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I
observe, gentlemen, that when I would lead you on a new venture
you no longer follow me with your old spirit. I have asked you
to meet me that we may come to a decision together: are we, upon
my advice, to go forward, or, upon yours, to turn back?
If you have
any complaint to make about the results of your efforts hitherto,
or about myself as your commander, there is no more to say. But
let me remind you: through your courage and endurance you have
gained possession of Ionia, the Hellespont, both Phrygias, Cappadocia,
Paphlagonia, Lydia, Caria, Lycia, Pamphylia, Phoenicia, and Egypt;
the Greek part of Libya is now yours, together with much of Arabia,
lowland Syria, Mesopotamia, Babylon, and Susia; Persia and Media
with all the territories either formerly controlled by them or
not are in your hands; you have made yourselves masters of the
lands beyond the Caspian Gates, beyond the Caucasus, beyond the
Tanais, of Bactria, Hyrcania, and the Hyrcanian sea; we have driven
the Scythians back into the desert; and Indus and Hydaspes, Acesines
and Hydraotes flow now through country which is ours. With all
that accomplished, why do you hesitate to extend the power of
Macedon--yourpower--to the Hyphasis and the tribes on the other
side ? Are you afraid that a few natives who may still be left
will offer opposition? Come, come! These natives either surrender
without a blow or are caught on the run--or leave their country
undefended for your taking; and when we take it, we make a present
of it to those who have joined us of their own free will and fight
on our side.
For a man who
is a man, work, in my belief, if it is directed to noble ends, has
no object beyond itself; none the less, if any of you wish to know
what limit may be set to this particular camapaign, let me tell
you that the area of country still ahead of us, from here to the
Ganges and the Eastern ocean, is comparatively small. You will undoubtedly
find that this ocean is connected with the Hyrcanian Sea, for the
great Stream of Ocean encircles the earth. Moreover I shall prove
to you, my friends, that the Indian and Persian Gulfs and the Hyrcanian
Sea are all three connected and continuous. Our ships will sail
round from the Persian Gulf to Libya as far as the Pillars of Hercules,
whence all Libya to the eastward will soon be ours, and all Asia
too, and to this empire there will be no boundaries but what God
Himself has made for the whole world.
But if you
turn back now, there will remain unconquered many warlike peoples
between the Hyphasis and the Eastern Ocean, and many more to the
northward and the Hyrcanian Sea, with the Scythians, too, not far
away; so that if we withdraw now there is a danger that the territory
which we do not yet securely hold may be stirred to revolt by some
nation or other we have not yet forced into submission. Should that
happen, all that we have done and suffered will have proved fruitless--or
we shall be faced with the task of doing it over again from the
beginning. Gentlemen of Macedon, and you, my friends and allies,
this must not be. Stand firm; for well you know that hardship and
danger are the price of glory, and that sweet is the savour of a
life of courage and of deathless renown beyond the grave.
Are you not
aware that if Heracles, my ancestor, had gone no further than Tiryns
or Argos--or even than the Peloponnese or Thebes--he could never
have won the glory which changed him from a man into a god, actual
or apparent? Even Dionysus, who is a god indeed, in a sense beyond
what is applicable to Heracles, faced not a few laborious tasks;
yet we have done more: we have passed beyond Nysa and we have taken
the rock of Aornos which Heracles himself could not take. Come,
then; add the rest of Asia to what you already possess--a small
addition to the great sum of your conquests. What great or noble
work could we ourselves have achieved had we thought it enough,
living at ease in Macedon, merely to guard our homes, accepting
no burden beyond checking the encroachment of the Thracians on our
borders, or the Illyrians and Triballians, or perhaps such Greeks
as might prove a menace to our comfort ?
I could not
have blamed you for being the first to lose heart if I, your commander,
had not shared in your exhausting marches and your perilous campaigns;
it would have been natural enough if you had done all the work merely
for others to reap the reward. But it is not so. You and I, gentlemen,
have shared the labour and shared the danger, and the rewards are
for us all. The conquered territory belongs to you; from your ranks
the governors of it are chosen; already the greater part of its
treasure passes into your hands, and when all Asia is overrun, then
indeed I will go further than the mere satisfaction of our ambitions:
the utmost hopes of riches or power which each one of you cherishes
will be far surpassed, and whoever wishes to return home will be
allowed to go, either with me or without me. I will make those who
stay the envy of those who return.
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