<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_CIII">CHAPTER CIII<br/> <span class="subhead">DEMOSTHENES IN THE TEMPLE OF POSEIDON</span></h2></div>
<p class="in0"><span class="firstword">When</span> Alexander set out on his great expedition to Asia,
Demosthenes was living in Athens, and for five years nothing
happened to disturb the quiet habits of his life.</p>
<p>He loved his city well, and with his own money he had
rebuilt the walls of Athens. Many other services he had
done for his countrymen, and because of these, one of the
Athenians proposed to the people that a hero’s crown of gold
should be bestowed upon Demosthenes.</p>
<p>This they were very willing to do. So at one of the great
Athenian festivals, when the people were assembled in the
theatre, a herald proclaimed that a golden crown had been
awarded to the orator because of all that he had done for
his city.</p>
<p>But Æschines, another great orator, was angry that this
honour should have been given to Demosthenes, whom he
happened to dislike. So he brought a lawsuit against him,
and attacked his enemy in a speech that became famous.</p>
<p>But Demosthenes defended himself in a still more brilliant
speech, and won his case, which so annoyed Æschines that
he left Athens and never again returned to the city.</p>
<p>Six years later, Demosthenes was accused of having
taken bribes. It was not proved that he had done so,
yet he was found guilty and sentenced to pay a heavy
fine.</p>
<p>As he had not money enough to pay the fine, he was
thrown into prison. Before long he escaped and fled to the
sea-coast town of Ægina, not far from Athens. Often he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_350">350</span>
would sit on the shore or pace up and down the sands, looking
wistfully toward the city he loved.</p>
<p>When tidings of the death of Alexander reached Athens,
the Greeks resolved once more to try to fling off the yoke
of Macedon. Demosthenes was recalled to the city, and his
voice encouraged the Athenians in their determination to
fight for liberty.</p>
<p>But Antipater hastened to Attica with an army, and
soon put down the revolt of the Athenians. He then condemned
Demosthenes to death, for it was well-known that
his Philippics had often roused the Athenians to show their
hatred of Philip, and he had, too, continually spoken against
his son Alexander.</p>
<p>When Demosthenes heard that he had been condemned,
he fled to the temple of Poseidon, in the island of Calauria.
Antipater at once sent soldiers, led by a man named Archias,
to capture the fugitive. Archias had once been an actor,
and was well known to Demosthenes.</p>
<p>Archias reached Calauria, and going to the temple he
begged Demosthenes to come out of the sanctuary, saying
that if he did so he would be pardoned.</p>
<p>But Demosthenes knew that this was a false promise
and he said, ‘O Archias, I am as little affected by your promises
now as I used formerly to be by your acting.’</p>
<p>Now Archias had been proud of his acting, so this made
him very angry with Demosthenes, and he began to threaten
him with all kinds of evil.</p>
<p>‘Now,’ said the orator, ‘you speak like an oracle of
Macedon; before, you were acting a part. Therefore wait
only a little, while I write a word or two to my family.’</p>
<p>Then he rose and went into the inner temple, and taking
a tablet and his own pen in his hand, he sat down as though
to write. He had a habit of putting his pen into his mouth
and biting it, and he did so now. It seemed as though he
was thinking what he would write. But all the while he
was sucking poison which he had concealed in his pen.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_351">351</span></p>
<p>Then, knowing that the poison would soon do its work,
Demosthenes leaned on the altar, his face hidden in his
cloak.</p>
<p>Archias had now grown tired of waiting, and he went
into the temple again and bade Demosthenes come, without
more delay.</p>
<p>The orator rose, uncovering his head, and looking at
Archias, he said, ‘I will depart while I am alive out of this
sacred place.’ But as he tried to walk toward the door he
staggered and fell by the altar. The poison had done its
work.</p>
<p>Antipater had no interest in the art or in the culture of
Greece, and her glory soon faded under his rule. Athens,
Sparta, Corinth, as well as the smaller states, all ceased
to be independent.</p>
<p>As the power of Greece grew less, that of Rome was
growing greater and greater. In 196 <span class="allsmcap">B.C.</span> she conquered
Macedon and restored to Greece her liberty.</p>
<p>Fifty years later, Corinth defied the Roman power, and
treated her ambassadors with insult. The Roman consuls
then sent an army into Greece to conquer the country, and
add it to their great dominions.</p>
<p>But although the Romans conquered Greece, and so
made her subject to them, they could not escape her influence.
The Greek language was spoken by every educated
Roman, Greek plays were acted at Rome, Greek literature
was read and studied.</p>
<p>Wherever the Romans went they carried with them the
habits and the culture of the people whom they had conquered.
And the greatest and most precious thing the
Greeks had to teach the world was, ‘the just consideration
of the truth of things everywhere.’</p>
<hr />
<div class="index">
<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_353">353</span></p>
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