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       Herodotus 
       Gyges According
      to the Persians best informed in history, the Phoenicians began to
      quarrel. This people, who had formerly dwelt on the shores of the
      Erythraean Sea, having migrated to the Mediterranean and settled in the
      parts which they now inhabit, began at once, they say, to adventure on
      long voyages, freighting their vessels with the wares of Egypt and
      Assyria. They landed at many places on the coast, and among the rest at
      Argos, which was then preeminent above all the states included now under
      the common name of Hellas. Here they exposed their merchandise, and traded
      with the natives for five or six days; at the end of which time, when
      almost everything was sold, there came down to the beach a number of
      women, and among them the daughter of the king, who was, they say,
      agreeing in this with the Greeks, Io, the child of Inachus. The women were
      standing by the stern of the ship intent upon their purchases, when the
      Phoenicians, with a general shout, rushed upon them. The greater part made
      their escape, but some were seized and carried off. Io herself was among
      the captives. The Phoenicians put the women on board their vessel, and set
      sail for Egypt. Thus did Io pass into Egypt, according to the Persian
      story, which differs widely from the Phoenician: and thus commenced,
      according to their authors, the series of outrages. At
      a later period, certain Greeks, with whose name they made a landing at
      Tyre, on the Phoenician coast, and bore off the king’s daughter, Europe.
      In this they only retaliated; but afterwards the Greeks, they say, were
      guilty of a second violence. They manned a ship of war, and sailed to Aea,
      a city of Colchis, on the river Phasis; from whence, after despatching the
      rest of the business on which they had come, they carried off Medea, the
      daughter of the king of the land. The
      monarch sent a herald into Greece to demand reparation of the wrong, and
      the restitution of his child; but the Greeks made answer that, having
      received no reparation of the wrong done them in the seizure of Io the
      Argive, they should give none in this instance. In
      the next generation afterwards, according to the same authorities,
      Alexander the son of Priam, bearing these events in mind, resolved to
      procure himself a wife out of Greece by violence, fully persuaded, that as
      the Greeks had not given satisfaction for their outrages, so neither would
      he be forced to make any for his. Accordingly
      he made prize of Helen; upon which the Greeks decided that, before
      resorting to other measures, they would send envoys to reclaim the
      princess and require reparation of the wrong. Their demands were met by a
      reference to the violence which had been offered to Medea, and they were
      asked with what face they could now require satisfaction, when they had
      formerly rejected all demands for either reparation or restitution
      addressed to them. Hitherto
      the injuries on either side had been mere acts of common violence; but in
      what followed the Persians consider that the Greeks were greatly to blame,
      since before any attack had been made on Europe, they led an army into
      Asia. Now as for the carrying off of women, it is the deed, they say, of a
      rogue: but to make a stir about such as are carried off, argues a man a
      fool. Men of sense care nothing for such women, since it is plain that
      without their own consent they would never be forced away. The Asiatics,
      when the Greeks ran off with their women, never troubled themselves about
      the matter; but the Greeks, for the sake of a single Lacadaemonian girl,
      collected a vast armament, invaded Asia, and destroyed the kingdom of
      Priam. Henceforth they ever looked upon the Greeks as their open enemies.
      For Asia, with all the various tribes of barbarians that inhabit it, is
      regarded by the Persians as their own; but Europe and the Greek race they
      look on as distinct and separate. Such
      is the account which the Persians give of these matters. They trace to the
      attack upon Troy their ancient enmity towards the Greeks. The
      Phoenicians, however, as regards Io, vary from the Persian statements.
      They deny that they used any violence to remove her into Egypt; she
      herself, they say, having formed an intimacy with the captain, while his
      vessel lay at Argos, and perceiving herself to be with child, of her own
      free will accompanied the Phoenicians on their leaving the shore, to
      escape the shame of detection and the reproaches of her parents. Whether
      this latter account be true, or whether the matter happened otherwise, I
      shall not discuss further. I
      shall proceed at once to point out the person who first within my own
      knowledge inflicted injury on the Greeks, after which I shall go forward
      with my history, describing equally the greater and the lesser cities. For
      the cities which were formerly great have most of them become
      insignificant; and such as are at present powerful, were weak in the olden
      time. I shall therefore discourse equally of both, convinced that human
      happiness never continues long in one stay. Croesus,
      son of Alyattes, by birth a Lydian, was lord of all the nations to the
      west of the river Halys. This stream, which separates Syria from
      Paphlagonia, runs with a course from south to north, and finally falls
      into the Euxine. So far as our knowledge goes, he was the first of the
      barbarians who had dealings with the Greeks, forcing some of them to
      become his tributaries, and entering into alliance with others. He
      conquered the Aeolians, Ionians, and Dorians of Asia, and made a treaty
      with the Lacedaemonians. Up to that time all Greeks had been free. For the
      Cimmerian attack upon Ionia, which was earlier than Croesus, was not a
      conquest of the cities, but only an inroad for plundering. The
      sovereignty of Lydia, which had belonged to the Heraclides, passed into
      the family of Croesus, who were called the Mermnadae, in the manner which
      I will now relate. There was a certain king of Sardis, Candaules by name,
      whom the Greeks called Myrsilus. He was a descendant of Alcaeus, son of
      Hercules. The first king of this dynasty was Agron, son of Ninus, grandson
      of Belus, and great-grandson of Alcaeus; Candaules, son of Myrsus, was the
      last. The kings who reigned before Agron sprang from Lydus, son of Atys,
      from whom the people of the land, called previously Meonians, received the
      name of Lydians. The
      Heraclides, descended from Hercules and the slave-girl of Jardanus, having
      been entrusted by these princes with the management of affairs, obtained
      the kingdom by an oracle. Their rule endured for two and twenty
      generations of men, a space of five hundred and five years; during the
      whole of which period, from Agron to Candaules, the crown descended in the
      direct line from father to son. Now
      it happened that this Candaules was in love with his own wife; and not
      only so, but thought her the fairest woman in the whole world. This
      fancy had strange consequences. There was in his bodyguard a man whom he
      specially favoured, Gyges, the son of Dascylus. All affairs of greatest
      moment were entrusted by Candaules to this person, and to him he was wont
      to extol the surpassing beauty of his wife. So
      matters went on for a while. At length, one day, Candaules, who was fated
      to end ill, thus addressed his follower: “I see thou dost not credit
      what I tell thee of my lady’s loveliness; but come now, since men’s
      ears are less credulous than their eyes, contrive some means whereby thou
      mayst behold her naked.” At this the other loudly exclaimed, saying,
      “What most unwise speech is this, master, which thou hast uttered?
      Wouldst thou have me behold my mistress when she is naked? Bethink thee
      that a woman, with her clothes, puts off her bashfulness. Our fathers, in
      time past, distinguished right and wrong plainly enough, and it is our
      wisdom to submit to be taught by them. There is an old saying, ’Let each
      look on his own.’ I hold thy wife for the fairest of all womankind.
      Only, I beseech thee, ask me not to do wickedly.” Gyges thus endeavoured
      to decline the king’s proposal, trembling lest some dreadful evil should
      befall him through it. But the king replied to him, “Courage, friend;
      suspect me not of the design to prove thee by this discourse; nor dread
      thy mistress, lest mischief be thee at her hands. Be sure I will so
      manage that she shall not even know that thou hast looked upon her. I will
      place thee behind the open door of the chamber in which we sleep. When I
      enter to go to rest she will follow me. There stands a chair close to the
      entrance, on which she will lay her clothes one by one as she takes them
      off. Thou
      wilt be able thus at thy leisure to peruse her person. Then, when she is
      moving from the chair toward the bed, and her back is turned on thee, be
      it thy care that she see thee not as thou passest through the doorway.”
      Gyges, unable to escape, could but declare his readiness. Then Candaules,
      when bedtime came, led Gyges into his sleeping-chamber, and a moment after
      the queen followed. She entered, and laid her garments on the chair, and
      Gyges gazed on her. After a while she moved toward the bed, and her back
      being then turned, he glided stealthily from the apartment. As he was
      passing out, however, she saw him, and instantly divining what had
      happened, she neither screamed as her shame impelled her, nor even
      appeared to have noticed aught, purposing to take vengeance upon the
      husband who had so affronted her. For among the Lydians, and indeed among
      the barbarians generally, it is reckoned a deep disgrace, even to a man,
      to be seen naked. No
      sound or sign of intelligence escaped her at the time. But in the morning,
      as soon as day broke, she hastened to choose from among her retinue such
      as she knew to be most faithful to her, and preparing them for what was to
      ensue, summoned Gyges into her presence. Now it had often happened before
      that the queen had desired to confer with him, and he was accustomed to
      come to her at her call. He therefore obeyed the summons, not suspecting
      that she knew aught of what had occurred. Then she addressed these words
      to him: “Take thy choice, Gyges, of two courses which are open to thee.
      Slay Candaules, and thereby become my lord, and obtain the Lydian throne,
      or die this moment in his room. So wilt thou not again, obeying all
      behests of thy master, behold what is not lawful for thee. It must needs
      be that either he perish by whose counsel this thing was done, or thou,
      who sawest me naked, and so didst break our usages.” At these words
      Gyges stood awhile in mute astonishment; recovering after a time, he
      earnestly besought the queen that she would not compel him to so hard a
      choice. But finding he implored in vain, and that necessity was indeed
      laid on him to kill or to be killed, he made choice of life for himself,
      and replied by this inquiry: “If it must be so, and thou compellest me
      against my will to put my lord to death, come, let me hear how thou wilt
      have me set on him.” “Let him be attacked,” she answered, “on the
      spot where I was by him shown naked to you, and let the assault be made
      when he is asleep.” All was then prepared for the attack, and when night
      fell, Gyges, seeing that he had no retreat or escape, but must absolutely
      either slay Candaules, or himself be slain, followed his mistress into the
      sleeping-room. She placed a dagger in his hand and hid him carefully
      behind the self-same door. Then Gyges, when the king was fallen asleep,
      entered privily into the chamber and struck him dead. Thus
      did the wife and kingdom of Candaules pass into the possession of Gyges,
      of whom Archilochus the Parian, who lived about the same time, made
      mention in a poem written in iambic trimeter verse. Gyges
      was afterwards confirmed in the possession of the throne by an answer of
      the Delphic oracle. Enraged at the murder of their king, the people flew
      to arms, but after a while the partisans of Gyges came to terms with them,
      and it was agreed that if the Delphic oracle declared him king of the
      Lydians, he should reign; if otherwise, he should yield the throne to the
      Heraclides. As the oracle was given in his favour he became king. The
      Pythoness, however, added that, in the fifth generation from Gyges,
      vengeance should come for the Heraclides; a prophecy of which neither the
      Lydians nor their princes took any account till it was fulfilled. Such was
      the way in which the Mermnadae deposed the Heraclides, and themselves
      obtained the sovereignty. When
      Gyges was established on the throne, he sent no small presents to Delphi,
      as his many silver offerings at the Delphic shrine testify. Besides this
      silver he gave a vast number of vessels of gold, among which the most
      worthy of mention are the goblets, six in number, and weighing altogether
      thirty talents, which stand in the Corinthian treasury, dedicated by him.
      I call it the Corinthian treasury, though in strictness of speech it is
      the treasury not of the whole Corinthian people, but of Cypselus, son of
      Eetion. Excepting Midas, son of Gordias, king of Phrygia, Gyges was the
      first of the barbarians whom we know to have sent offerings to Delphi.
      Midas dedicated the royal throne whereon he was accustomed to sit and
      administer justice, an object well worth looking at. It lies in the same
      place as the goblets presented by Gyges. The Delphians call the whole of
      the silver and the gold which Gyges dedicated, after the name of the
      donor, Gygian. As
      soon as Gyges was king he made an in-road on Miletus and Smyrna, and took
      the city of Colophon. Afterwards, however, though he reigned eight and
      thirty years, he did not perform a single noble exploit. I shall therefore
      make no further mention of him, but pass on to his son and successor in
      the kingdom, Ardys. Ardys
      took Priene and made war upon Miletus. In his reign the Cimmerians, driven
      from their homes by the nomads of Scythia, entered Asia and captured
      Sardis, all but the citadel. He reigned forty-nine years, and was
      succeeded by his son, Sadyattes, who reigned twelve years. At his death
      his son Alyattes mounted the throne. This
      prince waged war with the Medes under Cyaxares, the grandson of Deioces,
      drove the Cimmerians out of Asia, conquered Smyrna, the Colophonian
      colony, and invaded Clazomenae. From this last contest he did not come off
      as he could have wished, but met with a sore defeat; still, however, in
      the course of his reign, he performed other actions very worthy of note,
      of which I will now proceed to give an account. Inheriting
      from his father a war with the Milesians, he pressed the siege against the
      city by attacking it in the following manner. When
      the harvest was ripe on the ground he marched his army into Milesia to the
      sound of pipes and harps, and flutes masculine and feminine. The buildings
      that were scattered over the country he neither pulled down nor burnt, nor
      did he even tear away the doors, but left them standing as they were. He
      cut down, however, and utterly destroyed all the trees and all the corn
      throughout the land, and then returned to his own dominions. It was idle
      for his army to sit down before the place, as the Milesians were masters
      of the sea. The reason that he did not demolish their buildings was that
      the inhabitants might be tempted to use them as homesteads from which to
      go forth to sow and till their lands; and so each time that he invaded the
      country he might find something to plunder. In
      this way he carried on the war with the Milesians for eleven years, in the
      course of which he inflicted on them two terrible blows; one in their own
      country in the district of Limeneium, the other in the plain of the
      Maeander. During six of these eleven years, Sadyattes, the son of Ardys
      who first lighted the flames of this war, was king of Lydia, and made the
      incursions. Only the five following years belong to the reign of Alyattes,
      son of Sadyattes, who (as I said before) inheriting the war from his
      father, applied himself to it unremittingly. The Milesians throughout the
      contest received no help at all from any of the Ionians, excepting those
      of Chios, who lent them troops in requital of a like service rendered them
      in former times, the Milesians having fought on the side of the Chians
      during the whole of the war between them and the people of Erythrae. It
      was in the twelfth year of the war that the following mischance occurred
      from the firing of the harvest-fields. Scarcely had the corn been set
      alight by the soldiers when a violent wind carried the flames against the
      temple of Minerva Assesia, which caught fire and was burnt to the ground.
      At the time no one made any account of the circumstance; but afterwards,
      on the return of the army to Sardis, Alyattes fell sick. His illness
      continued, whereupon, either advised thereto by some friend, or perchance
      himself conceiving the idea, he sent messengers to Delphi to inquire of
      the god concerning his malady. On
      their arrival the Pythoness declared that no answer should be given them
      until they had rebuilt the temple of Minerva, burnt by the Lydians at
      Assesus in Milesia. Thus
      much I know from information given me by the Delphians; the remainder of
      the story the Milesians add. The
      answer made by the oracle came to the ears of Periander, son of Cypselus,
      who was a very close friend to Thrasybulus, tyrant of Miletus at that
      period. He instantly despatched a messenger to report the oracle to him,
      in order that Thrasybulus, forewarned of its tenor, might the better adapt
      his measures to the posture of affairs. Alyattes,
      the moment that the words of the oracle were reported to him, sent a
      herald to Miletus in hopes of concluding a truce with Thrasybulus and the
      Milesians for such a time as was needed to rebuild the temple. The herald
      went upon his way; but meantime Thrasybulus had been apprised of
      everything; and conjecturing what Alyattes would do, he contrived this
      artifice. He had all the corn that was in the city, whether belonging to
      himself or to private persons, brought into the market-place, and issued
      an order that the Milesians should hold themselves in readiness, and, when
      he gave the signal, should, one and all, fall to drinking and revelry. The
      purpose for which he gave these orders was the following. He hoped that
      the Sardian herald, seeing so great store of corn upon the ground, and all
      the city given up to festivity, would inform Alyattes of it, which fell
      out as he anticipated. The herald observed the whole, and when he had
      delivered his message, went back to Sardis. This circumstance alone, as I
      gather, brought about the peace which ensued. Alyattes, who had hoped that
      there was now a great scarcity of corn in Miletus, and that the people
      were worn down to the last pitch of suffering, when he heard from the
      herald on his return from Miletus tidings so contrary to those he had
      expected, made a treaty with the enemy by which the two nations became
      close friends and allies. He then built at Assesus two temples to Minerva
      instead of one, and shortly after recovered from his malady. Such were the
      chief circumstances of the war which Alyattes waged with Thrasybulus and
      the Milesians. This
      Periander, who apprised Thrasybulus of the oracle, was son of Cypselus,
      and tyrant of Corinth. In his time a very wonderful thing is said to have
      happened. The Corinthians and the Lesbians agree in their account of the
      matter. They relate that Arion of Methymna, who as a player on the harp,
      was second to no man living at that time, and who was, so far as we know,
      the first to invent the dithyrambic measure, to give it its name, and to
      recite in it at Corinth, was carried to Taenarum on the back of a dolphin. He
      had lived for many years at the court of Periander, when a longing came
      upon him to sail across to Italy and Sicily. Having made rich profits in
      those parts, he wanted to recross the seas to Corinth. He therefore hired
      a vessel, the crew of which were Corinthians, thinking that there was no
      people in whom he could more safely confide; and, going on board, he set
      sail from Tarentum. The sailors, however, when they reached the open sea,
      formed a plot to throw him overboard and seize upon his riches.
      Discovering their design, he fell on his knees, beseeching them to spare
      his life, and making them welcome to his money. But they refused; and
      required him either to kill himself outright, if he wished for a grave on
      the dry land, or without loss of time to leap overboard into the sea. In
      this strait Arion begged them, since such was their pleasure, to allow him
      to mount upon the quarter-deck, dressed in his full costume, and there to
      play and sing, and promising that, as soon as his song was ended, he would
      destroy himself. Delighted at the prospect of hearing the very best harper
      in the world, they consented, and withdrew from the stern to the middle of
      the vessel: while Arion dressed himself in the full costume of his
      calling, took his harp, and standing on the quarter-deck, chanted the
      Orthian. His strain ended, he flung himself, fully attired as he was,
      headlong into the sea. The
      Corinthians then sailed on to Corinth. As for Arion, a dolphin, they say,
      took him upon his back and carried him to Taenarum, where he went ashore,
      and thence proceeded to Corinth in his musician’s dress, and told all
      that had happened to him. Periander, however, disbelieved the story, and
      put Arion in ward, to prevent his leaving Corinth, while he watched
      anxiously for the return of the mariners. On their arrival he summoned
      them before him and asked them if they could give him any tiding of Arion.
      They returned for answer that he was alive and in good health in Italy,
      and that they had left him at Tarentum, where he was doing well. Thereupon
      Arion appeared before them, just as he was when he jumped from the vessel:
      the men, astonished and detected in falsehood, could no longer deny their
      guilt. Such is the account which the Corinthians and Lesbians give; and
      there is to this day at Taenarum, an offering of Arion’s at the shrine,
      which is a small figure in bronze, representing a man seated upon a
      dolphin. Having
      brought the war with the Milesians to a close, and reigned over the land
      of Lydia for fifty-seven years, Alyattes died. He
      was the second prince of his house who made offerings at Delphi. His
      gifts, which he sent on recovering from his sickness, were a great bowl of
      pure silver, with a salver in steel curiously inlaid, a work among all the
      offerings at Delphi the best worth looking at. Glaucus,
      the Chian, made it, the man who first invented the art of inlaying steel.  |