<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XCIX">CHAPTER XCIX<br/> <span class="subhead">ALEXANDER SLAYS HIS FOSTER-BROTHER</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">Early</span> in 330 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> Alexander left Persepolis to go in search
of Darius.</p>
<p>After a long and difficult march of three hundred miles,
to which his soldiers took only eleven days, the king heard
that Darius had passed the defile called the ‘Caspian Gates.’
For five days he allowed his men, who were utterly exhausted,
to rest, before he again started in pursuit of the fugitive.</p>
<p>After passing through the Caspian Gates, Alexander
heard that Bessus, a kinsman of Darius, who was also his
officer or satrap, had made him a prisoner. Loaded with
chains, Darius was being carried away to the district over
which Bessus ruled.</p>
<p>This made the king the more determined to reach the
unfortunate captive. For four days he hurried on until
at length he reached a village where Bessus and his men
had stayed the evening before. He was told that the satrap
was going to make a forced march that night.</p>
<p>The king learned of a shorter road, by which he might
overtake the fugitives, but there was no water to be found
on the way. Alexander did not hesitate. With only a
small company he set out the same evening, and when
morning dawned he had ridden forty-five miles. The
fugitives were now within sight.</p>
<p>When the barbarians who were with Bessus saw the king
in the distance they fled. The satrap quickly took the
chains off his captive, bidding him mount a horse and
follow them. When Darius refused he stabbed him and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">335</span>
rode away, leaving the wretched king to die or to fall into
the hands of his enemy.</p>
<p>A few Macedonians who were riding in front of the king
reached the wounded man first, and gave him water, for
which he begged. Darius then lay back and before Alexander
arrived, he had breathed his last.</p>
<p>The king looked at his fallen foe with pity, and then
flung over him his own cloak. His body he sent to the
queen-mother, that it might be buried beside the other
Persian kings at Persepolis.</p>
<p>Bessus was betrayed into the hands of Alexander not
long afterwards. Naked and chained he was placed on
the road by which Alexander’s army must pass.</p>
<p>The king stopped when he reached the satrap, and asked
him why he had murdered Darius, who had always treated
him well.</p>
<p>Bessus answered that he did it to win Alexander’s favour.</p>
<p>His reply won no pity from the king, who ordered him
to be scourged and sent to prison. Some time after he was
brought to trial and sentenced to a cruel death.</p>
<p>Until now Alexander had lived almost as simply as when
he was a lad, and but lately he had reproved his officers for
their indolent and luxurious habits. Now he gradually
began to adopt the customs of the East. He dressed in
purple and surrounded himself with Persian courtiers, and
acted as though he was indeed a descendant of the gods.
The Macedonians were quick to take offence at the favour
their king showed to the Persians.</p>
<p>Philotas, a son of Parmenio, resented the king’s deeds,
more perhaps than any other of his generals. He was
proud and his haughty ways had made his men dislike him.</p>
<p>Parmenio would sometimes say to him, ‘My son, to be
not quite so great would be better.’ But Philotas would
take no notice of the rebuke.</p>
<p>One day he declared that but for him and his father, the
king would never have conquered Asia. ‘Yet it is he, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">336</span>
boy Alexander who enjoys the glory of the victories and the
title of king,’ said the foolish officer.</p>
<p>Alexander was told of the boastful way in which Philotas
had spoken, but he neither reproved nor punished him.</p>
<p>A little later a plot was made against his life, and Philotas
would not allow those who wished to warn the king to enter
his presence. Then Alexander, who knew of this also, ordered
Philotas to be seized and imprisoned.</p>
<p>He was tried before an assembly of Macedonians and
confessed that he had known of the plot to kill the king, and
yet had neither warned him nor allowed others to do so.</p>
<p>The Macedonians condemned him to death, and themselves
carried out the sentence, throwing at him their
javelins.</p>
<p>Alexander had been patient with Philotas and his
punishment was just, but now the king did a cruel deed.
For thinking that his old and faithful general Parmenio
might have shared in the treachery of his son, he sent a
messenger to slay him.</p>
<p>The king’s despatch was taken to Parmenio and put into
his hand. As he began to read it he was stabbed in the
back.</p>
<p>From this time the king’s temper grew less and less controlled.
At one of the royal feasts he lost it altogether. A
guest sang a song which made a jest of some Macedonians
who had been beaten by the Persians. The old soldiers were
indignant, the more so that Alexander paid no heed to their
anger and bade the singer sing on.</p>
<p>Clitus, the king’s foster-brother, had a quick temper,
and he cried out, ‘It is not well done to expose the Macedonians
before their enemies; since though it was their
unhappiness to be overcome, yet are they much better
men than those who laugh at them.’</p>
<p>‘Clitus pleads his own cause,’ said the king, ‘when he
names cowardice misfortune.’</p>
<p>The king spoke half in jest, half in anger, for he knew<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">337</span>
well that Clitus and all his Macedonians were brave men
and no cowards.</p>
<p>But Clitus sprang to his feet at Alexander’s words and
cried, ‘Yet, O king, it was my cowardice that once saved
your life from the Persians, and it is by the wounds of
Macedonians that you are now the great king.’</p>
<p>‘Speak not so boldly,’ answered the king, and in his
voice there was a threat, ‘or think not you will long enjoy
the power to do so.’</p>
<p>Clitus was now too angry to care what he said, and he
spoke to the king yet more bitterly, until Alexander could
brook no more. He took an apple from the table before
him, and flinging it at his foster-brother, felt for his sword.
But one of his guards, foreseeing what might happen, had
removed it. His guests now gathered around the king,
trying to soothe his anger. Alexander pushed them aside,
and ordered one of his guard to sound the alarm. This
would have assembled the whole army and the man hesitated,
whereupon Alexander struck him on the face.</p>
<p>Meanwhile a friend had hurried Clitus out of the room,
but he slipped back again by another door, and boldly
taunted the king with the way in which he treated his old
soldiers.</p>
<p>Then in a passion Alexander snatched a spear from one
of his guards, rushed upon Clitus and stabbed him to death.</p>
<p>A moment later the king’s anger faded away, and he
looked in horror upon the dead body of his foster-brother.
He seized the spear again and tried to kill himself, but his
guards wrenched it away, and led him to his own room.
There he lay all through the long night and all through the
following day, weeping for his foster-brother whom he had
slain.</p>
<hr />
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_338">338</span></p>
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