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When Xerxes heard this answer of Demaratus, he laughed and
answered:
"What wild words, Demaratus! A thousand men join battle with such
an army as this! Come then, wilt thou - who wert once, as thou
sayest, their king - engage to fight this very day with ten men? I
trow not. And yet, if all thy fellow-citizens be indeed such as thou
sayest they are, thou oughtest, as their king, by thine own
country's usages, to be ready to fight with twice the number. If
then each one of them be a match for ten of my soldiers, I may well
call upon thee to be a match for twenty. So wouldest thou assure the
truth of what thou hast now said. If, however, you Greeks, who
vaunt yourselves so much, are of a truth men like those whom I have
seen about my court, as thyself, Demaratus, and the others with whom
I am wont to converse - if, I say, you are really men of this sort
and size, how is the speech that thou hast uttered more than a mere
empty boast? For, to go to the very verge of likelihood - how could
a thousand men, or ten thousand, or even fifty thousand, particularly
if they were all alike free, and not under one lord - how could such a
force, I say, stand against an army like mine? Let them be five
thousand, and we shall have more than a thousand men to each one of
theirs. If, indeed, like our troops, they had a single master,
their fear of him might make them courageous beyond their natural bent;
or they might be urged by lashes against an enemy which far outnumbered
them. But left to their own free choice, assuredly they will act
differently. For mine own part, I believe, that if the Greeks had
to contend with the Persians only, and the numbers were equal on both
sides, the Greeks would find it hard to stand their ground. We too
have among us such men as those of whom thou spakest - not many
indeed, but still we possess a few. For instance, some of my
bodyguard would be willing to engage singly with three Greeks. But
this thou didst not know; and therefore it was thou talkedst so foolishly."
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