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Darius had a quarrel against us and the Eretrians, because, as he said, we had
conspired against Sardis, and he sent 500,000 men in transports and vessels of
war, and 300 ships, and Datis as commander, telling him to bring the Eretrians
and Athenians to the king, if he wished to keep his head on his shoulders. He
sailed against the Eretrians, who were reputed to be amongst the noblest and
most warlike of the Hellenes of that day, and they were numerous, but he
conquered them all in three days; and when he had conquered them, in order
that no one might escape, he searched the whole country after this manner: his
soldiers, coming to the borders of Eretria and spreading from sea to sea,
joined hands and passed through the whole country, in order that they might
be able to tell the king that no one had escaped them. And from Eretria they
went to Marathon with a like intention, expecting to bind the Athenians in the
same yoke of necessity in which they had bound the Eretrians. Having
effected one-half of their purpose, they were in the act of attempting the other,
and none of the Hellenes dared to assist either the Eretrians or the Athenians,
except the Lacedaemonians, and they arrived a day too late for the battle; but
the rest were panic-stricken and kept quiet, too happy in having escaped for a
time. He who has present to his mind that conflict will know what manner of
men they were who received the onset of the barbarians at Marathon, and
chastened the pride of the whole of Asia, and by the victory which they
gained over the barbarians first taught other men that the power of the
Persians was not invincible, but that hosts of men and the multitude of riches
alike yield to valour. And I assert that those men are the fathers not only of
ourselves, but of our liberties and of the liberties of all who are on the
continent, for that was the action to which the Hellenes looked back when
they ventured to fight for their own safety in the battles which ensued: they
became disciples of the men of Marathon. To them, therefore, I assign in my
speech the first place, and the second to those who fought and conquered in
the sea fights at Salamis and Artemisium; for of them, too, one might have
many things to say—of the assaults which they endured by sea and land, and
how they repelled them. I will mention only that act of theirs which appears to
me to be the noblest, and which followed that of Marathon and came nearest
to it; for the men of Marathon only showed the Hellenes that it was possible
to ward off the barbarians by land, the many by the few; but there was no
proof that they could be defeated by ships, and at sea the Persians retained the
reputation of being invincible in numbers and wealth and skill and strength.
This is the glory of the men who fought at sea, that they dispelled the second
terror which had hitherto possessed the Hellenes, and so made the fear of
numbers, whether of ships or men, to cease among them. And so the soldiers
of Marathon and the sailors of Salamis became the schoolmasters of Hellas;
the one teaching and habituating the Hellenes not to fear the barbarians at sea,
and the others not to fear them by land. Third in order, for the number and
136
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The Complete Plato
- Title
- The Complete Plato
- Author
- Plato
- Date
- ~347 B.C.
- Language
- English
- License
- PD
- Size
- 21.0 x 29.7 cm
- Pages
- 1612
- Keywords
- Philosophy, Antique, Philosophie, Antike, Dialogues, Metaphysik, Metaphysics, Ideologie, Ideology, Englisch
- Categories
- Geisteswissenschaften
- International