<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XCII">CHAPTER XCII<br/> <span class="subhead">ALEXANDER AND DIOGENES</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">When</span> Alexander marched at the head of his army into
Thessaly, not a blow was struck. His presence seemed
enough to gain the allegiance of the Thessalians.</p>
<p>The king then went to Corinth, where ambassadors from
many of the Greek states met him. Young as he was, they
chose Alexander to be general over the Greek troops which
were to go with the Macedonians to invade Asia.</p>
<p>Every one in Corinth was eager to see the king. From
the surrounding towns, too, the people crowded into the
city, that they might look at the young monarch who was
going to lead their soldiers on so great an expedition.</p>
<p>They did not dream of all that he would do, how he
would spread their customs, their language, their culture
over Asia first, and then over all the world. But looking
at him they knew that he would be a conqueror.</p>
<p>Among those who wished to see Alexander were many
philosophers and great men. But one strange philosopher,
called Diogenes, showed no interest in the king.</p>
<p>Alexander heard of this man, who was said to sit all
day in a tub or barrel. As Diogenes did not come to see
him, he resolved to go to see Diogenes. He found the
philosopher outside the gates of Corinth, sitting in a tub
which was placed so that the rays of the sun fell upon
him.</p>
<p>When the philosopher saw the king and the courtiers
who accompanied him, he roused himself from his meditations
and looked at the young sovereign.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">313</span></p>
<p>Alexander spoke kindly to him, and asked if there was
anything he wished.</p>
<p>‘Yes,’ answered Diogenes, ‘I would have you not stand
between me and the sun.’</p>
<p>The courtiers were indignant at such an answer, but
Alexander laughed, and being pleased with the philosopher’s
indifference to his rank, he said to them, ‘If I were not
Alexander, I should like to be Diogenes.’</p>
<p>Soon after this the king, believing that he had secured
the fealty of Greece, went back to Macedon. In the spring
of 335 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> he hoped to set out to invade Asia.</p>
<p>But the wild tribes on the borders of Macedon began to
be restless, and the king was forced to subdue these foes
nearer home before he went to Asia. While he was driving
them beyond his borders, a rumour that he was dead reached
Greece.</p>
<p>If Alexander was dead it was a good chance, thought
the Thebans, to drive the Macedonians from their citadel, and
without waiting to find out if the rumour was true they
revolted. Demosthenes tried to persuade the Athenians to
go to the help of the Thebans, but although his eloquence
moved them it had not power to make them act.</p>
<p>The Thebans soon found to their cost that Alexander
was not dead. He was, indeed, on his way to Greece to
punish them for revolting.</p>
<p>Outside the walls of their city he halted, so that the
citizens might submit, if so they willed. But they, still
dreaming of liberty, refused to surrender.</p>
<p>Then Alexander attacked the city and captured it with
little difficulty. He determined to give the other cities
in Greece a lesson by punishing the rebels severely. So
he pulled down their houses and utterly destroyed their
town, leaving untouched only the temples, and a house in
which a great poet named Pindar had dwelt.</p>
<p>Demosthenes was bitterly disappointed that the Athenians
had not sent to help the Thebans. He feared, too, that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">314</span>
Alexander would now march against Athens, and destroy
her as he had destroyed Thebes. But the king only sent
to demand that eight of the orators who had done their best
to incite the people to rebel against him, should be sent to
him as hostages.</p>
<p>Demosthenes would have been among the eight, and he
urged the Athenians not to ‘hand over their sheep-dogs to
the wolf.’ But Phocion said that it would be wise to do
as Alexander asked.</p>
<p>At length the assembly sent Damocles to the king to
plead the cause of his comrades, for he was, after Demosthenes,
the greatest orator in Athens.</p>
<p>Alexander listened to Damocles and was persuaded to
leave the orators in their own city, for he believed that the
fate of Thebes would make Athens afraid to rebel.</p>
<p>Of the loyalty of the Greek troops the king was sure,
for were they not going to avenge the invasion of Greece by
Xerxes?</p>
<p>The king did not mean to return to Macedon to reign,
rather did he dream of a throne in one of the great cities
which he was going to conquer. So before he marched
away, he divided his royal domain and his wealth among
his friends.</p>
<p>Perdiccas, one of his friends, was dismayed at the
generosity of the king, and asked him what he was keeping
for himself.</p>
<p>‘Hope,’ answered Alexander. Then Perdiccas refused
to accept his share of the king’s gifts, saying, ‘We who go
forth to fight with you need share only in your hope.’</p>
<p>Antipater, one of his father’s generals, Alexander left
in Macedon to look after his kingdom.</p>
<p>At length in the spring of 334 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span>, after saying good-bye
to his mother, whom he dearly loved, the king marched with
an enormous force to the Hellespont and crossed it. The
great expedition had really begun.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">315</span></p>
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