29.
At his return out of Egypt into Phoenicia, he sacrificed and made
solemn processions, to which were added shows of lyric dances and tragedies,
remarkable not merely for the splendour of the equipage and decorations, but
for the competition among those who exhibited them. For the kings of Darius wrote him
a letter, and sent friends to intercede with him, requesting him to accept as
a ransom of his captives the sum of a thousand talents, and offering him in
exchange for his amity and alliance all the countries on this side the river
Euphrates, together with one of his daughters in marriage. These propositions
he communicated to his friends, and when Parmenion told him that, for his
part, if he were Alexander, he should readily embrace them, "So would
I," said Alexander, "if I were Parmenion." Accordingly, his
answer to Darius was, that if he would come and yield himself up into his
power he would treat him with all possible kindness; if not, he was resolved
immediately to go himself and seek him. 30.
But the death of Darius's wife in childbirth made him soon after
regret one part of this answer, and he showed evident marks of grief at thus
deprived of a further opportunity of exercising his clemency and good nature,
which he manifested, however, as far as he could, by giving her a most
sumptuous funeral. Among the eunuchs who waited in the queen's chamber,
and were taken prisoners with the women, there was one Tireus, who, getting
out of the camp, fled away on horseback to Darius, to inform him of his
wife's death. He, when he heard it, beating his head, and bursting into tears
and lamentations, said, "Alas! how great is the
calamity of the Persians! Was it not enough that their king's consort and
sister was a prisoner in her lifetime, but she must, now she is dead, also be
but meanly and obscurely buried?" "O king," replied the
eunuch, "as to her funeral rites, or any respect or honour that should
have been shown in them, you have not the least reason to accuse the ill
fortune of your country; for to my knowledge neither your queen Statira when
alive, nor your mother, nor children, wanted anything of their former happy
condition, unless it were the light of your countenance, which I doubt not
but the lord Oromasdes will yet restore to its former glory. And after her
decease, I assure you, she had not only all due funeral ornaments, but was
honoured also with the tears of your very enemies; for Alexander is as gentle
after victory as he is terrible in the field." At the bearing of these
words, such was the grief and emotion of Darius's mind, that they carried him
into extravagant suspicions; and taking Tireus aside into a more private part
of his tent, "Unless you likewise," said he to him, "have
deserted me, together with the good fortune of Persia, and are become a
Macedonian in your heart; if you yet own me for your master
Darius, tell me, I charge you, by the veneration you pay the light of
Mithras, and this right hand of your king, do I not lament the least of
Statira's misfortunes in her captivity and death? Have I not suffered
something more injurious and deplorable in her lifetime? And had I not been
miserable with less dishonour if I had met with a more severe and inhuman
enemy? For how is it possible a young man as he is should treat the wife of
his opponent with so much distinction, were it not from some motive that does
me disgrace?" Whilst he was yet speaking, Tireus threw himself at his
feet, and besought him neither to wrong Alexander so much, nor his dead wife
and sister, as to give utterance to any such thoughts, which deprived him of
the greatest consolation left him in his adversity, the belief that he was
overcome by a man whose virtues raised him above human nature; that he ought
to look upon Alexander with love and admiration, who had given no less proofs
of his continence towards the Persian women, than of his valour among the
men. The eunuch confirmed all he said with solemn and dreadful oaths, and was
further enlarging upon Alexander's moderation and magnanimity on other
occasions, when Darius, breaking away from him into the other division of the
tent, where his friends and courtiers were, lifted up his hands to heaven and
uttered this prayer, "Ye gods," said he, "of my family, and of
my kingdom, if it be possible, I beseech you to restore the declining affairs
of Persia, that I may leave them in as flourishing a condition as I found
them, and have it in my power to make a grateful return to Alexander for the
kindness which in my adversity he has shown to those who are dearest to me.
But if, indeed, the fatal time be come, which is to give a period to the
Persian monarchy, if our ruin be a debt that must be paid to the divine
jealousy and the vicissitude of things, then I beseech you grant that no
other man but Alexander may sit upon the throne of Cyrus." Such is the
narrative given by the greater number of the historians. |