt, and the sea." Then   Croesus, who was standing near, and misliked the comparison, spoke thus to  Cambyses: "In my judgment, O son of Cyrus, thou art not equal to thy father, for   thou hast not yet left behind thee such a son as he." Cambyses was delighted   when he heard this reply, and praised the judgment of Croesus. 
              [3.35] Recollecting these answers, Cambyses   spoke fiercely to Prexaspes, saying, "Judge now thyself, Prexaspes, whether the   Persians tell the truth, or whether it is not they who are mad for speaking as   they do. Look there now at thy son standing in the vestibule - if I shoot and   hit him right in the middle of the heart, it will be plain the Persians have no   grounds for what they say: if I miss him, then I allow that the Persians are   right, and that I am out of my mind." So speaking he drew his bow to the full,   and struck the boy, who straightway fell down dead. Then Cambyses ordered the   body to be opened, and the wound examined; and when the arrow was found to have   entered the heart, the king was quite overjoyed, and said to the father with a   laugh, "Now thou seest plainly, Prexaspes, that it is not I who am mad, but the   Persians who have lost their senses. I pray thee tell me, sawest thou ever   mortal man send an arrow with a better aim?" Prexaspes, seeing that the king was   not in his right mind, and fearing for himself, replied, "Oh! my lord, I do not   think that God himself could shoot so dexterously." Such was the outrage which   Cambyses committed at this time: at another, he took twelve of the noblest   Persians, and, without bringing any charge worthy of death against them, buried   them all up to the neck. 
              [3.36] Hereupon Croesus the Lydian thought it   right to admonish Cambyses, which he did in these words following:- "Oh! king,   allow not thyself to give way entirely to thy youth, and the heat of thy temper,   but check and control thyself. It is well to look to consequences, and in   forethought is true wisdom. Thou layest hold of men, who are thy   fellow-citizens, and, without cause of complaint, slayest them - thou even   puttest children to death - bethink thee now, if thou shalt often do things like   these, will not the Persians rise in revolt against thee? It is by thy father's   wish that I offer thee advice; he charged me strictly to give thee such counsel   as I might see to be most for thy good." In thus advising Cambyses, Croesus   meant nothing but what was friendly. But Cambyses answered him, "Dost thou   presume to offer me advice? Right well thou ruledst thy own country when thou   wert a king, and right sage advice thou gavest my father Cyrus, bidding him   cross the Araxes and fight the Massagetae in their own land, when they were   willing to have passed over into ours. By thy misdirection of thine own affairs   thou broughtest ruin upon thyself, and by thy bad counsel, which he followed,   thou broughtest ruin upon Cyrus, my father. But thou shalt not escape punishment   now, for I have long been seeking to find some occasion against thee." As he   thus spoke, Cambyses took up his bow to shoot at Croesus; but Croesus ran   hastily out, and escaped. So when Cambyses found that he could not kill him with   his bow, he bade his servants seize him, and put him to death. The servants,   however, who knew their master's humour, thought it best to hide Croesus; that   so, if Cambyses relented, and asked for him, they might bring him out, and get a   reward for having saved his life - if, on the other hand, he did not relent, or   regret the loss, they might then despatch him. Not long afterwards, Cambyses did   in fact regret the loss of Croesus, and the servants, perceiving it, let him   know that he was still alive. "I am glad," said he, "that Croesus lives, but as   for you who saved him, ye shall not escape my vengeance, but shall all of you be   put to death." And he did even as he had said. 
              [3.37] Many other wild outrages of this sort   did Cambyses commit, both upon the Persians and the allies, while he still   stayed at Memphis; among the rest he opened the ancient sepulchres, and examined   the bodies that were buried in them. He likewise went into the temple of Vulcan,   and made great sport of the image. For the image of Vulcan is very like the   Pataeci of the Phoenicians, wherewith they ornament the prows of their ships of   war. If persons have not seen these, I will explain in a different way - it is a   figure resembling that of a pigmy. He went also into the temple of the Cabiri,   which it is unlawful for any one to enter except the priests, and not only made   sport of the images, but even burnt them. They are made like the statue of   Vulcan, who is said to have been their father. 
              [3.38] Thus it appears certain to me, by a   great variety of proofs, that Cambyses was raving mad; he would not else have   set himself to make a mock of holy rites and long-established usages. For if one   were to offer men to choose out of all the customs in the world such as seemed   to them the best, they would examine the whole number, and end by preferring   their own; so convinced are they that their own usages far surpass those of all   others. Unless, therefore, a man was mad, it is not likely that he would make   sport of such matters. That people have this feeling about their laws may be   seen by very many proofs: among others, by the following. Darius, after he had   got the kingdom, called into his presence certain Greeks who were at hand, and   asked - "What he should pay them to eat the bodies of their fathers when they   died?" To which they answered, that there was no sum that would tempt them to do   such a thing. He then sent for certain Indians, of the race called Callatians,   men who eat their fathers, and asked them, while the Greeks stood by, and knew   by the help of an interpreter all that was said - "What he should give them to   burn the bodies of their fathers at their decease?" The Indians exclaimed aloud,   and bade him forbear such language. Such is men's wont herein; and Pindar was   right, in my judgment, when he said, "Law is the king o'er all." 
              [3.39] While Cambyses was carrying on this   war in Egypt, the Lacedaemonians likewise sent a force to Samos against  Polycrates, the son of Aeaces, who had by insurrection made himself master of   that island. At the outset he divided the state into three parts, and shared the   kingdom with his brothers, Pantagnotus and Syloson; but later, having killed the   former and banished the latter, who was the younger of the two, he held the   whole island. Hereupon he made a contract of friendship with Amasis the Egyptian   king, sending him gifts, and receiving from him others in return. In a little   while his power so greatly increased, that the fame of it went abroad throughout   Ionia and the rest of Greece. Wherever he turned his arms, success waited on   him. He had a fleet of a hundred penteconters, and bowmen to the number of a   thousand. Herewith he plundered all, without distinction of friend or foe; for   he argued that a friend was better pleased if you gave him back what you had   taken from him, than if you spared him at the first. He captured many of the   islands, and several towns upon the mainland. Among his other doings he overcame   the Lesbians in a sea-fight, when they came with all their forces to the help of  Miletus, and made a number of them prisoners. These persons, laden with fetters,   dug the moat which surrounds the castle at Samos. 
              [3.40] The exceeding good fortune of   Polycrates did not escape the notice of Amasis, who was much disturbed thereat.   When therefore his successes continued increasing, Amasis wrote him the   following letter, and sent it to Samos. "Amasis to Polycrates thus sayeth: It is   a pleasure to hear of a friend and ally prospering, but thy exceeding prosperity   does not cause me joy, forasmuch as I know that the gods are envious. My wish   for myself and for those whom I love is to be now successful, and now to meet   with a check; thus passing through life amid alternate good and ill, rather than   with perpetual good fortune. For never yet did I hear tell of any one succeeding   in all his undertakings, who did not meet with calamity at last, and come to   utter ruin. Now, therefore, give ear to my words, and meet thy good luck in this   way: bethink thee which of all thy treasures thou valuest most and canst least   bear to part with; take it, whatsoever it be, and throw it away, so that it may   be sure never to come any more into the sight of man. Then, if thy good fortune   be not thenceforth chequered with ill, save thyself from harm by again doing as   I have counselled." 
              [3.41] When Polycrates read this letter, and   perceived that the advice of Amasis was good, he considered carefully with   himself which of the treasures that he had in store it would grieve him most to   lose. After much thought he made up his mind that it was a signet-ring which he   was wont to wear, an emerald set in gold, the workmanship of Theodore, son of  Telecles, a Samian. So he determined to throw this away; and, manning a  penteconter, he went on board, and bade the sailors put out into the open sea.   When he was now a long way from the island, he took the ring from his finger,   and, in the sight of all those who were on board, flung it into the deep. This   done, he returned home, and gave vent to his sorrow. 
              [3.42] Now it happened five or six days   afterwards that a fisherman caught a fish so large and beautiful that he thought   it well deserved to be made a present of to the king. So he took it with him to   the gate of the palace, and said that he wanted to see Polycrates. Then   Polycrates allowed him to come in, and the fisherman gave him the fish with   these words following - "Sir king, when I took this prize, I thought I would not   carry it to market, though I am a poor man who live by my trade. I said to   myself, it is worthy of Polycrates and his greatness; and so I brought it here   to give it to you." The speech pleased the king, who thus spoke in reply:- "Thou   didst right well, friend, and I am doubly indebted, both for the gift, and for   the speech. Come now, and sup with me." So the fisherman went home, esteeming it   a high honour that he had been asked to sup with the king. Meanwhile the   servants, on cutting open the fish, found the signet of their master in its   belly. No sooner did they see it than they seized upon it, and hastening to   Polycrates with great joy, restored it to him, and told him in what way it had   been found. The king, who saw something providential in the matter, forthwith   wrote a letter to Amasis, telling him all that had happened, what he had himself   done, and what had been the upshot - and despatched the letter to Egypt. 
              [3.43] When Amasis had read the letter of  Polycrates, he perceived that it does not belong to man to save his fellow-man   from the fate which is in store for him; likewise he felt certain that   Polycrates would end ill, as he prospered in everything, even finding what he   had thrown away. So he sent a herald to Samos, and dissolved the contract of   friendship. This he did, that when the great and heavy misfortune came, he might   escape the grief which he would have felt if the sufferer had been his   bond-friend. 
              [3.44] It was with this Polycrates, so   fortunate in every undertaking, that the Lacedaemonians now went to war. Certain  Samians, the same who afterwards founded the city of Cydonia in Crete, had   earnestly intreated their help. For Polycrates, at the time when Cambyses, son   of Cyrus, was gathering together an armament against Egypt, had sent to beg him   not to omit to ask aid from Samos; whereupon Cambyses with much readiness   despatched a messenger to the island, and made request that Polycrates would   give some ships to the naval force which he was collecting against Egypt.   Polycrates straightway picked out from among the citizens such as he thought   most likely to stir revolt against him, and manned with them forty triremes,   which he sent to Cambyses, bidding him keep the men safe, and never allow them   to return home. 
              [3.45] Now some accounts say that these   Samians did not reach Egypt; for that when they were off Carpathus, they took   counsel together and resolved to sail no further. But others maintain that they   did go to Egypt, and, finding themselves watched, deserted, and sailed back to  Samos. There Polycrates went out against them with his fleet, and a battle was   fought and gained by the exiles; after which they disembarked upon the island   and engaged the land forces of Polycrates, but were defeated, and so sailed off   to Lacedaemon. Some relate that the Samians from Egypt overcame Polycrates, but   it seems to me untruly; for had the Samians been strong enough to conquer   Polycrates by themselves, they would not have needed to call in the aid of the  Lacedaemonians. And moreover, it is not likely that a king who had in his pay so   large a body of foreign mercenaries, and maintained likewise such a force of   native bowmen, would have been worsted by an army so small as that of the   returned Samians. As for his own subjects, to hinder them from betraying him and   joining the exiles, Polycrates shut up their wives and children in the sheds   built to shelter his ships, and was ready to burn sheds and all in case of need. 
              [3.46] When the banished Samians reached   Sparta, they had audience of the magistrates, before whom they made a long   speech, as was natural with persons greatly in want of aid. Accordingly at this   first sitting the Spartans answered them that they had forgotten the first half   of their speech, and could make nothing of the remainder. Afterwards the Samians   had another audience, whereat they simply said, showing a bag which they had   brought with them, "The bag wants flour." The Spartans answered that they did   not need to have said "the bag"; however, they resolved to give them aid. 
              [3.47] Then the Lacedaemonians made ready and   set forth to the attack of Samos, from a motive of gratitude, if we may believe   the Samians, because the Samians had once sent ships to their aid against the  Messenians; but as the Spartans themselves say, not so much from any wish to   assist the Samians who begged their help, as from a desire to punish the people   who had seized the bowl which they sent to Croesus, and the corselet which   Amasis, king of Egypt, sent as a present to them. The Samians made prize of this   corselet the year before they took the bowl - it was of linen, and had a vast   number of figures of animals inwoven into its fabric, and was likewise   embroidered with gold and tree-wool. What is most worthy of admiration in it is   that each of the twists, although of fine texture, contains within it three   hundred and sixty threads, all of them clearly visible. The corselet which   Amasis gave to the temple of Minerva in Lindus is just such another. 
              [3.48] The Corinthians likewise right   willingly lent a helping hand towards the expedition against Samos; for a   generation earlier, about the time of the seizure of the wine-bowl, they too had   suffered insult at the hands of the Samians. It happened that Periander, son of  Cypselus, had taken three hundred boys, children of the chief nobles among the  Corcyraeans, and sent them to Alyattes for eunuchs; the men who had them in   charge touched at Samos on their way to Sardis; whereupon the Samians, having   found out what was to become of the boys when they reached that city, first   prompted them to take sanctuary at the temple of Diana; and after this, when the   Corinthians, as they were forbidden to tear the suppliants from the holy place,   sought to cut off from them all supplies of food, invented a festival in their   behalf, which they celebrate to this day with the selfsame rites. Each evening,   as night closed in, during the whole time that the boys continued there, choirs   of youths and virgins were placed about the temple, carrying in their hands   cakes made of sesame and honey, in order that the Corcyraean boys might snatch   the cakes, and so get enough to live upon. 
              [3.49] And this went on for so long, that at   last the Corinthians who had charge of the boys gave them up, and took their   departure, upon which the Samians conveyed them back to Corcyra. If now, after   the death of Periander, the Corinthians and Corcyraeans had been good friends,   it is not to be imagined that the former would ever have taken part in the   expedition against Samos for such a reason as this; but as, in fact, the two   people have always, ever since the first settlement of the island, been enemies   to one another, this outrage was remembered, and the Corinthians bore the   Samians a grudge for it. Periander had chosen the youths from among the first   families in Corcyra, and sent them a present to Alyattes, to avenge a wrong   which he had received. For it was the Corcyraeans who began the quarrel and   injured Periander by an outrage of a horrid nature. 
              [3.50] After Periander had put to death his   wife Melissa, it chanced that on this first affliction a second followed of a   different kind. His wife had borne him two sons, and one of them had now reached   the age of seventeen, the other of eighteen years, when their mother's father,   Procles, tyrant of Epidaurus, asked them to his court. They went, and Procles   treated them with much kindness, as was natural, considering they were his own   daughter's children. At length, when the time for parting came, Procles, as he   was sending them on their way, said, "Know you now, my children, who it was that   caused your mother's death?" The elder son took no account of this speech, but   the younger, whose name was Lycophron, was sorely troubled at it - so much so,   that when he got back to Corinth, looking upon his father as his mother's   murderer, he would neither speak to him, nor answer when spoken to, nor utter a   word in reply to all his questionings. So Periander at last, growing furious at   such behaviour, banished him from his house. 
              [3.51] The younger son gone, he turned to the   elder and asked him, "what it was that their grandfather had said to them?" Then   he related in how kind and friendly a fashion he had received them; but, not   having taken any notice of the speech which Procles had uttered at parting, he   quite forgot to mention it. Periander insisted that it was not possible this   should be all - their grandfather must have given them some hint or other - and   he went on pressing him, till at last the lad remembered the parting speech and   told it. Periander, after he had turned the whole matter over in his thoughts,   and felt unwilling to give way at all, sent a messenger to the persons who had   opened their houses to his outcast son, and forbade them to harbour him. Then   the boy, when he was chased from one friend, sought refuge with another, but was   driven from shelter to shelter by the threats of his father, who menaced all   those that took him in, and commanded them to shut their doors against him.   Still, as fast as he was forced to leave one house he went to another, and was   received by the inmates; for his acquaintance, although in no small alarm, yet   gave him shelter, as he was Periander's son. 
              [3.52] At last Periander made proclamation   that whoever harboured his son or even spoke to him, should forfeit a certain   sum of money to Apollo. On hearing this no one any longer liked to take him in,   or even to hold converse with him, and he himself did not think it right to seek   to do what was forbidden; so, abiding by his resolve, he made his lodging in the   public porticos. When four days had passed in this way, Periander, secing how   wretched his son was, that he neither washed nor took any food, felt moved with   compassion towards him; wherefore, foregoing his anger, he approached him, and   said, "Which is better, oh! my son, to fare as now thou farest, or to receive my   crown and all the good things that I possess, on the one condition of submitting   thyself to thy father? See, now, though my own child, and lord of this wealthy   Corinth, thou hast brought thyself to a beggar's life, because thou must resist   and treat with anger him whom it least behoves thee to oppose. If there has been   a calamity, and thou bearest me ill will on that account, bethink thee that I   too feel it, and am the greatest sufferer, in as much as it was by me that the   deed was done. For thyself, now that thou knowest how much better a thing it is   to be envied than pitied, and how dangerous it is to indulge anger against   parents and superiors, come back with me to thy home." With such words as these   did Periander chide his son; but the son made no reply, except to remind his   father that he was indebted to the god in the penalty for coming and holding   converse with him. Then Periander knew that there was no cure for the youth's   malady, nor means of overcoming it; so he prepared a ship and sent him away out   of his sight to Corcyra, which island at that time belonged to him. As for   Procles, Periander, regarding him as the true author of all his present   troubles, went to war with him as soon as his son was gone, and not only made   himself master of his kingdom Epidaurus, but also took Procles himself, and   carried him into captivity. 
              [3.53] As time went on, and Periander came to   be old, he found himself no longer equal to the oversight and management of   affairs. Seeing, therefore, in his eldest son no manner of ability, but knowing   him to be dull and blockish, he sent to Corcyra and recalled Lycophron to take   the kingdom. Lycophron, however, did not even deign to ask the bearer of this   message a question. But Periander's heart was set upon the youth, so he sent   again to him, this time by his own daughter, the sister of Lycophron, who would,   he thought, have more power to persuade him than any other person. Then she,   when she reached Corcyra, spoke thus with her brother:- "Dost thou wish the   kingdom, brother, to pass into strange hands, and our father's wealth to be made   a prey, rather than thyself return to enjoy it? Come back home with me, and   cease to punish thyself. It is scant gain, this obstinacy. Why seek to cure evil   by evil? Mercy, remember, is by many set above justice. Many, also, while   pushing their mother's claims have forfeited their father's fortune. Power is a   slippery thing - it has many suitors; and he is old and stricken in years - let   not thy own inheritance go to another." Thus did the sister, who had been   tutored by Periander what to say, urge all the arguments most likely to have   weight with her brother. He however made answer, "That so long as he knew his   father to be still alive, he would never go back to Corinth." When the sister   brought Periander this reply, he sent his son a third time by a herald, and said   he would come himself to Corcyra, and let his son take his place at Corinth as   heir to his kingdom. To these terms Lycophron agreed; and Periander was making   ready to pass into Corcyra and his son to return to Corinth, when the   Corcyraeans, being informed of what was taking place, to keep Periander away,   put the young man to death. For this reason it was that Periander took vengeance   on the Corcyraeans. 
              [3.54] The Lacedaemonians arrived before   Samos with a mighty armament, and forthwith laid siege to the place. In one of   the assaults upon the walls, they forced their way to the top of the tower which   stands by the sea on the side where the suburb is, but Polycrates came in person   to the rescue with a strong force, and beat them back. Meanwhile at the upper   tower, which stood on the ridge of the hill, the besieged, both mercenaries and   Samians, made a sally; but after they had withstood the Lacedaemonians a short   time, they fled backwards, and the Lacedaemonians, pressing upon them, slew   numbers. 
              [3.55] If now all who were present had   behaved that day like Archias and Lycopas, two of the Lacedaemonians, Samos   might have been taken. For these two heroes, following hard upon the flying   Samians, entered the city along with them, and, being all alone, and their   retreat cut off, were slain within the walls of the place. I myself once fell in   with the grandson of this Archias, a man named Archias like his grandsire, and   the son of Samius, whom I met at Pitana, to which canton he belonged. He   respected the Samians beyond all other foreigners, and he told me that his   father was called Samius, because his grandfather Archias died in Samos so   gloriously, and that the reason why he respected the Samians so greatly was that   his grandsire was buried with public honours by the Samian people. 
              [3.56] The Lacedaemonians besieged Samos   during forty days, but not making any progress before the place, they raised the   siege at the end of that time, and returned home to the Peloponnese. There is a   silly tale told that Polycrates struck a quantity of the coin of his country in   lead, and, coating it with gold, gave it to the Lacedaemonians, who on receiving   it took their departure. 
              This was the first expedition into Asia of the Lacedaemonian Dorians. 
              [3.57] The Samians who had fought against   Polycrates, when they knew that the Lacedaemonians were about to forsake them,   left Samos themselves, and sailed to Siphnos. They happened to be in want of   money; and the Siphnians at that time were at the height of their greatness, no   islanders having so much wealth as they. There were mines of gold and silver in   their country, and of so rich a yield, that from a tithe of the ores the   Siphnians furnished out a treasury at Delphi which was on a par with the   grandest there. What the mines yielded was divided year by year among the   citizens. At the time when they formed the treasury, the Siphnians consulted the   oracle, and asked whether their good things would remain to them many years. The   Pythoness made answer as follows:- 
              
                When the Prytanies'seat shines white in the island of     Siphnos,
                  White-browed all the forum-need then of a true seer's wisdom - 
                Danger will threat from a wooden host, and a herald in scarlet. 
              
              Now about this time the forum of the Siphnians and their townhall or   prytaneum had been adorned with Parian marble. 
              [3.58] The Siphnians, however, were unable to   understand the oracle, either at the time when it was given, or afterwards on   the arrival of the Samians. For these last no sooner came to anchor off the   island than they sent one of their vessels, with an ambassage on board, to the   city. All ships in these early times were painted with vermilion; and this was   what the Pythoness had meant when she told them to beware of danger "from a   wooden host, and a herald in scarlet." So the ambassadors came ashore and   besought the Siphnians to lend them ten talents; but the Siphnians refused,   whereupon the Samians began to plunder their lands. Tidings of this reached the   Siphnians, who straightway sallied forth to save their crops; then a battle was   fought, in which the Siphnians suffered defeat, and many of their number were   cut off from the city by the Samians, after which these latter forced the   Siphnians to give them a hundred talents. 
              [3.59] With this money they bought of the   Hermionians the island of Hydrea, off the coast of the Peloponnese, and this   they gave in trust to the Troezenians, to keep for them, while they themselves   went on to Crete, and founded the city of Cydonia. They had not meant, when they   set sail, to settle there, but only to drive out the Zacynthians from the   island. However they rested at Cydonia, where they flourished greatly for five   years. It was they who built the various temples that may still be seen at that   place, and among them the fane of Dictyna. But in the sixth year they were   attacked by the Eginetans, who beat them in a sea-fight, and, with the help of   the Cretans, reduced them all to slavery. The beaks of their ships, which   carried the figure of a wild boar, they sawed off, and laid them up in the   temple of Minerva in Egina. The Eginetans took part against the Samians on   account of an ancient grudge, since the Samians had first, when Amphicrates was   king of Samos, made war on them and done great harm to their island, suffering,   however, much damage also themselves. Such was the reason which moved the   Eginetans to make this attack. 
              [3.60] I have dwelt the longer on the affairs   of the Samians, because three of the greatest works in all Greece were made by   them. One is a tunnel, under a hill one hundred and fifty fathoms high, carried   entirely through the base of the hill, with a mouth at either end. The length of   the cutting is seven furlongs - the height and width are each eight feet. Along   the whole course there is a second cutting, twenty cubits deep and three feet   broad, whereby water is brought, through pipes, from an abundant source into the   city. The architect of this tunnel was Eupalinus, son of Naustrophus, a   Megarian. Such is the first of their great works; the second is a mole in the   sea, which goes all round the harbour, near twenty fathoms deep, and in length   above two furlongs. The third is a temple; the largest of all the temples known   to us, whereof Rhoecus, son of Phileus, a Samian, was first architect. Because   of these works I have dwelt the longer on the affairs of Samos. 
              [3.61] While Cambyses, son of Cyrus, after   losing his senses, still lingered in Egypt, two Magi, brothers, revolted against   him. One of them had been left in Persia by Cambyses as comptroller of his   household; and it was he who began the revolt. Aware that Smerdis was dead, and   that his death was hid and known to few of the Persians, while most believed   that he was still alive, he laid his plan, and made a bold stroke for the crown.   He had a brother - the same of whom I spoke before as his partner in the revolt   - who happened greatly to resemble Smerdis the son of Cyrus, whom Cambyses his   brother had put to death. And not only was this brother of his like Smerdis in   person, but he also bore the selfsame name, to wit Smerdis. Patizeithes, the   other Magus, having persuaded him that he would carry the whole business   through, took him and made him sit upon the royal throne. Having so done, he   sent heralds through all the land, to Egypt and elsewhere, to make proclamation   to the troops that henceforth they were to obey Smerdis the son of Cyrus, and   not Cambyses. 
              [3.62] The other heralds therefore made   proclamation as they were ordered, and likewise the herald whose place it was to   proceed into Egypt. He, when he reached Agbatana in Syria, finding Cambyses and   his army there, went straight into the middle of the host, and standing forth   before them all, made the proclamation which Patizeithes the Magus had   commanded. Cambyses no sooner heard him, than believing that what the herald   said was true, and imagining that he had been betrayed by Prexaspes (who, he   supposed, had not put Smerdis to death when sent into Persia for that purpose),   he turned his eyes full upon Prexaspes, and said, "Is this the way, Prexaspes,   that thou didst my errand?" "Oh! my liege," answered the other, "there is no   truth in the tidings that Smerdis thy brother has revolted against thee, nor   hast thou to fear in time to come any quarrel, great or small, with that man.   With my own hands I wrought thy will on him, and with my own hands I buried him.   If of a truth the dead can leave their graves, expect Astyages the Mede to rise   and fight against thee; but if the course of nature be the same as formerly,   then be sure no ill will ever come upon thee from this quarter. Now, therefore,   my counsel is that we send in pursuit of the herald, and strictly question him   who it was that charged him to bid us obey king Smerdis." 
              [3.63] When Prexaspes had so spoken, and   Cambyses had approved his words, the herald was forthwith pursued, and brought   back to the king. Then Prexaspes said to him, "Sirrah, thou bear'st us a   message, sayst thou, from Smerdis, son of Cyrus. Now answer truly, and go thy   way scathless. Did Smerdis have thee to his presence and give thee thy orders,   or hadst thou them from one of his officers?" The herald answered, "Truly I have   not set eyes on Smerdis son of Cyrus, since the day when king Cambyses led the   Persians into Egypt. The man who gave me my orders was the Magus that Cambyses   left in charge of the household; but he said that Smerdis son of Cyrus sent you   the message." In all this the herald spoke nothing but the strict truth. Then   Cambyses said thus to Prexaspes:- "Thou art free from all blame, Prexaspes,   since, as a right good man, thou hast not failed to do the thing which I   commanded. But tell me now, which of the Persians can have taken the name of   Smerdis, and revolted from me?" "I think, my liege," he answered, "that I   apprehend the whole business. The men who have risen in revolt against thee are   the two Magi, Patizeithes, who was left comptroller of thy household, and his   brother, who is named Smerdis." 
              [3.64] Cambyses no sooner heard the name of   Smerdis than he was struck with the truth of Prexaspes' words, and the   fulfilment of his own dream - the dream, I mean, which he had in former days,   when one appeared to him in his sleep and told him that Smerdis sate upon the   royal throne, and with his head touched the heavens. So when he saw that he had   needlessly slain his brother Smerdis, he wept and bewailed his loss: after   which, smarting with vexation as he thought of all his ill luck, he sprang   hastily upon his steed, meaning to march his army with all haste to Susa against   the Magus. As he made his spring, the button of his sword-sheath fell off, and   the bared point entered his thigh, wounding him exactly where he had himself   once wounded the Egyptian god Apis. Then Cambyses, feeling that he had got his   death-wound, inquired the name of the place where he was, and was answered,   "Agbatana." Now before this it had been told him by the oracle at Buto that he   should end his days at Agbatana. He, however, had understood the Median   Agbatana, where all his treasures were, and had thought that he should die there   in a good old age; but the oracle meant Agbatana in Syria. So when Cambyses   heard the name of the place, the double shock that he had received, from the   revolt of the Magus and from his wound, brought him back to his senses. And he   understood now the true meaning of the oracle, and said, "Here then Cambyses,   son of Cyrus, is doomed to die." 
              [3.65] At this time he said no more; but   twenty days afterwards he called to his presence all the chief Persians who were   with the army, and addressed them as follows:- "Persians, needs must I tell you   now what hitherto I have striven with the greatest care to keep concealed. When   I was in Egypt I saw in my sleep a vision, which would that I had never beheld!   I thought a messenger came to me from my home, and told me that Smerdis sate   upon the royal throne, and with his head touched the heavens. Then I feared to   be cast from my throne by Smerdis my brother, and I did what was more hasty than   wise. Ah! truly, do what they may, it is impossible for men to turn aside the   coming fate. I, in my folly, sent Prexaspes to Susa to put my brother to death.   So this great woe was accomplished, and I then lived without fear, never   imagining that, after Smerdis was dead, I need dread revolt from any other. But   herein I had quite mistaken what was about to happen, and so I slew my brother   without any need, and nevertheless have lost my crown. For it was Smerdis the   Magus, and not Smerdis my brother, of whose rebellion God forewarned me by the   vision. The deed is done, however, and Smerdis, son of Cyrus, be sure is lost to   you. The Magi have the royal power - Patizeithes, whom I left at Susa to   overlook my household, and Smerdis his brother. There was one who would have   been bound beyond all others to avenge the wrongs I have suffered from these   Magians, but he, alas! has perished by a horrid fate, deprived of life by those   nearest and dearest to him. In his default, nothing now remains for me but to   tell you, O Persians, what I would wish to have done after I have breathed my   last. Therefore, in the name of the gods that watch over our royal house, I   charge you all, and specially such of you as are Achaemenids, that ye do not   tamely allow the kingdom to go back to the Medes. Recover it one way or another,   by force or fraud; by fraud, if it is by fraud that they have seized on it; by   force, if force has helped them in their enterprise. Do this, and then may your   land bring you forth fruit abundantly, and your wives bear children, and your   herds increase, and freedom be your portion for ever: but do it not - make no   brave struggle to regain the kingdom - and then my curse be on you, and may the   opposite of all these things happen to you - and not only so, but may you, one   and all, perish at the last by such a fate as mine!" Then Cambyses, when he left   speaking, bewailed his whole misfortune from beginning to end. 
              [3.66] Whereupon the Persians, seeing their   king weep, rent the garments that they had on, and uttered lamentable cries;   after which, as the bone presently grew carious, and the limb gangrened,   Cambyses, son of Cyrus, died. He had reigned in all seven years and five months,   and left no issue behind him, male or female. The Persians who had heard his   words, put no faith in anything that he said concerning the Magi having the   royal power; but believed that he spoke out of hatred towards Smerdis, and had   invented the tale of his death to cause the whole Persian race to rise up in   arms against him. Thus they were convinced that it was Smerdis the son of Cyrus   who had rebelled and now sate on the throne. For Prexaspes stoutly denied that   he had slain Smerdis, since it was not safe for him, after Cambyses was dead, to   allow that a son of Cyrus had met with death at his hands. 
              [3.67] Thus then Cambyses died, and the Magus   now reigned in security, and passed himself off for Smerdis the son of Cyrus.   And so went by the seven months which were wanting to complete the eighth year   of Cambyses. His subjects, while his reign lasted, received great benefits from   him, insomuch that, when he died, all the dwellers in Asia mourned his loss   exceedingly, except only the Persians. For no sooner did he come to the throne   than forthwith he sent round to every nation under his rule, and granted them   freedom from war-service and from taxes for the space of three years. 
              [3.68] In the eighth month, however, it was   discovered who he was in the mode following. There was a man called Otanes, the   son of Pharnaspes, who for rank and wealth was equal to the greatest of the   Persians. This Otanes was the first to suspect that the Magus was not Smerdis   the son of Cyrus, and to surmise moreover who he really was. He was led to guess   the truth by the king never quitting the citadel, and never calling before him   any of the Persian noblemen. As soon, therefore, as his suspicions were aroused   he adopted the following measures:- One of his daughters, who was called   Phaedima, had been married to Cambyses, and was taken to wife, together with the   rest of Cambyses' wives, by the Magus. To this daughter Otanes sent a message,   and inquired of her "who it was whose bed she shared, - was it Smerdis the son   of Cyrus, or was it some other man?" Phaedima in reply declared she did not know   - Smerdis the son of Cyrus she had never seen, and so she could not tell whose   bed she shared. Upon this Otanes sent a second time, and said, "If thou dost not   know Smerdis son of Cyrus thyself, ask queen Atossa who it is with whom ye both   live - she cannot fail to know her own brother." To this the daughter made   answer, "I can neither get speech with Atossa, nor with any of the women who   lodge in the palace. For no sooner did this man, be he who he may, obtain the   kingdom, than he parted us from one another, and gave us all separate chambers." 
              [3.69] This made the matter seem still more   plain to Otanes. Nevertheless he sent a third message to his daughter in these   words following:- "Daughter, thou art of noble blood - thou wilt not shrink from   a risk which thy father bids thee encounter. If this fellow be not Smerdis the   son of Cyrus, but the man whom I think him to be, his boldness in taking thee to   be his wife, and lording it over the Persians, must not be allowed to pass   unpunished. Now therefore do as I command - when next he passes the night with   thee, wait till thou art sure he is fast asleep, and then feel for his ears. If   thou findest him to have ears, then believe him to be Smerdis the son of Cyrus,   but if he has none, know him for Smerdis the Magian." Phaedima returned for   answer, "It would be a great risk. If he was without ears, and caught her   feeling for them, she well knew he would make away with her - nevertheless she   would venture." So Otanes got his daughter's promise that she would do as he   desired. Now Smerdis the Magian had had his ears cut off in the lifetime of   Cyrus son of Cambyses, as a punishment for a crime of no slight heinousness.   Phaedima therefore, Otanes' daughter, bent on accomplishing what she had   promised her father, when her turn came, and she was taken to the bed of the   Magus (in Persia a man's wives sleep with him in their turns), waited till he   was sound asleep, and then felt for his ears. She quickly perceived that he had   no ears; and of this, as soon as day dawned, she sent word to her father. 
              [3.70] Then Otanes took to him two of the   chief Persians, Aspathines and Gobryas, men whom it was most advisable to trust   in such a matter, and told them everything. Now they had already of themselves   suspected how the matter stood. When Otanes therefore laid his reasons before   them they at once came into his views; and it was agreed that each of the three   should take as companion in the work the Persian in whom he placed the greatest   confidence. Then Otanes chose Intaphernes, Gobryas Megabyzus, and Aspathines   Hydarnes. After the number had thus become six, Darius, the son of Hystaspes,   arrived at Susa from Persia, whereof his father was governor. On his coming it   seemed good to the six to take him likewise into their counsels. 
              [3.71] After this, the men, being now seven   in all, met together to exchange oaths, and hold discourse with one another. And   when it came to the turn of Darius to speak his mind, he said as follows:-   "Methought no one but I knew that Smerdis, the son of Cyrus, was not now alive,   and that Smerdis the Magian ruled over us; on this account I came hither with   speed, to compass the death of the Magian. But as it seems the matter is known   to you all, and not to me only, my judgment is that we should act at once, and   not any longer delay. For to do so were not well." Otanes spoke upon this:- "Son   of Hystaspes," said he, "thou art the child of a brave father, and seemest   likely to show thyself as bold a gallant as he. Beware, however, of rash haste   in this matter; do not hurry so, but proceed with soberness. We must add to our   number ere we adventure to strike the blow." "Not so," Darius rejoined; "for let   all present be well assured that if the advice of Otanes guide our acts, we   shall perish most miserably. Some one will betray our plot to the Magians for   lucre's sake. Ye ought to have kept the matter to yourselves, and so made the   venture; but as ye have chosen to take others into your secret, and have opened   the matter to me, take my advice and make the attempt today - or if not, if a   single day be suffered to pass by, be sure that I will let no one betray me to   the Magian. I myself will go to him, and plainly denounce you all." 
              [3.72] Otanes, when he saw Darius so hot,   replied, "But if thou wilt force us to action, and not allow a day's delay, tell   us, I pray thee, how we shall get entrance into the palace, so as to set upon   them. Guards are placed everywhere, as thou thyself well knowest - for if thou   hast not seen, at least thou hast heard tell of them. How are we to pass these   guards, I ask thee?" answered Darius, "there are many things easy enough in act,   which by speech it is hard to explain. There are also things concerning which   speech is easy, but no noble action follows when the speech is done. As for   these guards, ye know well that we shall not find it hard to make our way   through them. Our rank alone would cause them to allow us to enter - shame and   fear alike forbidding them to say us nay. But besides, I have the fairest plea   that can be conceived for gaining admission. I can say that I have just come   from Persia, and have a message to deliver to the king from my father. An   untruth must be spoken, where need requires. For whether men lie, or say true,   it is with one and the same object. Men lie, because they think to gain by   deceiving others; and speak the truth, because they expect to get something by   their true speaking, and to be trusted afterwards in more important matters.   Thus, though their conduct is so opposite, the end of both is alike. If there   were no gain to be got, your true-speaking man would tell untruths as much as   your liar, and your liar would tell the truth as much as your true-speaking man.   The doorkeeper, who lets us in readily, shall have his guerdon some day or   other; but woe to the man who resists us, he must forthwith be declared an   enemy. Forcing our way past him, we will press in and go straight to our work." 
              [3.73] After Darius had thus said, Gobryas   spoke as follows:- "Dear friends, when will a fitter occasion offer for us to   recover the kingdom, or, if we are not strong enough, at least die in the   attempt? Consider that we Persians are governed by a Median Magus, and one, too,   who has had his ears cut off! Some of you were present when Cambyses lay upon   his deathbed - such, doubtless, remember what curses he called down upon the   Persians if they made no effort to recover the kingdom. Then, indeed, we paid   but little heed to what he said, because we thought he spoke out of hatred to   set us against his brother. Now, however, my vote is that we do as Darius has   counselled - march straight in a body to the palace from the place where we now   are, and forthwith set upon the Magian." So Gobryas spake, and the others all   approved. 
              [3.74] While the seven were thus taking   counsel together, it so chanced that the following events were happening:- The   Magi had been thinking what they had best do, and had resolved for many reasons   to make a friend of Prexaspes. They knew how cruelly he had been outraged by   Cambyses, who slew his son with an arrow; they were also aware that it was by   his hand that Smerdis the son of Cyrus fell, and that he was the only person   privy to that prince's death; and they further found him to be held in the   highest esteem by all the Persians. So they called him to them, made him their   friend, and bound him by a promise and by oaths to keep silence about the fraud   which they were practising upon the Persians, and not discover it to any one;   and they pledged themselves that in this case they would give him thousands of   gifts of every sort and kind. So Prexaspes agreed, and the Magi, when they found   that they had persuaded him so far, went on to another proposal, and said they   would assemble the Persians at the foot of the palace wall, and he should mount   one of the towers and harangue them from it, assuring them that Smerdis the son   of Cyrus, and none but he, ruled the land. This they bade him do, because   Prexaspes was a man of great weight with his countrymen, and had often declared   in public that Smerdis the son of Cyrus was still alive, and denied being his   murderer. 
              [3.75] Prexaspes said he was quite ready to   do their will in the matter; so the Magi assembled the people, and placed   Prexaspes upon the top of the tower, and told him to make his speech. Then this   man, forgetting of set purpose all that the Magi had intreated him to say, began   with Achaeamenes, and traced down the descent of Cyrus; after which, when he   came to that king, he recounted all the services that had been rendered by him   to the Persians, from whence he went on to declare the truth, which hitherto he   had concealed, he said, because it would not have been safe for him to make it   known, but now necessity was laid on him to disclose the whole. Then he told   how, forced to it by Cambyses, he had himself taken the life of Smerdis, son of   Cyrus, and how that Persia was now ruled by the Magi. Last of all, with many   curses upon the Persians if they did not recover the kingdom, and wreak   vengeance on the Magi, he threw himself headlong from the tower into the abyss   below. Such was the end of Prexaspes, a man all his life of high repute among   the Persians. 
              [3.76] And now the seven Persians, having   resolved that they would attack the Magi without more delay, first offered   prayers to the gods and then set off for the palace, quite unacquainted with   what had been done by Prexaspes. The news of his doings reached them upon their   way, when they had accomplished about half the distance. Hereupon they turned   aside out of the road, and consulted together. Otanes and his party said they   must certainly put off the business, and not make the attack when affairs were   in such a ferment. Darius, on the other hand, and his friends, were against any   change of plan, and wished to go straight on, and not lose a moment. Now, as   they strove together, suddenly there came in sight two pairs of vultures, and   seven pairs of hawks, pursuing them, and the hawks tore the vultures both with   their claws and bills. At this sight the seven with one accord came in to the   opinion of Darius, and encouraged by the omen hastened on towards the palace. 
              [3.77] At the gate they were received as   Darius had foretold. The guards, who had no suspicion that they came for any ill   purpose, and held the chief Persians in much reverence, let them pass without   difficulty - it seemed as if they were under the special protection of the gods   - none even asked them any question. When they were now in the great court they   fell in with certain of the eunuchs, whose business it was to carry the king's   messages, who stopped them and asked what they wanted, while at the same time   they threatened the doorkeepers for having let them enter. The seven sought to   press on, but the eunuchs would not suffer them. Then these men, with cheers   encouraging one another, drew their daggers, and stabbing those who strove to   withstand them, rushed forward to the apartment of the males. 
              [3.78] Now both the Magi were at this time   within, holding counsel upon the matter of Prexaspes. So when they heard the   stir among the eunuchs, and their loud cries, they ran out themselves, to see   what was happening. Instantly perceiving their danger, they both flew to arms;   one had just time to seize his bow, the other got hold of his lance; when   straightway the fight began. The one whose weapon was the bow found it of no   service at all; the foe was too near, and the combat too close to allow of his   using it. But the other made a stout defence with his lance, wounding two of the   seven, Aspathines in the leg, and Intaphernes in the eye. This wound did not   kill Intaphernes, but it cost him the sight of that eye. The other Magus, when   he found his bow of no avail, fled into a chamber which opened out into the   apartment of the males, intending to shut to the doors. But two of the seven   entered the room with him, Darius and Gobryas. Gobryas seized the Magus and   grappled with him, while Darius stood over them, not knowing what to do; for it   was dark, and he was afraid that if he struck a blow he might kill Gobryas. Then   Gobyras, when he perceived that Darius stood doing nothing, asked him, "why his   hand was idle?" "I fear to hurt thee," he answered. "Fear not," said Gobryas;   "strike, though it be through both." Darius did as he desired, drove his dagger   home, and by good hap killed the Magus. 
              [3.79] Thus were the Magi slain; and the   seven, cutting off both the heads, and leaving their own wounded in the palace,   partly because they were disabled, and partly to guard the citadel, went forth   from the gates with the heads in their hands, shouting and making an uproar.   They called out to all the Persians whom they met, and told them what had   happened, showing them the heads of the Magi, while at the same time they slew   every Magus who fell in their way. Then the Persians, when they knew what the   seven had done, and understood the fraud of the Magi, thought it but just to   follow the example set them, and, drawing their daggers, they killed the Magi   wherever they could find any. Such was their fury, that, unless night had closed   in, not a single Magus would have been left alive. The Persians observe this day   with one accord, and keep it more strictly than any other in the whole year. It   is then that they hold the great festival, which they call the Magophonia. No   Magus may show himself abroad during the whole time that the feast lasts; but   all must remain at home the entire day. 
              [3.80] And now when five days were gone, and   the hubbub had settled down, the conspirators met together to consult about the   situation of affairs. At this meeting speeches were made, to which many of the   Greeks give no credence, but they were made nevertheless. Otanes recommended   that the management of public affairs should be entrusted to the whole nation.   "To me," he said, "it seems advisable, that we should no longer have a single   man to rule over us - the rule of one is neither good nor pleasant. Ye cannot   have forgotten to what lengths Cambyses went in his haughty tyranny, and the   haughtiness of the Magi ye have yourselves experienced. How indeed is it   possible that monarchy should be a well-adjusted thing, when it allows a man to   do as he likes without being answerable? Such licence is enough to stir strange   and unwonted thoughts in the heart of the worthiest of men. Give a person this   power, and straightway his manifold good things puff him up with pride, while   envy is so natural to human kind that it cannot but arise in him. But pride and   envy together include all wickedness - both of them leading on to deeds of   savage violence. True it is that kings, possessing as they do all that heart can   desire, ought to be void of envy; but the contrary is seen in their conduct   towards the citizens. They are jealous of the most virtuous among their   subjects, and wish their death; while they take delight in the meanest and   basest, being ever ready to listen to the tales of slanderers. A king, besides,   is beyond all other men inconsistent with himself. Pay him court in moderation,   and he is angry because you do not show him more profound respect - show him   profound respect, and he is offended again, because (as he says) you fawn on   him. But the worst of all is, that he sets aside the laws of the land, puts men   to death without trial, and subjects women to violence. The rule of the many, on   the other hand, has, in the first place, the fairest of names, to wit, isonomy;   and further it is free from all those outrages which a king is wont to commit.   There, places are given by lot, the magistrate is answerable for what he does,   and measures rest with the commonalty. I vote, therefore, that we do away with   monarchy, and raise the people to power. For the people are all in all." 
              [3.81] Such were the sentiments of Otanes.   Megabyzus spoke next, and advised the setting up of an oligarchy:- "In all that   Otanes has said to persuade you to put down monarchy," he observed, "I fully   concur; but his recommendation that we should call the people to power seems to   me not the best advice. For there is nothing so void of understanding, nothing   so full of wantonness, as the unwieldy rabble. It were folly not to be borne,   for men, while seeking to escape the wantonness of a tyrant, to give themselves   up to the wantonness of a rude unbridled mob. The tyrant, in all his doings, at   least knows what is he about, but a mob is altogether devoid of knowledge; for   how should there be any knowledge in a rabble, untaught, and with no natural   sense of what is right and fit? It rushes wildly into state affairs with all the   fury of a stream swollen in the winter, and confuses everything. Let the enemies   of the Persians be ruled by democracies; but let us choose out from the citizens   a certain number of the worthiest, and put the government into their hands. For   thus both we ourselves shall be among the governors, and power being entrusted   to the best men, it is likely that the best counsels will prevail in the state." 
              [3.82] This was the advice which Megabyzus   gave, and after him Darius came forward, and spoke as follows:- "All that   Megabyzus said against democracy was well said, I think; but about oligarchy he   did not speak advisedly; for take these three forms of government - democracy,   oligarchy, and monarchy - and let them each be at their best, I maintain that   monarchy far surpasses the other two. What government can possibly be better   than that of the very best man in the whole state? The counsels of such a man   are like himself, and so he governs the mass of the people to their heart's   content; while at the same time his measures against evil-doers are kept more   secret than in other states. Contrariwise, in oligarchies, where men vie with   each other in the service of the commonwealth, fierce enmities are apt to arise   between man and man, each wishing to be leader, and to carry his own measures;   whence violent quarrels come, which lead to open strife, often ending in   bloodshed. Then monarchy is sure to follow; and this too shows how far that rule   surpasses all others. Again, in a democracy, it is impossible but that there   will be malpractices: these malpractices, however, do not lead to enmities, but   to close friendships, which are formed among those engaged in them, who must   hold well together to carry on their villainies. And so things go on until a man   stands forth as champion of the commonalty, and puts down the evil-doers.   Straightway the author of so great a service is admired by all, and from being   admired soon comes to be appointed king; so that here too it is plain that   monarchy is the best government. Lastly, to sum up all in a word, whence, I ask,   was it that we got the freedom which we enjoy? - did democracy give it us, or   oligarchy, or a monarch? As a single man recovered our freedom for us, my   sentence is that we keep to the rule of one. Even apart from this, we ought not   to change the laws of our forefathers when they work fairly; for to do so is not   well." 
              [3.83] Such were the three opinions brought   forward at this meeting; the four other Persians voted in favour of the last.   Otanes, who wished to give his countrymen a democracy, when he found the   decision against him, arose a second time, and spoke thus before the assembly:-   "Brother conspirators, it is plain that the king who is to be chosen will be one   of ourselves, whether we make the choice by casting lots for the prize, or by   letting the people decide which of us they will have to rule over them, in or   any other way. Now, as I have neither a mind to rule nor to be ruled, I shall   not enter the lists with you in this matter. I withdraw, however, on one   condition - none of you shall claim to exercise rule over me or my seed for   ever." The six agreed to these terms, and Otanes withdraw and stood aloof from   the contest. And still to this day the family of Otanes continues to be the only   free family in Persia; those who belong to it submit to the rule of the king   only so far as they themselves choose; they are bound, however, to observe the   laws of the land like the other Persians. 
              [3.84] After this the six took counsel   together, as to the fairest way of setting up a king: and first, with respect to   Otanes, they resolved, that if any of their own number got the kingdom, Otanes   and his seed after him should receive year by year, as a mark of special honour,   a Median robe, and all such other gifts as are accounted the most honourable in   Persia. And these they resolved to give him, because he was the man who first   planned the outbreak, and who brought the seven together. These privileges,   therefore, were assigned specially to Otanes. The following were made common to   them all:- It was to be free to each, whenever he pleased, to enter the palace   unannounced, unless the king were in the company of one of his wives; and the   king was to be bound to marry into no family excepting those of the   conspirators. Concerning the appointment of a king, the resolve to which they   came was the following:- They would ride out together next morning into the   skirts of the city, and he whose steed first neighed after the sun was up should   have the kingdom. 
              [3.85] Now Darius had a groom, a sharp-witted   knave, called Oebares. After the meeting had broken up, Darius sent for him, and   said, "Oebares, this is the way in which the king is to be chosen - we are to   mount our horses, and the man whose horse first neighs after the sun is up is to   have the kingdom. If then you have any cleverness, contrive a plan whereby the   prize may fall to us, and not go to another." "Truly, master," Oebares answered,   "if it depends on this whether thou shalt be king or no, set thine heart at   ease, and fear nothing: I have a charm which is sure not to fail." "If thou hast   really aught of the kind," said Darius, "hasten to get it ready. The matter does   not brook delay, for the trial is to be to-morrow." So Oebares when he heard   that, did as follows:- When night came, he took one of the mares, the chief   favourite of the horse which Darius rode, and tethering it in the suburb,   brought his master's horse to the place; then, after leading him round and round   the mare several times, nearer and nearer at each circuit, he ended by letting   them come together. 
              [3.86] And now, when the morning broke, the   six Persians, according to agreement, met together on horseback, and rode out to   the suburb. As they went along they neared the spot where the mare was tethered   the night before, whereupon the horse of Darius sprang forward and neighed. just   at the same time, though the sky was clear and bright, there was a flash of   lightning, followed by a thunderclap. It seemed as if the heavens conspired with   Darius, and hereby inaugurated him king: so the five other nobles leaped with   one accord from their steeds, and bowed down before him and owned him for their   king. 
              [3.87] This is the account which some of the   Persians gave of the contrivance of Oebares; but there are others who relate the   matter differently. They say that in the morning he stroked the mare with his   hand, which he then hid in his trousers until the sun rose and the horses were   about to start, when he suddenly drew his hand forth and put it to the nostrils   of his master's horse, which immediately snorted and neighed. 
              [3.88] Thus was Darius, son of Hystaspes,   appointed king; and, except the Arabians, all they of Asia were subject to him;   for Cyrus, and after him Cambyses, had brought them all under. The Arabians were   never subject as slaves to the Persians, but had a league of friendship with   them from the time when they brought Cambyses on his way as he went into Egypt;   for had they been unfriendly the Persians could never have made their invasion. 
              And now Darius contracted marriages of the first rank, according to the   notions of the Persians: to wit, with two daughters of Cyrus, Atossa and   Artystone; of whom, Atossa had been twice married before, once to Cambyses, her   brother, and once to the Magus, while the other, Artystone, was a virgin. He   married also Parmys, daughter of Smerdis, son of Cyrus; and he likewise took to   wife the daughter of Otanes, who had made the discovery about the Magus. And now   when his power was established firmly throughout all the kingdoms, the first   thing that he did was to set up a carving in stone, which showed a man mounted   upon a horse, with an inscription in these words following:- "Darius, son of   Hystaspes, by aid of his good horse" (here followed the horse's name), "and of   his good groom Oebares, got himself the kingdom of the Persians." 
              [3.89] This he set up in Persia; and   afterwards he proceeded to establish twenty governments of the kind which the   Persians call satrapies, assigning to each its governor, and fixing the tribute   which was to be paid him by the several nations. And generally he joined   together in one satrapy the nations that were neighbours, but sometimes he   passed over the nearer tribes, and put in their stead those which were more   remote. The following is an account of these governments, and of the yearly   tribute which they paid to the king:- Such as brought their tribute in silver   were ordered to pay according to the Babylonian talent; while the Euboic was the   standard measure for such as brought gold. Now the Babylonian talent contains   seventy Euboic minae. During all the reign of Cyrus, and afterwards when   Cambyses ruled, there were no fixed tributes, but the nations severally brought   gifts to the king. On account of this and other like doings, the Persians say   that Darius was a huckster, Cambyses a master, and Cyrus a father; for Darius   looked to making a gain in everything; Cambyses was harsh and reckless; while   Cyrus was gentle, and procured them all manner of goods. 
              [3.90] The Ionians, the Magnesians of Asia,   the Aeolians, the Carians, the Lycians, the Milyans, and the Pamphylians, paid   their tribute in a single sum, which was fixed at four hundred talents of   silver. These formed together the first satrapy. 
              The Mysians, Lydians, Lasonians, Cabalians, and Hygennians paid the sum of   five hundred talents. This was the second satrapy. 
              The Hellespontians, of the right coast as one enters the straits, the   Phrygians, the Asiatic Thracians, the Paphlagonians, the Mariandynians' and the   Syrians paid a tribute of three hundred and sixty talents. This was the third   satrapy. 
              The Cilicians gave three hundred and sixty white horses, one for each day in   the year, and five hundred talents of silver. Of this sum one hundred and forty   talents went to pay the cavalry which guarded the country, while the remaining   three hundred and sixty were received by Darius. This was the fourth satrapy. 
              [3.91] The country reaching from the city of   Posideium (built by Amphilochus, son of Amphiaraus, on the confines of Syria and   Cilicia) to the borders of Egypt, excluding therefrom a district which belonged   to Arabia and was free from tax, paid a tribute of three hundred and fifty   talents. All Phoenicia, Palestine Syria, and Cyprus, were herein contained. This   was the fifth satrapy. 
              From Egypt, and the neighbouring parts of Libya, together with the towns of   Cyrene and Barca, which belonged to the Egyptian satrapy, the tribute which came   in was seven hundred talents. These seven hundred talents did not include the   profits of the fisheries of Lake Moeris, nor the corn furnished to the troops at   Memphis. Corn was supplied to 120,000 Persians, who dwelt at Memphis in the   quarter called the White Castle, and to a number of auxiliaries. This was the   sixth satrapy. 
              The Sattagydians, the Gandarians, the Dadicae, and the Aparytae, who were all   reckoned together, paid a tribute of a hundred and seventy talents. This was the   seventh satrapy. 
              Susa, and the other parts of Cissia, paid three hundred talents. This was the   eighth satrapy. 
              [3.92] From Babylonia, and the rest of   Assyria, were drawn a thousand talents of silver, and five hundred boy-eunuchs.   This was the ninth satrapy. 
              Agbatana, and the other parts of Media, together with the Paricanians and   Orthocorybantes, paid in all four hundred and fifty talents. This was the tenth   satrapy. 
              The Caspians, Pausicae, Pantimathi, and Daritae, were joined in one   government, and paid the sum of two hundred talents. This was the eleventh   satrapy. 
              From the Bactrian tribes as far as the Aegli the tribute received was three   hundred and sixty talents. This was the twelfth satrapy. 
              [3.93] From Pactyica, Armenia, and the   countries reaching thence to the Euxine, the sum drawn was four hundred talents.   This was the thirteenth satrapy. 
              The Sagartians, Sarangians, Thamanaeans, Utians, and Mycians, together with   the inhabitants of the islands in the Erythraean sea, where the king sends those   whom he banishes, furnished altogether a tribute of six hundred talents. This   was the fourteenth satrapy. 
              The Sacans and Caspians gave two hundred and fifty talents. This was the   fifteenth satrapy. 
              The Parthians, Chorasmians, Sogdians, and Arians, gave three hundred. This   was the sixteenth satrapy. 
              [3.94] The Paricanians and Ethiopians of Asia   furnished a tribute of four hundred talents. This was the seventeenth satrapy. 
              The Matienians, Saspeires, and Alarodians were rated to pay two hundred   talents. This was the eighteenth satrapy. 
              The Moschi, Tibareni, Macrones, Mosynoeci, and Mares had to pay three hundred   talents. This was the nineteenth satrapy. 
              The Indians, who are more numerous than any other nation with which we are   acquainted, paid a tribute exceeding that of every other people, to wit, three   hundred and sixty talents of gold-dust. This was the twentieth satrapy. 
              [3.95] If the Babylonian money here spoken of   be reduced to the Euboic scale, it will make nine thousand five hundred and   forty such talents; and if the gold be reckoned at thirteen times the worth of   silver, the Indian gold-dust will come to four thousand six hundred and eighty   talents. Add these two amounts together and the whole revenue which came in to   Darius year by year will be found to be in Euboic money fourteen thousand five   hundred and sixty talents, not to mention parts of a talent. 
              [3.96] Such was the revenue which Darius   derived from Asia and a small part of Libya. Later in his reign the sum was   increased by the tribute of the islands, and of the nations of Europe as far as   Thessaly. The Great King stores away the tribute which he receives after this   fashion - he melts it down, and, while it is in a liquid state, runs it into   earthen vessels, which are afterwards removed, leaving the metal in a solid   mass. When money is wanted, he coins as much of this bullion as the occasion   requires. 
              [3.97] Such then were the governments, and   such the amounts of tribute at which they were assessed respectively. Persia   alone has not been reckoned among the tributaries - and for this reason, because   the country of the Persians is altogether exempt from tax. The following peoples   paid no settled tribute, but brought gifts to the king: first, the Ethiopians   bordering upon Egypt, who were reduced by Cambyses when he made war on the   long-lived Ethiopians, and who dwell about the sacred city of Nysa, and have   festivals in honour of Bacchus. The grain on which they and their next   neighbours feed is the same as that used by the Calantian Indians. Their   dwelling-houses are under ground. Every third year these two nations brought -   and they still bring to my day - two choenices of virgin gold, two hundred logs   of ebony, five Ethiopian boys, and twenty elephant tusks. The Colchians, and the   neighbouring tribes who dwell between them and the Caucasus - for so far the   Persian rule reaches, while north of the Caucasus no one fears them any longer -   undertook to furnish a gift, which in my day was still brought every fifth year,   consisting of a hundred boys, and the same number of maidens. The Arabs brought   every year a thousand talents of frankincense. Such were the gifts which the   king received over and above the tribute-money. 
              [3.98] The way in which the Indians get the   plentiful supply of gold which enables them to furnish year by year so vast an   amount of gold-dust to the kind is the following:- eastward of India lies a   tract which is entirely sand. Indeed of all the inhabitants of Asia, concerning   whom anything certain is known, the Indians dwell the nearest to the east, and   the rising of the sun. Beyond them the whole country is desert on account of the   sand. The tribes of Indians are numerous, and do not all speak the same language   - some are wandering tribes, others not. They who dwell in the marshes along the   river live on raw fish, which they take in boats made of reeds, each formed out   of a single joint. These Indians wear a dress of sedge, which they cut in the   river and bruise; afterwards they weave it into mats, and wear it as we wear a   breast-plate. 
              [3.99] Eastward of these Indians are another   tribe, called Padaeans, who are wanderers, and live on raw flesh. This tribe is   said to have the following customs:- If one of their number be ill, man or   woman, they take the sick person, and if he be a man, the men of his   acquaintance proceed to put him to death, because, they say, his flesh would be   spoilt for them if he pined and wasted away with sickness. The man protests he   is not ill in the least; but his friends will not accept his denial - in spite   of all he can say, they kill him, and feast themselves on his body. So also if a   woman be sick, the women, who are her friends, take her and do with her exactly   the same as the men. If one of them reaches to old age, about which there is   seldom any question, as commonly before that time they have had some disease or   other, and so have been put to death - but if a man, notwithstanding, comes to   be old, then they offer him in sacrifice to their gods, and afterwards eat his   flesh. 
              [3.100] There is another set of Indians   whose customs are very different. They refuse to put any live animal to death,   they sow no corn, and have no dwelling-houses. Vegetables are their only food.   There is a plant which grows wild in their country, bearing seed, about the size   of millet-seed, in a calyx: their wont is to gather this seed and having boiled   it, calyx and all, to use it for food. If one of them is attacked with sickness,   he goes forth into the wilderness, and lies down to die; no one has the least   concern either for the sick or for the dead. 
              [3.101] All the tribes which I have   mentioned live together like the brute beasts: they have also all the same tint   of skin, which approaches that of the Ethiopians. Their country is a long way   from Persia towards the south: nor had king Darius ever any authority over them. 
              [3.102] Besides these, there are Indians of   another tribe, who border on the city of Caspatyrus, and the country of   Pactyica; these people dwell northward of all the rest of the Indians, and   follow nearly the same mode of life as the Bactrians. They are more warlike than   any of the other tribes, and from them the men are sent forth who go to procure   the gold. For it is in this part of India that the sandy desert lies. Here, in   this desert, there live amid the sand great ants, in size somewhat less than   dogs, but bigger than foxes. The Persian king has a number of them, which have   been caught by the hunters in the land whereof we are speaking. Those ants make   their dwellings under ground, and like the Greek ants, which they very much   resemble in shape, throw up sand-heaps as they burrow. Now the sand which they   throw up is full of gold. The Indians, when they go into the desert to collect   this sand, take three camels and harness them together, a female in the middle   and a male on either side, in a leading-rein. The rider sits on the female, and   they are particular to choose for the purpose one that has but just dropped her   young; for their female camels can run as fast as horses, while they bear   burthens very much better. 
              [3.103] As the Greeks are well acquainted   with the shape of the camel, I shall not trouble to describe it; but I shall   mention what seems to have escaped their notice. The camel has in its hind legs   four thigh-bones and four knee-joints. 
              [3.104] When the Indians therefore have thus   equipped themselves they set off in quest of the gold, calculating the time so   that they may be engaged in seizing it during the most sultry part of the day,   when the ants hide themselves to escape the heat. The sun in those parts shines   fiercest in the morning, not, as elsewhere, at noonday; the greatest heat is   from the time when he has reached a certain height, until the hour at which the   market closes. During this space he burns much more furiously than at midday in   Greece, so that the men there are said at that time to drench themselves with   water. At noon his heat is much the same in India as in other countries, after   which, as the day declines, the warmth is only equal to that of the morning sun   elsewhere. Towards evening the coolness increases, till about sunset it becomes   very cold. 
              [3.105] When the Indians reach the place   where the gold is, they fill their bags with the sand, and ride away at their   best speed: the ants, however, scenting them, as the Persians say, rush forth in   pursuit. Now these animals are, they declare, so swift, that there is nothing in   the world like them: if it were not, therefore, that the Indians get a start   while the ants are mustering, not a single gold-gatherer could escape. During   the flight the male camels, which are not so fleet as the females, grow tired,   and begin to drag, first one, and then the other; but the females recollect the   young which they have left behind, and never give way or flag. Such, according   to the Persians, is the manner in which the Indians get the greater part of   their gold; some is dug out of the earth, but of this the supply is more scanty. 
              [3.106] It seems as if the extreme regions   of the earth were blessed by nature with the most excellent productions, just in   the same way that Greece enjoys a climate more excellently tempered than any   other country. In India, which, as I observed lately, is the furthest region of   the inhabited world towards the east, all the four-footed beasts and the birds   are very much bigger than those found elsewhere, except only the horses, which   are surpassed by the Median breed called the Nisaean. Gold too is produced there   in vast abundance, some dug from the earth, some washed down by the rivers, some   carried off in the mode which I have but now described. And further, there are   trees which grow wild there, the fruit whereof is a wool exceeding in beauty and   goodness that of sheep. The natives make their clothes of this tree-wool. 
              [3.107] Arabia is the last of inhabited   lands towards the south, and it is the only country which produces frankincense,   myrrh, cassia, cinnamon, and ledanum. The Arabians do not get any of these,   except the myrrh, without trouble. The frankincense they procure by means of the   gum styrax, which the Greeks obtain from the Phoenicians; this they burn, and   thereby obtain the spice. For the trees which bear the frankincense are guarded   by winged serpents, small in size, and of varied colours, whereof vast numbers   hang about every tree. They are of the same kind as the serpents that invade   Egypt; and there is nothing but the smoke of the styrax which will drive them   from the trees. 
              [3.108] The Arabians say that the whole   world would swarm with these serpents, if they were not kept in check in the way   in which I know that vipers are. Of a truth Divine Providence does appear to be,   as indeed one might expect beforehand, a wise contriver. For timid animals which   are a prey to others are all made to produce young abundantly, that so the   species may not be entirely eaten up and lost; while savage and noxious   creatures are made very unfruitful. The hare, for instance, which is hunted   alike by beasts, birds, and men, breeds so abundantly as even to superfetate, a   thing which is true of no other animal. You find in a hare's belly, at one and   the same time, some of the young all covered with fur, others quite naked,   others again just fully formed in the womb, while the hare perhaps has lately   conceived afresh. The lioness, on the other hand, which is one of the strongest   and boldest of brutes, brings forth young but once in her lifetime, and then a   single cub; she cannot possibly conceive again, since she loses her womb at the   same time that she drops her young. The reason of this is that as soon as the   cub begins to stir inside the dam, his claws, which are sharper than those of   any other animal, scratch the womb; as the time goes on, and he grows bigger, he   tears it ever more and more; so that at last, when the birth comes, there is not   a morsel in the whole womb that is sound. 
              [3.109] Now with respect to the vipers and   the winged snakes of Arabia, if they increased as fast as their nature would   allow, impossible were it for man to maintain himself upon the earth.   Accordingly it is found that when the male and female come together, at the very   moment of impregnation, the female seizes the male by the neck, and having once   fastened, cannot be brought to leave go till she has bit the neck entirely   through. And so the male perishes; but after a while he is revenged upon the   female by means of the young, which, while still unborn, gnaw a passage through   the womb, and then through the belly of their mother, and so make their entrance   into the world. Contrariwise, other snakes, which are harmless, lay eggs, and   hatch a vast number of young. Vipers are found in all parts of the world, but   the winged serpents are nowhere seen except in Arabia, where they are all   congregated together. This makes them appear so numerous. 
              [3.110] Such, then, is the way in which the   Arabians obtain their frankincense; their manner of collecting the cassia is the   following:- They cover all their body and their face with the hides of oxen and   other skins, leaving only holes for the eyes, and thus protected go in search of   the cassia, which grows in a lake of no great depth. All round the shores and in   the lake itself there dwell a number of winged animals, much resembling bats,   which screech horribly, and are very valiant. These creatures they must keep   from their eyes all the while that they gather the cassia. 
              [3.111] Still more wonderful is the mode in   which they collect the cinnamon. Where the wood grows, and what country produces   it, they cannot tell - only some, following probability, relate that it comes   from the country in which Bacchus was brought up. Great birds, they say, bring   the sticks which we Greeks, taking the word from the Phoenicians, call cinnamon,   and carry them up into the air to make their nests. These are fastened with a   sort of mud to a sheer face of rock, where no foot of man is able to climb. So   the Arabians, to get the cinnamon, use the following artifice. They cut all the   oxen and asses and beasts of burthen that die in their land into large pieces,   which they carry with them into those regions, and Place near the nests: then   they withdraw to a distance, and the old birds, swooping down, seize the pieces   of meat and fly with them up to their nests; which, not being able to support   the weight, break off and fall to the ground. Hereupon the Arabians return and   collect the cinnamon, which is afterwards carried from Arabia into other   countries. 
              [3.112] Ledanum, which the Arabs call   ladanum, is procured in a yet stranger fashion. Found in a most inodorous place,   it is the sweetest-scented of all substances. It is gathered from the beards of   he-goats, where it is found sticking like gum, having come from the bushes on   which they browse. It is used in many sorts of unguents, and is what the Arabs   burn chiefly as incense. 
              [3.113] Concerning the spices of Arabia let   no more be said. The whole country is scented with them, and exhales an odour   marvellously sweet. There are also in Arabia two kinds of sheep worthy of   admiration, the like of which is nowhere else to be seen; the one kind has long   tails, not less than three cubits in length, which, if they were allowed to   trail on the ground, would be bruised and fall into sores. As it is, all the   shepherds know enough of carpentering to make little trucks for their sheep's   tails. The trucks are placed under the tails, each sheep having one to himself,   and the tails are then tied down upon them. The other kind has a broad tail,   which is a cubit across sometimes. 
              [3.114] Where the south declines towards the   setting sun lies the country called Ethiopia, the last inhabited land in that   direction. There gold is obtained in great plenty, huge elephants abound, with   wild trees of all sorts, and ebony; and the men are taller, handsomer, and   longer lived than anywhere else. 
              [3.115] Now these are the farthest regions   of the world in Asia and Libya. Of the extreme tracts of Europe towards the west   I cannot speak with any certainty; for I do not allow that there is any river,   to which the barbarians give the name of Eridanus, emptying itself into the   northern sea, whence (as the tale goes) amber is procured; nor do I know of any   islands called the Cassiterides (Tin Islands), whence the tin comes which we   use. For in the first place the name Eridanus is manifestly not a barbarian word   at all, but a Greek name, invented by some poet or other; and secondly, though I   have taken vast pains, I have never been able to get an assurance from an   eye-witness that there is any sea on the further side of Europe. Nevertheless,   tin and amber do certainly come to us from the ends of the earth. 
              [3.116] The northern parts of Europe are   very much richer in gold than any other region: but how it is procured I have no   certain knowledge. The story runs that the one-eyed Arimaspi purloin it from the   griffins; but here too I am incredulous, and cannot persuade myself that there   is a race of men born with one eye, who in all else resemble the rest of   mankind. Nevertheless it seems to be true that the extreme regions of the earth,   which surround and shut up within themselves all other countries, produce the   things which are the rarest, and which men reckon the most beautiful. 
              [3.117] There is a plain in Asia which is   shut in on all sides by a mountain-range, and in this mountain-range are five   openings. The plain lies on the confines of the Chorasmians, Hyrcanians,   Parthians, Sarangians, and Thamanaeans, and belonged formerly to the   first-mentioned of those peoples. Ever since the Persians, however, obtained the   mastery of Asia, it has been the property of the Great King. A mighty river,   called the Aces, flows from the hills inclosing the plain; and this stream,   formerly splitting into five channels, ran through the five openings in the   hills, and watered the lands of the five nations which dwell around. The Persian   came, however, and conquered the region, and then it went ill with the people of   these lands. The Great King blocked up all the passages between the hills with   dykes and flood gates, and so prevented the water from flowing out. Then the   plain within the hills became a sea, for the river kept rising, and the water   could find no outlet. From that time the five nations which were wont formerly   to have the use of the stream, losing their accustomed supply of water, have   been in great distress. In winter, indeed, they have rain from heaven like the   rest of the world, but in summer, after sowing their millet and their sesame,   they always stand in need of water from the river. When, therefore, they suffer   from this want, hastening to Persia, men and women alike, they take their   station at the gate of the king's palace, and wail aloud. Then the king orders   the flood-gates to be opened towards the country whose need is greatest, and   lets the soil drink until it has had enough; after which the gates on this side   are shut, and others are unclosed for the nation which, of the remainder, needs   it most. It has been told me that the king never gives the order to open the   gates till the suppliants have paid him a large sum of money over and above the   tribute. 
              [3.118] Of the seven Persians who rose up   against the Magus, one, Intaphernes, lost his life very shortly after the   outbreak, for an act of insolence. He wished to enter the palace and transact a   certain business with the king. Now the law was that all those who had taken   part in the rising against the Magus might enter unannounced into the king's   presence, unless he happened to be in private with his wife. So Intaphernes   would not have any one announce him, but, as he belonged to the seven, claimed   it as his right to go in. The doorkeeper, however, and the chief usher forbade   his entrance, since the king, they said, was with his wife. But Intaphernes   thought they told lies; so, drawing his scymitar, he cut off their noses and   their ears, and, hanging them on the bridle of his horse, put the bridle round   their necks, and so let them go. 
              [3.119] Then these two men went and showed   themselves to the king, and told him how it had come to pass that they were thus   treated. Darius trembled lest it was by the common consent of the six that the   deed had been done; he therefore sent for them all in turn, and sounded them to   know if they approved the conduct of Intaphernes. When he found by their answers   that there had been no concert between him and them, he laid hands on   Intaphernes, his children, and all his near kindred; strongly suspecting that he   and his friends were about to raise a revolt. When all had been seized and put   in chains, as malefactors condemned to death, the wife of Intaphernes came and   stood continually at the palace-gates, weeping and wailing sore. So Darius after   a while, seeing that she never ceased to stand and weep, was touched with pity   for her, and bade a messenger go to her and say, "Lady, king Darius gives thee   as a boon the life of one of thy kinsmen - choose which thou wilt of the   prisoners." Then she pondered awhile before she answered, "If the king grants me   the life of one alone, I make choice of my brother." Darius, when he heard the   reply, was astonished, and sent again, saying, "Lady, the king bids thee tell   him why it is that thou passest by thy husband and thy children, and preferrest   to have the life of thy brother spared. He is not so near to thee as thy   children, nor so dear as thy husband." She answered, "O king, if the gods will,   I may have another husband and other children when these are gone. But as my   father and my mother are no more, it is impossible that I should have another   brother. This was my thought when I asked to have my brother spared." Then it   seemed to Darius that the lady spoke well, and he gave her, besides the life   that she had asked, the life also of her eldest son, because he was greatly   pleased with her. But he slew all the rest. Thus one of the seven died, in the   way I have described, very shortly after the insurrection. 
              [3.120] About the time of Cambyses' last   sickness, the following events happened. There was a certain Oroetes, a Persian,   whom Cyrus had made governor of Sardis. This man conceived a most unholy wish.   He had never suffered wrong or had an ill word from Polycrates the Samian - nay,   he had not so much as seen him in all his life; yet, notwithstanding, he   conceived the wish to seize him and put him to death. This wish, according to   the account which the most part give, arose from what happened one day as he was   sitting with another Persian in the gate of the king's palace. The man's name   was Mitrobates, and he was ruler of the satrapy of Dascyleium. He and Oroetes   had been talking together, and from talking they fell to quarrelling and   comparing their merits; whereupon Mitrobates said to Oroetes reproachfully, "Art   thou worthy to be called a man, when, near as Samos lies to thy government, and   easy as it is to conquer, thou hast omitted to bring it under the dominion of   the king? Easy to conquer, said I? Why, a mere common citizen, with the help of   fifteen men-at-arms, mastered the island, and is still king of it." Oroetes,   they say, took this reproach greatly to heart; but, instead of seeking to   revenge himself on the man by whom it was uttered, he conceived the desire of   destroying Polycrates, since it was on Polycrates' account that the reproach had   fallen on him. 
              [3.121] Another less common version of the   story is that Oroetes sent a herald to Samos to make a request, the nature of   which is not stated; Polycrates was at the time reclining in the apartment of   the males, and Anacreon the Teian was with him; when therefore the herald came   forward to converse, Polycrates, either out of studied contempt for the power of   Oroetes, or it may be merely by chance, was lying with his face turned away   towards the wall; and so he lay all the time that the herald spake, and when he   ended, did not even vouchsafe him a word. 
              [3.122] Such are the two reasons alleged for   the death of Polycrates; it is open to all to believe which they please. What is   certain is that Oroetes, while residing at Magnesia on the Maeander, sent a   Lydian, by name Myrsus, the son of Gyges, with a message to Polycrates at Samos,   well knowing what that monarch designed. For Polycrates entertained a design   which no other Greek, so far as we know, ever formed before him, unless it were   Minos the Cnossian, and those (if there were any such) who had the mastery of   the Egaean at an earlier time - Polycrates, I say, was the first of mere human   birth who conceived the design of gaining the empire of the sea, and aspired to   rule over Ionia and the islands. Knowing then that Polycrates was thus minded,   Oroetes sent his message, which ran as follows:- 
              "Oroetes to Polycrates thus sayeth: I hear thou raisest thy thoughts high,   but thy means are not equal to thy ambition. Listen then to my words, and learn   how thou mayest at once serve thyself and preserve me. King Cambyses is bent on   my destruction - of this I have warning from a sure hand. Come thou, therefore,   and fetch me away, me and all my wealth - share my wealth with me, and then, so   far as money can aid, thou mayest make thyself master of the whole of Greece.   But if thou doubtest of my wealth, send the trustiest of thy followers, and I   will show my treasures to him." 
              [3.123] Polycrates, when he heard this   message, was full of joy, and straightway approved the terms; but, as money was   what he chiefly desired, before stirring in the business he sent his secretary,   Maeandrius, son of Maeandrius, a Samian, to look into the matter. This was the   man who, not very long afterwards, made an offering at the temple of Juno of all   the furniture which had adorned the male apartments in the palace of Polycrates,   an offering well worth seeing. Oroetes learning that one was coming to view his   treasures, contrived as follows:- he filled eight great chests almost brimful of   stones, and then covering over the stones with gold, corded the chests, and so   held them in readiness. When Maeandrius arrived, he was shown this as Oroetes'   treasure, and having seen it returned to Samos. 
              [3.124] On hearing his account, Polycrates,   notwithstanding many warnings given him by the soothsayers, and much dissuasion   of his friends, made ready to go in person. Even the dream which visited his   daughter failed to check him. She had dreamed that she saw her father hanging   high in air, washed by love, and anointed by the sun. Having therefore thus   dreamed, she used every effort to prevent her father from going; even as he went   on board his penteconter crying after him with words of evil omen. Then   Polycrates threatened her that, if he returned in safety, he would keep her   unmarried many years. She answered, "Oh! that he might perform his threat; far   better for her to remain long unmarried than to be bereft of her father!" 
              [3.125] Polycrates, however, making light of   all the counsel offered him, set sail and went to Oroetes. Many friends   accompanied him; among the rest, Democedes, the son of Calliphon, a native of   Crotona, who was a physician, and the best skilled in his art of all men then   living. Polycrates, on his arrival at Magnesia, perished miserably, in a way   unworthy of his rank and of his lofty schemes. For, if we except the Syracusans,   there has never been one of the Greek tyrants who was to be compared with   Polycrates for magnificence. Oroetes, however, slew him in a mode which is not   fit to be described, and then hung his dead body upon a cross. His Samian   followers Oroetes let go free, bidding them thank him that they were allowed   their liberty; the rest, who were in part slaves, in part free foreigners, he   alike treated as his slaves by conquest. Then was the dream of the daughter of   Polycrates fulfilled; for Polycrates, as he hung upon the cross, and rain fell   on him, was washed by Jupiter; and he was anointed by the sun, when his own   moisture overspread his body. And so the vast good fortune of Polycrates came at   last to the end which Amasis the Egyptian king had prophesied in days gone by. 
              [3.126] It was not long before retribution   for the murder of Polycrates overtook Oroetes. After the death of Cambyses, and   during all the time that the Magus sat upon the throne, Oroetes remained in   Sardis, and brought no help to the Persians, whom the Medes had robbed of the   sovereignty. On the contrary, amid the troubles of this season, he slew   Mitrobates, the satrap of Dascyleium, who had cast the reproach upon him in the   matter of Polycrates; and he slew also Mitrobates's son, Cranaspes - both men of   high repute among the Persians. He was likewise guilty of many other acts of   insolence; among the rest, of the following:- there was a courier sent to him by   Darius whose message was not to his mind - Oroetes had him waylaid and murdered   on his road back to the king; the man and his horse both disappeared, and no   traces were left of either. 
              [3.127] Darius therefore was no sooner   settled upon the throne than he longed to take vengeance upon Oroetes for all   his misdoings, and especially for the murder of Mitrobates and his son. To send   an armed force openly against him, however, he did not think advisable, as the   whole kingdom was still unsettled, and he too was but lately come to the throne,   while Oroetes, as he understood, had a great power. In truth a thousand Persians   attended on him as a bodyguard, and he held the satrapies of Phrygia, Lydia, and   Ionia. Darius therefore proceeded by artifice. He called together a meeting of   all the chief of the Persians, and thus addressed them:- "Who among you, O   Persians, will undertake to accomplish me a matter by skill without force or   tumult? Force is misplaced where the work wants skilful management. Who, then,   will undertake to bring me Oroetes alive, or else to kill him? He never did the   Persians any good in his life, and he has wrought us abundant injury. Two of our   number, Mitrobates and his son, he has slain; and when messengers go to recall   him, even though they have their mandate from me, with an insolence which is not   to be endured, he puts them to death. We must kill this man, therefore, before   he does the Persians any greater hurt." 
              [3.128] Thus spoke Darius; and straightway   thirty of those present came forward and offered themselves for the work. As   they strove together, Darius interfered, and bade them have recourse to the lot.   Accordingly lots were cast, and the task fell to Bagaeus, son of Artontes. Then   Bagaeus caused many letters to be written on divers matters, and sealed them all   with the king's signet; after which he took the letters with him, and departed   for Sardis. On his arrival he was shown into the presence of Oroetes, when he   uncovered the letters one by one, and giving them to the king's secretary -   every satrap has with him a king's secretary - commanded him to read their   contents. Herein his design was to try the fidelity of the bodyguard, and to see   if they would be likely to fall away from Oroetes. When therefore he saw that   they showed the letters all due respect, and even more highly reverenced their   contents, he gave the secretary a paper in which was written, "Persians, king   Darius forbids you to guard Oroetes." The soldiers at these words laid aside   their spears. So Bagaeus, finding that they obeyed this mandate, took courage,   and gave into the secretary's hands the last letter, wherein it was written,   "King Darius commands the Persians who are in Sardis to kill Oroetes." Then the   guards drew their swords and slew him upon the spot. Thus did retribution for   the murder of Polycrates the Samian overtake Oroetes the Persian. 
              [3.129] Soon after the treasures of Oroetes   had been conveyed to Sardis it happened that king Darius, as he leaped from his   horse during the chase, sprained his foot. The sprain was one of no common   severity, for the ankle-bone was forced quite out of the socket. Now Darius   already had at his court certain Egyptians whom he reckoned the best-skilled   physicians in all the world; to their aid, therefore, he had recourse; but they   twisted the foot so clumsily, and used such violence, that they only made the   mischief greater. For seven days and seven nights the king lay without sleep, so   grievous was the pain he suffered. On the eighth day of his indisposition, one   who had heard before leaving Sardis of the skill of Democedes the Crotoniat,   told Darius, who commanded that he should be brought with all speed into his   presence. When, therefore, they had found him among the slaves of Oroetes, quite   uncared for by any one, they brought him just as he was, clanking his fetters,   and all clothed in rags, before the king. 
              [3.130] As soon as he was entered into the   presence, Darius asked him if he knew medicine - to which he answered "No," for   he feared that if he made himself known he would lose all chance of ever again   beholding Greece. Darius, however, perceiving that he dealt deceitfully, and   really understood the art, bade those who had brought him to the presence go   fetch the scourges and the pricking-irons. Upon this Democedes made confession,   but at the same time said, that he had no thorough knowledge of medicine - he   had but lived some time with a physician, and in this way had gained a slight   smattering of the art. However, Darius put himself under his care, and   Democedes, by using the remedies customary among the Greeks, and exchanging the   violent treatment of the Egyptians for milder means, first enabled him to get   some sleep, and then in a very little time restored him altogether, after he had   quite lost the hope of ever having the use of his foot. Hereupon the king   presented Democedes with two sets of fetters wrought in gold; so Democedes asked   if he meant to double his sufferings because he had brought him back to health?   Darius was pleased at the speech, and bade the eunuchs take Democedes to see his   wives, which they did accordingly, telling them all that this was the man who   had saved the king's life. Then each of the wives dipped with a saucer into a   chest of gold, and gave so bountifully to Democedes, that a slave named Sciton,   who followed him, and picked up the staters which fell from the saucers,   gathered together a great heap of gold. 
              [3.131] This Democedes left his country and   became attached to Polycrates in the following way:- His father, who dwelt at   Crotona, was a man of a savage temper, and treated him cruelly. When, therefore,   he could no longer bear such constant ill-usage, Democedes left his home, and   sailed away to Egina. There he set up in business, and succeeded the first year   in surpassing all the best-skilled physicians of the place, notwithstanding that   he was without instruments, and had with him none of the appliances needful for   the practice of his art. In the second year the state of Egina hired his   services at the price of a talent; in the third the Athenians engaged him at a   hundred minae; and in the fourth Polycrates at two talents. So he went to Samos,   and there took up his abode. It was in no small measure from his success that   the Crotoniats came to be reckoned such good physicians; for about this period   the physicians of Crotona had the name of being the best, and those of Cyrene   the second best, in all Greece. The Argives, about the same time, were thought   to be the first musicians in Greece. 
              [3.132] After Democedes had cured Darius at   Susa, he dwelt there in a large house, and feasted daily at the king's table,   nor did he lack anything that his heart desired, excepting liberty to return to   his country. By interceding for them with Darius, he saved the lives of the   Egyptian physicians who had had the care of the king before he came, when they   were about to be impaled because they had been surpassed by a Greek; and   further, he succeeded in rescuing an Elean soothsayer, who had followed the   fortunes of Polycrates, and was lying in utter neglect among his slaves. In   short there was no one who stood so high as Democedes in the favour of the king. 
              [3.133] Moreover, within a little while it   happened that Atossa, the daughter of Cyrus, who was married to Darius, had a   boil form upon her breast, which, after it burst, began to spread and increase.   Now so long as the sore was of no great size, she hid it through shame and made   no mention of it to any one; but when it became worse, she sent at last for   Democedes, and showed it to him. Democedes said that he would make her well, but   she must first promise him with an oath that if he cured her she would grant him   whatever request he might prefer; assuring her at the same time that it should   be nothing which she could blush to hear. 
              [3.134] On these terms Democedes applied his   art, and soon cured the abscess; and Atossa, when she had heard his request,   spake thus one night to Darius:- 
              "It seemeth to me strange, my lord, that, with the mighty power which is   thine, thou sittest idle, and neither makest any conquest, nor advancest the   power of the Persians. Methinks that one who is so young, and so richly endowed   with wealth, should perform some noble achievement to prove to the Persians that   it is a man who governs them. Another reason, too, should urge thee to attempt   some enterprise. Not only does it befit thee to show the Persians that a man   rules them, but for thy own peace thou shouldest waste their strength in wars   lest idleness breed revolt against thy authority. Now, too, whilst thou art   still young, thou mayest well accomplish some exploit; for as the body grows in   strength the mind too ripens, and as the body ages, the mind's powers decay,   till at last it becomes dulled to everything." 
              So spake Atossa, as Democedes had instructed her. Darius answered:- "Dear   lady, thou hast uttered the very thoughts that occupy my brain. I am minded to   construct a bridge which shall join our continent with the other, and so carry   war into Scythia. Yet a brief space and all will be accomplished as thou   desirest." 
              But Atossa rejoined:- "Look now, this war with Scythia were best reserved   awhile - for the Scythians may be conquered at any time. Prithee, lead me thy   host first into Greece. I long to be served by some of those Lacedaemonian maids   of whom I have heard so much. I want also Argive, and Athenian, and Corinthian   women. There is now at the court a man who can tell thee better than any one   else in the whole world whatever thou wouldst know concerning Greece, and who   might serve thee right well as guide; I mean him who performed the cure on thy   foot." 
              "Dear lady," Darius answered, "since it is thy wish that we try first the   valour of the Greeks, it were best, methinks, before marching against them, to   send some Persians to spy out the land; they may go in company with the man thou   mentionest, and when they have seen and learnt all, they can bring us back a   full report. Then, having a more perfect knowledge of them, I will begin the   war." 
              [3.135] Darius, having so spoke, put no long   distance between the word and the deed, but as soon as day broke he summoned to   his presence fifteen Persians of note, and bade them take Democedes for their   guide, and explore the sea-coasts of Greece. Above all, they were to be sure to   bring Democedes back with them, and not suffer him to run away and escape. After   he had given these orders, Darius sent for Democedes, and besought him to serve   as guide to the Persians, and when he had shown them the whole of Greece to come   back to Persia. He should take, he said, all the valuables he possessed as   presents to his father and his brothers, and he should receive on his return a   far more abundant store. Moreover, the king added, he would give him, as his   contribution towards the presents, a merchantship laden with all manner of   precious things, which should accompany him on his voyage. Now I do not believe   that Darius, when he made these promises, had any guile in his heart: Democedes,   however, who suspected that the king spoke to try him, took care not to snatch   at the offers with any haste; but said, "he would leave his own goods behind to   enjoy upon his return - the merchant-ship which the king proposed to grant him   to carry gifts to his brothers, that he would accept at the king's hands." So   when Darius had laid his orders upon Democedes, he sent him and the Persians   away to the coast. 
              [3.136] The men went down to Phoenicia, to   Sidon, the Phoenician town, where straightway they fitted out two triremes and a   trading-vessel, which they loaded with all manner of precious merchandise; and,   everything being now ready, they set sail for Greece. When they had made the   land, they kept along the shore and examined it, taking notes of all that they   saw; and in this way they explored the greater portion of the country, and all   the most famous regions, until at last they reached Tarentum in Italy. There   Aristophilides, king of the Tarentines, out of kindness to Democedes, took the   rudders off the Median ships, and detained their crews as spies. Meanwhile   Democedes escaped to Crotona, his native city, whereupon Aristophilides released   the Persians from prison, and gave their rudders back to them. 
              [3.137] The Persians now quitted Tarentum,   and sailed to Crotona in pursuit of Democedes; they found him in the   market-place, where they straightway laid violent hands on him. Some of the   Crotoniats, who greatly feared the power of the Persians, were willing to give   him up; but others resisted, held Democedes fast, and even struck the Persians   with their walking-sticks. They, on their part, kept crying out, "Men of   Crotona, beware what you do. It is the king's runaway slave that you are   rescuing. Think you Darius will tamely submit to such an insult? Think you, that   if you carry off the man from us, it will hereafter go well with you? Will you   not rather be the first persons on whom we shall make war? Will not your city be   the first we shall seek to lead away captive?" Thus they spake, but the   Crotoniats did not heed them; they rescued Democedes, and seized also the   trading-ship which the Persians had brought with them from Phoenicia. Thus   robbed, and bereft of their guide, the Persians gave up all hope of exploring   the rest of Greece, and set sail for Asia. As they were departing, Democedes   sent to them and begged they would inform Darius that the daughter of Milo was   allianced to him as his bride. For the name of Milo the wrestler was in high   repute with the king. My belief is, that Democedes hastened his marriage by the   payment of a large sum of money for the purpose of showing Darius that he was a   man of mark in his own country. 
              [3.138] The Persians weighed anchor and left   Crotona, but, being wrecked on the coast of Iapygia, were made slaves by the   inhabitants. From this condition they were rescued by Gillus, a banished   Tarentine, who ransomed them at his own cost, and took them back to Darius.   Darius offered to repay this service by granting Gillus whatever boon he chose   to ask; whereupon Gillus told the king of his misfortune, and begged to be   restored to his country. Fearing, however, that he might bring trouble on Greece   if a vast armament were sent to Italy on his account, he added that it would   content him if the Cnidians undertook to obtain his recall. Now the Cnidians   were dose friends of the Tarentines, which made him think there was no likelier   means of procuring his return. Darius promised and performed his part; for he   sent messenger to Cnidus, and commanded the Cnidians to restore Gillus. The   Cnidians did as he wished, but found themselves unable to persuade the   Tarentines, and were too weak to attempt force. Such then was the course which   this matter took. These were the first Persians who ever came from Asia to   Greece; and they were sent to spy out the land for the reason which I have   before mentioned. 
              [3.139] After this, king Darius besieged and   took Samos, which was the first city, Greek or Barbarian, that he conquered. The   cause of his making war upon Samos was the following:- at the time when   Cambyses, son of Cyrus, marched against Egypt, vast numbers of Greeks flocked   thither; some, as might have been looked for, to push their trade; others, to   serve in his army; others again, merely to see the land: among these last was   Syloson, son of Aeaces, and brother of Polycrates, at that time an exile from   Samos. This Syloson, during his stay in Egypt, met with a singular piece of good   fortune. He happened one day to put on a scarlet cloak, and thus attired to go   into the market-place at Memphis, when Dariuss who was one of Cambyses'   bodyguard, and not at that time a man of any account, saw him, and taking a   strong liking to the dress, went up and offered to purchase it. Syloson   perceived how anxious he was, and by a lucky inspiration answered: "There is no   price at which I would sell my cloak; but I will give it thee for nothing, if it   must needs be thine." Darius thanked him, and accepted the garment. 
              [3.140] Poor Syloson felt at the time that   he had fooled away his cloak in a very simple manner; but afterwards, when in   the course of years Cambyses died, and the seven Persians rose in revolt against   the Magus, and Darius was the man chosen out of the seven to have the kingdom,   Syloson learnt that the person to whom the crown had come was the very man who   had coveted his cloak in Egypt, and to whom he had freely given it. So he made   his way to Susa, and seating himself at the portal of the royal palace, gave out   that he was a benefactor of the king. Then the doorkeeper went and told Darius.   Amazed at what he heard, king said thus within himself:- "What Greek can have   been my benefactor, or to which of them do I owe anything, so lately as I have   got the kingdom? Scarcely a man of them all has been here, not more than one or   two certainly, since I came to the throne. Nor do I remember that I am in the   debt of any Greek. However, bring him in, and let me hear what he means by his   boast." So the doorkeeper ushered Syloson into the presence, and the   interpreters asked him who he was, and what he had done that he should call   himself a benefactor of the king. Then Syloson told the whole story of the   cloak, and said that it was he who had made Darius the present. Hereupon Darius   exclaimed, "Oh! thou most generous of men, art thou indeed he who, when I had no   power at all, gavest me something, albeit little? Truly the favour is as great   as a very grand present would be nowadays. I will therefore give thee in return   gold and silver without stint, that thou mayest never repent of having rendered   a service to Darius, son of Hystaspes. "Give me not, O king," replied Syloson,   "either silver or gold, but recover me Samos, my native land, and let that be   thy gift to me. It belongs now to a slave of ours, who, when Oroetes put my   brother Polycrates to death, became its master. Give me Samos, I beg; but give   it unharmed, with no bloodshed - no leading into captivity." 
              [3.141] When he heard this, Darius sent off   an army, under Otanes, one of the seven, with orders to accomplish all that   Syloson had desired. And Otanes went down to the coast and made ready to cross   over. 
              [3.142] The government of Samos was held at   this time by Maeandrius, son of Maeandrius, whom Polycrates had appointed as his   deputy. This person conceived the wish to act like the justest of men, but it   was not allowed him to do so. On receiving tidings of the death of Polycrates,   he forthwith raised an altar to love the Protector of Freedom, and assigned it   the piece of ground which may still be seen in the suburb. This done, he   assembled all the citizens, and spoke to them as follows:- 
              "Ye know, friends, that the sceptre of Polycrates, and all his power, has   passed into my hands, and if I choose I may rule over you. But what I condemn in   another I will, if I may, avoid myself. I never approved the ambition of   Polycrates to lord it over men as good as himself, nor looked with favour on any   of those who have done the like. Now therefore, since he has fulfilled his   destiny, I lay down my office, and proclaim equal rights. All that I claim in   return is six talents from the treasures of Polycrates, and the priesthood of   Jove the Protector of Freedom, for myself and my descendants for ever. Allow me   this, as the man by whom his temple has been built, and by whom ye yourselves   are now restored to liberty." As soon as Maeandrius had ended, one of the   Samians rose up and said, "As if thou wert fit to rule us, base-born and rascal   as thou art! Think rather of accounting for the monies which thou hast   fingered." 
              [3.143] The man who thus spoke was a certain   Telesarchus, one of the leading citizens. Maeandrius, therefore, feeling sure   that if he laid down the sovereign power some one else would become tyrant in   his room, gave up the thought of relinquishing it. Withdrawing to the citadel,   he sent for the chief men one by one, under pretence of showing them his   accounts, and as fast as they came arrested them and put them in irons. So these   men were bound; and Maeandrius within a short time fell sick: whereupon   Lycaretus, one of his brothers, thinking that he was going to die, and wishing   to make his own accession to the throne the easier, slew all the prisoners. It   seemed that the Samians did not choose to be a free people. 
              [3.144] When the Persians whose business it   was to restore Syloson reached Samos, not a man was found to lift up his hand   against them. Maeandrius and his partisans expressed themselves willing to quit   the island upon certain terms, and these terms were agreed to by Otanes. After   the treaty was made, the most distinguished of the Persians had their thrones   brought, and seated themselves over against the citadel. 
              [3.145] Now the king Maeandrius had a   lightheaded brother - Charilaus by name - whom for some offence or other he had   shut up in prison: this man heard what was going on, and peering through his   bars, saw the Persians sitting peacefully upon their seats, whereupon he   exclaimed aloud, and said he must speak with Maeandrius. When this was reported   to him, Maeandrius gave orders that Charilaus should be released from prison and   brought into his presence. No sooner did he arrive than he began reviling and   abusing his brother, and strove to persuade him to attack the Persians. "Thou   meanest-spirited of men," he said, "thou canst keep me, thy brother, chained in   a dungeon, notwithstanding that I have done nothing worthy of bonds; but when   the Persians come and drive thee forth a houseless wanderer from thy native   land, thou lookest on, and hast not the heart to seek revenge, though they might   so easily be subdued. If thou, however, art afraid, lend me thy soldiers, and I   will make them pay dearly for their coming here. I engage too to send thee first   safe out of the island." 
              [3.146] So spake Charilaus, and Maeandrius   gave consent; not (I believe) that he was so void of sense as to imagine that   his own forces could overcome those of the king, but because he was jealous of   Syloson, and did not wish him to get so quietly an unharmed city. He desired   therefore to rouse the anger of the Persians against Samos, that so he might   deliver it up to Syloson with its power at the lowest possible ebb; for he knew   well that if the Persians met with a disaster they would be furious against the   Samians, while he himself felt secure of a retreat at any time that he liked,   since he had a secret passage under ground leading from the citadel to the sea.   Maeandrius accordingly took ship and sailed away from Samos; and Charilaus,   having armed all the mercenaries, threw open the gates, and fell upon the   Persians, who looked for nothing less, since they supposed that the whole matter   had been arranged by treaty. At the first onslaught therefore all the Persians   of most note, men who were in the habit of using litters, were slain by the   mercenaries; the rest of the army, however, came to the rescue, defeated the   mercenaries, and drove them back into the citadel. 
              [3.147] Then Otanes, the general, when he   saw the great calamity which had befallen the Persians, made up his mind to   forget the orders which Darius had given him, "not to kill or enslave a single   Samian, but to deliver up the island unharmed to Syloson," and gave the word to   his army that they should slay the Samians, both men and boys, wherever they   could find them. Upon this some of his troops laid siege to the citadel, while   others began the massacre, killing all they met, some outside, some inside the   temples. 
              [3.148] Maeandrius fled from Samos to   Lacedaemon, and conveyed thither all the riches which he had brought away from   the island, after which he acted as follows. Having placed upon his board all   the gold and silver vessels that he had, and bade his servants employ themselves   in cleaning them, he himself went and entered into conversation with Cleomenes,   son of Anaxandridas, king of Sparta, and as they talked brought him along to his   house. There Cleomenes, seeing the plate, was filled with wonder and   astonishment; whereon the other begged that he would carry home with him any of   the vessels that he liked. Maeandrius said this two or three times; but   Cleomenes here displayed surpassing honesty. He refused the gift, and thinking   that if Maeandrius made the same offers to others he would get the aid he   sought, the Spartan king went straight to the ephors and told them "it would be   best for Sparta that the Samian stranger should be sent away from the   Peloponnese; for otherwise he might perchance persuade himself or some other   Spartan to be base." The ephors took his advice, and let Maeandrius know by a   herald that he must leave the city. 
              [3.149] Meanwhile the Persians netted Samos,   and delivered it up to Syloson, stripped of all its men. After some time,   however, this same general Otanes was induced to repeople it by a dream which he   had, and a loathsome disease that seized on him. 
              [3.150] After the armament of Otanes had set   sail for Samos, the Babylonians revolted, having made every preparation for   defence. During all the time that the Magus was king, and while the seven were   conspiring, they had profited by the troubles, and had made themselves ready   against a siege. And it happened somehow or other that no one perceived what   they were doing. At last when the time came for rebelling openly, they did as   follows:- having first set apart their mothers, each man chose besides out of   his whole household one woman, whomsoever he pleased; these alone were allowed   to live, while all the rest were brought to one place and strangled. The women   chosen were kept to make bread for the men; while the others were strangled that   they might not consume the stores. 
              [3.151] When tidings reached Darius of what   had happened, he drew together all his power, and began the war by marching   straight upon Babylon, and laying siege to the place. The Babylonians, however,   cared not a whit for his siege. Mounting upon the battlements that crowned their   walls, they insulted and jeered at Darius and his mighty host. One even shouted   to them and said, "Why sit ye there, Persians? why do ye not go back to your   homes? Till mules foal ye will not take our city." This was by a Babylonian who   thought that a mule would never foal. 
              [3.152] Now when a year and seven months had   passed, Darius and his army were quite wearied out, finding that they could not   anyhow take the city. All stratagems and all arts had been used, and yet the   king could not prevail - not even when he tried the means by which Cyrus made   himself master of the place. The Babylonians were ever upon the watch, and he   found no way of conquering them. 
              [3.153] At last, in the twentieth month, a   marvellous thing happened to Zopyrus, son of the Megabyzus who was among the   seven men that overthrew the Magus. One of his sumpter-mules gave birth to a   foal. Zopyrus, when they told him, not thinking that it could be true, went and   saw the colt with his own eyes; after which he commanded his servants to tell no   one what had come to pass, while he himself pondered the matter. Calling to mind   then the words of the Babylonian at the beginning of the siege, "Till mules foal   ye shall not take our city" - he thought, as he reflected on this speech, that   Babylon might now be taken. For it seemed to him that there was a Divine   Providence in the man having used the phrase, and then his mule having foaled. 
              [3.154] As soon therefore as he felt within   himself that Babylon was fated to be taken, he went to Darius and asked him if   he set a very high value on its conquest. When he found that Darius did indeed   value it highly, he considered further with himself how he might make the deed   his own, and be the man to take Babylon. Noble exploits in Persia are ever   highly honoured and bring their authors to greatness. He therefore reviewed all   ways of bringing the city under, but found none by which he could hope to   prevail, unless he maimed himself and then went over to the enemy. To do this   seeming to him a light matter, he mutilated himself in a way that was utterly   without remedy. For he cut off his own nose and ears, and then, clipping his   hair close and flogging himself with a scourge, he came in this plight before   Darius. 
              [3.155] Wrath stirred within the king at the   sight of a man of his lofty rank in such a condition; leaping down from his   throne, he exclaimed aloud, and asked Zopyrus who it was that had disfigured   him, and what he had done to be so treated. Zopyrus answered, "There is not a   man in the world, but thou, O king, that could reduce me to such a plight - no   stranger's hands have wrought this work on me, but my own only. I maimed myself   I could not endure that the Assyrians should laugh at the Persians." "Wretched   man," said Darius, "thou coverest the foulest deed with the fairest possible   name, when thou sayest thy maiming is to help our siege forward. How will thy   disfigurement, thou simpleton, induce the enemy to yield one day the sooner?   Surely thou hadst gone out of thy mind when thou didst so misuse thyself." "Had   I told thee," rejoined the other, "what I was bent on doing, thou wouldest not   have suffered it; as it is, I kept my own counsel, and so accomplished my plans.   Now, therefore, if there be no failure on thy part, we shall take Babylon. I   will desert to the enemy as I am, and when I get into their city I will tell   them that it is by thee I have been thus treated. I think they will believe my   words, and entrust me with a command of troops. Thou, on thy part, must wait   till the tenth day after I am entered within the town, and then place near to   the gates of Semiramis a detachment of thy army, troops for whose loss thou wilt   care little, a thousand men. Wait, after that, seven days, and post me another   detachment, two thousand strong, at the Nineveh gates; then let twenty days   pass, and at the end of that time station near the Chaldaean gates a body of   four thousand. Let neither these nor the former troops be armed with any weapons   but their swords - those thou mayest leave them. After the twenty days are over,   bid thy whole army attack the city on every side, and put me two bodies of   Persians, one at the Belian, the other at the Cissian gates; for I expect, that,   on account of my successes, the Babylonians will entrust everything, even the   keys of their gates, to me. Then it will be for me and my Persians to do the   rest." 
              [3.156] Having left these instructions,   Zopyrus fled towards the gates of the town, often looking back, to give himself   the air of a deserter. The men upon the towers, whose business it was to keep a   lookout, observing him, hastened down, and setting one of the gates slightly   ajar, questioned him who he was, and on what errand he had come. He replied that   he was Zopyrus, and had deserted to them from the Persians. Then the   doorkeepers, when they heard this, carried him at once before the Magistrates.   Introduced into the assembly, he began to bewail his misfortunes, telling them   that Darius had maltreated him in the way they could see, only because he had   given advice that the siege should be raised, since there seemed no hope of   taking the city. "And now," he went on to say, "my coming to you, Babylonians,   will prove the greatest gain that you could possibly receive, while to Darius   and the Persians it will be the severest loss. Verily he by whom I have been so   mutilated shall not escape unpunished. And truly all the paths of his counsels   are known to me." Thus did Zopyrus speak. 
              [3.157] The Babylonians, seeing a Persian of   such exalted rank in so grievous a plight, his nose and ears cut off, his body   red with marks of scourging and with blood, had no suspicion but that he spoke   the truth, and was really come to be their friend and helper. They were ready,   therefore, to grant him anything that he asked; and on his suing for a command,   they entrusted to him a body of troops, with the help of which he proceeded to   do as he had arranged with Darius. On the tenth day after his flight he led out   his detachment, and surrounding the thousand men, whom Darius according to   agreement had sent first, he fell upon them and slew them all. Then the   Babylonians, seeing that his deeds were as brave as his words, were beyond   measure pleased, and set no bounds to their trust. He waited, however, and when   the next period agreed on had elapsed, again with a band of picked men he   sallied forth, and slaughtered the two thousand. After this second exploit, his   praise was in all mouths. Once more, however, he waited till the interval   appointed had gone by, and then leading the troops to the place where the four   thousand were, he put them also to the sword. This last victory gave the   finishing stroke to his power, and made him all in all with the Babylonians:   accordingly they committed to him the command of their whole army, and put the   keys of their city into his hands. 
              [3.158] Darius now, still keeping to the   plan agreed upon, attacked the walls on every side, whereupon Zopyrus played out   the remainder of his stratagem. While the Babylonians, crowding to the walls,   did their best to resist the Persian assault, he threw open the Cissian and the   Belian gates, and admitted the enemy. Such of the Babylonians as witnessed the   treachery, took refuge in the temple of Jupiter Belus; the rest, who did not see   it, kept at their posts, till at last they too learnt that they were betrayed. 
              [3.159] Thus was Babylon taken for the   second time. Darius having become master of the place, destroyed the wall, and   tore down all the gates; for Cyrus had done neither the one nor the other when   he took Babylon. He then chose out near three thousand of the leading citizens,   and caused them to be crucified, while he allowed the remainder still to inhabit   the city. Further, wishing to prevent the race of the Babylonians from becoming   extinct, he provided wives for them in the room of those whom (as I explained   before) they strangled, to save their stores. These he levied from the nations   bordering on Babylonia, who were each required to send so large a number to   Babylon, that in all there were collected no fewer than fifty thousand. It is   from these women that the Babylonians of our times are sprung. 
              [3.160] As for Zopyrus, he was considered by   Darius to have surpassed, in the greatness of his achievements, all other   Persians, whether of former or of later times, except only Cyrus - with whom no   Persian ever yet thought himself worthy to compare. Darius, as the story goes,   would often say that "he had rather Zopyrus were unmaimed, than be master of   twenty more Babylons." And he honoured Zopyrus greatly; year by year he   presented him with all the gifts which are held in most esteem among the   Persians; he gave him likewise the government of Babylon for his life, free from   tribute; and he also granted him many other favours. Megabyzus, who held the   command in Egypt against the Athenians and their allies, was a son of this   Zopyrus. And Zopyrus, who fled from Persia to Athens, was a son of this   Megabyzus.