<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LI">CHAPTER LI<br/> <span class="subhead">THE BATTLE OF SALAMIS</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">On</span> the morning of the battle, Xerxes ascended a golden
throne which had been placed for him upon a rock that overlooked
the sea. Around him sat scribes ready to record the
events of the battle. That they would all be to the honour
of his fleet Xerxes never doubted.</p>
<p>Themistocles saw with pleasure that the wind was rising,
making it difficult for the Persians to manage their unwieldy
vessels. As he watched their efforts he urged the Greeks to
attack them at once.</p>
<p>The narrowness of the strait, as well as the force of the
wind, added to the confusion of the enemy and made the
number of its ships of little use. Yet the Persians fought
bravely, remembering that the eyes of the great king were
upon them.</p>
<p>One of the ships was commanded by a queen named
Artemisia. She was fighting fiercely when her ship was
attacked by an Athenian vessel at close quarters.</p>
<p>Artemisia tried to escape, but as her ship sailed away it
was followed by the enemy. Straight in her path lay one of
Xerxes’ vessels. The queen did not try to avoid it, but
pursuing her course struck the ship, so that her own countrymen
who were on board were sent to the bottom.</p>
<p>When the Athenian captain saw what the queen had
done, he thought, as perhaps she meant him to do, that
she had deserted her own side and was now fighting for the
Greeks, so he turned back and followed her no more.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span></p>
<p>From his golden throne, Xerxes too saw what Artemisia
had done, and he supposed it was a Greek vessel that she
had run down. In his delight he exclaimed, ‘My men are
become women, my women men.’ This was a hard thing to
say of his soldiers who were fighting gallantly for their king.</p>
<p>Meantime the Persian ships were driven into the narrow
strait. Ship dashed against ship till the Persian dead
strewed the deep ‘like flowers.’ When evening fell, two
hundred Persian ships had been destroyed and the Greeks
had won the great sea-battle of Salamis. The glory of the
victory was due to Themistocles. There might indeed
have been no battle at Salamis had he not tricked both the
Persian king and the Greek admirals.</p>
<p>The Athenian was proud of his success, and he now
determined by another crafty message to Xerxes to drive
him out of Greece.</p>
<p>But first he sent for Aristides, and to test his wisdom he
told him that he thought they should sail to the Hellespont
to destroy the bridge by which Xerxes had crossed into
Europe and by which he could return to Asia.</p>
<p>‘Rather than break down the bridge,’ answered Aristides,
‘we should build another, if by so doing we may hasten his
departure.’</p>
<p>Now this was what Themistocles himself really wished—to
hasten the king’s retreat. So although he did not mean
to destroy the bridge, he sent once again to Xerxes, and this
is what he said: ‘O king, the Greeks are hastening to the
Hellespont to destroy the bridge by which alone thou canst
return to Asia. Hasten then to reach the bridge, while I
delay the Greek fleet, lest evil overtake thee.’</p>
<p>Once more the king fell into the trap Themistocles had
prepared for him. For he set out in haste with the main
body of his army for the Hellespont, leaving Mardonius with
a large force to carry on the war as well as he could.</p>
<div id="if_i_170" class="figcenter" style="max-width: 29em;">
<ANTIMG src="images/i_170.jpg" width-obs="1808" height-obs="2512" alt="" />
<div class="caption">Ship dashed against ship, till the Persian dead strewed the deep
‘like flowers’</div>
</div>
<p>The march to the Hellespont was a terrible one, for Xerxes
had himself laid waste the land when he advanced upon
Athens, and now there was neither food nor shelter for his
army. The soldiers who were starving ate plants, grass, the
bark of trees—anything to satisfy their hunger.</p>
<p>In their weakness they were attacked by plague, and
hundreds perished long before the Hellespont was in sight.
Even when at length the gleam of water gladdened the
hearts of the soldiers, they were soon stricken again with
fear, for where was the bridge?</p>
<p>The Greeks had not outstripped them, so this was not
their doing. A storm had destroyed the bridge. Weak
and hungry as they were, the soldiers had to rebuild it
before they could cross over to Asia, where food and shelter
awaited them.</p>
<p>When the Greeks saw that the Persians were marching
to the Hellespont, they were eager to follow them. But
Themistocles persuaded them to go back to Athens to rebuild
the city.</p>
<p>Then he sent yet another message to Xerxes, saying,
‘Themistocles, the leader of the Athenians and the best and
wisest of the Greeks, has out of goodwill to thee held back
the allies from chasing thy ships and breaking up the bridge
at the Hellespont. So go thy way in peace.’</p>
<p>Although Themistocles sent these proud words to the
great king, he really believed it was wiser for the Greeks not
to pursue the retreating army. But he also wished to make
Xerxes his friend, so that if at any time he was ostracised by
the Athenians, he would find a welcome at the Persian court.</p>
<p>Greece was full of rejoicing when she heard of the
victory of Salamis. The generals of the different states met
at Corinth to propose a reward for the bravest and wisest
among themselves.</p>
<p>Each general wrote on a tablet the names of two whom
he believed to be worthy of a prize. They were not very
modest, these brave soldiers of Greece, for each general wrote
his own name first, though nearly all added beneath, the name
of Themistocles.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_172">172</span></p>
<p>The Spartans gave their meed of honour to the great
Athenian, for a crown of olive was placed upon his head and
he was presented with the most magnificent chariot that
Sparta had ever produced.</p>
<p>Æschylus, one of the great Greek poets, wrote a tragedy
on the fall of Xerxes, called <i>The Persians</i>, which was acted
in 472 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, eight years after the battle of Salamis. Sculptors
too wrought statues to commemorate the war, which were
placed in the temple of Athene.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span></p>
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