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When Xerxes therefore asked the guides if there were any other outlet
by which the waters could reach the sea, they, being men well
acquainted with the nature of their country, made answer:
"O king! there is no other passage by which this stream can empty
itself into the sea save that which thine eye beholds. For Thessaly
is girt about with a circlet of hills."
Xerxes is said to have observed upon this -
"Wise men truly are they of Thessaly, and good reason had they to
change their minds in time and consult for their own safety. For, to
pass by others matters, they must have felt that they lived in a
country which may easily be brought under and subdued. Nothing more is
needed than to turn the river upon their lands by an embankment.which
should fill up the gorge and force the stream from its present channel,
and lo! all Thessaly, except the mountains, would at once be laid
under water."
The king aimed in this speech at the sons of Aleuas, who were
Thessalians, and had been the first of all the Greeks to make
submission to him. He thought that they had made their friendly offers
in the name of the whole people. So Xerxes, when he had viewed the
place, and made the above speech, went back to Therma.
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