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              <title>Xenophon:  Anabasis 1 (English) (NER)</title>
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          <body><div><p>﻿1.</p><p><persName xml:id="recogito-5d101181-4485-4541-8cf4-fb6591b12898">Darius</persName><note target="recogito-5d101181-4485-4541-8cf4-fb6591b12898" resp="aghague">Darius II of Persia. Ruled between 423 and 404(?) BC</note> and <persName xml:id="recogito-d7bc353d-5d8a-4327-87b7-799a5ed8376d">Parysatis</persName><note target="recogito-d7bc353d-5d8a-4327-87b7-799a5ed8376d" resp="aghague">Wife of, and advisor to, Darius II of Persia. Lived in the 5th century BC.</note> had two sons born to them, of whom the elder was <persName xml:id="recogito-a5c0b376-3e73-4be6-8ba7-8a1d98a68bb3">Artaxerxes</persName><note target="recogito-a5c0b376-3e73-4be6-8ba7-8a1d98a68bb3" resp="aghague">Ruled as Artaxerxes II of Persia between 404 and 358. Also known as Artaxerxes II Mnemon.</note> and the younger <persName xml:id="recogito-e6f30ce2-305d-4c4f-8bef-9b090e1b5b4c">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-e6f30ce2-305d-4c4f-8bef-9b090e1b5b4c" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-e6f30ce2-305d-4c4f-8bef-9b090e1b5b4c" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>.1 Now when <persName xml:id="recogito-7b7a81ca-4cb8-4fc3-9ba2-8f96bd8be3fd">Darius</persName><note target="recogito-7b7a81ca-4cb8-4fc3-9ba2-8f96bd8be3fd" resp="aghague">Darius II of Persia. Ruled between 423 and 405(?) BC</note><note target="recogito-7b7a81ca-4cb8-4fc3-9ba2-8f96bd8be3fd" resp="aghague">Darius II of Persia. Ruled between 423 and 404(?) BC</note> lay sick and suspected that the end of his life was near, he wished to have both his sons with him. [2] The elder, as it chanced, was with him already; but <persName xml:id="recogito-468402b9-bb34-478c-9ca7-a3107ecaa0c1">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-468402b9-bb34-478c-9ca7-a3107ecaa0c1" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-468402b9-bb34-478c-9ca7-a3107ecaa0c1" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> he summoned from the province over which he had made him satrap, and he had also appointed him commander of all the forces that muster in the plain of <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/609425" xml:id="recogito-d3e9057b-611c-46a9-b3b8-b9ce86f43eff" cert="high">Castolus</placeName>.2 <persName xml:id="recogito-43ed67f4-f373-4020-a2ee-dfcfb383a975">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-43ed67f4-f373-4020-a2ee-dfcfb383a975" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-43ed67f4-f373-4020-a2ee-dfcfb383a975" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> accordingly went up3 to his father, taking with him <persName xml:id="recogito-cde6601c-f6c4-4f0b-a078-367d9dbf9ae8">Tissaphernes</persName><note target="recogito-cde6601c-f6c4-4f0b-a078-367d9dbf9ae8" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note> as a friend and accompanied by three hundred <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/570102" xml:id="recogito-a2d6fa14-45b3-4244-932f-a6f8d33393a4" cert="high">Greek</placeName><note target="recogito-a2d6fa14-45b3-4244-932f-a6f8d33393a4" resp="aghague">Arcadian / Parrhasian (?) mercenary hoplites commanded by General Xenias</note> hoplites,4 under the command of <persName xml:id="recogito-7a6ae3e4-a47c-4e20-b1b9-394628134fb7">Xenias of Parrhasia</persName><note target="recogito-7a6ae3e4-a47c-4e20-b1b9-394628134fb7" resp="aghague">Xenias of Arcadia, also known as Xenias of Parrhasia. 5th century BC. Greek general commanding mercenary troups.</note>. [3]</p><p>When <persName xml:id="recogito-5f314697-3fae-4b4d-807d-b16a824b25c6">Darius</persName><note target="recogito-5f314697-3fae-4b4d-807d-b16a824b25c6" resp="aghague">Darius II of Persia. Ruled between 423 and 405(?) BC</note><note target="recogito-5f314697-3fae-4b4d-807d-b16a824b25c6" resp="aghague">Darius II of Persia. Ruled between 423 and 404(?) BC</note> had died and <persName xml:id="recogito-185be292-6efe-4399-8ab6-e93c845b52c8">Artaxerxes</persName><note target="recogito-185be292-6efe-4399-8ab6-e93c845b52c8" resp="aghague">Ruled as Artaxerxes II of Persia between 404 and 358. Also known as Artaxerxes II Mnemon.</note> had become established as king, <persName xml:id="recogito-fe475e7b-b771-4e1a-9ca0-59fd5e2ffdb9">Tissaphernes</persName><note target="recogito-fe475e7b-b771-4e1a-9ca0-59fd5e2ffdb9" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note> falsely accused <persName xml:id="recogito-6fae37ac-e6ad-451c-bb2b-64429ac4a95e">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-6fae37ac-e6ad-451c-bb2b-64429ac4a95e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> to his brother of plotting against him. And Artaxerxes, believing the accusation, arrested <persName xml:id="recogito-25b000c8-9f78-43cd-bea3-5d857376d407">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-25b000c8-9f78-43cd-bea3-5d857376d407" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-25b000c8-9f78-43cd-bea3-5d857376d407" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, with the intention of putting him to death; his mother, however, made intercession for him, and sent him back again to his province. [4] Now when <persName xml:id="recogito-c6ecffdd-38ae-430b-bb96-1e24af097384">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-c6ecffdd-38ae-430b-bb96-1e24af097384" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-c6ecffdd-38ae-430b-bb96-1e24af097384" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> had thus returned, after his danger and disgrace, he set about planning that he might never again be in the power of his brother, but, if possible, might be king in his stead. He had, in the first place, the support of <persName xml:id="recogito-42433219-c8b4-42ea-975e-efdccc97138f">Parysatis</persName><note target="recogito-42433219-c8b4-42ea-975e-efdccc97138f" resp="aghague">Wife of, and advisor to, Darius II of Persia. Lived in the 5th century BC.</note>, his mother, for she loved him better than the son who was king, <persName xml:id="recogito-19fea8cb-f92f-489d-8bb3-f38d067eb01e">Artaxerxes</persName><note target="recogito-19fea8cb-f92f-489d-8bb3-f38d067eb01e" resp="aghague">Ruled as Artaxerxes II of Persia between 404 and 358. Also known as Artaxerxes II Mnemon.</note>. [5] Again, when any of the King's court came to visit him, he treated them all in such a way that when he sent them back they were more devoted to him than to the King. He also took care that the barbarians5 of his own province should be capable soldiers and should feel kindly toward him. [6] Lastly, as regards his <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/570102" xml:id="recogito-638baffe-651b-4cc7-9880-54d876318a97" cert="high">Greek</placeName> force, he proceeded to collect it with the utmost secrecy, so that he might take the King as completely unprepared as possible.</p><p>It was in the following way, then, that he gathered this force: In the first place, he sent orders to the commanders of all the garrisons he had in the cities to enlist as many <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/570577" xml:id="recogito-b59c2e70-3908-4917-a7b1-4d7209a19c99" ana="#pleiades570577" cert="high">Peloponnesian</placeName> soldiers of the best sort as they severally could, on the plea that <persName xml:id="recogito-b898b1db-ee4b-4c24-8ddc-5917b6d0c513">Tissaphernes</persName><note target="recogito-b898b1db-ee4b-4c24-8ddc-5917b6d0c513" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note> had designs upon their cities. For, in fact, the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/735295266" xml:id="recogito-b9c814a1-de50-4bb2-8341-f40421af4e53" cert="high">Ionian</placeName> cities had originally belonged to <placeName xml:id="recogito-40dd0bf8-cfc2-4ecd-a17f-407d1e1a4058" cert="low">Tissaphernes</placeName><note target="recogito-40dd0bf8-cfc2-4ecd-a17f-407d1e1a4058" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note>, by gift of the King,6 but at that time all of them except <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/599799" xml:id="recogito-f60d53ee-b63a-498a-ab98-e8e595fa2be7" cert="high">Miletus</placeName> had revolted and gone over to <persName xml:id="recogito-65d7644f-cec5-43a0-9823-6a50cfb9f484">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-65d7644f-cec5-43a0-9823-6a50cfb9f484" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-65d7644f-cec5-43a0-9823-6a50cfb9f484" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>. [7] The people of <persName xml:id="recogito-50add4fe-0dbc-41f5-9184-ac5d27dc4391">Miletus</persName> also were planning to do the very same thing, namely, to go over to <persName xml:id="recogito-785886f7-33e7-4b16-9e61-ed7777643731">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-785886f7-33e7-4b16-9e61-ed7777643731" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-785886f7-33e7-4b16-9e61-ed7777643731" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, but <persName xml:id="recogito-81e7b8c2-8eb3-46ff-b53b-338772b71bf4">Tissaphernes</persName><note target="recogito-81e7b8c2-8eb3-46ff-b53b-338772b71bf4" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note>, finding out about it in time, put some of them to death and banished others. <persName xml:id="recogito-9e5e6535-f9b5-486c-add8-ac34982aee55">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-9e5e6535-f9b5-486c-add8-ac34982aee55" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-9e5e6535-f9b5-486c-add8-ac34982aee55" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> thereupon took the exiles under his protection, collected an army, and laid siege to <persName xml:id="recogito-e5b231fd-5e30-4717-81cc-47e25704b918">Miletus</persName> both by land and by sea, and endeavoured to restore the exiles to their city; and this, again, made him another pretext for gathering an army. [8] Meanwhile he sent to the King and urged, on the ground that he was his brother, that these <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/735295266" xml:id="recogito-f0c87ceb-b180-4e03-b15e-f058dc03ddef" cert="high">Ionian</placeName> cities should be given to him instead of remaining under the rule of <placeName xml:id="recogito-0ed2129e-4009-4601-a041-1a0c9d2d1294" cert="low">Tissaphernes</placeName><note target="recogito-0ed2129e-4009-4601-a041-1a0c9d2d1294" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note>, and his mother co-operated with him in this. The result was that the King failed to perceive the plot against himself, but believed that <persName xml:id="recogito-c04d80fa-f9ce-4a82-af05-f0434ee73736">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-c04d80fa-f9ce-4a82-af05-f0434ee73736" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-c04d80fa-f9ce-4a82-af05-f0434ee73736" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was spending money on his troops because he was at war with <persName xml:id="recogito-99419c18-ecd3-4bc3-ab08-45dd18ab4f9c">Tissaphernes</persName><note target="recogito-99419c18-ecd3-4bc3-ab08-45dd18ab4f9c" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note>. Consequently he was not at all displeased at their being at war, the less so because <persName xml:id="recogito-53fcbefe-0584-41d9-8d67-6969295483fc">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-53fcbefe-0584-41d9-8d67-6969295483fc" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-53fcbefe-0584-41d9-8d67-6969295483fc" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> regularly remitted to the King the tribute which came in from the cities he chanced to have that belonged to <placeName xml:id="recogito-96605f6e-8689-4481-bf2d-0375fbfecfc2" cert="low">Tissaphernes</placeName><note target="recogito-96605f6e-8689-4481-bf2d-0375fbfecfc2" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note>. [9]</p><p>Still another army was being collected for him in the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/501411" xml:id="recogito-c69bf28f-e7ac-4f4b-8daf-b949cb274e08" cert="high">Chersonese</placeName> which is opposite <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/749780" xml:id="recogito-9b82c55b-fd4d-46b5-acc1-f92a3cd0df2f" cert="high">Abydus</placeName>, in the following manner: Clearchus7 was a Lacedaemonian exile; <persName xml:id="recogito-bbfcc867-5f2f-4177-8052-44e9febe9c68">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-bbfcc867-5f2f-4177-8052-44e9febe9c68" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-bbfcc867-5f2f-4177-8052-44e9febe9c68" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, making his acquaintance, came to admire him, and gave him ten thousand darics.8 And Clearchus, taking the gold, collected an army by means of this money, and using the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/501411" xml:id="recogito-c2a94547-9ae8-4661-9a1f-6ef36a0f2bf8" cert="high">Chersonese</placeName> as a base of operations, proceeded to make war upon the Thracians who dwell beyond the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/501325" xml:id="recogito-41a73c2a-2cc6-4428-9cca-da6759aff48a" cert="low">Hellespont</placeName>, thereby aiding the Greeks.9 Consequently, the Hellespontine cities of their own free will sent <persName xml:id="recogito-b2144cee-cde6-406e-8431-ac9a04252586">Clearchus</persName> contributions of money for the support of his troops. So it was that this army also was being secretly maintained for Cyrus. [10]</p><p>Again, <persName xml:id="recogito-4d9381a0-9701-4045-918d-7a3feeb5f929">Aristippus</persName> the Thessalian chanced to be a friend of <persName xml:id="recogito-d9fa15b8-f50e-47eb-9a5f-32bf13bbd665">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-d9fa15b8-f50e-47eb-9a5f-32bf13bbd665" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-d9fa15b8-f50e-47eb-9a5f-32bf13bbd665" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, and since he was hard pressed by his political opponents at home, he came to <persName xml:id="recogito-f2ae9b7f-d7de-41ab-a217-61da0dff06b9">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-f2ae9b7f-d7de-41ab-a217-61da0dff06b9" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-f2ae9b7f-d7de-41ab-a217-61da0dff06b9" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> and asked him for three months' pay for two thousand mercenaries, urging that in this way he should get the better of his opponents. And <persName xml:id="recogito-04f12ded-3972-4b96-98b4-7270f9e2beec">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-04f12ded-3972-4b96-98b4-7270f9e2beec" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-04f12ded-3972-4b96-98b4-7270f9e2beec" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> gave him six months' pay for four thousand, and requested him not to come to terms with his opponents until he had consulted with him. Thus the army in <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/6697809" xml:id="recogito-aa15b79d-979c-4fe5-9807-d90da529c6da" cert="high">Thessaly</placeName>, again, was being secretly maintained for him. [11]</p><p>Furthermore, <persName xml:id="recogito-cdf0e7ce-28b2-4fd3-b3bf-90e1f5fd2e7a">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-cdf0e7ce-28b2-4fd3-b3bf-90e1f5fd2e7a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-cdf0e7ce-28b2-4fd3-b3bf-90e1f5fd2e7a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> directed <persName xml:id="recogito-0e8ecae5-61de-467b-b959-b3fbf8045133">Proxenus the Boeotian</persName>, who was a friend of his, to come to him with as many men as he could get, saying that he wished to undertake a campaign against the Pisidians, because, as he said, they were causing trouble to his province. He also directed <persName xml:id="recogito-623646eb-7285-4f7d-9783-9408e14157e3">Sophaenetus</persName> the Stymphalian and <persName xml:id="recogito-808bcea9-af17-41c9-8f56-60af06b8b018">Socrates</persName> the Achaean, who were likewise friends of his, to come with as many men as they could get, saying that he intended to make war upon <persName xml:id="recogito-1a7afd35-ca14-49d4-b13d-d7646521fc26">Tissaphernes</persName><note target="recogito-1a7afd35-ca14-49d4-b13d-d7646521fc26" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note> with the aid of the Milesian exiles; and they proceeded to carry out his directions. 2.</p><p>When he thought the time had come to begin his upward10 march, the pretext he offered was that he wished to drive the Pisidians out of his land entirely, and it was avowedly against them that he set about collecting both his barbarian and his <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-adc037db-f88d-4b41-9476-5db23784a7bd" cert="low">Greek</placeName> troops. At that time he also sent word to <persName xml:id="recogito-fd9ff57f-781f-4fe4-946a-5aba29f752a8">Clearchus</persName> to come to him with the entire army which he had, and to Aristippus to effect a reconciliation with his adversaries at home and send him the army which he had; and he sent word to <persName xml:id="recogito-97c6b2bf-30a1-4fc3-b08b-6dea5b71658f">Xenias the Arcadian</persName><note target="recogito-97c6b2bf-30a1-4fc3-b08b-6dea5b71658f" resp="aghague">Xenias of Arcadia, also known as Xenias of Parrhasia. 5th century BC. Greek general commanding mercenary troups.</note>, who commanded for him the mercenary force in the cities,11 to come with his troops, leaving behind only so many as were necessary to garrison the citadels. [2] He likewise summoned the troops which were besieging Miletus, and urged the Milesian exiles to take the field with him, promising them that, if he should successfully accomplish the object for which he was taking the field, he would not stop until he had restored them to their homes. And they gladly obeyed—for they trusted him—and presented themselves, under arms, at <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/4445170" xml:id="recogito-11f1e898-3360-45b8-82b0-4ce3963d07e5" cert="low">Sardis</placeName>. [3]</p><p>Xenias, then, arrived at <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/4445170" xml:id="recogito-7370a13b-4f42-43cd-be6d-8e4cdc175ea9" cert="low">Sardis</placeName> with the troops from the cities, who were hoplites to the number of four thousand; <persName xml:id="recogito-2300751f-8adf-4e2f-b7c8-8ac1704e65cb">Proxenus</persName> was there with hoplites to the number of fifteen hundred, and five hundred light-armed troops; <persName xml:id="recogito-3c4aad70-7fa1-4af4-92aa-e1f5b4a31cc3">Sophaenetus</persName> the Stymphalian with a thousand hoplites; <persName xml:id="recogito-bfa41e01-99cf-4f80-8d05-25ad5a2e286c">Socrates</persName> the Achaean with about five hundred hoplites; and Pasion the Megarian arrived with three hundred hoplites and three hundred peltasts.12 The last-named, and <persName xml:id="recogito-fc8c9ea9-7407-4eb6-a722-c114a0258042">Socrates</persName> also, belonged to the force that had been engaged in besieging <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/599799" xml:id="recogito-89ea02ac-6ffd-4a71-83b4-633c44e6c333" cert="high">Miletus</placeName>. All these came to <persName xml:id="recogito-a70a64b4-7ba9-465f-b6a0-6dbeeddcc673">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a70a64b4-7ba9-465f-b6a0-6dbeeddcc673" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a70a64b4-7ba9-465f-b6a0-6dbeeddcc673" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> at <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/4445170" xml:id="recogito-ab29265f-af1f-450a-a2da-c165f310cf73" cert="low">Sardis</placeName>. [4]</p><p>Meanwhile <persName xml:id="recogito-ae516ff8-cbe4-4796-a425-278f7e0764ab">Tissaphernes</persName><note target="recogito-ae516ff8-cbe4-4796-a425-278f7e0764ab" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note> had taken note of these proceedings and come to the conclusion that <persName xml:id="recogito-4518f48a-38c0-470d-8a70-98d4b762690a">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-4518f48a-38c0-470d-8a70-98d4b762690a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-4518f48a-38c0-470d-8a70-98d4b762690a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' preparations were too extensive to be against the Pisidians; he accordingly made his way to the King as quickly as he could, with about five hundred horsemen. [5] And when the King heard from <placeName xml:id="recogito-52be3a8b-0697-4d03-a4c8-4f96c71af73b" cert="low">Tissaphernes</placeName><note target="recogito-52be3a8b-0697-4d03-a4c8-4f96c71af73b" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note> about <persName xml:id="recogito-db17dfdd-fe80-4d40-aa24-660fd4ec77d8">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-db17dfdd-fe80-4d40-aa24-660fd4ec77d8" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-db17dfdd-fe80-4d40-aa24-660fd4ec77d8" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' array, he set about making counter-preparations.</p><p><persName xml:id="recogito-ca3fa0ca-ca01-44f0-a43e-4d067c3b0096">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-ca3fa0ca-ca01-44f0-a43e-4d067c3b0096" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-ca3fa0ca-ca01-44f0-a43e-4d067c3b0096" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was now setting forth from <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/4445170" xml:id="recogito-b9849d97-736e-49f7-a859-d898e324da68" cert="low">Sardis</placeName> with the troops I have mentioned; and he marched through <persName xml:id="recogito-5c237a92-064e-4a3d-a597-149ab9da7d92">Lydia</persName> three stages,13 a distance of twenty-two parasangs,14 to the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/599777" xml:id="recogito-0fd27326-b479-4b43-9089-1608db4212b7" cert="high">Maeander</placeName> river. The width of this river was two plethra,15 and there was a bridge over it made of seven boats. [6] After crossing the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/599777" xml:id="recogito-04b3f821-d2d1-417c-b49c-7a49c9d2964b" cert="high">Maeander</placeName> he marched through <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/981543" xml:id="recogito-598edade-4eaa-440f-9e74-bec60960e264" cert="high">Phrygia</placeName> one stage, a distance of eight parasangs, to <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/638811" xml:id="recogito-2a43636f-f99e-4492-87c9-2b275cff05a9" cert="high">Colossae</placeName>, an inhabited16 city, prosperous and large. There he remained seven days; and Menon17 the Thessalian arrived, with a thousand hoplites and five hundred peltasts, consisting of Dolopians, Aenianians, and Olynthians. [7] Thence he marched three stages, twenty parasangs, to <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/316634" xml:id="recogito-e31d6aab-ab62-4e72-8b23-eb1e3dd72e8d" cert="high">Celaenae</placeName>, an inhabited city of <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/981543" xml:id="recogito-634a961f-99a3-4573-a7ad-c4fb0d165fac" cert="high">Phrygia</placeName>, large and prosperous. There <persName xml:id="recogito-5924c2bd-4dee-4dab-aa1e-9d841dc9f34a">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-5924c2bd-4dee-4dab-aa1e-9d841dc9f34a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-5924c2bd-4dee-4dab-aa1e-9d841dc9f34a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> had a palace and a large park full of wild animals, which he used to hunt on horseback whenever he wished to give himself and his horses exercise. Through the middle of this park flows the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/599777" xml:id="recogito-9e3a2185-f407-4380-b5a0-842dc7d07094" cert="high">Maeander</placeName> river; its sources are beneath the palace, and it flows through the city of <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/316634" xml:id="recogito-1db2ffae-f9fa-435a-8256-1592b4e3b117" cert="high">Celaenae</placeName> also. [8] There is likewise a palace of the Great King18 in <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/316634" xml:id="recogito-170b6848-4a4d-4e46-9382-c823c65f879f" cert="high">Celaenae</placeName>, strongly fortified and situated at the foot of the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/25113" xml:id="recogito-2abd1912-c8ae-494a-98f0-cec4fbb75c6e" cert="low">Acropolis</placeName> over the sources of the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/658529" xml:id="recogito-2388b0e6-e63b-4963-9c43-68c1b86901f9" cert="high">Marsyas</placeName> river; the <persName xml:id="recogito-9029fea7-6b3d-416c-8937-1e493df8721d">Marsyas</persName> also flows through the city, and empties into the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/599777" xml:id="recogito-2e6cf6d0-e5ea-470d-be17-83e055d575e1" cert="high">Maeander</placeName>, and its width is twenty-five feet. It was here, according to the story, that Apollo flayed Marsyas,19 after having defeated him in a contest of musical skill; he hung up his skin in the cave from which the sources issue, and it is for this reason that the river is called <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/658529" xml:id="recogito-e00d83ba-81dd-4925-8728-5d9528e1b40b" cert="high">Marsyas</placeName>. [9] It was here also, report has it, that Xerxes, when he was on his retreat from <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/390903" xml:id="recogito-b27f1084-d562-42a7-aec8-4d3fd443aca4" cert="high">Greece</placeName> after losing the famous battle,20 built the palace just mentioned and likewise the citadel of Celaenae. Here <persName xml:id="recogito-73502edc-c313-4a5c-a34e-80e9e37da227">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-73502edc-c313-4a5c-a34e-80e9e37da227" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-73502edc-c313-4a5c-a34e-80e9e37da227" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> remained thirty days; and <persName xml:id="recogito-f73f318e-d633-4e2f-b356-a3816c1cd7cf">Clearchus</persName>, the Lacedaemonian exile, arrived, with a thousand hoplites, eight hundred Thracian peltasts, and two hundred Cretan bowmen. At the same time came also <persName xml:id="recogito-540a8502-8868-4e6f-9e5f-e825a89652de">Sosis</persName> the Syracusan with three hundred hoplites and Agias the Arcadian with a thousand hoplites. And here <persName xml:id="recogito-ca3e56d8-65ad-45ec-a134-aff2bc26b26e">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-ca3e56d8-65ad-45ec-a134-aff2bc26b26e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-ca3e56d8-65ad-45ec-a134-aff2bc26b26e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> held a review and made an enumeration of the Greeks in the park, and they amounted all told to eleven thousand hoplites and about two thousand peltasts.21 [10]</p><p>Thence he marched two stages, ten parasangs, to <placeName xml:id="recogito-b65a446e-15f7-4f6b-97f2-2b99fd03c5eb" cert="unknown">Peltae</placeName>, an inhabited city. There he remained three days, during which time <persName xml:id="recogito-15b11ec4-a954-4f0a-9e1b-a753e69abce6">Xenias</persName><note target="recogito-15b11ec4-a954-4f0a-9e1b-a753e69abce6" resp="aghague">Xenias of Arcadia, also known as Xenias of Parrhasia. 5th century BC. Greek general commanding mercenary troups.</note> the Arcadian celebrated the Lycaean22 festival with sacrifice and held games; the prizes were golden strigils, and <persName xml:id="recogito-49e02a18-6bb5-47f2-b13c-f38e84cb489b">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-49e02a18-6bb5-47f2-b13c-f38e84cb489b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-49e02a18-6bb5-47f2-b13c-f38e84cb489b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> himself was one of those who watched the games. Thence he marched two stages, twelve parasangs, to the inhabited city of <placeName xml:id="recogito-2b321bd7-057c-4d29-b63e-b574c44ea20a" cert="unknown">Ceramon-agora</placeName>,23 the last Phrygian city as one goes toward <persName xml:id="recogito-3c53a298-c493-45c5-a98d-c28d317156f1">Mysia</persName>. [11] Thence he marched three stages, thirty parasangs, to <placeName xml:id="recogito-bff31c04-8ad1-4c70-988e-9b31712b824a" cert="unknown">Caystru-pedion</placeName>,24 an inhabited city. There he remained five days. At this time he was owing the soldiers more than three months' pay, and they went again and again to his headquarters and demanded what was due them. He all the while expressed hopes, and was manifestly troubled; for it was not <persName xml:id="recogito-38b73cb7-fc3f-4e50-95f9-4305b110c7b4">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-38b73cb7-fc3f-4e50-95f9-4305b110c7b4" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-38b73cb7-fc3f-4e50-95f9-4305b110c7b4" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' way to withhold payment when he had money. [12] At this juncture arrived <persName xml:id="recogito-dfa39848-cc6b-4d1c-ad63-3424731cc774">Epyaxa</persName>, the wife of <placeName xml:id="recogito-4212aa2b-3621-41af-8558-d1b4fa5c9b7c" cert="low">Syennesis</placeName>, the king25 of the Cilicians, coming to visit <persName xml:id="recogito-c3b030e8-af17-48e2-a334-e672502e6457">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-c3b030e8-af17-48e2-a334-e672502e6457" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-c3b030e8-af17-48e2-a334-e672502e6457" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, and the story was that she gave him a large sum of money; at any rate, <persName xml:id="recogito-94b3b3f4-2abb-4564-8043-406d9c281cc3">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-94b3b3f4-2abb-4564-8043-406d9c281cc3" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-94b3b3f4-2abb-4564-8043-406d9c281cc3" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> paid the troops at that time four months' wages. The Cilician queen was attended by a body-guard of Cilicians and Aspendians; and people said that <persName xml:id="recogito-963afd0d-f521-4a90-a9c1-96fbf6927f67">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-963afd0d-f521-4a90-a9c1-96fbf6927f67" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-963afd0d-f521-4a90-a9c1-96fbf6927f67" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> had intimate relations with the queen. [13]</p><p>Thence he marched two stages, ten parasangs, to the inhabited city of <placeName xml:id="recogito-56634801-ebf9-483d-abd7-26288fba246d" cert="low">Thymbrium</placeName>. There, alongside the road, was the so-called spring of <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/609570" xml:id="recogito-c3fb9211-02a5-46fa-9f02-00b5d4cac0d5" cert="low">Midas</placeName>, the king of the Phrygians, at which Midas, according to the story, caught the satyr by mixing wine with the water of the spring.26 [14] Thence he marched two stages, ten parasangs, to <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/311553" xml:id="recogito-9ba186fb-b7ba-45ea-a543-960618fe7dce" cert="low">Tyriaeum</placeName>, an inhabited city. There he remained three days. And the Cilician queen, as the report ran, asked <persName xml:id="recogito-650d1904-31fa-4150-a597-74178552f8a4">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-650d1904-31fa-4150-a597-74178552f8a4" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-650d1904-31fa-4150-a597-74178552f8a4" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> to exhibit his army to her; such an exhibition was what he desired to make, and accordingly he held a review of the Greeks and the barbarians on the plain. [15] He ordered the Greeks to form their lines and take their positions just as they were accustomed to do for battle, each general marshalling his own men. So they formed the line four deep, <persName xml:id="recogito-257d0965-76d8-4804-bf75-c7200956043d">Menon</persName> and his troops occupying the right wing, <persName xml:id="recogito-f50558ba-f3a4-4471-bed8-f01970dde868">Clearchus</persName> and his troops the left, and the other generals the centre. [16] <persName xml:id="recogito-b57f25da-3262-48c9-9445-425b64b283a6">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-b57f25da-3262-48c9-9445-425b64b283a6" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-b57f25da-3262-48c9-9445-425b64b283a6" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> inspected the barbarians first, and they marched past with their cavalry formed in troops and their infantry in companies; then he inspected the Greeks, driving past them in a chariot, the Cilician queen in a carriage. And the Greeks all had helmets of bronze, crimson tunics, and greaves, and carried their shields uncovered. [17] When he had driven past them all, he halted his chariot in front of the centre of the phalanx, and sending his interpreter <persName xml:id="recogito-59b25a69-f04f-4190-8399-76d161dfcf34">Pigres</persName> to the generals of the Greeks, gave orders that the troops should advance arms and the phalanx move forward in a body. The generals transmitted these orders to the soldiers, and when the trumpet sounded, they advanced arms and charged. And then, as they went on faster and faster, at length with a shout the troops broke into a run of their own accord, in the direction of the camp. [18] As for the barbarians, they were terribly frightened; the Cilician queen took to flight in her carriage, and the people in the market27 left their wares behind and took to their heels; while the Greeks with a roar of laughter came up to their camp. Now the Cilician queen was filled with admiration at beholding the brilliant appearance and the order of the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-a61cfac7-7436-4768-b707-06ab061bce27" cert="low">Greek</placeName> army; and <persName xml:id="recogito-1cdc6d0a-08f8-4046-b7e1-8e8c7a989f99">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-1cdc6d0a-08f8-4046-b7e1-8e8c7a989f99" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-1cdc6d0a-08f8-4046-b7e1-8e8c7a989f99" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was delighted to see the terror with which the Greeks inspired the barbarians. [19]</p><p>Thence he marched three stages, twenty parasangs, to Iconium, the last city of <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/981543" xml:id="recogito-925f1c58-0fe8-40c0-9fb9-cdd371debe1d" cert="high">Phrygia</placeName>. There he remained three days. Thence he marched through <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/982262" xml:id="recogito-d1770302-f092-4350-ab32-81a19a60a37b" cert="low">Lycaonia</placeName> five stages, thirty parasangs. This country he gave over to the Greeks to plunder, on the ground that it was hostile territory.28 [20] From there <persName xml:id="recogito-e7369272-a6b2-4ff6-96cd-5d0d051611e7">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-e7369272-a6b2-4ff6-96cd-5d0d051611e7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-e7369272-a6b2-4ff6-96cd-5d0d051611e7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> sent the Cilician queen back to <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/628957" xml:id="recogito-b77ac6ea-76c8-41ae-b644-2b49204056ee" cert="low">Cilicia</placeName> by the shortest route, and he sent some of <persName xml:id="recogito-3a6b80c7-255e-4b44-965d-4d9b184771dd">Menon</persName>'s troops to escort her, <persName xml:id="recogito-6bca13fd-6c60-4321-aaaf-9384a4847cb9">Menon</persName> himself commanding them. With the rest of the army <persName xml:id="recogito-7ccc4b2d-36aa-4ebe-932c-5e26cc8145d0">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-7ccc4b2d-36aa-4ebe-932c-5e26cc8145d0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-7ccc4b2d-36aa-4ebe-932c-5e26cc8145d0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> marched through <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/991402" xml:id="recogito-eb6a4da2-c21f-4b60-96b0-5fb457982a6b" cert="low">Cappadocia</placeName> four stages, twenty-five parasangs, to <persName xml:id="recogito-97b800e4-4425-4008-b77e-237728005b87">Dana</persName>, an inhabited city, large and prosperous. There they remained three days; and during that time <persName xml:id="recogito-1984d074-9bea-4a20-8a43-0a1e259a6e84">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-1984d074-9bea-4a20-8a43-0a1e259a6e84" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-1984d074-9bea-4a20-8a43-0a1e259a6e84" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> put to death a Persian named <persName xml:id="recogito-56d1aeac-0421-4f99-8fe9-83fc7a6d5d30">Megaphernes</persName>, who was a wearer of the royal purple,29 and another dignitary among his subordinates, on the charge that they were plotting against him. [21]</p><p>From there they made ready to try to enter Cilicia. Now the entrance was by a wagon-road, exceedingly steep and impracticable for an army to pass if there was anybody to oppose it; and in fact, as report ran, <persName xml:id="recogito-d583631a-ab41-438a-bd60-4209fda416cd">Syennesis</persName> was upon the heights, guarding the entrance; therefore <persName xml:id="recogito-a2125568-85c9-496b-a355-fb3f05399da0">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a2125568-85c9-496b-a355-fb3f05399da0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a2125568-85c9-496b-a355-fb3f05399da0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> remained for a day in the plain. On the following day, however, a messenger came with word that Syennesis had abandoned the heights, because he had learned that <persName xml:id="recogito-c9bc9b8f-839b-4bd4-89c2-21a1defcecf2">Menon</persName>'s army was already in <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/628957" xml:id="recogito-85234802-d4c4-462a-85c5-280c8a09a154" cert="low">Cilicia</placeName>, on his own side of the mountains, and because, further, he was getting reports that triremes belonging to the Lacedaemonians30 and to <persName xml:id="recogito-1dfd9462-d56d-451b-8254-8be2b8927055">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-1dfd9462-d56d-451b-8254-8be2b8927055" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-1dfd9462-d56d-451b-8254-8be2b8927055" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> himself were sailing around from <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/543732" xml:id="recogito-ff9c5525-84ca-44cf-b612-bfabc9a10917" cert="low">Ionia</placeName> to <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/628957" xml:id="recogito-17b869e4-547d-42a2-9a5f-27c57336b984" cert="low">Cilicia</placeName> under the command of Tamos. [22] At any rate31 <persName xml:id="recogito-fa5f1746-8882-4207-aa03-2e7f271f7fbf">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-fa5f1746-8882-4207-aa03-2e7f271f7fbf" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-fa5f1746-8882-4207-aa03-2e7f271f7fbf" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> climbed the mountains without meeting any opposition, and saw the camp where the Cilicians had been keeping guard. Thence he descended to a large and beautiful plain, well-watered and full of trees of all sorts and vines; it produces an abundance of sesame, millet, panic, wheat, and barley, and it is surrounded on every side, from sea to sea, by a lofty and formidable range of mountains. [23] After descending he marched through this plain four stages, twenty-five parasangs, to <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/299817" xml:id="recogito-3a7b8134-d937-4b22-ac45-0ed2851fe58c" cert="low">Tarsus</placeName>,32 a large and prosperous city of <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/628957" xml:id="recogito-d72f009d-961f-44f3-a023-a679ef5373a0" cert="low">Cilicia</placeName>, where the palace of <placeName xml:id="recogito-0730151f-de2b-479e-8e4b-4cec46404282" cert="low">Syennesis</placeName>, the king of the Cilicians, was situated; and through the middle of the city flows a river named the Cydnus, two plethra in width. [24] The inhabitants of this city had abandoned it and fled, with <persName xml:id="recogito-d8023343-78b3-4b0f-9e07-0799b1c37603">Syennesis</persName>, to a stronghold upon the mountains—all of them, at least, except the tavern-keepers; and there remained also those who dwelt on the sea-coast, in <persName xml:id="recogito-654bc125-16c2-4257-b788-4cc4e3105de7">Soli</persName> and Issus.33 [25]</p><p>Now <persName xml:id="recogito-79777439-7eca-4ef8-802c-f401eceec4e2">Epyaxa</persName>, the wife of <placeName xml:id="recogito-3eefb67f-b8cd-4ec5-92c3-bc6e841306eb" cert="low">Syennesis</placeName>, had reached <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/299817" xml:id="recogito-b930e817-fbea-4baa-a27e-fc7a92240c1a" cert="low">Tarsus</placeName> five days ahead of <persName xml:id="recogito-d516181b-0425-4226-aec3-7aca0e3c75ce">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-d516181b-0425-4226-aec3-7aca0e3c75ce" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-d516181b-0425-4226-aec3-7aca0e3c75ce" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, but in the course of her passage over the mountains to the plain two companies of <persName xml:id="recogito-55b3132f-1a26-4514-b21e-894c669c13be">Menon</persName>'s army34 had been lost. Some said that they had been cut to pieces by the Cilicians while engaged in a bit of plundering; another story was that they had been left behind, and, unable to find the rest of the army or the roads, had thus wandered about and perished; at any rate, they numbered a hundred hoplites. [26] And when the rest of <persName xml:id="recogito-6397fa7e-93c7-4a18-950e-3ee6d4bffefa">Menon</persName>'s troops reached <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/299817" xml:id="recogito-691e31a8-3783-4302-a8a8-74a3f66a9b07" cert="low">Tarsus</placeName>, in their anger over the loss of their comrades they plundered thoroughly, not only the city, but also the palace that was in it. As for <persName xml:id="recogito-6c100ffc-8aa0-45e8-9fbe-6e76f4abbd59">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-6c100ffc-8aa0-45e8-9fbe-6e76f4abbd59" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-6c100ffc-8aa0-45e8-9fbe-6e76f4abbd59" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, after he had marched into the city he more than once summoned Syennesis to his presence; but <persName xml:id="recogito-25ddc7ee-b897-4145-a6fb-b986531c59d4">Syennesis</persName> said that he had never yet put himself in the hands of anyone who was more powerful than he was, and he would not now put himself in the hands of <persName xml:id="recogito-dac68096-a2d4-4c00-934c-a65795e11881">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-dac68096-a2d4-4c00-934c-a65795e11881" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-dac68096-a2d4-4c00-934c-a65795e11881" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> until his wife had won him over and he had received pledges. [27] When the two men finally met one another, <persName xml:id="recogito-5d9a805e-7b19-458a-ae9d-074d15fde405">Syennesis</persName> gave <persName xml:id="recogito-27f236c1-1c38-4385-b8c6-7a7822641400">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-27f236c1-1c38-4385-b8c6-7a7822641400" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-27f236c1-1c38-4385-b8c6-7a7822641400" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> a large sum of money for his army, while <persName xml:id="recogito-8d3c27f3-42ac-4f39-8ad2-184c74f840ec">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-8d3c27f3-42ac-4f39-8ad2-184c74f840ec" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-8d3c27f3-42ac-4f39-8ad2-184c74f840ec" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> gave him gifts which are regarded at court35 as tokens of honour—a horse with a gold-mounted bridle, a gold necklace and bracelets, a gold dagger and a Persian robe—promising him, further, that his land should not be plundered any more and that they might take back the slaves that had been seized in case they should chance upon them anywhere. 3.</p><p><persName xml:id="recogito-209b6dba-7c0c-4a2f-a0dc-7d8239bbf697">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-209b6dba-7c0c-4a2f-a0dc-7d8239bbf697" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-209b6dba-7c0c-4a2f-a0dc-7d8239bbf697" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> and his army remained here at <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/299817" xml:id="recogito-06f46ce1-0ec6-4f5a-8599-5074c82796b8" cert="low">Tarsus</placeName> twenty days, for the soldiers refused to go any farther; for they suspected by this time that they were going against the King, and they said they had not been hired for that. <persName xml:id="recogito-b0de60c9-2c8c-45d6-8757-93aef24a4305">Clearchus</persName> was the first to try to force his men to go on, but they pelted him and his pack-animals with stones as often as they began to go forward. [2] At that time <persName xml:id="recogito-2091f398-9d66-4317-97bf-3090fff6066b">Clearchus</persName> narrowly escaped being stoned to death; but afterwards, when he realized that he could not accomplish anything by force, he called a meeting of his own troops. And first he stood and wept for a long time, while his men watched him in wonder and were silent; then he spoke as follows: [3]</p><p>“Fellow-soldiers, do not wonder that I am distressed at the present situation. For <persName xml:id="recogito-19caeff0-d058-495a-b301-c77e7890bebc">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-19caeff0-d058-495a-b301-c77e7890bebc" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-19caeff0-d058-495a-b301-c77e7890bebc" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> became my friend and not only honoured me, an exile from my fatherland, in various ways, but gave me ten thousand darics. And I, receiving this money, did not lay it up for my own personal use or squander it in pleasure, but I proceeded to expend it on you. [4] First I went to war with the Thracians, and for the sake of <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/390903" xml:id="recogito-e0022753-6f46-47fc-99af-3636d2132e85" cert="high">Greece</placeName> I inflicted punishment upon them with your aid, driving them out of the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/501411" xml:id="recogito-c42eec17-5be7-48de-bef6-5ec01022657a" cert="high">Chersonese</placeName> when they wanted to deprive the Greeks who dwelt there of their land. Then when <persName xml:id="recogito-6a4b64ae-c9c9-4c0b-85d7-c9f5a9efecbd">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-6a4b64ae-c9c9-4c0b-85d7-c9f5a9efecbd" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-6a4b64ae-c9c9-4c0b-85d7-c9f5a9efecbd" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' summons came, I took you with me and set out, in order that, if he had need of me, I might give him aid in return for the benefits I had received from him. [5] But you now do not wish to continue the march with me; so it seems that I must either desert you and continue to enjoy <persName xml:id="recogito-7030387b-6e8f-4230-8003-f9da2b9876f6">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-7030387b-6e8f-4230-8003-f9da2b9876f6" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-7030387b-6e8f-4230-8003-f9da2b9876f6" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' friendship, or prove false to him and remain with you. Whether I shall be doing what is right, I know not, but at any rate I shall choose you and with you shall suffer whatever I must. And never shall any man say that I, after leading Greeks into the land of the barbarians, betrayed the Greeks and chose the friendship of the barbarians; [6] nay, since you do not care to obey me, I shall follow with you and suffer whatever I must. For I consider that you are to me both fatherland and friends and allies; with you I think I shall be honoured wherever I may be, bereft of you I do not think I shall be able either to aid a friend or to ward off a foe. Be sure, therefore, that wherever you go, I shall go also.” [7]</p><p>Such were his words. And the soldiers—not only his own men, but the rest also—when they heard that he said he would not go on to the King's capital, commended him; and more than two thousand of the troops under <persName xml:id="recogito-3285a9cc-c1f7-4c1f-bde4-c29c8f72b083">Xenias</persName><note target="recogito-3285a9cc-c1f7-4c1f-bde4-c29c8f72b083" resp="aghague">Xenias of Arcadia, also known as Xenias of Parrhasia. 5th century BC. Greek general commanding mercenary troups.</note> and Pasion took their arms and their baggage train and encamped with <persName xml:id="recogito-78539ba3-917a-4a32-bf1d-f2df8ed598af">Clearchus</persName>. [8] But <persName xml:id="recogito-5dfd2912-543a-4192-80d6-8758dd190301">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-5dfd2912-543a-4192-80d6-8758dd190301" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-5dfd2912-543a-4192-80d6-8758dd190301" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, perplexed and distressed by this situation, sent repeatedly for Clearchus. <persName xml:id="recogito-5c876591-99fc-450d-92d1-55e4a5d9472c">Clearchus</persName> refused to go to him, but without the knowledge of the soldiers he sent a messenger and told him not to be discouraged, because, he said, this matter would be settled in the right way. He directed <persName xml:id="recogito-9b8a7f9b-5127-432e-968b-73638dcc71ec">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-9b8a7f9b-5127-432e-968b-73638dcc71ec" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-9b8a7f9b-5127-432e-968b-73638dcc71ec" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, however, to keep on sending for him, though he himself, he said, would refuse to go. [9]</p><p>After this <persName xml:id="recogito-a4f76f83-1e16-48fa-aca7-145b15678698">Clearchus</persName> gathered together his own soldiers, those who had come over to him, and any others who wanted to be present, and spoke as follows: “Fellow-soldiers, it is clear that the relation of <persName xml:id="recogito-70c8a0c7-aac4-4539-9cbe-64943c96854d">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-70c8a0c7-aac4-4539-9cbe-64943c96854d" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-70c8a0c7-aac4-4539-9cbe-64943c96854d" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> to us is precisely the same as ours to him; that is, we are no longer his soldiers, since we decline to follow him, and likewise he is no longer our paymaster. [10] I know, however, that he considers himself wronged by us. Therefore, although he keeps sending for me, I decline to go, chiefly, it is true, from a feeling of shame, because I am conscious that I have proved utterly false to him, but, besides that, from fear that he may seize me and inflict punishment upon me for the wrongs he thinks he has suffered at my hands. [11] In my opinion, therefore, it is no time for us to be sleeping or unconcerned about ourselves; we should rather be considering what course we ought to follow under the present circumstances. And so long as we remain here we must consider, I think, how we can remain most safely; or, again, if we count it best to depart at once, how we are to depart most safely and how we shall secure provisions—for without provisions neither general nor private is of any use. [12] And remember that while this <persName xml:id="recogito-8500f264-67ee-4ff5-a431-3e0431a6254b">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-8500f264-67ee-4ff5-a431-3e0431a6254b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-8500f264-67ee-4ff5-a431-3e0431a6254b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> is a valuable friend when he is your friend, he is a most dangerous foe when he is your enemy; furthermore, he has an armament—infantry and cavalry and fleet—which we all alike see and know about; for I take it that our camp is not very far away from him. It is time, then, to propose whatever plan any one of you deems best.” With these words he ceased speaking. [13]</p><p>Thereupon various speakers arose, some of their own accord to express the opinions they held, but others at the instigation of <placeName xml:id="recogito-8d6f9999-bd24-4388-b792-fffe9f404c37" cert="low">Clearchus</placeName> to make clear the difficulty of either remaining or departing without the consent of <persName xml:id="recogito-71841854-e74b-4c4b-ac9c-2eeac2762546">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-71841854-e74b-4c4b-ac9c-2eeac2762546" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-71841854-e74b-4c4b-ac9c-2eeac2762546" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>. [14] One man in particular, pretending to be in a hurry to proceed back to <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/390903" xml:id="recogito-56f8c3a5-9b99-4dde-a1d4-cb1889693f80" cert="high">Greece</placeName> with all speed, proposed that they should choose other generals as quickly as possible, in case <persName xml:id="recogito-cdfe6553-1fd4-49ad-a2e7-cbc5fd410002">Clearchus</persName> did not wish to lead them back; secondly, that they should buy provisions—the market was in the barbarian army!—and pack up their baggage; then, to go to <persName xml:id="recogito-a72454e6-1f36-43f7-8f1e-e135df956bb5">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a72454e6-1f36-43f7-8f1e-e135df956bb5" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a72454e6-1f36-43f7-8f1e-e135df956bb5" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> and ask for vessels to sail away in; and if he would not give them vessels, to ask him for a guide to lead them homeward through a country that was friendly; and if he would not give them a guide, either, to form in line of battle with all speed and likewise to send a force to occupy the mountain heights in advance, in order that neither <persName xml:id="recogito-4f8d4295-d9a3-4f20-b921-532b92ce523e">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-4f8d4295-d9a3-4f20-b921-532b92ce523e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-4f8d4295-d9a3-4f20-b921-532b92ce523e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> nor the Cilicians should forestall them—“and we have in our possession,” he said, “many of these Cilicians and much of their property that we have seized as plunder.” Such were the words of this speaker. [15]</p><p>After him <persName xml:id="recogito-99a71913-0634-4ecb-a9cf-f4fdc52b1539">Clearchus</persName> said merely this: “Let no one among you speak of me as the man who is to hold this command, for I see many reasons why I should not do so; say rather that I shall obey to the best of my ability the man whom you choose, in order that you may know that I understand as well as any other person in the world how to be a subordinate also.” [16] After he had spoken another man arose to point out the foolishness of the speaker who had urged them to ask for vessels, just as if <persName xml:id="recogito-10c4c670-6d86-47aa-b677-568e1e766332">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-10c4c670-6d86-47aa-b677-568e1e766332" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-10c4c670-6d86-47aa-b677-568e1e766332" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> were going home again, and to point out also how foolish it was to ask for a guide “from this man whose enterprise we are ruining. Indeed, if we propose to trust the guide that <persName xml:id="recogito-15d3491e-fc33-45ef-b9ff-e5d5dba70bb9">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-15d3491e-fc33-45ef-b9ff-e5d5dba70bb9" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-15d3491e-fc33-45ef-b9ff-e5d5dba70bb9" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> gives us, what is to hinder us from directing <persName xml:id="recogito-6b9d47df-c375-47dd-831d-bbb60d5d2e5b">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-6b9d47df-c375-47dd-831d-bbb60d5d2e5b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-6b9d47df-c375-47dd-831d-bbb60d5d2e5b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> also to occupy the heights for us in advance? [17] For my part, I should hesitate to embark on the vessels that he might give us, for fear of his sinking us with his war-ships, and I should be afraid to follow the guide that he might give, for fear of his leading us to a place from which it will not be possible to escape; my choice would be, in going off without <persName xml:id="recogito-421a0f22-a184-46ef-96fd-632c9434c79b">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-421a0f22-a184-46ef-96fd-632c9434c79b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-421a0f22-a184-46ef-96fd-632c9434c79b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' consent, to go off without his knowledge—and that is not possible. [18] Now in my own opinion the plans just proposed are nonsense; rather, I think we should send to <persName xml:id="recogito-9dbe2cb6-f965-4c2b-b4a3-c930b92d22b3">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-9dbe2cb6-f965-4c2b-b4a3-c930b92d22b3" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-9dbe2cb6-f965-4c2b-b4a3-c930b92d22b3" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> men of the proper sort, along with <persName xml:id="recogito-09e5452e-ef8f-4d1f-ac60-1af6884ed472">Clearchus</persName>, to ask him what use he wishes to make of us; and if his enterprise is like the sort of one in which he employed mercenaries before,36 I think that we also should follow him and not be more cowardly than those who went up with him on the former occasion; [19] if, however, his enterprise is found to be greater and more laborious and more dangerous than the former one, we ought to demand that he should either offer sufficient persuasion37 and lead us on with him, or yield to our persuasion and let us go home in friendship; for in this way, if we should follow him, we should follow as friends and zealous supporters, and if we should go back, we should go back in safety. I propose, further, that our representatives should report back to us whatever reply he may make, and that we after hearing it should deliberate about the matter.” [20]</p><p>This plan was adopted, and they chose representatives and sent them with <persName xml:id="recogito-a43f15c0-7ce9-4e66-9bbb-e9cf98fe1c1c">Clearchus</persName>; and they proceeded to put to <persName xml:id="recogito-b5b92400-52b0-4f7d-b395-3ab3a92bd9fe">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-b5b92400-52b0-4f7d-b395-3ab3a92bd9fe" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-b5b92400-52b0-4f7d-b395-3ab3a92bd9fe" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> the questions resolved upon by the army. He replied that he had heard that <persName xml:id="recogito-740c55be-ff58-468e-bf51-ef18975fe995">Abrocomas</persName>, a foe of his, was at the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/912849" xml:id="recogito-ad2e8e34-7231-49e9-a244-e8c1e683bf51" cert="low">Euphrates</placeName> river, twelve stages distant. It was against him, therefore, he said, that he desired to march. And if he were there, he wished to inflict due punishment upon him; “but if he has fled,” he continued, “we will deliberate about the matter then and there.” [21] Upon hearing this reply the deputies reported it to the soldiers, and they, while suspecting that <persName xml:id="recogito-2f4bc36d-dec0-486b-8312-3cb68f12de55">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-2f4bc36d-dec0-486b-8312-3cb68f12de55" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-2f4bc36d-dec0-486b-8312-3cb68f12de55" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was leading them against the King, nevertheless thought it best to follow him. They asked, however, for more pay, and <persName xml:id="recogito-3ef806f5-cd4a-447f-b091-d64cb659cb57">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-3ef806f5-cd4a-447f-b091-d64cb659cb57" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-3ef806f5-cd4a-447f-b091-d64cb659cb57" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> promised to give them all half as much again as they had been receiving before, namely, a daric and a half a month to each man instead of a daric; but as regards the suspicion that he was leading them against the King, no one heard it expressed even then—at any rate, not openly. 4.</p><p>Thence he marched two stages, ten parasangs, to the <placeName xml:id="recogito-55b4a4bb-3087-41e4-8dde-afaba7448af2" cert="unknown">Psarus</placeName> river, the width of which was three plethra. From there he marched one stage, five parasangs, to the <placeName xml:id="recogito-b331e845-caa8-4b99-becf-47c360f335f8" cert="unknown">Pyramus</placeName> river, the width of which was a stadium.38 From there he marched two stages, fifteen parasangs, to Issus, the last city in <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/628957" xml:id="recogito-ba229982-76e2-4397-a330-643a51b52fa3" cert="low">Cilicia</placeName>, a place situated on the sea, and large and prosperous. [2] There they remained three days; and the ships from Peloponnesus39 arrived to meet <persName xml:id="recogito-93f2afee-dd90-47d1-950f-d8a55dc00ad2">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-93f2afee-dd90-47d1-950f-d8a55dc00ad2" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-93f2afee-dd90-47d1-950f-d8a55dc00ad2" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, thirty-five in number, with Pythagoras the Lacedaemonian as admiral in command of them. They had been guided from <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/599612" xml:id="recogito-8e9833f8-efd0-4de4-8e16-4fb150f8afa1" cert="low">Ephesus</placeName> to Issus by <persName xml:id="recogito-7be24071-561c-43b6-a803-a7ff1b529052">Tamos</persName> the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/228359733" xml:id="recogito-288f8ae8-dcf3-4511-b3de-bfb1aa0f314e" cert="low">Egyptian</placeName>, who was at the head of another fleet of twenty-five ships belonging to Cyrus—these latter being the ships with which <persName xml:id="recogito-9ee2d7e8-dbb4-4285-9f0c-ccd82f3a731a">Tamos</persName> had besieged Miletus, at the time when it was friendly to Tissaphernes,40 and had supported <persName xml:id="recogito-b22bb5c0-e170-4ed7-9798-8b9c2bf1b223">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-b22bb5c0-e170-4ed7-9798-8b9c2bf1b223" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-b22bb5c0-e170-4ed7-9798-8b9c2bf1b223" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> in his war upon <persName xml:id="recogito-9b492f2c-d057-4668-83ba-bc67c8ca7e99">Tissaphernes</persName><note target="recogito-9b492f2c-d057-4668-83ba-bc67c8ca7e99" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note>. [3] Cheirisophus the <placeName xml:id="recogito-110fa444-3df0-4ccb-aeab-2bd4241ba372" cert="low">Lacedaemonian</placeName> also arrived with this fleet, coming in response to <persName xml:id="recogito-d23534ee-25b6-47e2-b519-3d26f0dfdcb9">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-d23534ee-25b6-47e2-b519-3d26f0dfdcb9" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-d23534ee-25b6-47e2-b519-3d26f0dfdcb9" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' summons,41 together with seven hundred hoplites, over whom he continued to hold command in the army of <persName xml:id="recogito-8dddd2f0-48ef-48e0-b1df-dd5d7ee65eed">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-8dddd2f0-48ef-48e0-b1df-dd5d7ee65eed" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-8dddd2f0-48ef-48e0-b1df-dd5d7ee65eed" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>. And the ships lay at anchor alongside <persName xml:id="recogito-c54e4bd5-549f-4216-bba4-a20fc64b91a7">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-c54e4bd5-549f-4216-bba4-a20fc64b91a7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-c54e4bd5-549f-4216-bba4-a20fc64b91a7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' tent. It was at Issus also that the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-277ce69e-7aab-4df2-b5bc-92d136b8bfbf" cert="low">Greek</placeName> mercenaries who had been in the service of Abrocomas—four hundred hoplites—joined <persName xml:id="recogito-36d8c97b-7d53-4c11-8f63-59615527083e">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-36d8c97b-7d53-4c11-8f63-59615527083e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-36d8c97b-7d53-4c11-8f63-59615527083e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, after deserting <persName xml:id="recogito-eb25e2d0-8bb2-4c5a-8a2d-050458675a4d">Abrocomas</persName>, and so bore a share in his expedition against the King. [4]</p><p>Thence he marched one stage, five parasangs, to the Gates between <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/628957" xml:id="recogito-62d036c0-b16f-4ab6-8084-4ef7ec27fbf9" cert="low">Cilicia</placeName> and <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/1306" xml:id="recogito-a5bbaa5b-e6ea-4020-a648-f4275ffc1fd3" cert="low">Syria</placeName>. These Gates consisted of two walls; the one on the hither, or Cilician, side was held by <persName xml:id="recogito-c0f53173-66c5-47ab-9523-208127e583e0">Syennesis</persName> and a garrison of Cilicians, while the one on the farther, the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/727108" xml:id="recogito-654b4668-735e-456f-98df-8761399d39c8" cert="low">Syrian</placeName>, side was reported to be guarded by a garrison of the King's troops. And in the space between these walls flows a river named the <placeName xml:id="recogito-829c3808-a654-49bf-b82c-eaa0b040a4a9" cert="unknown">Carsus</placeName>, a plethrum in width. The entire distance from one wall to the other was three stadia; and it was not possible to effect a passage by force, for the pass was narrow, the walls reached down to the sea, and above the pass were precipitous rocks, while, besides, there were towers upon both the walls. [5] It was because of this pass that <persName xml:id="recogito-f5809050-9ed0-4102-95cc-961837ae5f50">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-f5809050-9ed0-4102-95cc-961837ae5f50" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-f5809050-9ed0-4102-95cc-961837ae5f50" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> had sent for the fleet, in order that he might disembark hoplites between and beyond the walls and thus overpower the enemy if they should be keeping guard at the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/727108" xml:id="recogito-e02fe5ad-3653-470d-94ae-5fb2cd09e26e" cert="low">Syrian</placeName> Gates—and that was precisely what <persName xml:id="recogito-5710b128-b0ab-4f1b-9b25-6c1615489271">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-5710b128-b0ab-4f1b-9b25-6c1615489271" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-5710b128-b0ab-4f1b-9b25-6c1615489271" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> supposed <persName xml:id="recogito-ccee0170-cd94-4ef6-b579-8579559f7527">Abrocomas</persName> would do, for he had a large army. <persName xml:id="recogito-d94fd331-9a95-4ad1-9e1f-f99cf4bfb7d1">Abrocomas</persName>, however, did not do so, but as soon as he heard that <persName xml:id="recogito-a4362c84-3241-4979-a507-c79d8926ac78">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a4362c84-3241-4979-a507-c79d8926ac78" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a4362c84-3241-4979-a507-c79d8926ac78" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was in <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/628957" xml:id="recogito-c0c50181-b948-4b74-baf7-b4570ef12d3d" cert="low">Cilicia</placeName>, he turned about in his journey from Phoenicia42 and marched off to join the King, with an army, so the report ran, of three hundred thousand men. [6]</p><p>Thence <persName xml:id="recogito-535946c6-ae03-47d5-a173-91ad54e4444d">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-535946c6-ae03-47d5-a173-91ad54e4444d" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-535946c6-ae03-47d5-a173-91ad54e4444d" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> marched one stage, five parasangs, to <placeName xml:id="recogito-751d7e37-ad3c-48b2-a6a7-51eb1b8e49af" cert="low">Myriandus</placeName>, a city on the sea coast, inhabited by Phoenicians; it was a trading place, and many merchant ships were lying at anchor there. There he remained seven days; [7] and <persName xml:id="recogito-f00e6e8e-1f9e-4667-9e4b-fbe3b5a7ca42">Xenias</persName><note target="recogito-f00e6e8e-1f9e-4667-9e4b-fbe3b5a7ca42" resp="aghague">Xenias of Arcadia, also known as Xenias of Parrhasia. 5th century BC. Greek general commanding mercenary troups.</note> the Arcadian and Pasion the Megarian embarked upon a ship, put on board their most valuable effects, and sailed away; they were moved to do this, as most people thought, by a feeling of jealous pride, because their soldiers had gone over to Clearchus43 with the intention of going back to <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/390903" xml:id="recogito-f2054e61-40d7-4e72-98f7-0aff74efbd7f" cert="high">Greece</placeName> again instead of proceeding against the King, and <persName xml:id="recogito-30ca0c4d-9306-4d77-9152-dc80beac71c7">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-30ca0c4d-9306-4d77-9152-dc80beac71c7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-30ca0c4d-9306-4d77-9152-dc80beac71c7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> had allowed <persName xml:id="recogito-fd094758-59be-4ba1-8d15-645699fadf4e">Clearchus</persName> to keep them. After they had disappeared, a report went round that <persName xml:id="recogito-b6aade76-9b22-4c72-961b-e0c09511d1f3">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-b6aade76-9b22-4c72-961b-e0c09511d1f3" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-b6aade76-9b22-4c72-961b-e0c09511d1f3" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was pursuing them with warships; and while some people prayed that they might be captured, because, as they said, they were cowards, yet others felt pity for them if they should be caught. [8]</p><p><persName xml:id="recogito-2a3ed42a-7c4f-4cb4-9d0b-c20be1b8d0b4">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-2a3ed42a-7c4f-4cb4-9d0b-c20be1b8d0b4" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-2a3ed42a-7c4f-4cb4-9d0b-c20be1b8d0b4" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, however, called the generals together and said: “Xenias and Pasion have deserted us. But let them, nevertheless, know full well that they have not escaped from me—either by stealth, for I know in what direction they have gone, or by speed, for I have men-of-war with which I can overtake their craft. But for my part, I swear by the gods that I shall not pursue them, nor shall anyone say about me that I use a man so long as he is with me and then, when he wants to leave me, seize him and maltreat him and despoil him of his possessions. Nay, let them go, with the knowledge that their behaviour toward us is worse than ours toward them. To be sure, I have their wives and children under guard in <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/599987" xml:id="recogito-9e1a01d7-89e6-4872-8604-a34d8d0b6d2f" cert="low">Tralles</placeName>,44 but I shall not deprive them of these, either, for they shall receive them back because of their former excellence in my service.” [9] Such were his words; as for the Greeks, even those who had been somewhat despondent in regard to the upward march, when they heard of the magnanimity of <persName xml:id="recogito-0f3c6c9e-6ef5-485f-ad79-da769b9f651b">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-0f3c6c9e-6ef5-485f-ad79-da769b9f651b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-0f3c6c9e-6ef5-485f-ad79-da769b9f651b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> they continued on their way with greater satisfaction and eagerness.</p><p>After this <persName xml:id="recogito-0b068a9d-cc84-4aac-8e64-7e011197eaf9">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-0b068a9d-cc84-4aac-8e64-7e011197eaf9" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-0b068a9d-cc84-4aac-8e64-7e011197eaf9" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> marched four stages, twenty parasangs, to the Chalus river, which is a plethrum in width and full of large, tame fish; these fish the Syrians regarded as gods, and they would not allow anyone to harm them, or the doves, either.45 And the villages in which the troops encamped belonged to <placeName xml:id="recogito-94729c39-8d96-4520-9998-a0e8c32060e0" cert="low">Parysatis</placeName><note target="recogito-94729c39-8d96-4520-9998-a0e8c32060e0" resp="aghague">Wife of, and advisor to, Darius II of Persia. Lived in the 5th century BC.</note>, for they had been given her for girdle-money.46 [10] From there <persName xml:id="recogito-e351422b-09dd-4687-93d3-05fec7fe1554">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-e351422b-09dd-4687-93d3-05fec7fe1554" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-e351422b-09dd-4687-93d3-05fec7fe1554" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> marched five stages, thirty parasangs, to the sources of the Dardas river, the width of which is a plethrum. There was the palace of <placeName xml:id="recogito-6cd0b405-774c-4309-8526-acb02739a9ea" cert="low">Belesys</placeName>, the late ruler of <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/1306" xml:id="recogito-6ee7fc30-3aae-448c-a738-5ca873d22a43" cert="low">Syria</placeName>, and a very large and beautiful park containing all the products of the seasons. But <persName xml:id="recogito-e8c0c763-bbc1-4697-9099-f9025bea6e5a">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-e8c0c763-bbc1-4697-9099-f9025bea6e5a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-e8c0c763-bbc1-4697-9099-f9025bea6e5a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> cut down the park and burned the palace. [11] Thence he marched three stages, fifteen parasangs, to the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/912849" xml:id="recogito-d9dd3cd4-46be-4d24-8f8c-88fc6f6add36" cert="low">Euphrates</placeName> river, the width of which was four stadia; and on the river was situated a large and prosperous city named Thapsacus. There he remained five days. And <persName xml:id="recogito-cf89a226-c13e-40ca-9f9d-36a4d0fda65f">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-cf89a226-c13e-40ca-9f9d-36a4d0fda65f" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-cf89a226-c13e-40ca-9f9d-36a4d0fda65f" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> summoned the generals of the Greeks and told them that the march was to be to <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/893951" xml:id="recogito-449b11bf-22de-4947-9a73-9c0b8d84c519" cert="low">Babylon</placeName>, against the Great King; he directed them, accordingly, to explain this to the soldiers and try to persuade them to follow. [12] So the generals called an assembly and made this announcement; and the soldiers were angry with the generals, and said that they had known about this for a long time, but had been keeping it from the troops; furthermore, they refused to go on unless they were given money,47 as were the men who made the journey with <persName xml:id="recogito-45da05c3-6dd0-4b8c-826e-ea97b4bca188">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-45da05c3-6dd0-4b8c-826e-ea97b4bca188" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-45da05c3-6dd0-4b8c-826e-ea97b4bca188" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> before,48 when he went to visit his father; they had received the donation, even though they marched, not to battle, but merely because <persName xml:id="recogito-9e6200ec-94bb-44ae-9dc7-9c5c031de5e9">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-9e6200ec-94bb-44ae-9dc7-9c5c031de5e9" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-9e6200ec-94bb-44ae-9dc7-9c5c031de5e9" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' father summoned him. [13] All these things the generals reported back to <persName xml:id="recogito-c6d15a7f-b0a9-40f3-9778-435b8f70601e">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-c6d15a7f-b0a9-40f3-9778-435b8f70601e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-c6d15a7f-b0a9-40f3-9778-435b8f70601e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, and he promised that he would give every man five minas49 in silver when they reached <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/893951" xml:id="recogito-0652996e-d8f2-4923-98c4-b7412bed92e9" cert="low">Babylon</placeName> and their pay in full until he brought the Greeks back to <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/543732" xml:id="recogito-2df24632-fdae-4a91-b853-e980bb36adeb" cert="low">Ionia</placeName> again.50 By these promises the greater part of the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-b407cf9b-a8ee-4a3e-a292-b001001684be" cert="low">Greek</placeName> army was persuaded.</p><p>But as for <persName xml:id="recogito-5671b7ed-ae24-4201-877e-1bfe08feba22">Menon</persName>, before it was clear what the rest of the soldiers would do, that is, whether they would follow <persName xml:id="recogito-4cb7a857-f91d-4c83-bc46-5cc9a6494f98">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-4cb7a857-f91d-4c83-bc46-5cc9a6494f98" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-4cb7a857-f91d-4c83-bc46-5cc9a6494f98" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> or not, he gathered together his own troops apart from the others and spoke as follows: [14] “Soldiers, if you will obey me, you will, without either danger or toil, be honoured by <persName xml:id="recogito-a88ebba2-f43d-4630-9e56-61286820904e">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a88ebba2-f43d-4630-9e56-61286820904e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a88ebba2-f43d-4630-9e56-61286820904e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> above and beyond the rest of the troops. What, then, do I direct you to do? At this moment <persName xml:id="recogito-c50d6c03-559b-4ab0-8177-c24897f2bb02">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-c50d6c03-559b-4ab0-8177-c24897f2bb02" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-c50d6c03-559b-4ab0-8177-c24897f2bb02" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> is begging the Greeks to follow him against the King; my own plan, then, is that you should cross the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/912849" xml:id="recogito-6094a752-2130-4198-81b1-1f2cc1faceda" cert="low">Euphrates</placeName> river before it is clear what answer the rest of the Greeks will make to <persName xml:id="recogito-9dd88144-c54b-4c6f-9010-80dbce81f15a">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-9dd88144-c54b-4c6f-9010-80dbce81f15a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-9dd88144-c54b-4c6f-9010-80dbce81f15a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>. [15] For if they vote to follow him, it is you who will get the credit for that decision because you began the crossing, and <persName xml:id="recogito-ccfa46d6-35c2-4e01-913c-29b627708472">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-ccfa46d6-35c2-4e01-913c-29b627708472" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-ccfa46d6-35c2-4e01-913c-29b627708472" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> will not only feel grateful to you, regarding you as the most zealous in his cause, but he will return the favour—and he knows how to do that if any man does; on the other hand, if the rest vote not to follow him, we shall all go back together, but you, as the only ones who were obedient, are the men he will employ, not only for garrison duty,51 but for captaincies; and whatever else you may desire, I know that you, as friends of <persName xml:id="recogito-e9617776-8a3f-4441-a270-88d62550fac0">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-e9617776-8a3f-4441-a270-88d62550fac0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-e9617776-8a3f-4441-a270-88d62550fac0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, will secure from him.” [16] Upon hearing these words the soldiers were persuaded, and made the crossing before the rest gave their answer. When <persName xml:id="recogito-a45da80e-8506-4a1f-8879-406ce05c2be6">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a45da80e-8506-4a1f-8879-406ce05c2be6" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a45da80e-8506-4a1f-8879-406ce05c2be6" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> learned that they had crossed, he was delighted and sent <persName xml:id="recogito-8ee8bf80-b6a1-4272-8b98-87e2b6c5565d">Glus</persName> to the troops with this message: “Soldiers, to-day I commend you; but I shall see to it that you also shall have cause to commend me, else count me no longer <persName xml:id="recogito-5c5332ee-a2cc-4c83-985d-ab5552eb2f04">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-5c5332ee-a2cc-4c83-985d-ab5552eb2f04" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-5c5332ee-a2cc-4c83-985d-ab5552eb2f04" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>.” [17] So <persName xml:id="recogito-17500dc8-aded-4b57-97ea-852fbf3c98e2">Menon</persName>'s troops cherished high hopes and prayed that he might be successful, while to <persName xml:id="recogito-5ad9486c-67b4-4c61-9b1a-dfd3eb496a8a">Menon</persName> himself <persName xml:id="recogito-8ab641d4-c8a7-484c-bf8d-d13f1d4ccc69">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-8ab641d4-c8a7-484c-bf8d-d13f1d4ccc69" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-8ab641d4-c8a7-484c-bf8d-d13f1d4ccc69" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was said to have sent magnificent gifts besides. After so doing <persName xml:id="recogito-556595f8-4a00-4c98-a53a-e8c546f02891">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-556595f8-4a00-4c98-a53a-e8c546f02891" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-556595f8-4a00-4c98-a53a-e8c546f02891" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> proceeded to cross the river, and the rest of the army followed him, to the last man. And in the crossing no one was wetted above the breast by the water. [18] The people of <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/674270" xml:id="recogito-c9c2495d-1ca9-4bc9-a575-4cbd46130f0d" cert="low">Thapsacus</placeName> said that this river had never been passable on foot except at this time, but only by boats; and these <persName xml:id="recogito-02d8e592-9e5d-4810-8743-304a71fac033">Abrocomas</persName> had now burned, as he marched on ahead of Cyrus, in order to prevent him from crossing. It seemed, accordingly, that here was a divine intervention, and that the river had plainly retired before <persName xml:id="recogito-bc01c8a9-7564-4f0e-8096-d0b67e8b3476">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-bc01c8a9-7564-4f0e-8096-d0b67e8b3476" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-bc01c8a9-7564-4f0e-8096-d0b67e8b3476" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> because he was destined to be king. [19]</p><p>Thence he marched through <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/1306" xml:id="recogito-e600ecf4-0473-4d57-8f0a-f45c3133f10a" cert="low">Syria</placeName> nine stages, fifty parasangs, and they arrived at the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/897715" xml:id="recogito-a8b20de9-34e8-4ce1-aa4f-5e454d8f9f06" cert="low">Araxes</placeName> river. There they found many villages full of grain and wine, and there they remained for three days and provisioned the army. 5.</p><p>Thence he marched through <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/912809" xml:id="recogito-4e0b053e-81d5-4939-9948-502d380f86b2" cert="low">Arabia</placeName>, keeping the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/912849" xml:id="recogito-5400d6f2-b15f-4221-9820-c4ecab782aff" cert="low">Euphrates</placeName> on the right, five stages through desert country, thirty-five parasangs. In this region the ground was an unbroken plain, as level as the sea, and full of wormwood; and whatever else there was on the plain by way of shrub or reed, was always fragrant, like spices; [2] trees there were none, but wild animals of all sorts, vast numbers of wild asses and many ostriches, besides bustards and gazelles. These animals were sometimes chased by the horsemen. As for the asses, whenever one chased them, they would run on ahead and stop—for they ran much faster than the horses—and then, when the horses came near, they would do the same thing again, and it was impossible to catch them unless the horsemen posted themselves at intervals and hunted them in relays. The flesh of those that were captured was like venison, but more tender. [3] But no ostrich was captured by anyone, and any horseman who chased one speedily desisted; for it would distance him at once in its flight, not merely plying its feet, but hoisting its wings and using them like a sail. The bustards, on the other hand, can be caught if one is quick in starting them up, for they fly only a short distance, like partridges, and soon tire; and their flesh was delicious. [4]</p><p>Marching on through this region they arrived at the <placeName xml:id="recogito-90107faf-70e6-401d-a3f7-ed17659f3753" cert="low">Mascas</placeName> river, which is a plethrum in width. There, in the desert, was a large city named Corsote, completely surrounded by the Mascas. [5] There they remained three days and provisioned the army. Thence <persName xml:id="recogito-ee461f6b-8c21-4395-9a59-eca5285e3417">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-ee461f6b-8c21-4395-9a59-eca5285e3417" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-ee461f6b-8c21-4395-9a59-eca5285e3417" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> marched thirteen stages through desert country, ninety parasangs, keeping the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/912849" xml:id="recogito-08f591d4-9907-4bd2-8e39-1dd9e620c533" cert="low">Euphrates</placeName> river on the right, and arrived at <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/876570" xml:id="recogito-f0182049-ef2e-4fcc-8b8d-a152498bdafd" cert="low">Pylae</placeName>. In the course of these stages many of the baggage animals died of hunger, for there was no fodder and, in fact, no growing thing of any kind, but the land was absolutely bare; and the people who dwelt here made a living by quarrying mill-stones along the river banks, then fashioning them and taking them to <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/893951" xml:id="recogito-c7b71784-fc5f-4b7d-9712-4918157e22e8" cert="low">Babylon</placeName>, where they sold them and bought grain in exchange. [6] As for the troops, their supply of grain gave out, and it was not possible to buy any except in the Lydian52 market attached to the barbarian army of Cyrus,53 at the price of four sigli for a capith of wheat flour or barley meal. The siglus is worth seven and one-half Attic obols, and the capith had the capacity of two Attic choenices.54 The soldiers therefore managed to subsist by eating meat.55 [7] And <persName xml:id="recogito-536b4d06-10ba-4f06-a51e-1ef8cf176013">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-536b4d06-10ba-4f06-a51e-1ef8cf176013" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-536b4d06-10ba-4f06-a51e-1ef8cf176013" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> sometimes made these stages through the desert very long, whenever he wanted to reach water or fresh fodder.</p><p>Once in particular, when they came upon a narrow, muddy place which was hard for the wagons to get through, <persName xml:id="recogito-0f855ed8-d45d-4fd3-84c5-d9e2e8d151b5">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-0f855ed8-d45d-4fd3-84c5-d9e2e8d151b5" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-0f855ed8-d45d-4fd3-84c5-d9e2e8d151b5" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> halted with his train of nobles and dignitaries and ordered <persName xml:id="recogito-b2046ab8-2a16-4b83-b658-fffe5180c5f6">Glus</persName> and <placeName xml:id="recogito-27b53c2a-b247-4c8f-84b3-081afcfef0aa" cert="low">Pigres</placeName> to take some of the barbarian troops and help to pull the wagons out. [8] But it seemed to him that they took their time with the work; accordingly, as if in anger, he directed the Persian nobles who accompanied him to take a hand in hurrying on the wagons. And then one might have beheld a sample of good discipline: they each threw off their purple cloaks where they chanced to be standing, and rushed, as a man would run to win a victory, down a most exceedingly steep hill, wearing their costly tunics and coloured trousers, some of them, indeed, with necklaces around their necks and bracelets on their arms; and leaping at once, with all this finery, into the mud, they lifted the wagons high and dry and brought them out more quickly than one would have thought possible. [9] In general, it was clear that <persName xml:id="recogito-a00e86bd-d185-4589-83fa-24aa4dc7382e">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a00e86bd-d185-4589-83fa-24aa4dc7382e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a00e86bd-d185-4589-83fa-24aa4dc7382e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was in haste throughout the whole journey and was making no delays, except where he halted to procure provisions or for some other necessary purpose; his thought was that the faster he went, the more unprepared the King would be to fight with him, while, on the other hand, the slower he went, the greater would be the army that was gathering for the King. Furthermore, one who observed closely could see at a glance that while the King's empire was strong in its extent of territory and number of inhabitants, it was weak by reason of the greatness of the distances and the scattered condition of its forces, in case one should be swift in making his attack upon it. [10]</p><p>Across the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/912849" xml:id="recogito-b93ab978-34b1-4bd3-9b28-26b94d2725a0" cert="low">Euphrates</placeName> river in the course of these desert marches was a large and prosperous city named Charmande, and here the soldiers made purchases of provisions, crossing the river on rafts in the following way: they took skins which they had for tent covers, filled them with hay, and then brought the edges together and sewed them up, so that the water could not touch the hay; on these they would cross and get provisions—wine made from the date of the palm tree and bread made of millet, for this grain was very abundant in the country. [11]</p><p>There one of <persName xml:id="recogito-8b995b72-96bf-4183-b0f3-ce3427919ff1">Menon</persName>'s soldiers and one of <persName xml:id="recogito-076e98d6-630b-4a69-90c4-f4965c9f18bd">Clearchus</persName>' men had some dispute, and <persName xml:id="recogito-b1f8ec0c-591a-4ffe-9016-8106f03cf2fe">Clearchus</persName>, deciding that <persName xml:id="recogito-7256e53d-fae0-486f-b83e-4dafa9250dc5">Menon</persName>'s man was in the wrong, gave him a flogging. The man then went to his own army and told about it, and when his comrades heard of the matter, they took it hard and were exceedingly angry with <persName xml:id="recogito-52808ba1-6f5c-4a7e-973f-d0361e21da15">Clearchus</persName>. [12] On the same day Clearchus, after going to the place where they crossed the river and there inspecting the market, was riding back to his own tent through <persName xml:id="recogito-7314d5be-060b-4a16-9d8c-059fc658676f">Menon</persName>'s army, having only a few men with him; and <persName xml:id="recogito-2bfe8c86-46f8-4199-9290-7cabc4c37bc5">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-2bfe8c86-46f8-4199-9290-7cabc4c37bc5" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-2bfe8c86-46f8-4199-9290-7cabc4c37bc5" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> had not yet arrived, but was still on the march toward the place; and one of <persName xml:id="recogito-ac92a1ba-402f-4adc-9680-933b7e1686d6">Menon</persName>'s soldiers who was splitting wood threw his axe at <persName xml:id="recogito-e28af2b2-2e18-4e11-a6eb-74e62bf8846b">Clearchus</persName> when he saw him riding through the camp. Now this man missed him, but another threw a stone at him, and still another, and then, after an outcry had been raised, many. [13] <persName xml:id="recogito-3356e9af-86b9-4637-928a-ca780932bdd7">Clearchus</persName> escaped to his own army and at once called his troops to arms; he ordered his hoplites to remain where they were, resting their shields against their knees,56 while he himself with the Thracians57 and the horsemen, of which he had in his army more than forty, most of them Thracians, advanced upon <persName xml:id="recogito-87ccf489-f70c-4bba-96a7-16c00ccee84d">Menon</persName>'s troops; the result was that these and <persName xml:id="recogito-ad161132-1c83-43d3-98c7-d023b9a10510">Menon</persName> himself were thoroughly frightened and ran to their arms, though there were some who stood stock-still, nonplussed by the situation. [14] But Proxenus—for he chanced to be now coming up, later than the others, with a battalion of hoplites following him—straightway led his troops into the space between the two parties, halted them under arms, and began to beg <persName xml:id="recogito-846f4450-8d5c-4244-8ddf-1dfab7ac105a">Clearchus</persName> not to proceed with his attack. Clearchus, however, was angry, because, when he had barely escaped being stoned to death, <persName xml:id="recogito-e1ee9de4-2fdb-4492-879d-61ba5a94a5fe">Proxenus</persName> was talking lightly of his grievance, and he ordered him to remove himself from between them. [15] At this moment <persName xml:id="recogito-c84e64df-4514-4cf6-b462-b5fc16b00da0">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-c84e64df-4514-4cf6-b462-b5fc16b00da0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-c84e64df-4514-4cf6-b462-b5fc16b00da0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> also came up and learned about the situation, and he immediately took his spears in his hands and, attended by such of his counsellors as were present, came riding into the intervening space and spoke as follows: [16] “Clearchus, and Proxenus, and all you other Greeks who are here, you know not what you are doing. For as certainly as you come to fighting with one another, you may be sure that on this very day I shall be instantly cut to pieces and yourselves not long after me; for once let ill fortune overtake us, and all these barbarians whom you see will be more hostile to us than are those who stand with the King.” [17] On hearing these words <persName xml:id="recogito-f9f369a5-c040-4073-b3ea-63b41c54ce49">Clearchus</persName> came to his senses, and both parties ceased from their quarrel and returned to their quarters. 6.</p><p>As they went on from there, they kept seeing tracks of horses and horses' dung. To all appearances it was the trail of about two thousand horses, and the horsemen as they proceeded were burning up fodder and everything else that was of any use. At this time Orontas, a Persian, who was related to the King by birth and was reckoned among the best of the Persians in matters of war, devised a plot against <persName xml:id="recogito-c23f6e1c-a8bd-42b8-bb4a-2a00d1d7ca19">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-c23f6e1c-a8bd-42b8-bb4a-2a00d1d7ca19" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-c23f6e1c-a8bd-42b8-bb4a-2a00d1d7ca19" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>—in fact, he had made war upon him before this, but had become his friend again. [2] He now said to <persName xml:id="recogito-de74f3e0-551d-4e31-af8b-0507a4823ed2">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-de74f3e0-551d-4e31-af8b-0507a4823ed2" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-de74f3e0-551d-4e31-af8b-0507a4823ed2" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> that if he would give him a thousand horsemen, he would either ambush and kill these horsemen who were burning ahead of him, or he would capture many of them alive and put a stop to their burning as they advanced; and he would see to it that they should never be able to behold <persName xml:id="recogito-2850380c-af5c-4191-97cf-bcafbd3ddb80">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-2850380c-af5c-4191-97cf-bcafbd3ddb80" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-2850380c-af5c-4191-97cf-bcafbd3ddb80" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' army and get to the King with their report. When <persName xml:id="recogito-a41477d9-7802-499f-a5ff-45b76bdbcc7d">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a41477d9-7802-499f-a5ff-45b76bdbcc7d" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a41477d9-7802-499f-a5ff-45b76bdbcc7d" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> heard this plan, it seemed to him to be an expedient one, and he directed <persName xml:id="recogito-93e41159-83de-4c0d-9c13-8a32c72b3aad">Orontas</persName> to get a detachment from each one of the cavalry commanders. [3] Then <persName xml:id="recogito-2cb07fe3-5453-4472-b00c-3ac6f7ce3e46">Orontas</persName>, thinking that his horsemen were assured him, wrote a letter to the King saying that he would come to him with as many horsemen as he could get; and he urged the King to direct his own cavalry to receive him as a friend. The letter also contained reminders of his former friendship and fidelity. This letter he gave to a man whom he supposed to be faithful to him; but this man took it and gave it to <persName xml:id="recogito-d69a47d7-35f6-4b91-b6c7-cce801050bb0">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-d69a47d7-35f6-4b91-b6c7-cce801050bb0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-d69a47d7-35f6-4b91-b6c7-cce801050bb0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>. [4] When <persName xml:id="recogito-367d0c37-1484-407a-8a98-d685984651bb">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-367d0c37-1484-407a-8a98-d685984651bb" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-367d0c37-1484-407a-8a98-d685984651bb" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> had read it, he had Orontas arrested, and summoned to his tent seven of the noblest Persians among his attendants, while he ordered the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-99702e3e-4bb4-4866-be23-4f940a329a4d" cert="low">Greek</placeName> generals to bring up hoplites and bid them station themselves under arms around his tent. And the generals obeyed the order, bringing with them about three thousand hoplites. [5]</p><p><persName xml:id="recogito-19a86a41-7ac4-41ae-9128-18926f4b8e3f">Clearchus</persName> was also invited into the tent as a counsellor, for both <persName xml:id="recogito-7500443d-c818-469b-bac0-3c8fea8a0011">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-7500443d-c818-469b-bac0-3c8fea8a0011" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-7500443d-c818-469b-bac0-3c8fea8a0011" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> and the other Persians regarded him as the man who was honoured above the rest of the Greeks. And when he came out, he reported to his friends how <persName xml:id="recogito-a9206a79-4e74-4a83-ba09-40724fae23e6">Orontas</persName>' trial was conducted—for it was no secret. [6] He said that <persName xml:id="recogito-3d83741e-0283-42c2-99c9-552781d2d5a3">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-3d83741e-0283-42c2-99c9-552781d2d5a3" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-3d83741e-0283-42c2-99c9-552781d2d5a3" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> began the conference in this way: “My friends, I have invited you here in order that I may consult with you and then take such action in the case of <placeName xml:id="recogito-93323380-fac5-42a8-95b4-18dbaf947039" cert="low">Orontas</placeName> here as is right in the sight of gods and men. This man was given me at first by my father, to be my subject; then, at the bidding, as he himself said, of my brother, this man levied war upon me, holding the citadel of <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/4445170" xml:id="recogito-f45c4f54-7712-46cd-bff2-42642df8e5dc" cert="low">Sardis</placeName>, and I, by the war I waged against him, made him count it best to cease from warring upon me, and I received and gave the hand-clasp of friendship. Since that,” he said, “Orontas, have I done you any wrong?” [7] “No,” <persName xml:id="recogito-79d2a7f3-e0ba-4afa-ac94-3a8934a8dc70">Orontas</persName> answered. <persName xml:id="recogito-9eca7709-11dc-4dea-ae11-bdc3ccdcf84c">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-9eca7709-11dc-4dea-ae11-bdc3ccdcf84c" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-9eca7709-11dc-4dea-ae11-bdc3ccdcf84c" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> went on questioning him: “Did you not afterwards, although, as you yourself admit, you had suffered no wrong at my hands, desert me for the Mysians, and do all the harm you could to my territory?” “Yes,” said <persName xml:id="recogito-6b040e06-d46a-4e61-b88a-0cdc6648e1fb">Orontas</persName>. “Did you not,” <persName xml:id="recogito-6108a398-480a-405e-aa37-674123d4a5d0">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-6108a398-480a-405e-aa37-674123d4a5d0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-6108a398-480a-405e-aa37-674123d4a5d0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> said, “when once more you had learned the slightness of your own power, go to the altar of Artemis and say you were sorry, and did you not, after prevailing upon me to pardon you, again give me pledges and receive pledges from me?” This also <persName xml:id="recogito-89f54fb3-793e-4eed-a1ef-4d8d183535f1">Orontas</persName> admitted. [8] “What wrong, then,” said <persName xml:id="recogito-008ab61c-6efe-4880-9879-0f7546049c84">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-008ab61c-6efe-4880-9879-0f7546049c84" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-008ab61c-6efe-4880-9879-0f7546049c84" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, “have you suffered at my hands, that you now for the third time have been found plotting against me?” When <persName xml:id="recogito-3170c32e-2af8-45b8-b753-419e5e0c83a5">Orontas</persName> replied, “None,” <persName xml:id="recogito-c92218dc-0940-49fc-8b59-ebded5386822">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-c92218dc-0940-49fc-8b59-ebded5386822" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-c92218dc-0940-49fc-8b59-ebded5386822" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> asked him: “Do you admit, then, that you have proved yourself a doer of wrong toward me?” “I cannot choose but do so,” said <persName xml:id="recogito-63eca625-ef15-4d8d-aa0b-cb2ae6838851">Orontas</persName>. Thereupon <persName xml:id="recogito-475ff93a-0031-421a-a60d-58bae95b6c51">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-475ff93a-0031-421a-a60d-58bae95b6c51" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-475ff93a-0031-421a-a60d-58bae95b6c51" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> asked again: “Then could you henceforth prove yourself a foe to my brother and a faithful friend to me?” “Even if I should do so <persName xml:id="recogito-a46db162-3fc4-4327-842d-510c0792a4e7">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a46db162-3fc4-4327-842d-510c0792a4e7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a46db162-3fc4-4327-842d-510c0792a4e7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>,” he replied, “you could never after this believe it of me.” [9] Then <persName xml:id="recogito-246e024e-2c32-4ed3-92e8-34c4c398070a">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-246e024e-2c32-4ed3-92e8-34c4c398070a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-246e024e-2c32-4ed3-92e8-34c4c398070a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> said to those who were present: “Such have been this man's deeds, such are now his words; and now, <persName xml:id="recogito-60cfe056-11dc-4023-a31e-3b97f8fe8d09">Clearchus</persName>, do you be the first of my counsellors to express the opinion you hold.” And <persName xml:id="recogito-bbdfccaa-67d5-4c4a-9908-5c4c77870d85">Clearchus</persName> said: “My advice is to put this man out of the way as speedily as possible, so that we may no longer have to be on our guard against the fellow, but may be left free, so far as concerns him, to requite with benefits these willing servants.” [10] In this opinion <persName xml:id="recogito-d8a639d0-a88c-4ebd-b9b9-724945d64a84">Clearchus</persName> said that the others also concurred.</p><p>After this, he said, at the bidding of <persName xml:id="recogito-521433c5-a8cc-4305-81ae-ce26a8204481">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-521433c5-a8cc-4305-81ae-ce26a8204481" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-521433c5-a8cc-4305-81ae-ce26a8204481" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, every man of them arose, even <persName xml:id="recogito-62bbd72f-2ae3-4d34-93c8-5fec6348aed3">Orontas</persName>' kinsmen, and took him by the girdle, as a sign that he was condemned to death; and then those to whom the duty was assigned led him out. And when the men who in former days were wont to do him homage saw him, they made their obeisance even then, although they knew that he was being led forth to death. [11] Now after he had been conducted into the tent of <placeName xml:id="recogito-224ad5cc-b514-4da1-969e-89061727fc84" cert="low">Artapates</placeName>, the most faithful of <persName xml:id="recogito-6e7c5821-290b-4147-91a3-2474074b7d91">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-6e7c5821-290b-4147-91a3-2474074b7d91" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-6e7c5821-290b-4147-91a3-2474074b7d91" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' chamberlains, from that moment no man ever saw <persName xml:id="recogito-0338ceaf-8d1c-4aed-bd78-4ea95fdda26f">Orontas</persName> living or dead, nor could anyone say from actual knowledge how he was put to death,—it was all conjectures, of one sort and another; and no grave of his was ever seen. 7.</p><p>From there <persName xml:id="recogito-38a68712-4c00-49f2-9205-1fcdb30b968b">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-38a68712-4c00-49f2-9205-1fcdb30b968b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-38a68712-4c00-49f2-9205-1fcdb30b968b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> marched through <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/912816" xml:id="recogito-4c5d96d1-07d6-459b-b854-39217d668434" cert="low">Babylonia</placeName> three stages, twelve parasangs. On the third stage he held a review of the Greeks and the barbarians on the plain at about midnight; for he thought that at the next dawn the King would come with his army to do battle; and he ordered <persName xml:id="recogito-cf5b4d14-ee1f-4b1c-b146-5b86e8f54570">Clearchus</persName> to act as commander of the right wing and <persName xml:id="recogito-632bb2ee-67e4-494e-9651-eca9c76103de">Menon</persName> of the left, while he himself marshalled his own troops. [2] On the morning following the review, at daybreak, there came deserters from the great King and brought reports to <persName xml:id="recogito-b98a3a53-cc3a-4e4a-b8aa-745bee14a23b">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-b98a3a53-cc3a-4e4a-b8aa-745bee14a23b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-b98a3a53-cc3a-4e4a-b8aa-745bee14a23b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> about his army.</p><p>At this time <persName xml:id="recogito-06158a25-9b95-4448-833c-401165ab4673">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-06158a25-9b95-4448-833c-401165ab4673" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-06158a25-9b95-4448-833c-401165ab4673" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> called together the generals and captains of the Greeks, and not only took counsel with them as to how he should fight the battle, but, for his own part, exhorted and encouraged them as follows: [3] “Men of <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/390903" xml:id="recogito-0f5a49a4-ca90-4496-bc91-b7fb755eaf9a" cert="high">Greece</placeName>, it is not because I have not barbarians enough that I have brought you hither to fight for me; but because I believe that you are braver and stronger than many barbarians, for this reason I took you also. Be sure, therefore, to be men worthy of the freedom you possess, upon the possession of which I congratulate you. For you may be certain that freedom is the thing I should choose in preference to all that I have and many times more. [4] And now, in order that you may know what sort of a contest it is into which you are going, I who do know will tell you. Our enemies have great numbers and they will come on with a great outcry; for the rest, however, if you can hold out against these things, I am ashamed, I assure you, to think what sorry fellows you will find the people of our country to be. But if you be men and if my undertaking turn out well, I shall make anyone among you who wishes to return home an object of envy to his friends at home upon his return, while I shall cause many of you, I imagine, to choose life with me in preference to life at home.” [5]</p><p><persName xml:id="recogito-8438125c-1c8f-4b69-940b-ca30f42ead6e">Hereupon Gaulites</persName>, a Samian exile who was there and was in the confidence of <persName xml:id="recogito-b73b1324-201e-4d3e-bc76-74ac9eb28ffb">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-b73b1324-201e-4d3e-bc76-74ac9eb28ffb" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-b73b1324-201e-4d3e-bc76-74ac9eb28ffb" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, said: “And yet, <persName xml:id="recogito-5d958f70-3b2d-4aa0-b6c8-ee6e426f92b8">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-5d958f70-3b2d-4aa0-b6c8-ee6e426f92b8" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-5d958f70-3b2d-4aa0-b6c8-ee6e426f92b8" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, there are those who say that your promises are big now because you are in such a critical situation—for the danger is upon you—but that if any good fortune befall, you will fail to remember them; and some say that even if you should remember and have the will, you would not have the means to make good all your promises.” [6] Upon hearing these words <persName xml:id="recogito-b62733de-49a2-4502-80b8-a2f7024377ee">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-b62733de-49a2-4502-80b8-a2f7024377ee" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-b62733de-49a2-4502-80b8-a2f7024377ee" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> said: “Well, gentlemen, my father's realm extends toward the south to a region where men cannot dwell by reason of the heat, and to the north to a region where they cannot dwell by reason of the cold; and all that lies between these limits my brother's friends rule as satraps. [7] Now if we win the victory, we must put our friends in control of these provinces. I fear, therefore, not that I shall not have enough to give to each of my friends, if success attends us, but that I shall not have enough friends to give to. And as for you men of <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/390903" xml:id="recogito-6e6b37fe-8d7b-4da0-8509-0801b231be25" cert="high">Greece</placeName>, I shall give each one of you a wreath of gold besides.” [8] When they heard these words, the officers were far more eager themselves and carried the news away with them to the other Greeks. Then some of the others also sought <persName xml:id="recogito-a2e1b5fd-c419-46d4-b87d-795c8849b8ba">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a2e1b5fd-c419-46d4-b87d-795c8849b8ba" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a2e1b5fd-c419-46d4-b87d-795c8849b8ba" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' presence, demanding to know what they should have, in case of victory; and he satisfied the expectations of every one of them before dismissing them. [9] Now all alike who conversed with him urged him not to take part in the fighting, but to station himself in their rear. Taking this opportunity <persName xml:id="recogito-5d53b6f5-bbfc-4767-8326-7f264022de84">Clearchus</persName> asked <persName xml:id="recogito-b190316a-6372-421a-a250-a880d980abf0">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-b190316a-6372-421a-a250-a880d980abf0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-b190316a-6372-421a-a250-a880d980abf0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> a question like this: “But do you think, <persName xml:id="recogito-a791f4d3-477d-4759-bc28-8c26d0e53ef0">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a791f4d3-477d-4759-bc28-8c26d0e53ef0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a791f4d3-477d-4759-bc28-8c26d0e53ef0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, that your brother will fight with you?” “Yes, by Zeus,” said <persName xml:id="recogito-329c4f14-499c-4e10-9f95-fee42afa4af7">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-329c4f14-499c-4e10-9f95-fee42afa4af7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-329c4f14-499c-4e10-9f95-fee42afa4af7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, “if he is really a son of <persName xml:id="recogito-5b4c7008-a1fa-45e0-b51a-9b117b4f8116">Darius</persName><note target="recogito-5b4c7008-a1fa-45e0-b51a-9b117b4f8116" resp="aghague">Darius II of Persia. Ruled between 423 and 405(?) BC</note><note target="recogito-5b4c7008-a1fa-45e0-b51a-9b117b4f8116" resp="aghague">Darius II of Persia. Ruled between 423 and 404(?) BC</note> and <persName xml:id="recogito-9540c438-a58d-4459-bc0c-ea68176c21d3">Parysatis</persName><note target="recogito-9540c438-a58d-4459-bc0c-ea68176c21d3" resp="aghague">Wife of, and advisor to, Darius II of Persia. Lived in the 5th century BC.</note> and a brother of mine, I shall not win this realm without fighting for it.” [10]</p><p>At this time, when the troops were marshalled under arms,58 the number of the Greeks was found to be ten thousand four hundred hoplites, and two thousand five hundred peltasts,59 while the number of the barbarians under <persName xml:id="recogito-0be374f5-b1fe-4691-8192-059994fb67a6">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-0be374f5-b1fe-4691-8192-059994fb67a6" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-0be374f5-b1fe-4691-8192-059994fb67a6" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was one hundred thousand and there were about twenty scythe-bearing chariots. [11] The enemy, it was reported, numbered one million two hundred thousand60 and had two hundred scythe-bearing chariots; besides, there was a troop of six thousand horsemen, under the command of Artagerses, which was stationed in front of the King himself. [12] And the King's army had four commanders, each at the head of three hundred thousand men, namely, <placeName xml:id="recogito-2d639cc7-0368-4e63-9731-f4919c893fe3" cert="low">Abrocomas</placeName>, <placeName xml:id="recogito-1f826766-ad87-46e9-be4e-1afb7770703c" cert="low">Tissaphernes</placeName><note target="recogito-1f826766-ad87-46e9-be4e-1afb7770703c" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note>, <placeName xml:id="recogito-d0b74932-9dc3-4a6f-ab66-e2bf60ecdb16" cert="low">Gobryas</placeName>, and Arbaces. But of the forces just enumerated only nine hundred thousand, with one hundred and fifty scythe-bearing chariots, were present at the battle; for Abrocomas, marching from <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/678334" xml:id="recogito-b1a397e9-454b-42ac-ae42-c70566cc3648" cert="low">Phoenicia</placeName>, arrived five days too late for the engagement. [13] Such were the reports brought to <persName xml:id="recogito-de0bcc8a-ac93-48f2-8540-f13f7c96ac69">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-de0bcc8a-ac93-48f2-8540-f13f7c96ac69" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-de0bcc8a-ac93-48f2-8540-f13f7c96ac69" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> by those who deserted from the Great King before the battle, and after the battle identical reports were made by the prisoners taken thereafter. [14]</p><p>From there <persName xml:id="recogito-1f0c4b0b-4374-4ded-bdda-016d3c685435">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-1f0c4b0b-4374-4ded-bdda-016d3c685435" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-1f0c4b0b-4374-4ded-bdda-016d3c685435" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> marched one stage, three parasangs, with his whole army, <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-ccadef9d-ec6a-465d-81d1-5da470c8c04d" cert="low">Greek</placeName> and barbarian alike, drawn up in line of battle; for he supposed that on that day the King would come to an engagement; for about midway of this day's march there was a deep trench, five fathoms61 in width and three fathoms in depth. [15] This trench extended up through the plain for a distance of twelve parasangs, reaching to the wall of Media,62 [Here also are the canals, which flow from the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/912964" xml:id="recogito-9c031731-b171-49b8-bbc2-b825e49a507c" cert="low">Tigris</placeName> river; they are four in number, each a plethrum wide and exceedingly deep, and grain-carrying ships ply in them; they empty into the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/912849" xml:id="recogito-83fa3a95-7fab-4f14-bf2b-ca1b70936943" cert="low">Euphrates</placeName> and are a parsang apart, and there are bridges over them.] and alongside the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/912849" xml:id="recogito-c6298715-6a2a-4a17-9ae5-596e69f8b880" cert="low">Euphrates</placeName> there was a narrow passage, not more than about twenty feet in width, between the river and the trench; [16] and the trench63 had been constructed by the Great King as a means of defence when he learned that <persName xml:id="recogito-0107bd94-fe8a-4c05-8d80-42879be4f6cc">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-0107bd94-fe8a-4c05-8d80-42879be4f6cc" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-0107bd94-fe8a-4c05-8d80-42879be4f6cc" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was marching against him. Accordingly <persName xml:id="recogito-15678ed3-3800-41fa-8e09-be53dc6dc3d8">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-15678ed3-3800-41fa-8e09-be53dc6dc3d8" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-15678ed3-3800-41fa-8e09-be53dc6dc3d8" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> and his army went through by the passage just mentioned, and so found themselves on the inner side of the trench. [17] Now on that day the King did not offer battle, but tracks of both horses and men in retreat were to be seen in great numbers. [18] Then <persName xml:id="recogito-6990b31d-6b38-4e2b-b9c4-9d8da2496a5d">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-6990b31d-6b38-4e2b-b9c4-9d8da2496a5d" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-6990b31d-6b38-4e2b-b9c4-9d8da2496a5d" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> summoned <persName xml:id="recogito-08ef17c8-3e0e-41ef-9f3a-8d9d231fd0b6">Silanus</persName>, his Ambraciot soothsayer, and gave him three thousand darics; for on the eleventh day before this, while sacrificing, he had told <persName xml:id="recogito-567cfb8e-6adb-410b-98af-7e20aac32460">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-567cfb8e-6adb-410b-98af-7e20aac32460" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-567cfb8e-6adb-410b-98af-7e20aac32460" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> that the King would not fight within ten days, and <persName xml:id="recogito-488a8dc7-1edd-4805-9630-fe1f364fbf69">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-488a8dc7-1edd-4805-9630-fe1f364fbf69" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-488a8dc7-1edd-4805-9630-fe1f364fbf69" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> had said: “Then he will not fight at all, if he will not fight within ten days; however, if your prediction proves true, I promise you ten talents.64” So it was this money that he then paid over, the ten days having passed. [19] But since the King did not appear at the trench and try to prevent the passage of <persName xml:id="recogito-fec840f6-816f-4853-82d0-1fdb7c56547c">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-fec840f6-816f-4853-82d0-1fdb7c56547c" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-fec840f6-816f-4853-82d0-1fdb7c56547c" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' army, both <persName xml:id="recogito-38df937b-45c5-42ec-8210-6e235f5c31dc">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-38df937b-45c5-42ec-8210-6e235f5c31dc" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-38df937b-45c5-42ec-8210-6e235f5c31dc" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> and the rest concluded that he had given up the idea of fighting. Hence on the following day <persName xml:id="recogito-33cd933a-beb8-4b8a-b064-9c88068b3a17">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-33cd933a-beb8-4b8a-b064-9c88068b3a17" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-33cd933a-beb8-4b8a-b064-9c88068b3a17" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> proceeded more carelessly; [20] and on the third day he was making the march seated in his chariot and with only a small body of troops drawn up in line in front of him, while the greater part of the army was proceeding in disorder and many of the soldiers' arms and accoutrements were being carried in wagons and on pack-animals. 8.</p><p>It was now about full-market time65 and the stopping-place where <persName xml:id="recogito-4ca8c6e0-25eb-4a5e-9e37-ddd582da06a0">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-4ca8c6e0-25eb-4a5e-9e37-ddd582da06a0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-4ca8c6e0-25eb-4a5e-9e37-ddd582da06a0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was intending to halt had been almost reached, when <persName xml:id="recogito-d264b89e-023b-4bc5-82ed-d9bb129c62bd">Pategyas</persName>, a trusty Persian of <persName xml:id="recogito-72870b36-153c-4094-823f-8eabb85af92e">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-72870b36-153c-4094-823f-8eabb85af92e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-72870b36-153c-4094-823f-8eabb85af92e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' staff, came into sight, riding at full speed, with his horse in a sweat, and at once shouted out to everyone he met, in the barbarian tongue and in <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-00e7280a-5fb1-405e-bcd4-5c9f51703d81" cert="low">Greek</placeName>, that the King was approaching with a large army, all ready for battle. [2] Then ensued great confusion; for the thought of the Greeks, and of all the rest in fact, was that he would fall upon them immediately, while they were in disorder; [3] and <persName xml:id="recogito-542919d2-3d79-43d0-b5c6-1298c7c34547">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-542919d2-3d79-43d0-b5c6-1298c7c34547" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-542919d2-3d79-43d0-b5c6-1298c7c34547" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> leaped down from his chariot, put on his breastplate, and then, mounting his horse, took his spears in his hands and passed the word to all the others to arm themselves and get into their places, every man of them. [4] Thereupon they proceeded in great haste to take their places, <persName xml:id="recogito-934816f7-9376-4081-aa43-381f8ebfb72e">Clearchus</persName> occupying the right end of the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-4f757588-95ea-42c2-9caa-7a42e36f688c" cert="low">Greek</placeName> wing,66 close to the <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/912849" xml:id="recogito-bb40b8e9-de68-420c-a999-ec9aaa125e26" cert="low">Euphrates</placeName> river, Proxenus next to him, and the others beyond Proxenus, while <persName xml:id="recogito-fc67dc20-aa27-4bdb-a76e-a42243d0ab21">Menon</persName> and his army took the left end of the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-5f9a4f29-c450-4e71-a4ab-d2b7dcfe55f9" cert="low">Greek</placeName> wing. [5] As for the barbarians, Paphlagonian horsemen to the number of a thousand took station beside <persName xml:id="recogito-334f2913-e8da-4d38-ada9-415bd8ae9e1e">Clearchus</persName> on the right wing, as did the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-0c9f88d7-3c35-4e90-94b1-701699b9c434" cert="low">Greek</placeName> peltasts, on the left was Ariaeus, <persName xml:id="recogito-6f5f1f8d-1418-4254-8bf3-282661eafc63">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-6f5f1f8d-1418-4254-8bf3-282661eafc63" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-6f5f1f8d-1418-4254-8bf3-282661eafc63" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' lieutenant, with the rest of the barbarian army, [6] and in the centre <persName xml:id="recogito-197bb539-439f-48c5-ad71-08f1f2611d88">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-197bb539-439f-48c5-ad71-08f1f2611d88" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-197bb539-439f-48c5-ad71-08f1f2611d88" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> and his horsemen, about six hundred in number. These troopers were armed with breastplates and thigh-pieces and, all of them except <persName xml:id="recogito-37ba798c-907f-42fc-b6ac-fcaf3ae44e11">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-37ba798c-907f-42fc-b6ac-fcaf3ae44e11" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-37ba798c-907f-42fc-b6ac-fcaf3ae44e11" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, with helmets—<persName xml:id="recogito-95452eeb-4a84-4c06-892b-da0d6138ef1a">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-95452eeb-4a84-4c06-892b-da0d6138ef1a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-95452eeb-4a84-4c06-892b-da0d6138ef1a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, however, went into the battle with his head unprotected. [In fact, it is said of the Persians in general that they venture all the perils of war with their heads unprotected.] [7] And all their horses [with <persName xml:id="recogito-1bd9caab-b02e-45f3-9231-4df7575a5b54">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-1bd9caab-b02e-45f3-9231-4df7575a5b54" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-1bd9caab-b02e-45f3-9231-4df7575a5b54" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>] had frontlets and breast-pieces; and the men carried, besides their other weapons, <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-8124897a-5f6d-4572-a03d-4e79d31e8a8e" cert="low">Greek</placeName> sabres. [8]</p><p>And now it was midday, and the enemy were not yet in sight; but when afternoon was coming on, there was seen a rising dust, which appeared at first like a white cloud, but some time later like a kind of blackness in the plain, extending over a great distance. As the enemy came nearer and nearer, there were presently flashes of bronze here and there, and spears and the hostile ranks began to come into sight. [9] There were horsemen in white cuirasses on the left wing of the enemy, under the command, it was reported, of <placeName xml:id="recogito-75fd9894-a3d0-4766-98f3-96de017ad21e" cert="low">Tissaphernes</placeName><note target="recogito-75fd9894-a3d0-4766-98f3-96de017ad21e" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note>; next to them were troops with wicker shields and, farther on, hoplites with wooden shields which reached to their feet, these latter being Egyptians, people said; and then more horsemen and more bowmen. All these troops were marching in national divisions, each nation in a solid square. [10] In front of them were the so-called scythe-bearing chariots, at some distance from one another; and the scythes they carried reached out sideways from the axles and were also set under the chariot bodies, pointing towards the ground, so as to cut to pieces whatever they met; the intention, then, was that they should drive into the ranks of the Greeks and cut the troops to pieces. [11] As for the statement, however, which <persName xml:id="recogito-a159fad3-abdc-4f4a-9df8-3661c04c5db0">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a159fad3-abdc-4f4a-9df8-3661c04c5db0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a159fad3-abdc-4f4a-9df8-3661c04c5db0" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> made when he called the Greeks together and urged them to hold out against the shouting of the barbarians, he proved to be mistaken in this point; for they came on, not with shouting, but in the utmost silence and quietness, with equal step and slowly. [12]</p><p>At this moment <persName xml:id="recogito-637c3f76-cf32-4fa4-bc80-abd9c02fccfa">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-637c3f76-cf32-4fa4-bc80-abd9c02fccfa" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-637c3f76-cf32-4fa4-bc80-abd9c02fccfa" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> rode along the line, attended only by <persName xml:id="recogito-b70399e3-e933-4227-870e-40d201ffcb96">Pigres</persName>, his interpreter, and three or four others, and shouted to <persName xml:id="recogito-80781ee4-d0ed-408d-b1ca-24c8987b158a">Clearchus</persName> to lead his army against the enemy's centre, for the reason that the King was stationed there; “and if,” he said, “we are victorious there, our whole task is accomplished.” [13] Clearchus, however, since he saw the compact body at the enemy's centre and heard from <persName xml:id="recogito-21ede16f-5c39-4b78-8f8d-7187bfd81128">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-21ede16f-5c39-4b78-8f8d-7187bfd81128" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-21ede16f-5c39-4b78-8f8d-7187bfd81128" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> that the King was beyond his left wing (for the King was so superior in numbers that, although occupying the centre of his own line, he was beyond <persName xml:id="recogito-bb9bb215-1696-4f50-b5bc-de68363b5a05">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-bb9bb215-1696-4f50-b5bc-de68363b5a05" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-bb9bb215-1696-4f50-b5bc-de68363b5a05" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' left wing), was unwilling to draw the right wing away from the river, for fear that he might be turned on both flanks; and he told <persName xml:id="recogito-2605c736-994a-4403-96a9-98610bfb3a66">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-2605c736-994a-4403-96a9-98610bfb3a66" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-2605c736-994a-4403-96a9-98610bfb3a66" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, in reply, that he was taking care to make everything go well. [14]</p><p>At this critical time the King's army was advancing evenly, while the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-0ba18b28-b3d0-4aa3-a09d-144912129ce7" cert="low">Greek</placeName> force, still remaining in the same place, was forming its line from those who were still coming up. And <persName xml:id="recogito-d324ac03-f421-447f-8263-2b7b9167f77c">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-d324ac03-f421-447f-8263-2b7b9167f77c" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-d324ac03-f421-447f-8263-2b7b9167f77c" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, riding along at some distance from his army, was taking a survey, looking in either direction, both at his enemies and his friends. [15] Then <persName xml:id="recogito-d139abd5-94e8-40cd-93f1-d04252b0ec98">Xenophon</persName>,67 an Athenian, seeing him from the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-b9aebd65-9c00-452a-9041-08a3d7a871a6" cert="low">Greek</placeName> army, approached so as to meet him and asked if he had any orders to give; and <persName xml:id="recogito-8c547ee6-853a-440c-b161-af99aba463fc">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-8c547ee6-853a-440c-b161-af99aba463fc" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-8c547ee6-853a-440c-b161-af99aba463fc" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> pulled up his horse and bade <persName xml:id="recogito-71ace0fe-2bd4-4051-adb4-5bc87e20e893">Xenophon</persName> tell everybody that the sacrificial victims and omens were all favourable. [16] While saying this he heard a noise running through the ranks, and asked what the noise was. <persName xml:id="recogito-59f62812-1c97-47c8-a531-35c84a894f4f">Xenophon</persName> replied that the watchword was now passing along for the second time.68 And <persName xml:id="recogito-a79ec468-2238-4897-832c-7d4e09af1785">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a79ec468-2238-4897-832c-7d4e09af1785" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a79ec468-2238-4897-832c-7d4e09af1785" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> wondered who had given it out, and asked what the watchword was. <persName xml:id="recogito-696b7927-3200-4d45-a0c9-41f079580a23">Xenophon</persName> replied “Zeus Saviour and Victory.” [17] And upon hearing this <persName xml:id="recogito-062250aa-f94b-4907-a3c2-294c3f808c2c">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-062250aa-f94b-4907-a3c2-294c3f808c2c" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-062250aa-f94b-4907-a3c2-294c3f808c2c" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> said, “Well, I accept it, and so let it be.” After he had said these words he rode back to his own position.</p><p>At length the opposing lines were not three or four stadia apart, and then the Greeks struck up the paean and began to advance against the enemy. [18] And when, as they proceeded, a part of the phalanx billowed out, those who were thus left behind began to run; at the same moment they all set up the sort of war-cry which they raise to Enyalius,69 and all alike began running. It is also reported that some of them clashed their shields against their spears, thereby frightening the enemy's horses. [19] And before an arrow reached them, the barbarians broke and fled. Thereupon the Greeks pursued with all their might, but shouted meanwhile to one another not to run at a headlong pace, but to keep their ranks in the pursuit. [20] As for the enemy's chariots, some of them plunged through the lines of their own troops, others, however, through the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-cf0b1e82-a4c2-4c6b-8798-74757f263109" cert="low">Greek</placeName> lines, but without charioteers. And whenever the Greeks saw them coming, they would open a gap for their passage; one fellow, to be sure, was caught, like a befuddled man on a race-course, yet it was said that even he was not hurt in the least, nor, for that matter, did any other single man among the Greeks get any hurt whatever in this battle, save that some one on the left wing was reported to have been hit by an arrow. [21]</p><p>When <persName xml:id="recogito-a70dd29f-cecb-443f-917a-f77cdcd0da1f">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a70dd29f-cecb-443f-917a-f77cdcd0da1f" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a70dd29f-cecb-443f-917a-f77cdcd0da1f" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> saw that the Greeks were victorious over the division opposite them and were in pursuit, although he was pleased and was already being saluted with homage as King by his attendants, he nevertheless was not induced to join the pursuit, but, keeping in close formation the six hundred horsemen of his troop, he was watching to see what the King would do. For he knew that the King held the centre of the Persian army; [22] in fact, all the generals of the barbarians hold their own centre when they are in command, for they think that this is the safest position, namely, with their forces on either side of them, and also that if they want to pass along an order, the army will get it in half the time; [23] so in this instance the King held the centre of the army under his command, but still he found himself beyond the left wing of <persName xml:id="recogito-406cc9a3-95e0-4b4e-8b8f-999c9e927d9a">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-406cc9a3-95e0-4b4e-8b8f-999c9e927d9a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-406cc9a3-95e0-4b4e-8b8f-999c9e927d9a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>. Since, then, there was no one in his front to give battle to him or to the troops drawn up before him, he proceeded to wheel round his line with the intention of encircling the enemy. [24]</p><p>Thereupon <persName xml:id="recogito-4873356e-dc5c-43ee-b97e-ed39f2c3e128">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-4873356e-dc5c-43ee-b97e-ed39f2c3e128" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-4873356e-dc5c-43ee-b97e-ed39f2c3e128" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, seized with fear lest he might get in the rear of the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-b7f9e211-dea7-48b1-9706-128b7b5eaad1" cert="low">Greek</placeName> troops and cut them to pieces, charged to meet him; and attacking with his six hundred, he was victorious over the forces stationed in front of the King and put to flight the six thousand,70 slaying with his own hand, it is said, their commander <persName xml:id="recogito-5f97bfef-dde6-4506-a514-daf3068d6d6f">Artagerses</persName>. [25] But when they turned to flight, <persName xml:id="recogito-041b4421-fac6-4a53-8359-6e74d51574ae">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-041b4421-fac6-4a53-8359-6e74d51574ae" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-041b4421-fac6-4a53-8359-6e74d51574ae" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' six hundred, setting out in pursuit, became scattered also, and only a very few were left about him, chiefly his so-called table companions. [26] While attended by these only, he caught sight of the King and the compact body around him; and on the instant he lost control of himself and, with the cry “I see the man,” rushed upon him and struck him in the breast and wounded him through his breastplate—as Ctesias71 the physician says, adding also that he himself healed the wound. [27]</p><p>While <persName xml:id="recogito-4fcda96e-a109-41ac-81bc-5b5dd317c30b">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-4fcda96e-a109-41ac-81bc-5b5dd317c30b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-4fcda96e-a109-41ac-81bc-5b5dd317c30b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was delivering his stroke, however, some one hit him a hard blow under the eye with a javelin; and then followed a struggle between the King and <persName xml:id="recogito-c7217439-8443-44a1-a9d2-33808c438a36">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-c7217439-8443-44a1-a9d2-33808c438a36" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-c7217439-8443-44a1-a9d2-33808c438a36" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> and the attendants who supported each of them. The number that fell on the King's side is stated by <persName xml:id="recogito-ee9bd8c6-2627-4e11-a692-f45924b79f79">Ctesias</persName>, who was with him; on the other side, <persName xml:id="recogito-74d65b77-1a7f-4cbc-abe7-fe240f6b73f9">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-74d65b77-1a7f-4cbc-abe7-fe240f6b73f9" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-74d65b77-1a7f-4cbc-abe7-fe240f6b73f9" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> himself was killed and eight of the noblest of his attendants lay dead upon him. [28] Of Artapates, the one among <persName xml:id="recogito-3c98a588-633c-47d0-976b-c7f65af7680a">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-3c98a588-633c-47d0-976b-c7f65af7680a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-3c98a588-633c-47d0-976b-c7f65af7680a" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' chamberlains who was his most faithful follower, it is told that when he saw <persName xml:id="recogito-14553e7c-4091-4815-9adf-bf5a46385e99">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-14553e7c-4091-4815-9adf-bf5a46385e99" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-14553e7c-4091-4815-9adf-bf5a46385e99" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> fallen, he leaped down from his horse and threw his arms about him. [29] And one report is that the King ordered someone to slay him upon the body of <persName xml:id="recogito-3d1ae304-36d4-44dd-91fb-28c7199eb004">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-3d1ae304-36d4-44dd-91fb-28c7199eb004" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-3d1ae304-36d4-44dd-91fb-28c7199eb004" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>, while others say that he drew his dagger and slew himself with his own hand; for he had a dagger of gold, and he also wore a necklace and bracelets and all the other ornaments that the noblest Persians wear; for he had been honoured by <persName xml:id="recogito-91662658-c878-4709-982d-7383902d1bb4">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-91662658-c878-4709-982d-7383902d1bb4" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-91662658-c878-4709-982d-7383902d1bb4" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> because of his affection and fidelity. 9.</p><p>In this way, then, <persName xml:id="recogito-8a785d2b-a5cd-49f2-8f3b-cef99ec922e7">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-8a785d2b-a5cd-49f2-8f3b-cef99ec922e7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-8a785d2b-a5cd-49f2-8f3b-cef99ec922e7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> came to his end, a man who was the most kingly and the most worthy to rule of all the Persians who have been born since <persName xml:id="recogito-6ed1e50f-7c32-4aee-9e98-e5e72f0a9273">Cyrus the Elder</persName>, as all agree who are reputed to have known <persName xml:id="recogito-dafd7b67-de78-4414-97b4-d203217b53cd">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-dafd7b67-de78-4414-97b4-d203217b53cd" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-dafd7b67-de78-4414-97b4-d203217b53cd" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> intimately. [2] For firstly, while he was still a boy and was being educated with his brother and the other boys, he was regarded as the best of them all in all respects. [3] For all the sons of the noblest Persians are educated at the King's court. There one may learn discretion and self-control in full measure, and nothing that is base can be either heard or seen. [4] The boys have before their eyes the spectacle of men honoured by the King and of others dishonoured; they likewise hear of them; and so from earliest boyhood they are learning how to rule and how to submit to rule. [5] Here, then, <persName xml:id="recogito-01971876-e40c-4f88-89a8-6dc54d1a5f0e">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-01971876-e40c-4f88-89a8-6dc54d1a5f0e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-01971876-e40c-4f88-89a8-6dc54d1a5f0e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was reputed to be, in the first place, the most modest of his fellows, and even more obedient to his elders than were his inferiors in rank; secondly, the most devoted to horses and the most skilful in managing horses; he was also adjudged the most eager to learn, and the most diligent in practising, military accomplishments, alike the use of the bow and of the javelin. [6] Then, when he was of suitable age, he was the fondest of hunting and, more than that, the fondest of incurring danger in his pursuit of wild animals. On one occasion, when a bear charged upon him, he did not take to flight, but grappled with her and was dragged from his horse; he received some injuries, the scars of which he retained, but in the end he killed the bear; and, furthermore, the man who was the first to come to his assistance he made an object of envy to many. [7]</p><p>Again, when he was sent down72 by his father to be satrap of <persName xml:id="recogito-628a4e35-475d-4c03-8d1c-e55841adf170">Lydia</persName>, Greater Phrygia, and <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/991402" xml:id="recogito-441411d2-1d78-40b4-83e6-b61bddfaeeed" cert="low">Cappadocia</placeName> and was also appointed commander of all the troops whose duty it is to muster in the plain of <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/609425" xml:id="recogito-06d37fe4-29a7-4773-89b6-c8dbc09962b7" cert="high">Castolus</placeName>, he showed, in the first place, that he counted it of the utmost importance, when he concluded a treaty or compact with anyone or made anyone any promise, under no circumstances to prove false to his word. [8] It was for this reason, then, that the cities trusted him and put themselves under his protection,73 and that individuals also trusted him; and if anyone had been an enemy, when <persName xml:id="recogito-ac43c96f-3735-4a7a-b2e2-ed6a49a728a1">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-ac43c96f-3735-4a7a-b2e2-ed6a49a728a1" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-ac43c96f-3735-4a7a-b2e2-ed6a49a728a1" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> made a treaty with him he trusted that he would suffer no harm in violation of that treaty. [9] Consequently, when he came to hostilities with <placeName xml:id="recogito-dfe8c744-a3a7-4048-b29b-581dd37632c6" cert="low">Tissaphernes</placeName><note target="recogito-dfe8c744-a3a7-4048-b29b-581dd37632c6" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note>, all the cities of their own accord chose <persName xml:id="recogito-c1fc04a1-531a-4bd7-82bd-afef02f18bb7">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-c1fc04a1-531a-4bd7-82bd-afef02f18bb7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-c1fc04a1-531a-4bd7-82bd-afef02f18bb7" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> rather than <placeName xml:id="recogito-283b3f36-9d93-424a-a8b5-d27574fda5b2" cert="low">Tissaphernes</placeName><note target="recogito-283b3f36-9d93-424a-a8b5-d27574fda5b2" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note>, with the exception of <persName xml:id="recogito-35f23572-a3f4-422b-8157-c90290e6f168">Miletus</persName>;74 and the reason why the Milesians feared him was, that he would not prove false to the exiles from their city. [10] For he showed repeatedly, by deed as well as by word, that he would never abandon them when once he had come to be their friend, not even if they should become still fewer in number and should meet with still worse misfortune. [11]</p><p>It was manifest also that whenever a man conferred any benefit upon <persName xml:id="recogito-9ac8d700-3bb7-43b8-b8ac-c6975faa5789">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-9ac8d700-3bb7-43b8-b8ac-c6975faa5789" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-9ac8d700-3bb7-43b8-b8ac-c6975faa5789" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> or did him any harm, he always strove to outdo him; in fact, some people used to report it as a prayer of his that he might live long enough to outdo both those who benefited and those who injured him, returning like for like. [12] Hence it was that he had a greater following than any other one man of our time of friends who eagerly desired to entrust to him both treasure and cities and their very bodies. [13] Yet, on the other hand, none could say that he permitted malefactors and wicked men to laugh at him; on the contrary, he was merciless to the last degree in punishing them, and one might often see along the travelled roads people who had lost feet or hands or eyes; thus in <persName xml:id="recogito-7ccf76c1-b66b-4ec8-92b8-d1e99fe46a24">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-7ccf76c1-b66b-4ec8-92b8-d1e99fe46a24" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-7ccf76c1-b66b-4ec8-92b8-d1e99fe46a24" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' province it became possible for either <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-f088c90d-936a-4889-8ec7-3ff9f2730806" cert="low">Greek</placeName> or barbarian, provided he were guilty of no wrongdoing, to travel fearlessly wherever he wished, carrying with him whatever it was to his interest to have. [14]</p><p>But it was the brave in war, as all agree, whom he honoured especially. For example, he was once at war with the Pisidians and Mysians and commanded in person an expedition into their territories; and whomsoever in his army he found willing to meet dangers, these men he would not only appoint as rulers of the territory he was subduing, but would honour thereafter with other gifts also. [15] Thus the brave were seen to be most prosperous, while cowards were deemed fit to be their slaves. Consequently <persName xml:id="recogito-e064a6b0-6276-4761-bc91-de34d4fb0466">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-e064a6b0-6276-4761-bc91-de34d4fb0466" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-e064a6b0-6276-4761-bc91-de34d4fb0466" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> had men in great abundance who were willing to meet danger wherever they thought that he would observe them. [16] As for uprightness, if a man showed that he desired to distinguish himself in that quality, <persName xml:id="recogito-b4e09a57-38ec-48c8-a5ee-0c7c2a63c566">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-b4e09a57-38ec-48c8-a5ee-0c7c2a63c566" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-b4e09a57-38ec-48c8-a5ee-0c7c2a63c566" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> considered it all important to enable such an one to live in greater opulence than those who were greedy of unjust gain. [17] Hence he not only had many and various functions performed for him with fidelity, but, in particular, he secured the services of an army worthy of the name. For generals and captains who came overseas to serve him for the sake of money judged that loyal obedience to <persName xml:id="recogito-04efc1bb-d0e2-433f-bf6b-8a50a8caa465">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-04efc1bb-d0e2-433f-bf6b-8a50a8caa465" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-04efc1bb-d0e2-433f-bf6b-8a50a8caa465" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was worth more to them than their mere monthly pay. [18] Again, so surely as a man performed with credit any service that he assigned him, <persName xml:id="recogito-ad453437-3fa5-404d-a290-b5e77f7f23e6">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-ad453437-3fa5-404d-a290-b5e77f7f23e6" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-ad453437-3fa5-404d-a290-b5e77f7f23e6" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> never let his zeal go unrewarded. In consequence, he was said to have gained the very best supporters for every undertaking. [19]</p><p>Furthermore, whenever he saw that a man was a skilful and just administrator, not only organizing well the country over which he ruled, but producing revenues, he would never deprive such a man of territory, but would always give him more besides. The result was that they toiled with pleasure and accumulated with confidence, and, more than that, no one would conceal from <persName xml:id="recogito-bffaa75e-38ef-43f6-91d4-1afe0bd54c59">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-bffaa75e-38ef-43f6-91d4-1afe0bd54c59" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-bffaa75e-38ef-43f6-91d4-1afe0bd54c59" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> the store which he had acquired; for it was clear that he did not envy those who were frankly and openly rich, but strove to make use of the possessions of such as tried to conceal their wealth. [20]</p><p>As to friends, all agree that he showed himself pre-eminent in his attentions to all the friends that he made and found devoted to him and adjudged to be competent co-workers in whatever he might be wishing to accomplish. [21] For, just as the precise object for which he thought he needed friends himself was that he might have co-workers, so he tried on his own part to be a most vigorous co-worker with his friends to secure that which he found each one of them desired. [22] Again, he received more gifts, I presume, than any other one man, and for many reasons; and surely he of all men distributed gifts most generously among his friends, with an eye to the tastes of each one and to whatever particular need he noted in each case. [23] As for all the gifts which people sent him to wear upon his person, whether intended for war or merely for show, it is reported that he said of them that his own person could not be adorned with all these things, but that in his opinion friends nobly adorned were a man's greatest ornament. [24] To be sure, the fact that he outdid his friends in the greatness of the benefits he conferred is nothing surprising, for the manifest reason that he had greater means than they; but that he surpassed them in solicitude and in eagerness to do favours, this in my opinion is more admirable. [25] For example, when <persName xml:id="recogito-60fc14a6-7af6-43be-86b2-6654eebeec3e">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-60fc14a6-7af6-43be-86b2-6654eebeec3e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-60fc14a6-7af6-43be-86b2-6654eebeec3e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> got some particularly good wine, he would often send the half-emptied jar to a friend with the message: “Cyrus says that he has not chanced upon better wine than this for a long time; so he sends it to you, and asks you to drink it up today in company with the friends you love best.” [26] So he would often send halves of geese and of loaves and so forth, instructing the bearer to add the message: “Cyrus enjoyed this, and therefore wants you also to take a taste of it.” [27] And wherever fodder was exceedingly scarce and he was able to get it for his own use because of the large number of his servants and because of his good planning, he would distribute this fodder among his friends and tell them to give it to the horses that carried their own bodies, that they might not be hungry while carrying his friends. [28] And whenever he was on the march and was likely to be seen by very many people, he would call his friends to him and engage them in earnest conversation, in order to show whom he honoured. Hence, as I at least conclude from what comes to my ears, no man, <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-68de0662-0503-4be7-b90a-56ad331c0c69" cert="low">Greek</placeName> or barbarian, has ever been loved by a greater number of people. [29] Here is a fact to confirm that conclusion: although <persName xml:id="recogito-0371eae0-931a-4d5c-8852-8ea6c2d3c144">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-0371eae0-931a-4d5c-8852-8ea6c2d3c144" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-0371eae0-931a-4d5c-8852-8ea6c2d3c144" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was a slave,75 no one deserted him to join the King, save that <persName xml:id="recogito-fc79a44f-7389-40d1-9fa6-a811211895b9">Orontas</persName> attempted to do so (and he, mark you, speedily found out that the man he imagined was faithful to him, was more devoted to <persName xml:id="recogito-e2e74755-0bc8-480a-bdd5-c89bea5d11e3">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-e2e74755-0bc8-480a-bdd5-c89bea5d11e3" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-e2e74755-0bc8-480a-bdd5-c89bea5d11e3" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> than to him); on the other hand, many went over from the King to <persName xml:id="recogito-e85b93ae-2c4c-4388-b2ca-24e2223b29dc">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-e85b93ae-2c4c-4388-b2ca-24e2223b29dc" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-e85b93ae-2c4c-4388-b2ca-24e2223b29dc" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> after the two had become enemies (these being, moreover, the men who were most highly regarded by the King), because they thought that if they were deserving, they would gain a worthier reward with <persName xml:id="recogito-a27aacc6-3911-4dff-a572-99b30d8a177b">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-a27aacc6-3911-4dff-a572-99b30d8a177b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-a27aacc6-3911-4dff-a572-99b30d8a177b" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> than with the King. [30] Furthermore, what happened to <persName xml:id="recogito-cf4db6a0-424e-4f10-8afb-879b693b5208">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-cf4db6a0-424e-4f10-8afb-879b693b5208" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-cf4db6a0-424e-4f10-8afb-879b693b5208" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> at the end of his life is a strong indication that he was a true man himself and that he knew how to judge those who were faithful, devoted, and constant. [31] When he died, namely, all his bodyguard of friends and table companions died fighting in his defence, with the exception of <placeName xml:id="recogito-956ced5f-7d51-4e18-958d-3c9b1aaef714" cert="low">Ariaeus</placeName>; he, it chanced, was stationed on the left wing at the head of the cavalry, and when he learned that <persName xml:id="recogito-928f2185-9ef1-4993-9022-b51ed299b065">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-928f2185-9ef1-4993-9022-b51ed299b065" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-928f2185-9ef1-4993-9022-b51ed299b065" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> had fallen, he took to flight with the whole army that he commanded. 10.</p><p>Then the head of <persName xml:id="recogito-8af4a7c5-69b1-4444-ad39-54d33e4fc354">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-8af4a7c5-69b1-4444-ad39-54d33e4fc354" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-8af4a7c5-69b1-4444-ad39-54d33e4fc354" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> and his right hand were cut off. But the King, pursuing Ariaeus, burst into the camp of <persName xml:id="recogito-59bcce78-033f-4a0a-b2a5-ac7e27981ad3">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-59bcce78-033f-4a0a-b2a5-ac7e27981ad3" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-59bcce78-033f-4a0a-b2a5-ac7e27981ad3" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>; and <persName xml:id="recogito-9c21cd25-88e5-42b3-8323-a53f9be34c20">Ariaeus</persName> and his men no longer stood their ground, but fled through their own camp to the stopping-place from which they had set out that morning, a distance, it was said, of four parasangs. [2] So the King and his troops proceeded to secure plunder of various sorts in abundance, while in particular he captured the <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/314903" xml:id="recogito-8751cd74-7779-4f32-ad11-18262e47dd59" cert="high">Phocaean</placeName> woman, <persName xml:id="recogito-321a8a81-3b5c-42e5-b841-e313719ac840">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-321a8a81-3b5c-42e5-b841-e313719ac840" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-321a8a81-3b5c-42e5-b841-e313719ac840" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' concubine, who, by all accounts, was clever and beautiful. [3] The Milesian woman, however, the younger one, after being seized by the King's men made her escape, lightly clad, to some Greeks who had chanced to be standing guard amid the baggage train and, forming themselves in line against the enemy, had killed many of the plunderers, although some of their own number had been killed also; nevertheless, they did not take to flight, but they saved this woman and, furthermore, whatever else came within their lines, whether persons or property, they saved all alike. [4]</p><p>At this time the King and the Greeks were distant from one another about thirty stadia, the Greeks pursuing the troops in their front, in the belief that they were victorious over all the enemy, the King and his followers plundering, in the belief that they were all victorious already. [5] When, however, the Greeks learned that the King and his forces were in their baggage train, and the King, on the other hand, heard from <placeName xml:id="recogito-5e2850fa-453b-4df0-b40d-0fe0f383d2d8" cert="low">Tissaphernes</placeName><note target="recogito-5e2850fa-453b-4df0-b40d-0fe0f383d2d8" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note> that the Greeks were victorious over the division opposite them and had gone on ahead in pursuit, then the King proceeded to gather his troops together and form them in line of battle, and <persName xml:id="recogito-24cb4168-ac8b-4198-8985-2dc6f6279c51">Clearchus</persName> called Proxenus (for he was nearest him in the line) and took counsel with him as to whether they should send a detachment or go in full force to the camp, for the purpose of lending aid. [6] Meanwhile the Greeks saw the King advancing again, as it seemed, from their rear, and they accordingly countermarched and made ready to meet his attack in case he should advance in that direction76; the King, however, did not do so, but returned by the same route he had followed before, when he passed outside of <persName xml:id="recogito-eff4f351-8cd9-4c02-a34a-bf115dd82fcf">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-eff4f351-8cd9-4c02-a34a-bf115dd82fcf" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-eff4f351-8cd9-4c02-a34a-bf115dd82fcf" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note>' left wing, and in his return picked up not only those who had deserted to the Greeks during the battle, but also <persName xml:id="recogito-ca05a3c9-5589-4d72-a089-06edf607cc36">Tissaphernes</persName><note target="recogito-ca05a3c9-5589-4d72-a089-06edf607cc36" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note> and his troops. [7] For <persName xml:id="recogito-372e95e3-0dc5-4b6d-ba5f-736728e99479">Tissaphernes</persName><note target="recogito-372e95e3-0dc5-4b6d-ba5f-736728e99479" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note> had not taken to flight in the first encounter, but had charged along the river through the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-2b5fbea9-e07d-4846-9102-2580d3eb13ad" cert="low">Greek</placeName> peltasts77; he did not kill anyone in his passage, but the Greeks, after opening a gap for his men, proceeded to deal blows and throw javelins upon them as they went through. The commander of the <placeName ref="http://dare.ht.lu.se/places/24327" xml:id="recogito-e7e0cd7c-629b-4cb2-aa1a-a5ba3e39f319" cert="low">Greek</placeName> peltasts was Episthenes of <placeName ref="http://pleiades.stoa.org/places/501347" xml:id="recogito-d9f5f35a-3afe-4adc-82ed-cd2a5d8e6370" cert="low">Amphipolis</placeName>, and it was said that he proved himself a sagacious man. [8] At any rate, after <persName xml:id="recogito-118c288d-11a0-4616-90c8-7a5902a2e090">Tissaphernes</persName><note target="recogito-118c288d-11a0-4616-90c8-7a5902a2e090" resp="aghague">445-395 BC. Persian. Satrap of Lydia.</note> had thus come off with the worst of it, he did not wheel round again, but went on to the camp of the Greeks and there fell in with the King; so it was that, after forming their lines once more, they were proceeding together. [9]</p><p>When they were over against the left wing of the Greeks,78 the latter conceived the fear that they might advance against that wing and, by outflanking them on both sides, cut them to pieces; they thought it best, therefore, to draw the wing back and get the river in their rear.79 [10] But while they were taking counsel about this matter, the King had already changed his line of battle to the same form as theirs and brought it into position opposite them, just as when he had met them for battle the first time.80 And when the Greeks saw that the enemy were near them and in battle-order, they again struck up the paean and advanced to the attack much more eagerly than before; [11] and the barbarians once again failed to await the attack, but took to flight when at a greater distance from the Greeks than they were the first time. [12] The Greeks pursued as far as a certain village, and there they halted; for above the village was a hill, upon which the King and his followers rallied; and they were not now foot-soldiers, but the hill was covered with horsemen, so that the Greeks could not perceive what was going on. They did see, they said, the royal standard, a kind of golden eagle on a shield, raised aloft upon a <placeName ref="http://sws.geonames.org/727067" xml:id="recogito-6875d7a1-f742-48a7-b63a-e12028103bf5" cert="low">pole</placeName>. [13] But when at this point also the Greeks resumed their forward movement, the horsemen at once proceeded to leave the hill; they did not keep together, however, as they went, but scattered in different directions; so the hill became gradually cleared of the horsemen, till at last they were all gone. [14] Clearchus, accordingly, did not lead the army up the hill, but halted at its foot and sent <persName xml:id="recogito-3f377e61-11b9-4d12-89f9-b1863fe37a22">Lycius the Syracusan</persName> and another man to the summit, directing them to observe what was beyond the hill and report back to him. [15] And <persName xml:id="recogito-82464dbe-98b8-4667-83cf-89f9a0083d64">Lycius</persName>, after riding up and looking, brought back word that the enemy were in headlong flight. [16] At about this time the sun set.</p><p>Then the Greeks halted, grounded arms, and proceeded to rest themselves. At the same time they wondered that <persName xml:id="recogito-76dda22f-5266-4b6a-b204-727804694eca">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-76dda22f-5266-4b6a-b204-727804694eca" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-76dda22f-5266-4b6a-b204-727804694eca" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> was nowhere to be seen and that no one else had come to them from him; for they did not know that he was dead, but conjectured that he had either gone off in pursuit or pushed on to occupy some point. [17] So they took counsel for themselves as to whether they should remain where they were and bring the baggage train thither, or return to their camp. The decision was to return, and they reached their tents about supper-time. [18] Such was the conclusion of this day. They found most of their property pillaged, in particular whatever there was to eat or drink, and as for the wagons loaded with flour and wine which <persName xml:id="recogito-f8ad428c-ae75-4a74-86da-0f3ca045f87e">Cyrus</persName><note target="recogito-f8ad428c-ae75-4a74-86da-0f3ca045f87e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger, Persian prince and general, 5th century BC.</note><note target="recogito-f8ad428c-ae75-4a74-86da-0f3ca045f87e" resp="aghague">Cyrus the Younger. Persian prince and general. 5th century BC.</note> had provided in order that, if ever serious need should overtake the army, he might have supplies to distribute among the Greeks (and there were four hundred of these wagons, it was said), these also the King and his men had now pillaged. [19] The result was that most of the Greeks had no dinner; and they had had no breakfast, either, for the King had appeared before the time when the army was to halt for breakfast. Thus it was, then that they got through this night.</p></div></body>
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