University of Virginia Library


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Scene VIII.—Opis, on the Tigris.

Large bodies of soldiers assembled before a platform occupied by Alexander's Generals.
1st Soldier.
Would that Alexander were taller; so
should we have a sight of him! The Scythian
ambassadors showed their discretion when they
wondered. They looked to see a reasonably sized
giant.

An Officer.
Who gave thee leave, sirrah, to see
that the king is not tall?

2nd Soldier.
He that is a Greek, let him be wary
as a Greek this day! There is a design, and it is
bad. The king is good: therefore it was Craterus
that moved him.

1st Soldier.
Nay, Craterus is honest, and loves
soldiers worn in the wars.

2nd Soldier.
Craterus is honest: therefore it was
Antigonus that deceived the king. He shall bleed
for it. We let pass the Persian pomps and the shame
of the cavalry; but if Barbarians be equalled with us
in the infantry, better it were that all the Greeks
were drowned in one day! Three years since, when
the king promised equality to the Barbarians, we
Greeks inwardly believed that he spake in craft.
This can be proved upon oath. Therefore, if he
keepeth his promise, he deceiveth his friends and
fawneth on his foes. But for these new-married we
should all be of one mind.

1st Soldier.
The Persians be all liars! They pretend
that they are not equalled with us Greeks. They are
equalled but for their own bad heart. Let them worship
the gods, and not grovel in their idolatry of fire!
What hindereth piety but a bad heart? Therefore, if

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a bad Persian be made equal to a good Greek, the
Greeks have a manifest wrong. Besides, if the many
be equalled with the few, the few shall be drowned in
the many. The Phalanx grins, the Hydaspists growl,
the Escort knows itself doomed. Papers have been
found scattered abroad:—here is one that lay near
the tent of old Phylax: “Sleep ye, O ye Greeks, or
be ye awake? There was one that watched for the
army—Philotas.” All night long, in our encampments,
thirteen men lectured us of our wrongs, and
twelve times the army gave acclamations.

A Mede.
Silence is stronger than acclamations.

Soldiers.
Eavesdropper, who sent thee hither?
Take that!
(Striking their daggers through him.)
To spite us the more he died in silence. The gods
be pitiful to all poor dumb beasts!

[A cry, “Push forward; the king has arrived.”]
Alex.
Ye sons of Macedon and Greece, attend:
'Tis rumoured there are still among you debtors:
A debtor is a slave: who serves his king
Must serve in freedom. I discharge those debts.

A Mutineer.
He must not be suffered to speak.

Alex.
You are mostly strong; but some are men in years,
War-wearied and outworn. Would any homeward?
At home they shall not sit abjects in age,
But largess-laden say to those that praise them,
“The ranks wherein our glorying manhood toiled
Are open still to all.”

A Ringleader of the Mutineers.
Are open, he means,
to Persians! He the son of Zeus! Lift up them
that shall speak for you!

[Thirteen ringleaders are lifted up on the shoulders of the crowd, and wave standards.

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A cry is raised on all sides. “Send us all home, since you need us no longer. Go to war with none to help you save Zeus, your father!”]

Ptol.
(to Alexander).
They'll turn on you, like hunds upon the huntsman!

[Alexander leaps down among the crowd, followed by his Generals. They seize the thirteen ringleaders, and drag them up the steps of the platform.
Alex.
Speed! To this headless rabble give their heads!
[The Generals fling the heads of the ringleaders among the mutineers.
Stand back! I go alone: let none attend me.

[Alexander takes his stand on a low part of the platform, level with the heads of the crowd.
Alex.
Ye swine-herds, and ye goat-herds, and ye shepherds,
That shamelessly in warlike garb usurped
Cloak your vile clay, my words are not for you;
There stand among you others, soldiers' sons,
Male breasts, o'er-writ with chronicles of wars,
To them I speak. What made you that ye are
The world's wide wonder and the dread of nations?
Your king! What king? Some king that ruled o'er lands
Illimitable, and golden-harvested
From ocean's rim to ocean? Sirs, 'twas one
With petty realm, foe-girt and cleft with treasons,
Dragged up from darkness late and half alive.
From these beginnings I subdued the earth:—
For whom? For you! The increase is yours: for me

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Whose forehead sweated and whose eyes kept watch,
Remains the barren crown and power imperial.
I found but seventy talents in my chest:
Full many a soldier with his late-spoused bride
Gat better dower. I found within my ports
A fleet to Persia's but as one to ten;
I sold my royal farms and built me ships;
I found an army lean as winter wolves
On Rodope snow-piled; I changed to bread
My sceptre's gems and fed it. Forth from nothing
I called that empire which this day I rule.
My father left me this—his Name: I took it
And kneaded in the hollows of my hands:
I moulded it to substance, nerved it, boned it;
I breathed through it my spirit to be its life;
Clothed it with vanquished nations, sent it forth
Sworded with justice, wisdom for its helm,
The one just empire of a world made one.
Forget ye, sirs, the things ye saw—the States
Redeemed of Lesser Asia, our own blood,
The States subdued, first Syria, then Phœnicia,
Old Tyre the war-winged tigress of the seas,
And Egypt next? The Pyramids broad-based
Descrying far our advent rocked for fear
Above their buried kings: Assyria bowed:
The realm of Ninus fought upon her knees
Not long: the realm of Cyrus kissed the dust:
From lost Granicus rang the vanquished wail
To Issus: on Arbela's plain it died.
Chaldæa, Persis, Media, Susiana—
We stepped above these corpses in our might
To Parthia, and Hyrcania, Bactriana,
And Scythia's endless waste—
The cry from Paromisus gave response

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To Drangiana's dirge: thy doom, Aria,
To wan-faced Acherosia spake her own:
In vain the Indian Caucasus hurled down
From heaven-topped crags her floods to bar my way:
Flood-like we dashed on valleys known till then
To gods, not men, of Greece. Bear witness, ye
Aornos, from thine eagle-baffling crest
Vainly by Hercules himself assailed,
Plucked down by us; and Nysa, Bacchus-built,
When Bacchus trod the East. What hands were those
Which from the grove Nysæan and fissured rocks
Dragged the green ivies? Whose the brows that wore them?
Whose lips upraised the Bacchus-praising hymn?
Whose hands consummated his work—restored
To liberty and laws the god-built city?—
Sirs, the vile end of all is briefly told.
We pierced the precinct of the Rivers Five,
Indus, and other four. The jewelled crowns
Of those dusk sovereigns fell flat before us:
The innumerous armies opened like the wind
That sighs around an arrow, while we passed:
Those moving mountains, the broad elephants,
Went down with all their towers. We reached Hydaspes:
Nations, the horizon blackening, o'er it hung:—
Porus, exult! In ruin thine were true;
While mine, in conquest's hour, upon the banks
Of Hyphasis—What stayed me on my way?
An idiot army in mid victory dumb!
I gave them time; three days: those three days past,
Ye heard a voice, “The gods forbid our march:”
Sirs, 'twas a falsehood! On the Olympian height

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That day the immortal concourse crouched for shame:
Their oracles were dead. 'Twas I that spake it!
I was, that hour, the Olympian height twelve-throned
That hid the happy auspice in the cloud,
And this mine oracle; “Of those dumb traitors
Not one shall wash his foot in Ganges' wave.”
I built twelve altars on that margin, each
A temple's height, and fronting eastward—why?
To lift my witness 'gainst you to the gods!
Once more as then I spurn you, slaves! Your place
Is vacant. Time shall judge this base desertion
Which leaves me but the conquered to complete
The circle of my conquests. Gods, it may be,
Shall vouch it holy, men confirm it just;—
Your places in the ranks are yours no more.

[Alexander departs, attended by his Generals.
1st Mutineer.
We are out of the ranks.

2nd Mutineer.
He will conquer the rest of the
world with the Persians. He will give unto Persians
the title of kinsmen, and the privilege of the kiss.

3rd Mutineer.
We must throng unto the palace
and throw down our arms: we must kneel in the
courts day by day, and lie before the gates. He
will come out, and forgive us, and lead us with him
to Ecbatana.

4th Mutineer.
As for those thirteen, it is certain
they died very justly, since they deceived the army.