|
The Thebans under the command of Leontiades remained with the
Greeks, and fought against the barbarians, only so long as necessity
compelled them. No sooner did they see victory inclining to the
Persians, and the Greeks under Leonidas hurrying with all speed
towards the hillock, than they moved away from their companions, and
with hands upraised advanced towards the barbarians, exclaiming, as
was indeed most true - "that they for their part wished well to the
Medes, and had been among the first to give earth and water to the
king; force alone had brought them to Thermopylae; and so they must
not be blamed for the slaughter which had befallen the king's army."
These words, the truth of which was attested by the Thessalians,
sufficed to obtain the Thebans the grant of their lives. However,
their good fortune was not without some drawback; for several of them
were slain by the barbarians on their first approach; and the rest,
who were the greater number, had the royal mark branded upon their
bodies by the command of Xerxes - Leontiades, their captain, being
the first to suffer. (This man's son, Eurymachus, was afterwards
slain by the Plataeans, when he came with a band of 400 Thebans,
and seized their city.)
|
|