|
Wrath stirred within the king at the sight of a man of his lofty rank
in such a condition; leaping down from his throne, he exclaimed
aloud, and asked Zopyrus who it was that had disfigured him, and what
he had done to be so treated. Zopyrus answered, "There is not a man
in the world, but thou, O king, that could reduce me to such a
plight - no stranger's hands have wrought this work on me, but my own
only. I maimed myself I could not endure that the Assyrians should
laugh at the Persians." "Wretched man," said Darius, "thou
coverest the foulest deed with the fairest possible name, when thou
sayest thy maiming is to help our siege forward. How will thy
disfigurement, thou simpleton, induce the enemy to yield one day the
sooner? Surely thou hadst gone out of thy mind when thou didst so
misuse thyself." "Had I told thee," rejoined the other, "what
I was bent on doing, thou wouldest not have suffered it; as it is,
I kept my own counsel, and so accomplished my plans. Now,
therefore, if there be no failure on thy part, we shall take
Babylon. I will desert to the enemy as I am, and when I get into
their city I will tell them that it is by thee I have been thus
treated. I think they will believe my words, and entrust me with a
command of troops. Thou, on thy part, must wait till the tenth day
after I am entered within the town, and then place near to the gates
of Semiramis a detachment of thy army, troops for whose loss thou wilt
care little, a thousand men. Wait, after that, seven days, and
post me another detachment, two thousand strong, at the Nineveh
gates; then let twenty days pass, and at the end of that time station
near the Chaldaean gates a body of four thousand. Let neither these
nor the former troops be armed with any weapons but their swords -
those thou mayest leave them. After the twenty days are over, bid thy
whole army attack the city on every side, and put me two bodies of
Persians, one at the Belian, the other at the Cissian gates; for
I expect, that, on account of my successes, the Babylonians will
entrust everything, even the keys of their gates, to me. Then it
will be for me and my Persians to do the rest."
|
|