<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_LXXIX">CHAPTER LXXIX<br/> <span class="subhead">THE MARCH OF THE TEN THOUSAND</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">In</span> 404 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, soon after the disaster of Ægospotami, Darius,
king of Persia, died. His eldest son Artaxerxes succeeded
to his father’s throne.</p>
<p>Cyrus, the younger son, who was present at his father’s
death, was accused by Tissaphernes of trying to secure the
throne for himself.</p>
<p>Artaxerxes believed Tissaphernes, and Cyrus was arrested,
and would have been put to death had not his mother
pleaded that his life might be spared.</p>
<p>The king listened to his mother’s request and set his
brother free. He even allowed him to govern the provinces
that had been his in his father’s lifetime.</p>
<p>But Cyrus felt no gratitude to his brother, he hated him,
and was determined if it were possible to seize his throne.</p>
<p>So he hired a large number of Greek soldiers, for now
that there was peace between Athens and Sparta, many of
them were idle and glad to take service under Cyrus.</p>
<p>The prince pretended that he was going to fight against
Tissaphernes, and no one save himself and the Spartan,
Clearchus, who was the leader of the Greeks, knew that the
army was going to Babylon to fight against Artaxerxes, king
of Persia.</p>
<p>Among the Greek soldiers was Xenophon, a scholar and
a pupil of Socrates, who wrote the story of this expedition.</p>
<p>Early in 401 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, Cyrus assembled his troops at Sardis.
When they arrived at Tarsus, a city on the coast of Cilicia,
the soldiers began to suspect that Cyrus was going to lead<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span>
them against Artaxerxes. They were not afraid of the
great king, but they were afraid to leave the sea behind
them, for that was ever a terrible thing to the Greeks. So
they refused to march farther.</p>
<p>Clearchus, who was a stern commander and no favourite
with his men, tried in vain to quell their rebellion, but all
his efforts were vain. Not a step forward would they march.</p>
<p>He had used his authority and failed, now he resolved
not to command but to persuade. So he called his men
together again, and as he looked at them he wept.</p>
<p>Their grim, stern commander shedding tears! The
soldiers stared at him in open-eyed wonder.</p>
<p>Then Clearchus bade them see in how difficult a position
they had placed him, for he must either fail Cyrus or
forsake them. Forsake them he could not, so he declared,
for were they not ‘his country, his friends, and his allies’?</p>
<p>These words pleased the soldiers well, but what pleased
them even more was that when Cyrus sent to ask their
commander to go to his tent, he refused to go.</p>
<p>But they were less content when Clearchus reminded
them that as they refused to follow Cyrus, they could no
longer expect him to give them food or wages. What, he
asked them, did they mean to do?</p>
<p>All that they could do was to send a few of their number
to the prince to ask him where he intended to lead them.</p>
<p>Cyrus answered that he was taking them to the river
Euphrates, to fight against a Persian rebel, and at the same
time he offered to increase their wages if they would obey
Clearchus.</p>
<p>The Greeks were far from home, and not knowing what
else to do, they agreed to follow their commander. But they
did not trust Cyrus, and they still suspected that he wished
to march beyond the river Euphrates. And when they
reached the river their suspicions proved true, for Cyrus
told them plainly that he was going to Babylon to dethrone
his brother Artaxerxes.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span></p>
<p>As the Euphrates was unusually shallow, the army was
able to cross over on foot, and soon afterwards it was in the
desert of Arabia.</p>
<p>Xenophon tells us that the desert was ‘smooth as a sea.’
There were no large trees in all the great expanse, but there
were many shrubs that had a pleasant scent.</p>
<p>The soldiers did not find the march across the desert
dull, for they saw many strange beasts, unlike any they had
ever seen—wild asses, ostriches, antelopes,—and these they
hunted with zest.</p>
<p>When the desert lay behind them they found themselves
in a land where fields had been dug and gardens tended.
Here, too, a little before them, was Artaxerxes, with a great
army, ready to fight to the death for his crown.</p>
<p>The king was encamped at a place called Cunascæ, where
in the summer of 401 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> a battle was fought. Strange
as it may seem, before a blow was struck, the Persians were
seized with panic and turned to flee. Only Tissaphernes at
the head of the cavalry stood firm.</p>
<p>Cyrus with a small body of men, about six hundred in
number, dashed upon the centre of the army, for there, surrounded
by six thousand horsemen, was Artaxerxes. The
guards scattered before his fierce attack, and the king
turned to fly with them.</p>
<p>Then Cyrus, careless of aught save his desire to slay his
brother, and gain his crown, galloped after him, attended
by only a few of his own bodyguard.</p>
<p>As he drew near to the king, he hurled a javelin at him
and wounded him slightly. Almost at the same moment
Cyrus himself was wounded in the eye, and shortly after he
fell from his horse and was slain.</p>
<p>Cyrus was dead, and ten thousand Greek soldiers were
left alone with their generals in a strange land, surrounded
by enemies. Tissaphernes pretended to be a friend to the
Greeks, and offered to guide them safely home. So the two
armies set out together, but before long the Greek soldiers<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span>
grew suspicious of the Persians. To reassure the men,
Tissaphernes invited Clearchus and his captains to his tent.</p>
<p>The Greek general accepted the invitation, and, never
dreaming of treachery, he went to the Persian’s tent with
four other generals, twenty captains and a few soldiers.</p>
<p>No sooner had they entered than the captains and soldiers
were seized and put to death by the order of Tissaphernes.
Clearchus and the other generals were loaded with chains
and sent to the king. Artaxerxes commanded that they,
too, should be put to death.</p>
<p>The Persians believed that the Greek army would now
be forced to surrender. For, alone in an unknown land,
without a leader, how could they hope to reach their own
country?</p>
<p>But the greatness of their danger roused the courage of
the Greeks. Xenophon, who was at the time only a young
man, made an eloquent speech to the army, bidding them
choose new generals and obey them, for in this way only
could they hope to escape from their enemies.</p>
<p>The men did as he advised, choosing Xenophon himself
as one of the new generals.</p>
<p>And now began the retreat of the ten thousand through
untold difficulties. To go back the same way as they had
come was impossible, for the roads would be guarded by
the Persians. So they turned to the north and marched
through a wild and barren country, where fierce hillmen
held the narrow passes through which they must pass.</p>
<p>Sometimes the savage tribes hurled down upon them
from the heights great pieces of rock, and the soldiers lived
in dread of being crushed to death by their unseen foes.</p>
<p>When they reached Armenia it was December and
bitterly cold. They were overtaken by a snowstorm so
severe that many of the men lost their way. In vain they
tried to rejoin their comrades, and at length, utterly worn
out, they stumbled into great snowdrifts or lay down on the
road to die.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span></p>
<p>Still the army struggled bravely on, in the face of the
biting north wind, until at length it reached a tributary of
the river Euphrates. This they crossed in safety, to find
that most of their difficulties were over, for soon after they
reached a city called Gymnias.</p>
<p>Gymnias was a prosperous mining town, and the inhabitants
welcomed the ten thousand gladly and gave them
food and shelter, after they had heard of the terrible difficulties
through which the men had come.</p>
<p>But the soldiers did not linger long at Gymnias. They
were eager to set out again, for a guide promised that in five
days he would bring them to the sea.</p>
<p>‘On the fifth day the Greeks came to a hill, and when the
van reached the summit a great cry arose. When Xenophon
and those at the rear heard it they thought that an enemy
was attacking in front; but when the cry increased as fresh
men continually came up to the summit, Xenophon thought
it must be something more serious, and galloped forward to
the front with his cavalry.</p>
<p>‘As he drew near he heard what the cry was—“The Sea,
the Sea.”’</p>
<p>A few days more and the ten thousand were on Greek
soil. Here they rested for a month, offering glad sacrifices
of thanksgiving to Zeus, who had brought them back
in safety to their own land.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span></p>
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