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Poor Syloson felt at the time that he had fooled away his cloak in a
very simple manner; but afterwards, when in the course of years
Cambyses died, and the seven Persians rose in revolt against the
Magus, and Darius was the man chosen out of the seven to have the
kingdom, Syloson learnt that the person to whom the crown had come was
the very man who had coveted his cloak in Egypt, and to whom he had
freely given it. So he made his way to Susa, and seating himself at
the portal of the royal palace, gave out that he was a benefactor of
the king. Then the doorkeeper went and told Darius. Amazed at what
he heard, king said thus within himself: "What Greek can have been
my benefactor, or to which of them do I owe anything, so lately as I
have got the kingdom? Scarcely a man of them all has been here, not
more than one or two certainly, since I came to the throne. Nor do
I remember that I am in the debt of any Greek. However, bring him
in, and let me hear what he means by his boast." So the doorkeeper
ushered Syloson into the presence, and the interpreters asked him who
he was, and what he had done that he should call himself a benefactor
of the king. Then Syloson told the whole story of the cloak, and
said that it was he who had made Darius the present. Hereupon Darius
exclaimed, "Oh! thou most generous of men, art thou indeed he who,
when I had no power at all, gavest me something, albeit little?
Truly the favour is as great as a very grand present would be
nowadays. I will therefore give thee in return gold and silver without
stint, that thou mayest never repent of having rendered a service to
Darius, son of Hystaspes. "Give me not, O king," replied
Syloson, "either silver or gold, but recover me Samos, my native
land, and let that be thy gift to me. It belongs now to a slave of
ours, who, when Oroetes put my brother Polycrates to death, became
its master. Give me Samos, I beg; but give it unharmed, with no
bloodshed - no leading into captivity."
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