Book 8 - URANIA
                  
              
[8.1] THE Greeks engaged in the sea-service   were the following. The Athenians furnished a hundred and twenty-seven vessels   to the fleet, which were manned in part by the Plataeans, who, though unskilled   in such matters, were led by their active and daring spirit to undertake this   duty; the Corinthians furnished a contingent of forty vessels; the Megarians   sent twenty; the Chalcideans also manned twenty, which had been furnished to   them by the Athenians; the Eginetans came with eighteen; the Sicyonians with   twelve; the Lacedaemonians with ten; the Epidaurians with eight; the Eretrians   with seven; the Troezenians with five; the Styreans with two; and the Ceans with   two triremes and two penteconters. Last of all, the Locrians of Opus came in aid   with a squadron of seven penteconters. 
              [8.2] Such were the nations which furnished   vessels to the fleet now at Artemisium; and in mentioning them I have given the   number of ships furnished by each. The total number of the ships thus brought   together, without counting the penteconters, was two hundred and seventy-one;   and the captain, who had the chief command over the whole fleet, was Eurybiades   the son of Eurycleides. He was furnished by Sparta, since the allies had said   that "if a Lacedaemonian did not take the command, they would break up the   fleet, for never would they serve under the Athenians." 
              [8.3] From the first, even earlier than the   time when the embassy went to Sicily to solicit alliance, there had been a talk   of intrusting the Athenians with the command at sea; but the allies were averse   to the plan, wherefore the Athenians did not press it; for there was nothing   they had so much at heart as the salvation of Greece, and they knew that, if   they quarrelled among themselves about the command, Greece would be brought to   ruin. Herein they judged rightly; for internal strife is a thing as much worse   than war carried on by a united people, as war itself is worse than peace. The   Athenians therefore, being so persuaded, did not push their claims, but waived   them, so long as they were in such great need of aid from the other Greeks. And   they afterwards showed their motive; for at the time when the Persians had been   driven from Greece, and were now threatened by the Greeks in their own country,   they took occasion of the insolence of Pausanias to deprive the Lacedaemonians   of their leadership. This, however, happened afterwards. 
              [8.4] At the present time the Greeks, on their   arrival at Artemisium, when they saw the number of the ships which lay at anchor   near Aphetae, and the abundance of troops everywhere, feeling disappointed that   matters had gone with the barbarians so far otherwise than they had expected,   and full of alarm at what they saw, began to speak of drawing back from   Artemisium towards the inner parts of their country. So when the Euboeans heard   what was in debate, they went to Eurybiades, and besought him to wait a few   days, while they removed their children and their slaves to a place of safety.   But, as they found that they prevailed nothing, they left him and went to  Themistocles, the Athenian commander, to whom they gave a bribe of thirty   talents, on his promise that the fleet should remain and risk a battle in   defence of Euboea. 
              [8.5] And Themistocles succeeded in detaining   the fleet in the way which I will now relate. He made over to Eurybiades five   talents out of the thirty paid him, which he gave as if they came from himself;   and having in this way gained over the admiral, he addressed himself to  Adeimantus, the son of Ocytus, the Corinthian leader, who was the only   remonstrant now, and who still threatened to sail away from Artemisium and not   wait for the other captains. Addressing himself to this man, Themistocles said   with an oath - "Thou forsake us? By no means! I will pay thee better for   remaining than the Mede would for leaving thy friends" - and straightway he sent   on board the ship of Adeimantus a present of three talents of silver. So these   two captains were won by gifts, and came over to the views of Themistocles, who   was thereby enabled to gratify the wishes of the Euboeans. He likewise made his   own gain on the occasion; for he kept the rest of the money, and no one knew of   it. The commanders who took the gifts thought that the sums were furnished by   Athens, and had been sent to be used in this way. 
              [8.6] Thus it came to pass that the Greeks   stayed at Euboea and there gave battle to the enemy. 
              Now the battle was on this wise. The barbarians reached Aphetae early in the   afternoon, and then saw (as they had previously heard reported) that a fleet of   Greek ships, weak in number, lay at Artemisium. At once they were eager to   engage, fearing that the Greeks would fly, and hoping to capture them before   they should get away. They did not however think it wise to make straight for   the Greek station, lest the enemy should see them as they bore down, and betake   themselves to flight immediately; in which case night might close in before they   came up with the fugitives, and so they might get clean off and make their   escape from them; whereas the Persians were minded not to let a single soul slip   through their hands. 
              [8.7] They therefore contrived a plan, which   was the following:- They detached two hundred of their ships from the rest, and   - to prevent the enemy from seeing them start - sent them round outside the   island of Sciathos, to make the circuit of Euboea by Caphareus and Geraestus,   and so to reach the Euripus. By this plan they thought to enclose the Greeks on   every side; for the ships detached would block up the only way by which they   could retreat, while the others would press upon them in front. With these   designs therefore they dispatched the two hundred ships, while they themselves   waited - since they did not mean to attack the Greeks upon that day, or until   they knew, by signal, of the arrival of the detachment which had been ordered to   sail round Euboea. Meanwhile they made a muster of the other ships at Aphetae. 
              [8.8] Now the Persians had with them a man   named Scyllias, a native of Scione, who was the most expert diver of his day. At   the time of the shipwreck off Mount Pelion he had recovered for the Persians a   great part of what they lost; and at the same time he had taken care to obtain   for himself a good share of the treasure. He had for some time been wishing to   go over to the Greeks; but no good opportunity had offered till now, when the   Persians were making the muster of their ships. In what way he contrived to   reach the Greeks I am not able to say for certain: I marvel much if the tale   that is commonly told be true. 'Tis said he dived into the sea at Aphetae, and   did not once come to the surface till he reached Artemisium, a distance of   nearly eighty furlongs. Now many things are related of this man which are   plainly false; but some of the stories seem to be true. My own opinion is that   on this occasion he made the passage to Artemisium in a boat. 
              However this might be, Scyllias no sooner reached Artemisium than he gave the   Greek captains a full account of the damage done by the storm, and likewise told   them of the ships sent to make the circuit of Euboea. 
              [8.9] So the Greeks on receiving these tidings   held a council, whereat, after much debate, it was resolved that they should   stay quiet for the present where they were, and remain at their moorings, but   that after midnight they should put out to sea, and encounter the ships which   were on their way round the island. Later in the day, when they found that no   one meddled with them, they formed a new plan, which was to wait till near   evening, and then sail out against the main body of the barbarians, for the   purpose of trying their mode of fight and skill in manoeuvring. 
              [8.10] When the Persian commanders and crews   saw the Greeks thus boldly sailing towards them with their few ships, they   thought them possessed with madness, and went out to meet them, expecting (as   indeed seemed likely enough) that they would take all their vessels with the   greatest ease. The Greek ships were so few, and their own so far outnumbered   them, and sailed so much better, that they resolved, seeing their advantage, to   encompass their foe on every side. And now such of the Ionians as wished well to   the Grecian cause and served in the Persian fleet unwillingly, seeing their   countrymen surrounded, were sorely distressed; for they felt sure that not one   of them would ever make his escape, so poor an opinion had they of the strength   of the Greeks. On the other hand, such as saw with pleasure the attack on   Greece, now vied eagerly with each other which should be the first to make prize   of an Athenian ship, and thereby to secure himself a rich reward from the king.   For through both the hosts none were so much accounted of as the Athenians. 
              [8.11] The Greeks, at a signal, brought the   sterns of their ships together into a small compass, and turned their prows on   every side towards the barbarians; after which, at a second signal, although   inclosed within a narrow space, and closely pressed upon by the foe, yet they   fell bravely to work, and captured thirty ships of the barbarians, at the same   time taking prisoner Philaon, the son of Chersis, and brother of Gorgus king of   Salamis, a man of much repute in the fleet. The first who made prize of a ship   of the enemy was Lycomedes the son of Aeschreas, an Athenian, who was afterwards   adjudged the meed of valour. Victory however was still doubtful when night came   on, and put a stop to the combat. The Greeks sailed back to Artemisium; and the   barbarians returned to Aphetae, much surprised at the result, which was far   other than they had looked for. In this battle only one of the Greeks who fought   on the side of the king deserted and joined his countrymen. This was Antidorus   of Lemnos, whom the Athenians rewarded for his desertion by the present of a   piece of land in Salamis. 
              [8.12] Evening had barely closed in when a   heavy rain - it was about midsummer - began to fall, which continued the whole   night, with terrible thunderings and lightnings from Mount Pelion: the bodies of   the slain and the broken pieces of the damaged ships were drifted in the   direction of Aphetae, and floated about the prows of the vessels there,   disturbing the action of the oars. The barbarians, hearing the storm, were   greatly dismayed, expecting certainly to perish, as they had fallen into such a   multitude of misfortunes. For before they were well recovered from the tempest   and the wreck of their vessels off Mount Pelion, they had been surprised by a   sea-fight which had taxed all their strength, and now the sea-fight was scarcely   over when they were exposed to floods of rain, and the rush of swollen streams   into the sea, and violent thunderings. 
              [8.13] If, however, they who lay at Aphetae   passed a comfortless night, far worse were the sufferings of those who had been   sent to make the circuit of Euboea; inasmuch as the storm fell on them out at   sea, whereby the issue was indeed calamitous. They were sailing along near the   Hollows of Euboea, when the wind began to rise and the rain to pour: overpowered   by the force of the gale, and driven they knew not whither, at the last they   fell upon rocks - Heaven so contriving, in order that the Persian fleet might   not greatly exceed the Greek, but be brought nearly to its level. This squadron,   therefore, was entirely lost about the Hollows of Euboea. 
              [8.14] The barbarians at Aphetae were glad   when day dawned, and remained in quiet at their station, content if they might   enjoy a little peace after so many sufferings. Meanwhile there came to the aid   of the Greeks a reinforcement of fifty-three ships from Attica. Their arrival,   and the news (which reached Artemisium about the same time) of the complete   destruction by the storm of the ships sent to sail round Euboea, greatly cheered   the spirits of the Greek sailors. So they waited again till the same hour as the   day before, and, once more putting out to sea, attacked the enemy. This time   they fell in with some Cilician vessels, which they sank; when night came on,   they withdrew to Artemisium. 
              [8.15] The third day was now come, and the   captains of the barbarians, ashamed that so small a number of ships should   harass their fleet, and afraid of the anger of Xerxes, instead of waiting for   the others to begin the battle, weighed anchor themselves, and advanced against   the Greeks about the hour of noon, with shouts encouraging one another. Now it   happened that these sea-fights took place on the very same days with the combats   at Thermopylae; and as the aim of the struggle was in the one case to maintain   the pass, so in the other it was to defend the Euripus. While the Greeks,   therefore, exhorted one another not to let the barbarians burst in upon Greece,   these latter shouted to their fellows to destroy the Grecian fleet, and get   possession of the channel. 
              [8.16] And now the fleet of Xerxes advanced   in good order to the attack, while the Greeks on their side remained quite   motionless at Artemisium. The Persians therefore spread themselves, and came   forward in a half-moon, seeking to encircle the Greeks on all sides, and thereby   prevent them from escaping. The Greeks, when they saw this, sailed out to meet   their assailants; and the battle forthwith began. In this engagement the two   fleets contended with no clear advantage to either - for the armament of Xerxes   injured itself by its own greatness, the vessels falling into disorder, and   oft-times running foul of one another; yet still they did not give way, but made   a stout fight, since the crews felt it would indeed be a disgrace to turn and   fly from a fleet so inferior in number. The Greeks therefore suffered much, both   in ships and men; but the barbarians experienced a far larger loss of each. So   the fleets separated after such a combat as I have described. 
              [8.17] On the side of Xerxes the Egyptians   distinguished themselves above all the combatants; for besides performing many   other noble deeds, they took five vessels from the Greeks with their crews on   board. On the side of the Greeks the Athenians bore off the meed of valour; and   among them the most distinguished was Clinias, the son of Alcibiades, who served   at his own charge with two hundred men, on board a vessel which he had himself   furnished. 
              [8.18] The two fleets, on separating,   hastened very gladly to their anchorage-grounds. The Greeks, indeed, when the   battle was over, became masters of the bodies of the slain and the wrecks of the   vessels; but they had been so roughly handled, especially the Athenians,   one-half of whose vessels had suffered damage, that they determined to break up   from their station, and withdraw to the inner parts of their country. 
              [8.19] Then Themistocles, who thought that if   the Ionian and Carian ships could be detached from the barbarian fleet, the   Greeks might be well able to defeat the rest, called the captains together. They   met upon the seashore, where the Euboeans were now assembling their flocks and   herds; and here Themistocles told them he thought that he knew of a plan whereby   he could detach from the king those who were of most worth among his allies.   This was all that he disclosed to them of his plan at that time. Meanwhile,   looking to the circumstances in which they were, he advised them to slaughter as   many of the Euboean cattle they liked - for it was better (he said) that their   own troops should enjoy them than the enemy - and to give orders to their men to   kindle the fires as usual. With regard to the retreat, he said that he would   take upon himself to watch the proper moment, and would manage matters so that   they should return to Greece without loss. These words pleased the captains; so   they had the fires lighted, and began the slaughter of the cattle. 
              [8.20] The Euboeans, until now, had made   light of the oracle of Bacis, as though it had been void of all significancy,   and had neither removed their goods from the island, nor yet taken them into   their strong places; as they would most certainly have done if they had believed   that war was approaching. By this neglect they had brought their affairs into   the very greatest danger. Now the oracle of which I speak ran as follows:- 
              
                When o'er the main shall be thrown a byblus yoke by a stranger,
                  Be thou     ware, and drive from Euboea the goats' loud-bleating. 
              
              So, as the Euboeans had paid no regard to this oracle when the evils   approached and impended, now that they had arrived, the worst was likely to   befall them. 
              [8.21] While the Greeks were employed in the   way described above, the scout who had been on the watch at Trachis arrived at  Artemisium. For the Greeks had employed two watchers:- Polyas, a native of  Anticyra, had been stationed off Artemisium, with a row-boat at his command   ready to sail at any moment, his orders being that, if an engagement took place   by sea, he should convey the news at once to the Greeks at Thermopylae; and in   like manner Abronychus the son of Lysicles, an Athenian, had been stationed with   a triaconter near Leonidas, to be ready, in case of disaster befalling the land   force, to carry tidings of it to Artemisium. It was this Abronychus who now   arrived with news of what had befallen Leonidas and those who were with him.   When the Greeks heard the tidings they no longer delayed to retreat, but   withdrew in the order wherein they had been stationed, the Corinthians leading,   and the Athenians sailing last of all. 
              [8.22] And now Themistocles chose out the   swiftest sailers from among the Athenian vessels, and, proceeding to the various   watering-places along the coast, cut inscriptions on the rocks, which were read   by the Ionians the day following, on their arrival at Artemisium. The   inscriptions ran thus:- "Men of Ionia, ye do wrong to fight against your own   fathers, and to give your help to enslave Greece. We beseech you therefore to   come over, if possible, to our side: if you cannot do this, then, we pray you,   stand aloof from the contest yourselves, and persuade the Carians to do the   like. If neither of these things be possible, and you are hindered, by a force   too strong to resist, from venturing upon desertion, at least when we come to   blows fight backwardly, remembering that you are sprung from us, and that it was   through you we first provoked the hatred of the barbarian." Themistocles, in   putting up these inscriptions, looked, I believe, to two chances - either Xerxes   would not discover them, in which case they might bring over the Ionians to the   side of the Greeks; or they would be reported to him and made a ground of   accusation against the Ionians, who would thereupon be distrusted, and would not   be allowed to take part in the sea-fights. 
              [8.23]  Shortly after the cutting of the inscriptions, a man of Histiaea went  in a merchantship to Aphetae, and told the Persians that the Greeks had  fled from Artemisium. Disbelieving his report, the Persians kept the  man a prisoner, while they sent some of their fastest vessels to see  what had happened. These brought back word how matters stood; whereupon  at sunrise the whole fleet advanced together in a body, and sailed to  Artemisium, where they remained till mid-day; after which they went on  to  Histiaea. That city fell into their hands immediately; and they shortly  overran the various villages upon the coast in the district of  Hellopia, which was part of the Histiaean territory. 
              [8.24] It was while they were at this station   that a herald reached them from Xerxes, whom he had sent after making the   following dispositions with respect to the bodies of those who fell at  Thermopylae. Of the twenty thousand who had been slain on the Persian side, he   left one thousand upon the field while he buried the rest in trenches; and these   he carefully filled up with earth, and hid with foliage, that the sailors might   not see any signs of them. The herald, on reaching Histiaea, caused the whole   force to be collected together, and spake thus to them: 
              "Comrades, King Xerxes gives permission to all who please, to quit their   posts, and see how he fights with the senseless men who think to overthrow his   armies." 
              [8.25] No sooner had these words been   uttered, than it became difficult to get a boat, so great was the number of   those who desired to see the sight. Such as went crossed the strait, and passing   among the heaps of dead, in this way viewed the spectacle. Many helots were   included in the slain, but every one imagined that the bodies were all either   Lacedaemonians or Thespians. However, no one was deceived by what Xerxes had   done with his own dead. It was indeed most truly a laughable device - on the one   side a thousand men were seen lying about the field, on the other four thousand   crowded together into one spot. This day then was given up to sight-seeing; on   the next the seamen embarked on board their ships and sailed back to Histiaea,   while Xerxes and his army proceeded upon their march. 
              [8.26] There came now a few deserters from   Arcadia to join the Persians - poor men who had nothing to live on, and were in   want of employment. The Persians brought them into the king's presence, and   there inquired of them, by a man who acted as their spokesman, "what the Greeks   were doing?" The Arcadians answered - "They are holding the Olympic Games,   seeing the athletic sports and the chariot-races." "And what," said the man, "is   the prize for which they contend?" "An olive-wreath," returned the others,   "which is given to the man who wins." On hearing this, Tritantaechmes, the son   of Artabanus, uttered a speech which was in truth most noble, but which caused   him to be taxed with cowardice by King Xerxes. Hearing the men say that the   prize was not money but a wreath of olive, he could not forbear from exclaiming   before them all: "Good heavens! Mardonius, what manner of men are these against   whom thou hast brought us to fight? - men who contend with one another, not for   money, but for honour!" 
              [8.27] A little before this, and just after   the blow had been struck at Thermopylae, a herald was sent into Phocis by the  Thessalians, who had always been on bad terms with the Phocians, and especially   since their last overthrow. For it was not many years previous to this invasion   of Greece by the king, that the Thessalians, with their allies, entered Phocis   in full force, but were defeated by the Phocians in an engagement wherein they   were very roughly handled. The Phocians, who had with them as soothsayer Tellias   of Elis, were blocked up in the mountain of Parnassus, when the following   stratagem was contrived for them by their Elean ally. He took six hundred of   their bravest men, and whitened their bodies and their arms with chalk; then   instructing them to slay every one whom they should meet that was not whitened   like themselves, he made a night attack upon the Thessalians. No sooner did the   Thessalian sentries, who were the first to see them, behold this strange sight,   than, imagining it to be a prodigy, they were all filled with affright. From the   sentries the alarm spread to the army, which was seized with such a panic that   the Phocians killed four thousand of them, and became masters of their dead   bodies and shields. Of the shields one half were sent as an offering to the   temple at Abae, the other half were deposited at Delphi; while from the tenth   part of the booty gained in the battle, were made the gigantic figures which   stand round the tripod in front of the Delphic shrine, and likewise the figures   of the same size and character at Abae. 
              [8.28] Besides this slaughter of the   Thessalian foot when it was blockading them, the Phocians had dealt a blow to   their horse upon its invading their territory, from which they had never   recovered. There is a pass near the city of Hyampolis, where the Phocians,   having dug a broad trench, filled up the void with empty wine-jars, after which   they covered the place with mould, so that the ground all looked alike, and then   awaited the coming of the Thessalians. These, thinking to destroy the Phocians   at one sweep, rushed rapidly forward, and became entangled in the wine-jars,   which broke the legs of their horses. 
              [8.29] The Thessalians had therefore a double   cause of quarrel with the Phocians, when they dispatched the herald above   mentioned, who thus delivered his message:- 
              "At length acknowledge, ye men of Phocis, that ye may not think to match with   us. In times past, when it pleased us to hold with the Greeks, we had always the   vantage over you; and now our influence is such with the barbarian, that, if we   choose it, you will lose your country, and (what is even worse) you will be sold   as slaves. However, though we can now do with you exactly as we like, we are   willing to forget our wrongs. Quit them with a payment of fifty talents of   silver, and we undertake to ward off the evils which threaten your country." 
              [8.30] Such was the message which the   Thessalians sent. The Phocians were the only people in these parts who had not   espoused the cause of the Medes; and it is my deliberate opinion that the motive   which swayed them was none other - neither more nor less - than their hatred of   the Thessalians: for had the Thessalians declared in favour of the Greeks, I   believe that the men of Phocis would have joined the Median side. As it was,   when the message arrived, the Phocians made answer, that "they would not pay   anything - it was open to them, equally with the Thessalians, to make common   cause with the Medes, if they only chose so to do - but they would never of   their own free will become traitors to Greece." 
              [8.31] On the return of this answer, the  Thessalians, full of wrath against the Phocians, offered themselves as guides to   the barbarian army, and led them forth from Trachinia into Doris. In this place   there is a narrow tongue of Dorian territory, not more than thirty furlongs   across, interposed between Malis and Phocis; it is the tract in ancient times   called Dryopis; and the land, of which it is a part, is the mother-country of   the Dorians in the Peloponnese. This territory the barbarians did not plunder,   for the inhabitants had espoused their side; and besides, the Thessalians wished   that they should be spared. 
              [8.32] From Doris they marched forward into  Phocis; but here the inhabitants did not fall into their power: for some of them   had taken refuge in the high grounds of Parnassus - one summit of which, called  Tithorea, standing quite by itself, not far from the city of Neon, is well   fitted to give shelter to a large body of men, and had now received a number of   the Phocians with their movables; while the greater portion had fled to the   country of the Ozolian Locrians, and placed their goods in the city called  Amphissa, which lies above the Crissaean plain. The land of Phocis, however, was   entirely overrun, for the Thessalians led the Persian army through the whole of   it; and wherever they went, the country was wasted with fire and sword, the   cities and even the temples being wilfully set alight by the troops. 
              [8.33] The march of the army lay along the   valley of the Cephissus; and here they ravaged far and wide, burning the towns   of Drymus, Charadra, Erochus, Tethronium, Amphicaea, Neon, Pedieis, Triteis,  Elateia, Hyampolis, Parapotamii, and Abae. At the last-named place there was a   temple of Apollo, very rich, and adorned with a vast number of treasures and   offerings. There was likewise an oracle there in those days, as indeed there is   at the present time. This temple the Persians plundered and burnt; and here they   captured a number of the Phocians before they could reach the hills, and caused   the death of some of their women by ill-usage. 
              [8.34] After passing Parapotamii, the   barbarians marched to Panopeis; and now the army separated into two bodies,   whereof one, which was the more numerous and the stronger of the two, marched,   under Xerxes himself, towards Athens, entering Boeotia by the country of the  Orchomenians. The Boeotians had one and all embraced the cause of the Medes; and   their towns were in the possession of Macedonian garrisons, whom Alexander had   sent there, to make it manifest to Xerxes that the Boeotians were on the Median   side. Such then was the road followed by one division of the barbarians. 
              [8.35] The other division took guides, and   proceeded towards the temple of Delphi, keeping Mount Parnassus on their right   hand. They too laid waste such parts of Phocis as they passed through, burning   the city of the Panopeans, together with those of the Daulians and of the  Aeolidae. This body had been detached from the rest of the army, and made to   march in this direction, for the purpose of plundering the Delphian temple and   conveying to King Xerxes the riches which were there laid up. For Xerxes, as I   am informed, was better acquainted with what there was worthy of note at Delphi,   than even with what he had left in his own house; so many of those about him   were continually describing the treasures - more especially the offerings made   by Croesus the son of Alyattes. 
              [8.36] Now when the Delphians heard what   danger they were in, great fear fell on them. In their terror they consulted the   oracle concerning the holy treasures, and inquired if they should bury them in   the ground, or carry them away to some other country. The god, in reply, bade   them leave the treasures untouched - "He was able," he said, "without help to   protect his own." So the Delphians, when they received this answer, began to   think about saving themselves. And first of all they sent their women and   children across the gulf into Achaea; after which the greater number of them   climbed up into the tops of Parnassus, and placed their goods for safety in the   Corycian cave; while some effected their escape to Amphissa in Locris. In this   way all the Delphians quitted the city, except sixty men, and the Prophet. 
              [8.37] When the barbarian assailants drew   near and were in sight of the place, the Prophet, who was named Aceratus,   beheld, in front of the temple, a portion of the sacred armour, which it was not   lawful for any mortal hand to touch, lying upon the ground, removed from the   inner shrine where it was wont to hang. Then went he and told the prodigy to the   Delphians who had remained behind. Meanwhile the enemy pressed forward briskly,   and had reached the shrine of Minerva Pronaia, when they were overtaken by other   prodigies still more wonderful than the first. Truly it was marvel enough, when   warlike harness was seen lying outside the temple, removed there by no power but   its own; what followed, however, exceeded in strangeness all prodigies that had   ever before been seen. The barbarians had just reached in their advance the   chapel of Minerva Pronaia, when a storm of thunder burst suddenly over their   heads - at the same time two crags split off from Mount Parnassus, and rolled   down upon them with a loud noise, crushing vast numbers beneath their weight -   while from the temple of Minerva there went up the war-cry and the shout of   victory. 
              [8.38] All these things together struck   terror into the barbarians, who forthwith turned and fled. The Delphians, seeing   this, came down from their hiding-places, and smote them with a great slaughter,   from which such as escaped fled straight into Boeotia. These men, on their   return, declared (as I am told) that besides the marvels mentioned above, they   witnessed also other supernatural sights. Two armed warriors, they said, of a   stature more than human, pursued after their flying ranks, pressing them close   and slaying them. 
              [8.39] These men, the Delphians maintain,   were two Heroes belonging to the place - by name Phylacus and Autonous - each of   whom has a sacred precinct near the temple; one, that of Phylacus, hard by the   road which runs above the temple of Pronaia; the other, that of Autonous, near   the Castalian spring, at the foot of the peak called Hyampeia. The blocks of   stone which fell from Parnassus might still be seen in my day; they lay in the   precinct of Pronaia, where they stopped, after rolling through the host of the   barbarians. Thus was this body of men forced to retire from the temple. 
              [8.40] Meanwhile, the Grecian fleet, which   had left Artemisium, proceeded to Salamis, at the request of the Athenians, and   there cast anchor. The Athenians had begged them to take up this position, in   order that they might convey their women and children out of Attica, and further   might deliberate upon the course which it now behoved them to follow.   Disappointed in the hopes which they had previously entertained, they were about   to hold a council concerning the present posture of their affairs. For they had   looked to see the Peloponnesians drawn up in full force to resist the enemy in  Boeotia, but found nothing of what they had expected; nay, they learnt that the   Greeks of those parts, only concerning themselves about their own safety, were   building a wall across the Isthmus, and intended to guard the Peloponnese, and   let the rest of Greece take its chance. These tidings caused them to make the   request whereof I spoke, that the combined fleet should anchor at Salamis. 
              [8.41] So while the rest of the fleet lay to   off this island, the Athenians cast anchor along their own coast. Immediately   upon their arrival, proclamation was made that every Athenian should save his   children and household as he best could; whereupon some sent their families to  Egina, some to Salamis, but the greater number to Troezen. This removal was made   with all possible haste, partly from a desire to obey the advice of the oracle,   but still more for another reason. The Athenians say that they have in their   Acropolis a huge serpent, which lives in the temple, and is the guardian of the   whole place. Nor do they only say this, but, as if the serpent really dwelt   there, every month they lay out its food, which consists of a honey-cake. Up to   this time the honey-cake had always been consumed; but now it remained   untouched. So the priestess told the people what had happened; whereupon they   left Athens the more readily, since they believed that the goddess had already   abandoned the citadel. As soon as all was removed, the Athenians sailed back to   their station. 
              [8.42] And now, the remainder of the Grecian   sea-force, hearing that the fleet which had been at Artemisium, was come to   Salamis, joined it at that island from Troezen - orders having been issued   previously that the ships should muster at Pogon, the port of the Troezenians.   The vessels collected were many more in number than those which had fought at  Artemisium, and were furnished by more cities. The admiral was the same who had   commanded before, to wit, Eurybiades, the son of Eurycleides, who was a Spartan,   but not of the family of the kings: the city, however, which sent by far the   greatest number of ships, and the best sailers, was Athens. 
              [8.43] Now these were the nations who   composed the Grecian fleet. From the Peloponnese, the following - the   Lacedaemonians with sixteen ships; the Corinthians with the same number as at  Artemisium; the Sicyonians with fifteen; the Epidaurians with ten; the   Troezenians with five; and the Hermionians with three. These were Dorians and   Macedonians all of them (except those from Hermione), and had emigrated last   from Erineus, Pindus, and Dryopis. The Hermionians were Dryopians, of the race   which Hercules and the Malians drove out of the land now called Doris. Such were   the Peloponnesian nations. 
              [8.44] From the mainland of Greece beyond the  Peloponnese, came the Athenians with a hundred and eighty ships, a greater   number than that furnished by any other people; and these were now manned wholly   by themselves; for the Plataeans did not serve aboard the Athenian ships at   Salamis, owing to the following reason. When the Greeks, on their withdrawal   from Artemisium, arrived off Chalcis, the Plataeans disembarked upon the   opposite shore of Boeotia, and set to work to remove their households, whereby   it happened that they were left behind. (The Athenians, when the region which is   now called Greece was held by the Pelasgi, were Pelasgians, and bore the name of  Cranaans; but under their king Cecrops, they were called Cecropidae; when   Erechtheus got the sovereignty, they changed their name to Athenians; and when   Ion, the son of Xuthus, became their general, they were named after him   Ionians.) 
              [8.45] The Megarians served with the same   number of ships as at Artemisium; the Ambraciots came with seven; the Leucadians   (who were Dorians from Corinth) with three. 
              [8.46] Of the islanders, the Eginetans   furnished thirty ships - they had a larger number equipped; but some were kept   back to guard their own coasts, and only thirty, which however were their best  sailers, took part in the fight at Salamis. (The Eginetans are Dorians from  Epidaurus; their island was called formerly Oenone). The Chalcideans came next   in order; they furnished the twenty ships with which they had served at  Artemisium. The Eretrians likewise furnished their seven. These races are   Ionian. Ceos gave its old number - the Ceans are Ionians from Attica. Naxos   furnished four: this detachment, like those from the other islands, had been   sent by the citizens at home to join the Medes; but they made light of the   orders given them, and joined the Greeks, at the instigation of Democritus, a   citizen of good report, who was at that time captain of a trireme. The Naxians   are Ionians, of the Athenian stock. The Styreans served with the same ships as   before; the Cythnians contributed one, and likewise a penteconter - these two   nations are Dryopians: the Seriphians, Siphnians, and Melians, also served; they   were the only islanders who had not given earth and water to the barbarian. 
              [8.47] All these nations dwelt inside the   river Acheron and the country inhabited by the Thesprotians; for that people   borders on the Ambraciots and Leucadians, who are the most remote of all those   by whom the fleet was furnished. From the countries beyond, there was only one   people which gave help to the Greeks in their danger. This was the people of  Crotona, who contributed a single ship, under the command of Phayllus, a man who   had thrice carried off the prize at the Pythian Games. The Crotoniats are, by   descent, Achaeans. 
              [8.48]  Most of the allies came with triremes; but the Melians, Siphnians, and  Seriphians, brought penteconters. The Melians, who draw their race from  Lacedaemon, furnished two; the Siphnians and Seriphians, who are  Ionians of the Athenian stock, one each. The whole number of the ships,  without counting the penteconters, was three hundred and seventy-eight. 
              [8.49] When the captains from these various   nations were come together at Salamis, a council of war was summoned; and   Eurybiades proposed that any one who liked to advise, should say which place   seemed to him the fittest, among those still in the possession of the Greeks, to   be the scene of a naval combat. Attica, he said, was not to be thought of now;   but he desired their counsel as to the remainder. The speakers mostly advised   that the fleet should sail away to the Isthmus, and there give battle in defence   of the Peloponnese; and they urged as a reason for this, that if they were   worsted in a sea-fight at Salamis, they would be shut up in an island where they   could get no help; but if they were beaten near the Isthmus, they could escape   to their homes. 
              [8.50] As the captains from the Peloponnese   were thus advising, there came an Athenian to the camp, who brought word that   the barbarians had entered Attica, and were ravaging and burning everything. For   the division of the army under Xerxes was just arrived at Athens from its march   through Boeotia, where it had burnt Thespiae and Plataea - both which cities   were forsaken by their inhabitants, who had fled to the Peloponnese - and now it   was laying waste all the possessions of the Athenians. Thespiae and Plataea had   been burnt by the Persians, because they knew from the Thebans that neither of   those cities had espoused their side. 
              [8.51] Since the passage of the Hellespont   and the commencement of the march upon Greece, a space of four months had gone   by; one, while the army made the crossing, and delayed about the region of the  Hellespont; and three while they proceeded thence to Attica, which they entered   in the archonship of Calliades. They found the city forsaken; a few people only   remained in the temple, either keepers of the treasures, or men of the poorer   sort. These persons having fortified the citadel with planks and boards, held   out against the enemy. It was in some measure their poverty which had prevented   them from seeking shelter in Salamis; but there was likewise another reason   which in part induced them to remain. They imagined themselves to have   discovered the true meaning of the oracle uttered by the Pythoness, which   promised that "the wooden wall" should never be taken - the wooden wall, they   thought, did not mean the ships, but the place where they had taken refuge. 
              [8.52] The Persians encamped upon the hill   over against the citadel, which is called Mars' hill by the Athenians, and began   the siege of the place, attacking the Greeks with arrows whereto pieces of   lighted tow were attached, which they shot at the barricade. And now those who   were within the citadel found themselves in a most woeful case; for their wooden   rampart betrayed them; still, however, they continued to resist. It was in vain   that the Pisistratidae came to them and offered terms of surrender - they   stoutly refused all parley, and among their other modes of defence, rolled down   huge masses of stone upon the barbarians as they were mounting up to the gates:   so that Xerxes was for a long time very greatly perplexed, and could not   contrive any way to take them. 
              [8.53] At last, however, in the midst of   these many difficulties, the barbarians made discovery of an access. For verily   the oracle had spoken truth; and it was fated that the whole mainland of Attica   should fall beneath the sway of the Persians. Right in front of the citadel, but   behind the gates and the common ascent - where no watch was kept, and no one   would have thought it possible that any foot of man could climb - a few soldiers   mounted from the sanctuary of Aglaurus, Cecrops' daughter, notwithstanding the   steepness of the precipice. As soon as the Athenians saw them upon the summit,   some threw themselves headlong from the wall, and so perished; while others fled   for refuge to the inner part of the temple. The Persians rushed to the gates and   opened them, after which they massacred the suppliants, When all were slain,   they plundered the temple, and fired every part of the citadel. 
              [8.54] Xerxes, thus completely master of   Athens, despatched a horseman to Susa, with a message to Artabanus, informing   him of his success hitherto. The day after, he collected together all the   Athenian exiles who had come into Greece in his train, and bade them go up into   the citadel, and there offer sacrifice after their own fashion. I know not   whether he had had a dream which made him give this order, or whether he felt   some remorse on account of having set the temple on fire. However this may have   been, the exiles were not slow to obey the command given them. 
              [8.55] I will now explain why I have made   mention of this circumstance: there is a temple of Erechtheus the Earth-born, as   he is called, in this citadel, containing within it an olive-tree and a sea. The   tale goes among the Athenians, that they were placed there as witnesses by   Neptune and Minerva, when they had their contention about the country. Now this   olive-tree had been burnt with the rest of the temple when the barbarians took   the place. But when the Athenians, whom the king had commanded to offer   sacrifice, went up into the temple for the purpose, they found a fresh shoot, as   much as a cubit in length, thrown out from the old trunk. Such at least was the   account which these persons gave. 
              [8.56] Meanwhile, at Salamis, the Greeks no   sooner heard what had befallen the Athenian citadel, than they fell into such   alarm that some of the captains did not even wait for the council to come to a   vote, but embarked hastily on board their vessels, and hoisted sail as though   they would take to flight immediately. The rest, who stayed at the council   board, came to a vote that the fleet should give battle at the Isthmus. Night   now drew on; and the captains, dispersing from the meeting, proceeded on board   their respective ships. 
              [8.57] Themistocles, as he entered his own   vessel, was met by Mnesiphilus, an Athenian, who asked him what the council had   resolved to do. On learning that the resolve was to stand away for the Isthmus,   and there give battle on behalf of the Peloponnese, Mnesiphilus exclaimed:- 
              "If these men sail away from Salamis, thou wilt have no fight at all for the   one fatherland; for they will all scatter themselves to their own homes; and   neither Eurybiades nor any one else will be able to hinder them, nor to stop the   breaking up of the armament. Thus will Greece be brought to ruin through evil   counsels. But haste thee now; and, if there be any possible way, seek to   unsettle these resolves - mayhap thou mightest persuade Eurybiades to change his   mind, and continue here." 
              [8.58] The suggestion greatly pleased  Themistocles; and without answering a word, he went straight to the vessel of  Eurybiades. Arrived there, he let him know that he wanted to speak with him on a   matter touching the public service. So Eurybiades bade him come on board, and   say whatever he wished. Then Themistocles, seating himself at his side, went   over all the arguments which he had heard from Mnesiphilus, pretending as if   they were his own, and added to them many new ones besides; until at last he   persuaded Eurybiades, by his importunity, to quit his ship and again collect the   captains to council. 
              [8.59] As soon as they were come, and before   Eurybiades had opened to them his purpose in assembling them together,  Themistocles, as men are wont to do when they are very anxious, spoke much to   divers of them; whereupon the Corinthian captain, Adeimantus, the son of Ocytus,   observed - "Themistocles, at the Games they who start too soon are scourged."   "True," rejoined the other in his excuse, "but they who wait too late are not   crowned." 
              [8.60] Thus he gave the Corinthian at this   time a mild answer; and towards Eurybiades himself he did not now use any of   those arguments which he had urged before, or say aught of the allies betaking   themselves to flight if once they broke up from Salamis; it would have been   ungraceful for him, when the confederates were present, to make accusation   against any: but he had recourse to quite a new sort of reasoning, and addressed   him as follows:- 
              "With thee it rests, O Eurybiades! to save Greece, if thou wilt only hearken   unto me, and give the enemy battle here, rather than yield to the advice of   those among us, who would have the fleet withdrawn to the Isthmus. Hear now, I   beseech thee, and judge between the two courses. At the Isthmus thou wilt fight   in an open sea, which is greatly to our disadvantage, since our ships are   heavier and fewer in number than the enemy's; and further, thou wilt in any case   lose Salamis, Megara, and Egina, even if all the rest goes well with us. The   land and sea force of the Persians will advance together; and thy retreat will   but draw them towards the Peloponnese, and so bring all Greece into peril. If,   on the other hand, thou doest as I advise, these are the advantages which thou   wilt so secure: in the first place, as we shall fight in a narrow sea with few   ships against many, if the war follows the common course, we shall gain a great   victory; for to fight in a narrow space is favourable to us - in an open sea, to   them. Again, Salamis will in this case be preserved, where we have placed our   wives and children. Nay, that very point by which ye set most store, is secured   as much by this course as by the other; for whether we fight here or at the   Isthmus, we shall equally give battle in defence of the Peloponnese. Assuredly   ye will not do wisely to draw the Persians upon that region. For if things turn   out as I anticipate, and we beat them by sea, then we shall have kept your   Isthmus free from the barbarians, and they will have advanced no further than   Attica, but from thence have fled back in disorder; and we shall, moreover, have   saved Megara, Egina, and Salamis itself, where an oracle has said that we are to   overcome our enemies. When men counsel reasonably, reasonable success ensues;   but when in their counsels they reject reason, God does not choose to follow the   wanderings of human fancies." 
              [8.61] When Themistocles had thus spoken,   Adeimantus the Corinthian again attacked him, and bade him be silent, since he   was a man without a city; at the same time he called on Eurybiades not to put   the question at the instance of one who had no country, and urged that   Themistocles should show of what state he was envoy, before he gave his voice   with the rest. This reproach he made, because the city of Athens had been taken,   and was in the hands of the barbarians. Hereupon Themistocles spake many bitter   things against Adeimantus and the Corinthians generally; and for proof that he   had a country, reminded the captains, that with two hundred ships at his   command, all fully manned for battle, he had both city and territory as good as   theirs; since there was no Grecian state which could resist his men if they were   to make a descent. 
              [8.62] After this declaration, he turned to  Eurybiades, and addressing him with still greater warmth and earnestness - "If   thou wilt stay here," he said, "and behave like a brave man, all will be well -   if not, thou wilt bring Greece to ruin. For the whole fortune of the war depends   on our ships. Be thou persuaded by my words. If not, we will take our families   on board, and go, just as we are, to Siris, in Italy, which is ours from of old,   and which the prophecies declare we are to colonise some day or other. You then,   when you have lost allies like us, will hereafter call to mind what I have now   said." 
              [8.63] At these words of Themistocles,   Eurybiades changed his determination; principally, as I believe, because he   feared that if he withdrew the fleet to the Isthmus, the Athenians would sail   away, and knew that without the Athenians, the rest of their ships could be no   match for the fleet of the enemy. He therefore decided to remain, and give   battle at Salamis. 
              [8.64] And now, the different chiefs,   notwithstanding their skirmish of words, on learning the decision of Eurybiades,   at once made ready for the fight. Morning broke; and, just as the sun rose, the   shock of an earthquake was felt both on shore and at sea: whereupon the Greeks   resolved to approach the gods with prayer, and likewise to send and invite the   Aeacids to their aid. And this they did, with as much speed as they had resolved   on it. Prayers were offered to all the gods; and Telamon and Ajax were invoked   at once from Salamis, while a ship was sent to Egina to fetch Aeacus himself,   and the other Aeacids. 
              [8.65] The following is a tale which was told   by Dicaeus, the son of Theocydes, an Athenian, who was at this time an exile,   and had gained a good report among the Medes. He declared that after the army of   Xerxes had, in the absence of the Athenians, wasted Attica, he chanced to be   with Demaratus the Lacedaemonian in the Thriasian plain, and that while there,   he saw a cloud of dust advancing from Eleusis, such as a host of thirty thousand   men might raise. As he and his companion were wondering who the men, from whom   the dust arose, could possibly be, a sound of voices reached his ear, and he   thought that he recognised the mystic hymn to Bacchus. Now Demaratus was   unacquainted with the rites of Eleusis, and so he inquired of Dicaeus what the   voices were saying. Dicaeus made answer - "O Demaratus! beyond a doubt some   mighty calamity is about to befall the king's army! For it is manifest, inasmuch   as Attica is deserted by its inhabitants, that the sound which we have heard is   an unearthly one, and is now upon its way from Eleusis to aid the Athenians and   their confederates. If it descends upon the Peloponnese, danger will threaten   the king himself and his land army - if it moves towards the ships at Salamis,   'twill go hard but the king's fleet there suffers destruction. Every year the   Athenians celebrate this feast to the Mother and the Daughter; and all who wish,   whether they be Athenians or any other Greeks, are initiated. The sound thou   hearest is the Bacchic song, which is wont to be sung at that festival." "Hush   now," rejoined the other; "and see thou tell no man of this matter. For if thy   words be brought to the king's ear, thou wilt assuredly lose thy head because of   them; neither I nor any man living can then save thee. Hold thy peace therefore.   The gods will see to the king's army." Thus Demaratus counselled him; and they   looked, and saw the dust, from which the sound arose, become a cloud, and the   cloud rise up into the air and sail away to Salamis, making for the station of   the Grecian fleet. Then they knew that it was the fleet of Xerxes which would   suffer destruction. Such was the tale told by Dicaeus the son of Theocydes; and   he appealed for its truth to Demaratus and other eye-witnesses. 
              [8.66] The men belonging to the fleet of   Xerxes, after they had seen the Spartan dead at Thermopylae, and crossed the   channel from Trachis to Histiaea, waited there by the space of three days, and   then sailing down through the Euripus, in three more came to Phalerum. In my   judgment, the Persian forces both by land and sea when they invaded Attica were   not less numerous than they had been on their arrival at Sepias and Thermopylae.   For against the Persian loss in the storm and at Thermopylae, and again in the   sea-fights off Artemisium, I set the various nations which had since joined the   king - as the Malians, the Dorians, the Locrians, and the Boeotians - each   serving in full force in his army except the last, who did not number in their   ranks either the Thespians or the Plataeans; and together with these, the  Carystians, the Andrians, the Tenians, and the other people of the islands, who   all fought on this side except the five states already mentioned. For as the   Persians penetrated further into Greece, they were joined continually by fresh   nations. 
              [8.67] Reinforced by the contingents of all   these various states, except Paros, the barbarians reached Athens. As for the  Parians, they tarried at Cythnus, waiting to see how the war would go. The rest   of the sea forces came safe to Phalerum; where they were visited by Xerxes, who   had conceived a desire to go aboard and learn the wishes of the fleet. So he   came and sate in a seat of honour; and the sovereigns of the nations, and the   captains of the ships, were sent for, to appear before him, and as they arrived   took their seats according to the rank assigned them by the king. In the first   seat sate the king of Sidon; after him, the king of Tyre; then the rest in their   order. When the whole had taken their places, one after another, and were set   down in orderly array, Xerxes, to try them, sent Mardonius and questioned each,   whether a sea-fight should be risked or no. 
              [8.68] Mardonius accordingly went round the   entire assemblage, beginning with the Sidonian monarch, and asked this question;   to which all gave the same answer, advising to engage the Greeks, except only  Artemisia, who spake as follows:- 
              "Say to the king, Mardonius, that these are my words to him: I was not the   least brave of those who fought at Euboea, nor were my achievements there among   the meanest; it is my right, therefore, O my lord, to tell thee plainly what I   think to be most for thy advantage now. This then is my advice. Spare thy ships,   and do not risk a battle; for these people are as much superior to thy people in   seamanship, as men to women. What so great need is there for thee to incur   hazard at sea? Art thou not master of Athens, for which thou didst undertake thy   expedition? Is not Greece subject to thee? Not a soul now resists thy advance.   They who once resisted, were handled even as they deserved. Now learn how I   expect that affairs will go with thy adversaries. If thou art not over-hasty to   engage with them by sea, but wilt keep thy fleet near the land, then whether   thou abidest as thou art, or marchest forward towards the Peloponnese, thou wilt   easily accomplish all for which thou art come hither. The Greeks cannot hold out   against thee very long; thou wilt soon part them asunder, and scatter them to   their several homes. In the island where they lie, I hear they have no food in   store; nor is it likely, if thy land force begins its march towards the   Peloponnese, that they will remain quietly where they are - at least such as   come from that region. Of a surety they will not greatly trouble themselves to   give battle on behalf of the Athenians. On the other hand, if thou art hasty to   fight, I tremble lest the defeat of thy sea force bring harm likewise to thy   land army. This, too, thou shouldst remember, O king; good masters are apt to   have bad servants, and bad masters good ones. Now, as thou art the best of men,   thy servants must needs be a sorry set. These Egyptians, Cyprians, Cilicians,   and Pamphylians, who are counted in the number of thy subject-allies, of how   little service are they to thee!" 
              [8.69] As Artemisia spake, they who wished   her well were greatly troubled concerning her words, thinking that she would   suffer some hurt at the king's hands, because she exhorted him not to risk a   battle; they, on the other hand, who disliked and envied her, favoured as she   was by the king above all the rest of the allies, rejoiced at her declaration,   expecting that her life would be the forfeit. But Xerxes, when the words of the   several speakers were reported to him, was pleased beyond all others with the   reply of Artemisia; and whereas, even before this, he had always esteemed her   much, he now praised her more than ever. Nevertheless, he gave orders that the   advice of the greater number should be followed; for he thought that at Euboea   the fleet had not done its best, because he himself was not there to see -   whereas this time he resolved that he would be an eye-witness of the combat. 
              [8.70] Orders were now given to stand out to   sea; and the ships proceeded towards Salamis, and took up the stations to which   they were directed, without let or hindrance from the enemy. The day, however,   was too far spent for them to begin the battle, since night already approached:   so they prepared to engage upon the morrow. The Greeks, meanwhile, were in great   distress and alarm, more especially those of the Peloponnese, who were troubled   that they had been kept at Salamis to fight on behalf of the Athenian territory,   and feared that, if they should suffer defeat, they would be pent up and   besieged in an island, while their own country was left unprotected. 
              [8.71] The same night the land army of the   barbarians began its march towards the Peloponnese, where, however, all that was   possible had been done to prevent the enemy from forcing an entrance by land. As   soon as ever news reached the Peloponnese of the death of Leonidas and his   companions at Thermopylae, the inhabitants flocked together from the various   cities, and encamped at the Isthmus, under the command of Cleombrotus, son of  Anaxandridas, and brother of Leonidas. Here their first care was to block up the   Scironian Way; after which it was determined in council to build a wall across   the Isthmus. As the number assembled amounted to many tens of thousands, and   there was not one who did not give himself to the work, it was soon finished.   Stones, bricks, timber, baskets filled full of sand, were used in the building;   and not a moment was lost by those who gave their aid; for they laboured without   ceasing either by night or day. 
              [8.72] Now the nations who gave their aid,   and who had flocked in full force to the Isthmus, were the following: the  Lacedaemonians, all the tribes of the Arcadians, the Eleans, the Corinthians,   the Sicyonians, the Epidaurians, the Phliasians, the Troezenians, and the  Hermionians. These all gave their aid, being greatly alarmed at the danger which   threatened Greece. But the other inhabitants of the Peloponnese took no part in   the matter; though the Olympic and Carneian festivals were now over. 
              [8.73] Seven nations inhabit the Peloponnese.   Two of them are aboriginal, and still continue in the regions where they dwelt   at the first - to wit, the Arcadians and the Cynurians. A third, that of the   Achaeans, has never left the Peloponnese, but has been dislodged from its own   proper country, and inhabits a district which once belonged to others. The   remaining nations, four out of the seven, are all immigrants - namely, the   Dorians, the Aetolians, the Dryopians, and the Lemnians. To the Dorians belong   several very famous cities; to the Aetolians one only, that is, Elis; to the  Dryopians, Hermione and that Asine which lies over against Cardamyle in Laconia;   to the Lemnians, all the towns of the Paroreats. The aboriginal Cynurians alone   seem to be Ionians; even they, however, have, in course of time, grown to be   Dorians, under the government of the Argives, whose Orneats and vassals they   were. All the cities of these seven nations, except those mentioned above, stood   aloof from the war; and by so doing, if I may speak freely, they in fact took   part with the Medes. 
              [8.74] So the Greeks at the Isthmus toiled   unceasingly, as though in the greatest peril; since they never imagined that any   great success would be gained by the fleet. The Greeks at Salamis, on the other   hand, when they heard what the rest were about, felt greatly alarmed; but their   fear was not so much for themselves as for the Peloponnese. At first they   conversed together in low tones, each man with his fellow, secretly, and   marvelled at the folly shown by Eurybiades; but presently the smothered feeling   broke out, and another assembly was held; whereat the old subjects provoked much   talk from the speakers, one side maintaining that it was best to sail to the   Peloponnese and risk battle for that, instead of abiding at Salamis and fighting   for a land already taken by the enemy; while the other, which consisted of the   Athenians, Eginetans, and Megarians, was urgent to remain and have the battle   fought where they were. 
              [8.75] Then Themistocles, when he saw that   the Peloponnesians would carry the vote against him, went out secretly from the   council, and, instructing a certain man what he should say, sent him on board a   merchant ship to the fleet of the Medes. The man's name was Sicinnus; he was one   of Themistocles' household slaves, and acted as tutor to his sons; in after   times, when the Thespians were admitting persons to citizenship, Themistocles   made him a Thespian, and a rich man to boot. The ship brought Sicinnus to the   Persian fleet, and there he delivered his message to the leaders in these   words:- 
              "The Athenian commander has sent me to you privily, without the knowledge of   the other Greeks. He is a well-wisher to the king's cause, and would rather   success should attend on you than on his countrymen; wherefore he bids me tell   you that fear has seized the Greeks and they are meditating a hasty flight. Now   then it is open to you to achieve the best work that ever ye wrought, if only ye   will hinder their escaping. They no longer agree among themselves, so that they   will not now make any resistance - nay, 'tis likely ye may see a fight already   begun between such as favour and such as oppose your cause." The messenger, when   he had thus expressed himself, departed and was seen no more. 
              [8.76] Then the captains, believing all that   the messenger had said, proceeded to land a large body of Persian troops on the   islet of Psyttaleia, which lies between Salamis and the mainland; after which,   about the hour of midnight, they advanced their western wing towards Salamis, so   as to inclose the Greeks. At the same time the force stationed about Ceos and   Cynosura moved forward, and filled the whole strait as far as Munychia with   their ships. This advance was made to prevent the Greeks from escaping by   flight, and to block them up in Salamis, where it was thought that vengeance   might be taken upon them for the battles fought near Artemisium. The Persian   troops were landed on the islet of Psyttaleia, because, as soon as the battle   began, the men and wrecks were likely to be drifted thither, as the isle lay in   the very path of the coming fight - and they would thus be able to save their   own men and destroy those of the enemy. All these movements were made in   silence, that the Greeks might have no knowledge of them; and they occupied the   whole night, so that the men had no time to get their sleep. 
              [8.77] I cannot say that there is no truth in   prophecies, or feel inclined to call in question those which speak with   clearness, when I think of the following:- 
              
                When they shall bridge with their ships to the sacred strand of     Diana
                  Girt with the golden falchion, and eke to marine Cynosura,
                  Mad     hope swelling their hearts at the downfall of beautiful Athens
                  Then shall     godlike Right extinguish haughty Presumption,
                  Insult's furious offspring,     who thinketh to overthrow all things.
                  Brass with brass shall mingle, and     Mars with blood shall empurple
                  Ocean's waves. Then - then shall the day of     Grecia's freedom
                Come from Victory fair, and Saturn's son all-seeing. 
              
              When I look to this, and perceive how clearly Bacis spoke, neither venture   myself to say anything against prophecies, nor do approve of others impugning   them. 
              [8.78] Meanwhile, among the captains at   Salamis, the strife of words grew fierce. As yet they did not know that they   were encompassed, but imagined that the barbarians remained in the same places   where they had seen them the day before. 
              [8.79] In the midst of their contention,  Aristides, the son of Lysimachus, who had crossed from Egina, arrived in   Salamis. He was an Athenian, and had been ostracised by the commonalty; yet I   believe, from what I have heard concerning his character, that there was not in   all Athens a man so worthy or so just as he. He now came to the council, and,   standing outside, called for Themistocles. Now Themistocles was not his friend,   but his most determined enemy. However, under the pressure of the great dangers   impending, Aristides forgot their feud, and called Themistocles out of the   council, since he wished to confer with him. He had heard before his arrival of   the impatience of the Peloponnesians to withdraw the fleet to the Isthmus. As   soon therefore as Themistocles came forth, Aristides addressed him in these   words:- 
              "Our rivalry at all times, and especially at the present season, ought to be   a struggle, which of us shall most advantage our country. Let me then say to   thee, that so far as regards the departure of the Peloponnesians from this   place, much talk and little will be found precisely alike. I have seen with my   own eyes that which I now report: that, however much the Corinthians or   Eurybiades himself may wish it, they cannot now retreat; for we are enclosed on   every side by the enemy. Go in to them, and make this known." 
              [8.80] "Thy advice is excellent," answered   the other; "and thy tidings are also good. That which I earnestly desired to   happen, thine eyes have beheld accomplished. Know that what the Medes have now   done was at my instance; for it was necessary, as our men would not fight here   of their own free will, to make them fight whether they would or no. But come   now, as thou hast brought the good news, go in and tell it. For if I speak to   them, they will think it a feigned tale, and will not believe that the   barbarians have inclosed us around. Therefore do thou go to them, and inform   them how matters stand. If they believe thee, 'twill be for the best; but if   otherwise, it will not harm. For it is impossible that they should now flee   away, if we are indeed shut in on all sides, as thou sayest." 
              [8.81] Then Aristides entered the assembly,   and spoke to the captains: he had come, he told them, from Egina, and had but   barely escaped the blockading vessels - the Greek fleet was entirely inclosed by   the ships of Xerxes - and he advised them to get themselves in readiness to   resist the foe. Having said so much, he withdrew. And now another contest arose;   for the greater part of the captains would not believe the tidings. 
              [8.82] But while they still doubted, a Tenian   trireme, commanded by Panaetius the son of Sosimenes, deserted from the Persians   and joined the Greeks, bringing full intelligence. For this reason the Tenians   were inscribed upon the tripod at Delphi among those who overthrew the   barbarians. With this ship, which deserted to their side at Salamis, and the   Lemnian vessel which came over before at Artemisium, the Greek fleet was brought   to the full number of 380 ships; otherwise it fell short by two of that amount. 
              [8.83] The Greeks now, not doubting what the   Tenians told them, made ready for the coming fight. At the dawn of day, all the   men-at-arms were assembled together, and speeches were made to them, of which   the best was that of Themistocles; who throughout contrasted what was noble with   what was base, and bade them, in all that came within the range of man's nature   and constitution, always to make choice of the nobler part. Having thus wound up   his discourse, he told them to go at once on board their ships, which they   accordingly did; and about his time the trireme, that had been sent to Egina for   the Aeacidae, returned; whereupon the Greeks put to sea with all their fleet. 
              [8.84] The fleet had scarce left the land   when they were attacked by the barbarians. At once most of the Greeks began to   back water, and were about touching the shore, when Ameinias of Palline, one of   the Athenian captains, darted forth in front of the line, and charged a ship of   the enemy. The two vessels became entangled, and could not separate, whereupon   the rest of the fleet came up to help Ameinias, and engaged with the Persians.   Such is the account which the Athenians give of the way in which the battle   began; but the Eginetans maintain that the vessel which had been to Egina for   the Aeacidae, was the one that brought on the fight. It is also reported, that a   phantom in the form of a woman appeared to the Greeks, and, in a voice that was   heard from end to end of the fleet, cheered them on to the fight; first,   however, rebuking them, and saying - "Strange men, how long are ye going to back   water?" 
              [8.85] Against the Athenians, who held the   western extremity of the line towards Eleusis, were placed the Phoenicians;   against the Lacedaemonians, whose station was eastward towards the Piraeus, the   Ionians. Of these last a few only followed the advice of Themistocles, to fight   backwardly; the greater number did far otherwise. I could mention here the names   of many trierarchs who took vessels from the Greeks, but I shall pass over all   excepting Theomestor, the son of Androdamas, and Phylacus, the son of Histiaeus,   both Samians. I show this preference to them, inasmuch as for this service   Theomestor was made tyrant of Samos by the Persians, which Phylacus was enrolled   among the king's benefactors, and presented with a large estate in land. In the   Persian tongue the king's benefactors are called Orosangs. 
              [8.86] Far the greater number of the Persian   ships engaged in this battle were disabled, either by the Athenians or by the  Eginetans. For as the Greeks fought in order and kept their line, while the   barbarians were in confusion and had no plan in anything that they did, the   issue of the battle could scarce be other than it was. Yet the Persians fought   far more bravely here than at Euboea, and indeed surpassed themselves; each did   his utmost through fear of Xerxes, for each thought that the king's eye was upon   himself. 
              [8.87] What part the several nations, whether   Greek or barbarian, took in the combat, I am not able to say for certain;  Artemisia, however, I know, distinguished herself in such a way as raised her   even higher than she stood before in the esteem of the king. For after confusion   had spread throughout the whole of the king's fleet, and her ship was closely   pursued by an Athenian trireme, she, having no way to fly, since in front of her   were a number of friendly vessels, and she was nearest of all the Persians to   the enemy, resolved on a measure which in fact proved her safety. Pressed by the   Athenian pursuer, she bore straight against one of the ships of her own party, a  Calyndian, which had Damasithymus, the Calyndian king, himself on board. I   cannot say whether she had had any quarrel with the man while the fleet was at   the Hellespont, or no - neither can I decide whether she of set purpose attacked   his vessel, or whether it merely chanced that the Calyndian ship came in her way   - but certain it is that she bore down upon his vessel and sank it, and that   thereby she had the good fortune to procure herself a double advantage. For the   commander of the Athenian trireme, when he saw her bear down on one of the   enemy's fleet, thought immediately that her vessel was a Greek, or else had   deserted from the Persians, and was now fighting on the Greek side; he therefore   gave up the chase, and turned away to attack others. 
              [8.88] Thus in the first place she saved her   life by the action, and was enabled to get clear off from the battle; while   further, it fell out that in the very act of doing the king an injury she raised   herself to a greater height than ever in his esteem. For as Xerxes beheld the   fight, he remarked (it is said) the destruction of the vessel, whereupon the   bystanders observed to him - "Seest thou, master, how well Artemisia fights, and   how she has just sunk a ship of the enemy?" Then Xerxes asked if it were really   Artemisia's doing; and they answered, "Certainly; for they knew her ensign":   while all made sure that the sunken vessel belonged to the opposite side.   Everything, it is said, conspired to prosper the queen - it was especially   fortunate for her that not one of those on board the Calyndian ship survived to   become her accuser. Xerxes, they say, in reply to the remarks made to him,   observed - "My men have behaved like women, my women like men!" 
              [8.89] There fell in this combat Ariabignes,   one of the chief commanders of the fleet, who was son of Darius and brother of   Xerxes; and with him perished a vast number of men of high repute, Persians,   Medes, and allies. Of the Greeks there died only a few; for, as they were able   to swim, all those that were not slain outright by the enemy escaped from the   sinking vessels and swam across to Salamis. But on the side of the barbarians   more perished by drowning than in any other way, since they did not know how to   swim. The great destruction took place when the ships which had been first   engaged began to fly; for they who were stationed in the rear, anxious to   display their valour before the eyes of the king, made every effort to force   their way to the front, and thus became entangled with such of their own vessels   as were retreating. 
              [8.90] In this confusion the following event   occurred: certain Phoenicians belonging to the ships which had thus perished   made their appearance before the king, and laid the blame of their loss on the   Ionians, declaring that they were traitors, and had wilfully destroyed the   vessels. But the upshot of this complaint was that the Ionian captains escaped   the death which threatened them, while their Phoenician accusers received death   as their reward. For it happened that, exactly as they spoke, a Samothracian   vessel bore down on an Athenian and sank it, but was attacked and crippled   immediately by one of the Eginetan squadron. Now the Samothracians were expert   with the javelin, and aimed their weapons so well, that they cleared the deck of   the vessel which had disabled their own, after which they sprang on board, and   took it. This saved the Ionians. Xerxes, when he saw the exploit, turned   fiercely on the Phoenicians - (he was ready, in his extreme vexation, to find   fault with any one) - and ordered their heads to be cut off, to prevent them, he   said, from casting the blame of their own misconduct upon braver men. During the   whole time of the battle Xerxes sate at the base of the hill called Aegaleos,   over against Salamis; and whenever he saw any of his own captains perform any   worthy exploit he inquired concerning him; and the man's name was taken down by   his scribes, together with the names of his father and his city. Ariaramnes too,   a Persian, who was a friend of the Ionians, and present at the time whereof I   speak, had a share in bringing about the punishment of the Phoenicians. 
              [8.91] When the rout of the barbarians began,   and they sought to make their escape to Phalerum, the Eginetans, awaiting them   in the channel, performed exploits worthy to be recorded. Through the whole of   the confused struggle the Athenians employed themselves in destroying such ships   as either made resistance or fled to shore, while the Eginetans dealt with those   which endeavoured to escape down the strait; so that the Persian vessels were no   sooner clear of the Athenians than forthwith they fell into the hands of the   Eginetan squadron. 
              [8.92] It chanced here that there was a   meeting between the ship of Themistocles, which was hasting in pursuit of the   enemy, and that of Polycritus, son of Crius the Eginetan, which had just charged   a Sidonian trireme. The Sidonian vessel was the same that captured the Eginetan   guard-ship off Sciathus, which had Pythias, the son of Ischenous, on board -   that Pythias, I mean, who fell covered with wounds, and whom the Sidonians kept   on board their ship, from admiration of his gallantry. This man afterwards   returned in safety to Egina; for when the Sidonian vessel with its Persian crew   fell into the hands of the Greeks, he was still found on board. Polycritus no   sooner saw the Athenian trireme than, knowing at once whose vessel it was, as he   observed that it bore the ensign of the admiral, he shouted to Themistocles   jeeringly, and asked him, in a tone of reproach, if the Eginetans did not show   themselves rare friends to the Medes. At the same time, while he thus reproached  Themistocles, Polycritus bore straight down on the Sidonian. Such of the   barbarian vessels as escaped from the battle fled to Phalerum, and there   sheltered themselves under the protection of the land army. 
              [8.93] The Greeks who gained the greatest   glory of all in the sea-fight off Salamis were the Eginetans, and after them the   Athenians. The individuals of most distinction were Polycritus the Eginetan, and   two Athenians, Eumenes of Anagyrus, and Ameinias of Palline; the latter of whom   had pressed Artemisia so hard. And assuredly, if he had known that the vessel   carried Artemisia on board, he would never have given over the chase till he had   either succeeded in taking her, or else been taken himself. For the Athenian   captains had received special orders touching the queen; and moreover a reward   of ten thousand drachmas had been proclaimed for any one who should make her   prisoner; since there was great indignation felt that a woman should appear in   arms against Athens. However, as I said before, she escaped; and so did some   others whose ships survived the engagement; and these were all now assembled at   the port of Phalerum. 
              [8.94] The Athenians say that Adeimantus, the   Corinthian commander, at the moment when the two fleets joined battle, was   seized with fear, and being beyond measure alarmed, spread his sails, and hasted   to fly away; on which the other Corinthians, seeing their leader's ship in full   flight, sailed off likewise. They had reached in their flight that part of the   coast of Salamis where stands the temple of Minerva Sciras, when they met a   light bark, a very strange apparition: it was never discovered that any one had   sent it to them; and till it appeared they were altogether ignorant how the   battle was going. That there was something beyond nature in the matter they   judged from this - that when the men in the bark drew near to their ships they   addressed them, saying - "Adeimantus, while thou playest the traitor's part, by   withdrawing all these ships, and flying away from the fight, the Greeks whom   thou hast deserted are defeating their foes as completely as they ever wished in   their prayers." Adeimantus, however, would not believe what the men said;   whereupon they told him "he might take them with him as hostages, and put them   to death if he did not find the Greeks winning." Then Adeimantus put about, both   he and those who were with him; and they re-joined the fleet when the victory   was already gained. Such is the tale which the Athenians tell concerning them of   Corinth; these latter however do not allow its truth. On the contrary, they   declare that they were among those who distinguished themselves most in the   fight. And the rest of Greece bears witness in their favour. 
              [8.95] In the midst of the confusion  Aristides, the son of Lysimachus, the Athenian, of whom I lately spoke as a man   of the greatest excellence, performed the following service. He took a number of   the Athenian heavy-armed troops, who had previously been stationed along the   shore of Salamis, and, landing with them on the islet of Psyttaleia, slew all   the Persians by whom it was occupied. 
              [8.96] As soon as the sea-fight was ended,   the Greeks drew together to Salamis all the wrecks that were to be found in that   quarter, and prepared themselves for another engagement, supposing that the king   would renew the fight with the vessels which still remained to him. Many of the   wrecks had been carried away by a westerly wind to the coast of Attica, where   they were thrown upon the strip of shore called Colias. Thus not only were the   prophecies of Bacis and Musaeus concerning this battle fulfilled completely, but   likewise, by the place to which the wrecks were drifted, the prediction of  Lysistratus, an Athenian soothsayer, uttered many years before these events, and   quite forgotten at the time by all the Greeks, was fully accomplished. The words   were - 
              
                Then shall the sight of the oars fill Colian dames with amazement. 
              
              Now this must have happened as soon as the king was departed. 
              [8.97] Xerxes, when he saw the extent of his   loss, began to be afraid lest the Greeks might be counselled by the Ionians, or   without their advice might determine to sail straight to the Hellespont and   break down the bridges there; in which case he would be blocked up in Europe,   and run great risk of perishing. He therefore made up his mind to fly; but, as   he wished to hide his purpose alike from the Greeks and from his own people, he   set to work to carry a mound across the channel to Salamis, and at the same time   began fastening a number of Phoenician merchant ships together, to serve at once   for a bridge and a wall. He likewise made many warlike preparations, as if he   were about to engage the Greeks once more at sea. Now, when these things were   seen, all grew fully persuaded that the king was bent on remaining, and intended   to push the war in good earnest. Mardonius, however, was in no respect deceived;   for long acquaintance enabled him to read all the king's thoughts. Meanwhile,   Xerxes, though engaged in this way, sent off a messenger to carry intelligence   of his misfortune to Persia. 
              [8.98] Nothing mortal travels so fast as   these Persian messengers. The entire plan is a Persian invention; and this is   the method of it. Along the whole line of road there are men (they say)   stationed with horses, in number equal to the number of days which the journey   takes, allowing a man and horse to each day; and these men will not be hindered   from accomplishing at their best speed the distance which they have to go,   either by snow, or rain, or heat, or by the darkness of night. The first rider   delivers his despatch to the second and the second passes it to the third; and   so it is borne from hand to hand along the whole line, like the light in the   torch-race, which the Greeks celebrate to Vulcan. The Persians give the riding   post in this manner, the name of "Angarum." 
              [8.99] At Susa, on the arrival of the first   message, which said that Xerxes was master of Athens, such was the delight of   the Persians who had remained behind, that they forthwith strewed all the   streets with myrtle boughs, and burnt incense, and fell to feasting and   merriment. In like manner, when the second message reached them, so sore was   their dismay, that they all with one accord rent their garments, and cried   aloud, and wept and wailed without stint. They laid the blame of the disaster on  Mardonius; and their grief on the occasion was less on account of the damage   done to their ships, than owing to the alarm which they felt about the safety of   the king. Hence their trouble did not cease till Xerxes himself, by his arrival,   put an end to their fears. 
              [8.100] And now Mardonius, perceiving that   Xerxes took the defeat of his fleet greatly to heart, and suspecting that he had   made up his mind to leave Athens and fly away, began to think of the likelihood   of his being visited with punishment for having persuaded the king to undertake   the war. He therefore considered that it would be the best thing for him to   adventure further, and either become the conqueror of Greece - which was the   result he rather expected - or else die gloriously after aspiring to a noble   achievement. So with these thoughts in his mind, he said one day to the king:- 
              "Do not grieve, master, or take so greatly to heart thy late loss. Our hopes   hang not altogether on the fate of a few planks, but on our brave steeds and   horsemen. These fellows, whom thou imaginest to have quite conquered us, will   not venture - no, not one of them - to come ashore and contend with our land   army; nor will the Greeks who are upon the mainland fight our troops; such as   did so have received their punishment. If thou so pleasest, we may at once   attack the Peloponnese; if thou wouldst rather wait a while, that too is in our   power. Only be not disheartened. For it is not possible that the Greeks can   avoid being brought to account, alike for this and for their former injuries;   nor can they anyhow escape being thy slaves. Thou shouldst therefore do as I   have said. If, however, thy mind is made up, and thou art resolved to retreat   and lead away thy army, listen to the counsel which, in that case, I have to   offer. Make not the Persians, O king! a laughing-stock to the Greeks. If thy   affairs have succeeded ill, it has not been by their fault; thou canst not say   that thy Persians have ever shown themselves cowards. What matters it if   Phoenicians and Egyptians, Cyprians and Cilicians, have misbehaved? - their   misconduct touches not us. Since then thy Persians are without fault, be advised   by me. Depart home, if thou art so minded, and take with thee the bulk of thy   army; but first let me choose out 300,000 troops, and let it be my task to bring   Greece beneath thy sway." 
              [8.101] Xerxes, when he heard these words,   felt a sense of joy and delight, like a man who is relieved from care. Answering  Mardonius, therefore, "that he would consider his counsel, and let him know   which course he might prefer," Xerxes proceeded to consult with the chief men   among the Persians; and because Artemisia on the former occasion had shown   herself the only person who knew what was best to be done, he was pleased to   summon her to advise him now. As soon as she arrived, he put forth all the rest,   both councillors and bodyguards, and said to her:- 
              "Mardonius wishes me to stay and attack the Peloponnese. My Persians, he   says, and my other land forces, are not to blame for the disasters which have   befallen our arms; and of this he declares they would very gladly give me the   proof. He therefore exhorts me, either to stay and act as I have said, or to let   him choose Out 300,000 of my troops - wherewith he undertakes to reduce Greece   beneath my sway - while I myself retire with the rest of my forces, and withdraw   into my own country. Do thou, therefore, as thou didst counsel me so wisely to   decline the sea-fight, now also advise me in this matter, and say, which course   of the twain I ought to take for my own good." 
              [8.102] Thus did the king ask Artemisia's   counsel; and the following are the words wherewith she answered him:- 
              "'Tis a hard thing, O king! to give the best possible advice to one who asks   our counsel. Nevertheless, as thy affairs now stand, it seemeth to me that thou   wilt do right to return home. As for Mardonius, if he prefers to remain, and   undertakes to do as he has said, leave him behind by all means, with the troops   which he desires. If his design succeeds, and he subdues the Greeks, as he   promises, thine is the conquest, master; for thy slaves will have accomplished   it. If, on the other hand, affairs run counter to his wishes, we can suffer no   great loss, so long as thou art safe, and thy house is in no danger. The Greeks,   too, while thou livest, and thy house flourishes, must be prepared to fight full   many a battle for their freedom; whereas if Mardonius fall, it matters nothing -   they will have gained but a poor triumph - a victory over one of thy slaves!   Remember also, thou goest home having gained the purpose of thy expedition; for   thou hast burnt Athens!" 
              [8.103] The advice of Artemisia pleased   Xerxes well; for she had exactly uttered his own thoughts. I, for my part, do   not believe that he would have remained had all his counsellors, both men and   women, united to urge his stay, so great was the alarm that he felt. As it was,   he gave praise to Artemisia, and entrusted certain of his children to her care,   ordering her to convey them to Ephesus; for he had been accompanied on the   expedition by some of his natural sons. 
              [8.104] He likewise sent away at this time   one of the principal of his eunuchs, a man named Hermotimus, a Pedasian, who was   bidden to take charge of these sons. Now the Pedasians inhabit the region above   Halicarnassus; and it is related of them, that in their country the following   circumstance happens: when a mischance is about to befall any of their   neighbours within a certain time, the priestess of Minerva in their city grows a   long beard. This has already taken place on two occasions. 
              [8.105] The Hermotimus of whom I spoke above   was, as I said, a Pedasian; and he, of all men whom we know, took the most cruel   vengeance on the person who had done him an injury. He had been made a prisoner   of war, and when his captors sold him, he was bought by a certain Panionius, a   native of Chios, who made his living by a most nefarious traffic. Whenever he   could get any boys of unusual beauty, he made them eunuchs, and, carrying them   to Sardis or Ephesus, sold them for large sums of money. For the barbarians   value eunuchs more than others, since they regard them as more trustworthy. Many   were the slaves that Panionius, who made his living by the practice, had thus   treated; and among them was this Hermotimus of whom I have here made mention.   However, he was not without his share of good fortune; for after a while he was   sent from Sardis, together with other gifts, as a present to the king. Nor was   it long before he came to be esteemed by Xerxes more highly than all his   eunuchs. 
              [8.106] When the king was on his way to   Athens with the Persian army, and abode for a time at Sardis, Hermotimus   happened to make a journey upon business into Mysia; and there, in a district   which is called Atarneus, but belongs to Chios, he chanced to fall in with  Panionius. Recognising him at once, he entered into a long and friendly talk   with him, wherein he counted up the numerous blessings he enjoyed through his   means, and promised him all manner of favours in return, if he would bring his   household to Sardis and live there. Panionius was overjoyed, and, accepting the   offer made him, came presently, and brought with him his wife and children. Then  Hermotimus, when he had got Panionius and all his family into his power,   addressed him in these words:- 
              "Thou man, who gettest a living by viler deeds than any one else in the whole   world, what wrong to thee or thine had I or any of mine done, that thou shouldst   have made me the nothing that I now am? Ah! surely thou thoughtest that the gods   took no note of thy crimes. But they in their justice have delivered thee, the   doer of unrighteousness, into my hands; and now thou canst not complain of the   vengeance which I am resolved to take on thee." 
              After these reproaches, Hermotimus commanded the four sons of Panionius to be   brought, and forced the father to make them eunuchs with his own hand. Unable to   resist, he did as Hermotimus required; and then his sons were made to treat him   in the self-same way. So in this way there came to Panionius requital at the   hands of Hermotimus. 
              [8.107] Xerxes, after charging Artemisia to   convey his sons safe to Ephesus, sent for Mardonius, and bade him choose from   all his army such men as he wished, and see that he made his achievements answer   to his promises. During this day he did no more; but no sooner was night come,   than he issued his orders, and at once the captains of the ships left Phalerum,   and bore away for the Hellespont, each making all the speed he could, and   hasting to guard the bridges against the king's return. On their way, as they   sailed by Zoster, where certain narrow points of land project into the sea, they   took the cliffs for vessels, and fled far away in alarm. Discovering their   mistake, however, after a time, they joined company once more, and proceeded   upon their voyage. 
              [8.108] Next day the Greeks, seeing the land   force of the barbarians encamped in the same place, thought that their ships   must still be lying at Phalerum; and, expecting another attack from that   quarter, made preparations to defend themselves. Soon however news came that the   ships were all departed and gone away; whereupon it was instantly resolved to   make sail in pursuit. They went as far as Andros; but, seeing nothing of the   Persian fleet, they stopped at that place, and held a council of war. At this   council Themistocles advised that the Greeks should follow on through the   islands, still pressing the pursuit, and making all haste to the Hellespont,   there to break down the bridges. Eurybiades, however, delivered a contrary   opinion. "If," he said, "the Greeks should break down the bridges, it would be   the worst thing that could possibly happen for Greece. The Persian, supposing   that his retreat were cut off, and he compelled to remain in Europe, would be   sure never to give them any peace. Inaction on his part would ruin all his   affairs, and leave him no chance of ever getting back to Asia - nay, would even   cause his army to perish by famine: whereas, if he bestirred himself, and acted   vigorously, it was likely that the whole of Europe would in course of time   become subject to him; since, by degrees, the various towns and tribes would   either fall before his arms, or else agree to terms of submission; and in this   way, his troops would find food sufficient for them, since each year the Greek   harvest would be theirs. As it was, the Persian, because he had lost the   sea-fight, intended evidently to remain no longer in Europe. The Greeks ought to   let him depart; and when he was gone from among them, and had returned into his   own country, then would be the time for them to contend with him for the   possession of that." 
              The other captains of the Peloponnesians declared themselves of the same   mind. 
              [8.109] Whereupon Themistocles, finding that   the majority was against him, and that he could not persuade them to push on to   the Hellespont, changed round, and addressing himself to the Athenians, who of   all the allies were the most nettled at the enemy's escape, and who eagerly   desired, if the other Greeks would not stir, to sail on by themselves to the   Hellespont and break the bridges, spake as follows:- 
              "I have often myself witnessed occasions, and I have heard of many more from   others, where men who had been conquered by an enemy, having been driven quite   to desperation, have renewed the fight, and retrieved their former disasters. We   have now had the great good luck to save both ourselves and all Greece by the   repulse of this vast cloud of men; let us then be content and not press them too   hard, now that they have begun to fly. Be sure we have not done this by our own   might. It is the work of gods and heroes, who were jealous that one man should   be king at once of Europe and of Asia - more especially a man like this, unholy   and presumptuous - a man who esteems alike things sacred and things profane; who   has cast down and burnt the very images of the gods themselves; who even caused   the sea to be scourged with rods and commanded fetters to be thrown into it. At   present all is well with us - let us then abide in Greece, and look to ourselves   and to our families. The barbarian is clean gone - we have driven him off - let   each now repair his own house, and sow his land diligently. In the spring we   will take ship and sail to the Hellespont and to Ionia!" All this Themistocles   said in the hope of establishing a claim upon the king; for he wanted to have a   safe retreat in case any mischance should befall him at Athens - which indeed   came to pass afterwards. 
              [8.110] At present, however, he dissembled;   and the Athenians were persuaded by his words. For they were ready now to do   whatever he advised; since they had always esteemed him a wise man, and he had   lately proved himself most truly wise and well-judging. Accordingly, they came   in to his views; whereupon he lost no time in sending messengers, on board a   light bark, to the king, choosing for this purpose men whom he could trust to   keep his instructions secret, even although they should be put to every kind of   torture. Among them was the house-slave Sicinnus, the same whom he had made use   of previously. When the men reached Attica, all the others stayed with the boat;   but Sicinnus went up to the king, and spake to him as follows:- 
              "I am sent to thee by Themistocles, the son of Neocles, who is the leader of   the Athenians, and the wisest and bravest man of all the allies, to bear thee   this message: 'Themistocles the Athenian, anxious to render thee a service, has   restrained the Greeks, who were impatient to pursue thy ships, and to break up   the bridges at the Hellespont. Now, therefore, return home at thy leisure.'" 
              The messengers, when they had performed their errand, sailed back to the   fleet. 
              [8.111] And the Greeks, having resolved that   they would neither proceed further in pursuit of the barbarians, nor push   forward to the Hellespont and destroy the passage, laid siege to Andros,   intending to take the town by storm. For Themistocles had required the Andrians   to pay down a sum of money; and they had refused, being the first of all the   islanders who did so. To his declaration, "that the money must needs be paid, as   the Athenians had brought with him two mighty gods - Persuasion and Necessity,"   they made reply, that "Athens might well be a great and glorious city, since she   was blest with such excellent gods; but they were wretchedly poor, stinted for   land, and cursed with two unprofitable gods, who always dwelt with them and   would never quit their island - to wit, Poverty and Helplessness. These were the   gods of the Andrians, and therefore they would not pay the money. For the power   of Athens could not possibly be stronger than their inability." This reply,   coupled with the refusal to pay the sum required, caused their city to be   besieged by the Greeks. 
              [8.112] Meanwhile Themistocles, who never   ceased his pursuit of gain, sent threatening messages to the other islanders   with demands for different sums, employing the same messengers and the same   words as he had used towards the Andrians. "If," he said, "they did not send him   the amount required, he would bring the Greek fleet upon them, and besiege them   till he took their cities." By these means he collected large sums from the   Carystians and the Parians, who, when they heard that Andros was already   besieged, and that Themistocles was the best esteemed of all the captains, sent   the money through fear. Whether any of the other islanders did the like, I   cannot say for certain; but I think some did besides those I have mentioned.   However, the Carystians, though they complied, were not spared any the more; but   Themistocles was softened by the Parians' gift, and therefore they received no   visit from the army. In this way it was that Themistocles, during his stay at  Andros, obtained money from the islanders, unbeknown to the other captains. 
              [8.113] King Xerxes and his army waited but   a few days after the sea-fight, and then withdrew into Boeotia by the road which   they had followed on their advance. It was the wish of Mardonius to escort the   king a part of the way; and as the time of year was no longer suitable for   carrying on war, he thought it best to winter in Thessaly, and wait for the   spring before he attempted the Peloponnese. After the army was come into  Thessaly, Mardonius made choice of the troops that were to stay with him; and,   first of all, he took the whole body called the "Immortals," except only their   leader, Hydarnes, who refused to quit the person of the king. Next, he chose the   Persians who wore breastplates, and the thousand picked horse; likewise the   Medes, the Sacans, the Bactrians, and the Indians, foot and horse equally. These   nations he took entire: from the rest of the allies he culled a few men, taking   either such as were remarkable for their appearance, or else such as had   performed, to his knowledge, some valiant deed. The Persians furnished him with   the greatest number of troops, men who were adorned with chains and armlets.   Next to them were the Medes, who in number equalled the Persians, but in valour   fell short of them. The whole army, reckoning the horsemen with the rest,   amounted to 300,000 men. 
              [8.114] At the time when Mardonius was   making choice of his troops, and Xerxes still continued in Thessaly, the   Lacedaemonians received a message from the Delphic oracle, bidding them seek   satisfaction at the hands of Xerxes for the death of Leonidas, and take whatever   he chose to give them. So the Spartans sent a herald with all speed into  Thessaly, who arrived while the entire Persian army was still there. This man,   being brought before the king, spake as follows:- 
              "King of the Medes, the Lacedaemonians and the Heracleids of Sparta require   of thee the satisfaction due for bloodshed, because thou slewest their king, who   fell fighting for Greece." 
              Xerxes laughed, and for a long time spake not a word. At last, however, he   pointed to Mardonius, who was standing by him, and said:- "Mardonius here shall   give them the satisfaction they deserve to get." And the herald accepted the   answer, and forthwith went his way. 
              [8.115] Xerxes, after this, left Mardonius   in Thessaly, and marched away himself, at his best speed, toward the Hellespont.   In five-and-forty days he reached the place of passage, where he arrived with   scarce a fraction, so to speak, of his former army. All along their line of   march, in every country where they chanced to be, his soldiers seized and   devoured whatever corn they could find belonging to the inhabitants; while, if   no corn was to be found, they gathered the grass that grew in the fields, and   stripped the trees, whether cultivated or wild, alike of their bark and of their   leaves, and so fed themselves. They left nothing anywhere, so hard were they   pressed by hunger. Plague too and dysentery attacked the troops while still upon   their march, and greatly thinned their ranks. Many died; others fell sick and   were left behind in the different cities that lay upon the route, the   inhabitants being strictly charged by Xerxes to tend and feed them. Of these   some remained in Thessaly, others in Siris of Paeonia, others again in Macedon.   Here Xerxes, on his march into Greece, had left the sacred car and steeds of   Jove; which upon his return he was unable to recover; for the Paeonians had   disposed of them to the Thracians, and, when Xerxes demanded them back, they   said that the Thracian tribes who dwelt about the sources of the Strymon had   stolen the mares as they pastured. 
              [8.116] Here too a Thracian chieftain, king   of the Bisaltians and of Crestonia, did a deed which went beyond nature. He had   refused to become the willing slave of Xerxes, and had fled before him into the   heights of Rhodope, at the same time forbidding his sons to take part in the   expedition against Greece. But they, either because they cared little for his   orders, or because they wished greatly to see the war, joined the army of   Xerxes. At this time they had all returned home to him - the number of the men   was six - quite safe and sound. But their father took them, and punished their   offence by plucking out their eyes from the sockets. Such was the treatment   which these men received. 
              [8.117] The Persians, having journeyed   through Thrace and reached the passage, entered their ships hastily and crossed   the Hellespont to Abydos. The bridges were not found stretched across the   strait; since a storm had broken and dispersed them. At Abydos the troops   halted, and, obtaining more abundant provision than they had yet got upon their   march, they fed without stint; from which cause, added to the change in their   water, great numbers of those who had hitherto escaped perished. The remainder,   together with Xerxes himself, came safe to Sardis. 
              [8.118] There is likewise another account   given of the return of the king. It is said that when Xerxes on his way from   Athens arrived at Eion upon the Strymon, he gave up travelling by land, and,   intrusting Hydarnes with the conduct of his forces to the Hellespont, embarked   himself on board a Phoenician ship, and so crossed into Asia. On his voyage the   ship was assailed by a strong wind blowing from the mouth of the Strymon, which   caused the sea to run high. As the storm increased, and the ship laboured   heavily, because of the number of the Persians who had come in the king's train,   and who now crowded the deck, Xerxes was seized with fear, and called out to the   helmsman in a loud voice, asking him, if there were any means whereby they might   escape the danger. "No means, master," the helmsman answered, "unless we could   be quit of these too numerous passengers." Xerxes, they say, on hearing this,   addressed the Persians as follows: "Men of Persia," he said, "now is the time   for you to show what love ye bear your king. My safety, as it seems, depends   wholly upon you." So spake the king; and the Persians instantly made obeisance,   and then leapt over into the sea. Thus was the ship lightened, and Xerxes got   safe to Asia. As soon as he had reached the shore, he sent for the helmsman, and   gave him a golden crown because he had preserved the life of the kings - but   because he had caused the death of a number of Persians, he ordered his head to   be struck from his shoulders. 
              [8.119] Such is the other account which is   given of the return of Xerxes; but to me it seems quite unworthy of belief,   alike in other respects, and in what relates to the Persians. For had the   helmsman made any such speech to Xerxes, I suppose there is not one man in ten   thousand who will doubt that this is the course which the king would have   followed:- he would have made the men upon the ship's deck, who were not only   Persians, but Persians of the very highest rank, quit their place and go down   below; and would have cast into the sea an equal number of the rowers, who were   Phoenicians. But the truth is, that the king, as I have already said, returned   into Asia by the same road as the rest of the army. 
              [8.120] I will add a strong proof of this.   It is certain that Xerxes on his way back from Greece passed through Abdera,   where he made a contract of friendship with the inhabitants, and presented them   with a golden scymitar, and a tiara broidered with gold. The Abderites declare -   but I put no faith in this part of their story - that from the time of the   king's leaving Athens, he never once loosed his girdle till he came to their   city, since it was not till then that he felt himself in safety. Now Abdera is   nearer to the Hellespont than Eion and the Strymon, where Xerxes, according to   the other tale, took ship. 
              [8.121] Meanwhile the Greeks, finding that   they could not capture Andros, sailed away to Carystus, and wasted the lands of   the Carystians, after which they returned to Salamis. Arrived here, they   proceeded, before entering on any other matter, to make choice of the   first-fruits which should be set apart as offerings to the gods. These consisted   of divers gifts; among them were three Phoenician triremes, one of which was   dedicated at the Isthmus, where it continued to my day; another at Sunium; and   the third, at Salamis itself, which was devoted to Ajax. This done, they made a   division of the booty, and sent away the first-fruits to Delphi. Thereof was   made the statue, holding in its hand the beak of a ship, which is twelve cubits   high, and which stands in the same place with the golden one of Alexander the   Macedonian. 
              [8.122] After the first-fruits had been sent   to Delphi, the Greeks made inquiry of the god, in the name of their whole body,   if he had received his full share of the spoils and was satisfied therewith. The   god made answer that all the other Greeks had paid him his full due, except only   the Eginetans; on them he had still a claim for the prize of valour which they   had gained at Salamis. So the Eginetans, when they heard this, dedicated the   three golden stars which stand on the top of a bronze mast in the corner near   the bowl offered by Croesus. 
              [8.123] When the spoils had been divided,   the Greeks sailed to the Isthmus, where a prize of valour was to be awarded to   the man who, of all the Greeks, had shown the most merit during the war. When   the chiefs were all come, they met at the altar of Neptune, and took the ballots   wherewith they were to give their votes for the first and for the second in   merit. Then each man gave himself the first vote, since each considered that he   was himself the worthiest; but the second votes were given chiefly to  Themistocies. In this way, while the others received but one vote apiece,   Themistocles had for the second prize a large majority of the suffrages. 
              [8.124]  Envy, however, hindered the chiefs from coming to a decision, and they  all sailed away to their homes without making any award. Nevertheless  Themistocles was regarded everywhere as by far the wisest man of all  the Greeks; and the whole country rang with his fame. As the chiefs who  fought at Salamis, notwithstanding that he was really entitled to the  prize, had withheld his honour from him, he went without delay to  Lacedaemon, in the hope that he would be honoured there. And the  Lacedaemonians received him handsomely, and paid him great respect. The  prize of valour indeed, which was a crown of olive, they gave to  Eurybiades; but Themistocles was given a crown of olive too, as the  prize of wisdom and dexterity. He was likewise presented with the most  beautiful chariot that could be found in Sparta; and after receiving  abundant praises, was, upon his departure, escorted as far as the  borders of Tegea, by the three hundred picked Spartans, who are called  the Knights. Never was it known, either before or since, that the  Spartans escorted a man out of their city. 
              [8.125] On the return of Themistocles to   Athens, Timodemus of Aphidnae, who was one of his enemies, but otherwise a man   of no repute, became so maddened with envy that he openly railed against him,   and, reproaching him with his journey to Sparta, said - "'Twas not his own merit   that had won him honour from the men of Lacedaemon, but the fame of Athens, his   country." Then Themistocles, seeing that Timodemus repeated this phrase   unceasingly, replied - 
              "Thus stands the case, friend. I had never got this honour from the Spartans,   had I been a Belbinite - nor thou, hadst thou been an Athenian!" 
              [8.126] Artabazus, the son of Pharnaces, a   man whom the Persians had always held in much esteem, but who, after the affair   of Plataea, rose still higher in their opinion, escorted King Xerxes as far as   the strait, with sixty thousand of the chosen troops of Mardonius. When the king   was safe in Asia, Artabazus set out upon his return; and on arriving near  Palline, and finding that Mardonius had gone into winter-quarters in Thessaly   and Macedonia, and was in no hurry for him to join the camp, he thought it his   bounden duty, as the Potidaeans had just revolted, to occupy himself in reducing   them to slavery. For as soon as the king had passed beyond their territory, and   the Persian fleet had made its hasty flight from Salamis, the Potidaeans   revolted from the barbarians openly; as likewise did all the other inhabitants   of that peninsula. 
              [8.127] Artabazus, therefore, laid siege to  Potidaea; and having a suspicion that the Olynthians were likely to revolt   shortly, he besieged their city also. Now Olynthus was at that time held by the  Bottiaeans, who had been driven from the parts about the Thermaic Gulf by the   Macedonians. Artabazus took the city, and, having so done, led out all the   inhabitants to a marsh in the neighbourhood, and there slew them. After this he   delivered the place into the hands of the people called Chalcideans, having   first appointed Critobulus of Torone to be governor. Such was the way in which   the Chalcideans got Olynthus. 
              [8.128] When this town had fallen, Artabazus   pressed the siege of Potidaea all the more unremittingly; and was pushing his   operations with vigour, when Timoxenus, captain of the Scionaeans, entered into   a plot to betray the town to him. How the matter was managed at first, I cannot   pretend to say, for no account has come down to us: but at the last this is what   happened. Whenever Timoxenus wished to send a letter to Artabazus, or Artabazus   to send one to Timoxenus, the letter was written on a strip of paper, and rolled   round the notched end of an arrow-shaft; the feathers were then put on over the   paper, and the arrow thus prepared was shot to some place agreed upon. But after   a while the plot of Timoxenus to betray Potidaea was discovered in this way.  Artabazus, on one occasion, shot off his arrow, intending to send it to the   accustomed place, but, missing his mark, hit one of the Potidaeans in the   shoulder. A crowd gathered about the wounded man, as commonly happens in war;   and when the arrow was pulled out, they noticed the paper, and straightway   carried it to the captains who were present from the various cities of the   peninsula. The captains read the letter, and, finding who the traitor was,   nevertheless resolved, out of regard for the city of Scione, that as they did   not wish the Scionaeans to be thenceforth branded with the name of traitors,   they would not bring against him any charge of treachery. Such accordingly was   the mode in which this plot was discovered. 
              [8.129] After Artabazus had continued the   siege by the space of three months, it happened that there was an unusual ebb of   the tide, which lasted a long while. So when the barbarians saw that what had   been sea was now no more than a swamp, they determined to push across it into  Pallene, And now the troops had already made good two-fifths of their passage,   and three-fifths still remained before they could reach Palline, when the tide   came in with a very high flood, higher than had ever been seen before, as the   inhabitants of those parts declare, though high floods are by no means uncommon.   All who were not able to swim perished immediately; the rest were slain by the  Potidaeans, who bore down upon them in their sailing vessels. The Potidaeans say   that what caused this swell and flood, and so brought about the disaster of the   Persians which ensued therefrom, was the profanation, by the very men now   destroyed in the sea, of the temple and image of Neptune, situated in their   suburb. And in this they seem to me to say well. Artabazus afterwards led away   the remainder of his army, and joined Mardonius in Thessaly. Thus fared it with   the Persians who escorted the king to the strait. 
              [8.130] As for that part of the fleet of   Xerxes which had survived the battle, when it had made good its escape from   Salamis to the coast of Asia, and conveyed the king with his army across the   strait from the Chersonese to Abydos, it passed the winter at Cyme. On the first   approach of spring, there was an early muster of the ships at Samos, where some   of them indeed had remained throughout the winter. Most of the men-at-arms who   served on board were Persians, or else Medes; and the command of the fleet had   been taken by Mardontes, the son of Bagaeus, and Artayntes, the son of  Artachaeus; while there was likewise a third commander, Ithamitres, the nephew   of Artayntes, whom his uncle had advanced to the post. Further west than Samos,   however, they did not venture to proceed; for they remembered what a defeat they   had suffered, and there was no one to compel them to approach any nearer to   Greece. They therefore remained at Samos, and kept watch over Ionia, to hinder   it from breaking into revolt. The whole number of their ships, including those   furnished by the Ionians, was three hundred. It did not enter into their   thoughts that the Greeks would proceed against Ionia; on the contrary, they   supposed that the defence of their own country would content them, more   especially as they had not pursued the Persian fleet when it fled from Salamis,   but had so readily given up the chase. They despaired, however, altogether of   gaining any success by sea themselves, though by land they thought that   Mardonius was quite sure of victory. So they remained at Samos, and took counsel   together, if by any means they might harass the enemy, at the same time that   they waited eagerly to hear how matters would proceed with Mardonius. 
              [8.131] The approach of spring, and the   knowledge that Mardonius was in Thessaly, roused the Greeks from inaction. Their   land force indeed was not yet come together; but the fleet, consisting of one   hundred and ten ships, proceeded to Egina, under the command of Leotychides.   This Leotychides, who was both general and admiral, was the son of Menares, the   son of Agesilaus, the son of Hippocratides, the son of Leotychides, the son of  Anaxilaus, the son of Archidamus, the son of Anaxandrides, the son of Theopompus, the son of  Nicander, the son of Charillus, the son of Eunomus, the   son of Polydectes, the son of Prytanis, the son of Euryphon, the son of Procles,   the son of Aristodemus, the son of Aristomachus, the son of Cleodaeus, the son   of Hyllus, the son of Hercules. He belonged to the younger branch of the royal   house. All his ancestors, except the two next in the above list to himself, had   been kings of Sparta. The Athenian vessels were commanded by Xanthippus, the son   of Ariphron. 
              [8.132] When the whole fleet was collected   together at Egina, ambassadors from Ionia arrived at the Greek station; they had   but just come from paying a visit to Sparta, where they had been intreating the   Lacedaemonians to undertake the deliverance of their native land. One of these   ambassadors was Herodotus, the son of Basileides. Originally they were seven in   number; and the whole seven had conspired to slay Strattis the tyrant of Chios;   one, however, of those engaged in the plot betrayed the enterprise; and the   conspiracy being in this way discovered, Herodotus, and the remaining five,   quitted Chios, and went straight to Sparta, whence they had now proceeded to  Egina, their object being to beseech the Greeks that they would pass over to   Ionia. It was not, however, without difficulty that they were induced to advance   even so far as Delos. All beyond that seemed to the Greeks full of danger; the   places were quite unknown to them, and to their fancy swarmed with Persian   troops; as for Samos, it appeared to them as far off as the Pillars of Hercules.   Thus it came to pass, that at the very same time the barbarians were hindered by   their fears from venturing any further west than Samos, and the prayers of the   Chians failed to induce the Greeks to advance any further east than Delos.   Terror guarded the mid region. 
              [8.133] The Greek fleet was now on its way   to Delos; but Mardonius still abode in his winter-quarters in Thessaly. When he   was about to leave them, he despatched a man named Mys, a European by birth, to   go and consult the different oracles, giving him orders to put questions   everywhere to all the oracles whereof he found it possible to make trial. What   it was that he wanted to know, when he gave Mys these orders, I am not able to   say, for no account has reached me of the matter; but for my own part, I suppose   that he sent to inquire concerning the business which he had in hand, and not   for any other purpose. 
              [8.134] Mys, it is certain, went to Lebadeia, and, by the payment of a sum of money, induced one of the inhabitants   to go down to Trophonius; he likewise visited Abae of the Phocians, and there   consulted the god; while at Thebes, to which place he went first of all, he not   only got access to Apollo Ismenius (of whom inquiry is made by means of victims,   according to the custom practised also at Olympia), but likewise prevailed on a   man, who was not a Theban but a foreigner, to pass the night in the temple of  Amphiaraus. No Theban can lawfully consult this oracle, for the following   reason: Amphiaraus by an oracle gave the Thebans their choice, to have him for   their prophet or for their helper in war; he bade them elect between the two,   and forego either one or the other; so they chose rather to have him for their   helper. On this account it is unlawful for a Theban to sleep in his temple. 
              [8.135] One thing which the Thebans declare   to have happened at this time is to me very surprising. Mys, the European, they   say, after he had gone about to all the oracles, came at last to the sacred   precinct of Apollo Ptous. The place itself bears the name of Ptoum; it is in the   country of the Thebans, and is situated on the mountain side overlooking Lake  Copais, only a very little way from the town called Acraephia. Here Mys arrived,   and entered the temple, followed by three Theban citizens - picked men whom the   state had appointed to take down whatever answer the god might give. No sooner   was he entered than the prophet delivered him an oracle, but in a foreign   tongue; so that his Theban attendants were astonished, hearing a strange   language when they expected Greek, and did not know what to do. Mys, however,   the European, snatched from their hands the tablet which they had brought with   them, and wrote down what the prophet uttered. The reply, he told them, was in   the Carian dialect. After this, Mys departed and returned to Thessaly. 
              [8.136]  Mardonius, when he had read the answers given by the oracles, sent next  an envoy to Athens. This was Alexander, the son of Amyntas, a  Macedonian, of whom he made choice for two reasons. Alexander was  connected with the Persians by family ties; for Gygaea, who was the  daughter of Amyntas, and sister to Alexander himself, was married to  Bubares, a Persian, and by him had a son, to wit, Amyntas of Asia; who  was named after his mother's father, and enjoyed the revenues of  Alabanda, a large city of  Phrygia, which had been assigned him by the king. Alexander was  likewise (and of this too Mardonius was well aware), both by services  which he had rendered, and by formal compact of friendship, connected  with Athens. Mardonius therefore thought that, by sending him, he would  be most likely to gain over the Athenians to the Persian side. He had  heard that they were a numerous and a warlike people, and he knew that  the disasters which had befallen the Persians by sea were mainly their  work; he therefore expected that, if he could form alliance with them,  he would easily get the mastery of the sea (as indeed he would have  done, beyond a doubt), while by land he believed that he was already  greatly superior; and so he thought by this alliance to make sure of  overcoming the Greeks. Perhaps, too, the oracles leant this way, and  counselled him to make Athens his friend: so that it may have been in  obedience to them that he sent the embassy. 
              [8.137] This Alexander was descended in the   seventh degree from Perdiccas, who obtained the sovereignty over the Macedonians   in the way which I will now relate. Three brothers, descendants of Temenus, fled   from Argos to the Illyrians; their names were Gauanes, Aeropus, and Perdiccas.   From Illyria they went across to Upper Macedonia, where they came to a certain   town called Lebaea. There they hired themselves out to serve the king in   different employs; one tended the horses; another looked after the cows; while  Perdiccas, who was the youngest, took charge of the smaller cattle. In those   early times poverty was not confined to the people: kings themselves were poor,   and so here it was the king's wife who cooked the victuals. Now, whenever she   baked the bread, she always observed that the loaf of the labouring boy   Perdiccas swelled to double its natural size. So the queen, finding this never   fail, spoke of it to her husband. Directly that it came to his ears, the thought   struck him that it was a miracle, and boded something of no small moment. He   therefore sent for the three labourers, and told them to begone out of his   dominions. They answered, "they had a right to their wages; if he would pay them   what was due, they were quite willing to go." Now it happened that the sun was   shining down the chimney into the room where they were; and the king, hearing   them talk of wages, lost his wits, and said, "There are the wages which you   deserve; take that - I give it you!" and pointed, as he spoke, to the sunshine.   The two elder brothers, Gauanes and Aeropus, stood aghast at the reply, and did   nothing; but the boy, who had a knife in his hand, made a mark with it round the   sunshine on the floor of the room, and said, "O king! we accept your payment."   Then he received the light of the sun three times into his bosom, and so went   away; and his brothers went with him. 
              [8.138] When they were gone, one of those   who sat by told the king what the youngest of the three had done, and hinted   that he must have had some meaning in accepting the wages given. Then the king,   when he heard what had happened, was angry, and sent horsemen after the youths   to slay them. Now there is a river in Macedonia to which the descendants of   these Argives offer sacrifice as their saviour. This stream swelled so much, as   soon as the sons of Temenus were safe across, that the horsemen found it   impossible to follow. So the brothers escaped into another part of Macedonia,   and took up their abode near the place called "the Gardens of Midas, son of  Gordias." In these gardens there are roses which grow of themselves, so sweet   that no others can come near them, and with blossoms that have as many as sixty   petals apiece. It was here, according to the Macedonians, that Silenus was made   a prisoner. Above the gardens stands a mountain called Bermius, which is so cold   that none can reach the top. Here the brothers made their abode; and from this   place by, degrees they conquered all Macedonia. 
              [8.139] From the Perdiccas of whom we have   here spoken, Alexander was descended in the following way:- Alexander was the   son of Amyntas, Amyntas of Alcetas; the father of Alcetas was Aeropus; of  Aeropus, Philip; of Philip, Argaeus; of Argaeus, Perdiccas, the first sovereign.   Such was the descent of Alexander. 
              [8.140] When Alexander reached Athens as the   ambassador of Mardonius, he spoke as follows:- 
              "O men of Athens, these be the words of Mardonius. 'The king has sent a   message to me, saying, "All the trespasses which the Athenians have committed   against me I freely forgive. Now then, Mardonius, thus shalt thou act towards   them. Restore to them their territory; and let them choose for themselves   whatever land they like besides, and let them dwell therein as a free people.   Build up likewise all their temples which I burned, if on these terms they will   consent to enter into a league with me." Such are the orders which I have   received, and which I must needs obey, unless there be a hindrance on your part.   And now I say unto you, - why are ye so mad as to levy war against the king,   whom ye cannot possibly overcome, or even resist for ever? Ye have seen the   multitude and the bravery of the host of Xerxes; ye know also how large a power   remains with me in your land; suppose then ye should get the better of us, and   defeat this army - a thing whereof ye will not, if ye be wise, entertain the   least hope - what follows even then but a contest with a still greater force? Do   not, because you would fain match yourselves with the king, consent to lose your   country and live in constant danger of your lives. Rather agree to make peace;   which ye can now do without any tarnish to your honour, since the king invites   you to it. Continue free, and make an alliance with us, without fraud or   deceit.' 
              "These are the words, O Athenians! which Mardonius had bid me speak to you.   For my own part, I will say nothing of the good will I bear your nation, since   ye have not now for the first time to become acquainted with it. But I will add   my intreaties also, and beseech you to give ear to Mardonius; for I see clearly   that it is impossible for you to go on for ever contending against Xerxes. If   that had appeared to me possible, I would not now have come hither the bearer of   such a message. But the king's power surpasses that of man, and his arm reaches   far. If then ye do not hasten to conclude a peace, when such fair terms are   offered you, I tremble to think of what you will have to endure - you, who of   all the allies lie most directly in the path of danger, whose land will always   be the chief battleground of the contending powers, and who will therefore   constantly have to suffer alone. Hearken then, I pray you, to Mardonius! Surely   it is no small matter that the Great King chooses you out from all the rest of   the Greeks, to offer you forgiveness of the wrongs you have done him, and to   propose himself as your friend and ally!" 
              [8.141] Such were the words of Alexander.   Now the Lacedaemonians, when tidings reached them that Alexander was gone to   Athens to bring about a league between the Athenians and the barbarians, and   when at the same time they called to mind the prophecies which declared that the   Dorian race should one day be driven from the Peloponnese by the Medes and the   Athenians, were exceedingly afraid lest the Athenians might consent to the   alliance with Persia. They therefore lost no time in sending envoys to Athens;   and it so happened that these envoys were given their audience at the same time   with Alexander: for the Athenians had waited and made delays, because they felt   sure that the Lacedaemonians would hear that an ambassador was come to them from   the Persians, and as soon as they heard it would with all speed send an embassy.   They contrived matters therefore of set purpose, so that the Lacedaemonians   might hear them deliver their sentiments on the occasion. 
              [8.142] As soon as Alexander had finished   speaking, the ambassadors from Sparta took the word and said, - 
              "We are sent here by the Lacedaemonians to entreat of you that ye will not do   a new thing in Greece, nor agree to the terms which are offered you by the   barbarian. Such conduct on the part of any of the Greeks were alike unjust and   dishonourable; but in you 'twould be worse than in others, for divers reasons.   'Twas by you that this war was kindled at the first among us - our wishes were   in no way considered; the contest began by your seeking to extend your empire -   now the fate of Greece is involved in it. Besides it was surely an intolerable   thing that the Athenians, who have always hitherto been known as a nation to   which many men owed their freedom, should now become the means of bringing all   other Greeks into slavery. We feel, however, for the heavy calamities which   press on you - the loss of your harvest these two years, and the ruin in which   your homes have lain for so long a time. We offer you, therefore, on the part of   the Lacedaemonians and the allies, sustenance for your women and for the   unwarlike portion of your households, so long as the war endures. Be ye not   seduced by Alexander the Macedonian, who softens down the rough words of   Mardonius. He does as is natural for him to do - a tyrant himself, he helps   forward a tyrant's cause. But ye, Athenians, should do differently, at least if   ye be truly wise; for ye should know that with barbarians there is neither faith   nor truth." 
              [8.143] Thus spake the envoys. After which   the Athenians returned this answer to Alexander:- 
              "We know, as well as thou dost, that the power of the Mede is many times   greater than our own: we did not need to have that cast in our teeth.   Nevertheless we cling so to freedom that we shall offer what resistance we may.   Seek not to persuade us into making terms with the barbarian - say what thou   wilt, thou wilt never gain our assent. Return rather at once, and tell Mardonius   that our answer to him is this:- 'So long as the sun keeps his present course,   we will never join alliance with Xerxes. Nay, we shall oppose him unceasingly,   trusting in the aid of those gods and heroes whom he has lightly esteemed, whose   houses and whose images he has burnt with fire.' come not thou again to us with   words like these; nor, thinking to do us a service, persuade us to unholy   actions. Thou art the guest and friend of our nation - we would not that thou   shouldst receive hurt at our hands." 
              [8.144] Such was the answer which the   Athenians gave to Alexander. To the Spartan envoys they said:- 
              "'Twas natural no doubt that the Lacedaemonians should be afraid we might   make terms with the barbarian; but nevertheless It was a base fear in men who   knew so well of what temper and spirit we are. Not all the gold that the whole   earth contains - not the fairest and most fertile of all lands - would bribe us   to take part with the Medes and help them to enslave our countrymen. Even could   we anyhow have brought ourselves to such a thing, there are many very powerful   motives which would now make it impossible. The first and chief of these is the   burning and destruction of our temples and the images of our gods, which forces   us to make no terms with their destroyer, but rather to pursue him with our   resentment to the uttermost. Again, there is our common brotherhood with the   Greeks: our common language, the altars and the sacrifices of which we all   partake, the common character which we bear - did the Athenians betray all   these, of a truth it would not be well. Know then now, if ye have not known it   before, that while one Athenian remains alive, we will never join alliance with   Xerxes. We thank you, however, for your forethought on our behalf, and for your   wish to give our families sustenance, now that ruin has fallen on us - the   kindness is complete on your part; but for ourselves, we will endure as we may,   and not be burdensome to you. Such then is our resolve. Be it your care with all   speed to lead out your troops; for if we surmise aright, the barbarian will not   wait long ere he invade our territory, but will set out so soon as he learns our   answer to be, that we will do none of those things which he requires of us. Now   then is the time for us, before he enters Attica, to go forth ourselves into   Boeotia, and give him battle." 
              When the Athenians had thus spoken, the ambassadors from Sparta departed, and   returned back to their own country.