The Ten Thousand (39 page)

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Authors: Michael Curtis Ford

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BOOK: The Ten Thousand
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BOOK TWELVE

 

GOD AND MAN

 

 

 

Self-born, untaught, motherless, unshakeable,

Giving place to no name, many-named, dwelling in fire...

All-seeing ether...

 

—INSCRIPTION FROM A TEMPLE WALL IN LYCIA

 

 

IT WAS HIS eyes I first noticed: sightless, watery orbs clouded an opaque creamy color from the thick cataracts covering them. He was as blind as a worm, yet his sightless gaze bored through the passersby on the crowded street as he peered straight into my face.

Listening carefully, I could hear his strange song rising above the background din of the street. The lyrics were faint, hardly more than a mumble, a repetitive chanting under the breath, but their effect was immediate and terrible. Trembling, I shouldered my way across the dusty street and seized the tottering old man roughly by the arm.

"Where did you learn that? Who are you?" He stared at me as I hissed at him, his blank expression slowly creasing into a grin, and he began laughing, the laugh of the deranged or the desperate. I thought perhaps he didn't hear me, or couldn't understand, so I brought my face closer. "Who are you?" I pleaded again, slowly and deliberately. My fingers gripped his surprisingly firm bicep in a kind of desperation. Despite my harsh grasp, no wince passed across his face—merely a vague stare, of amusement perhaps, even of triumph, though the strength of any emotion he might have been feeling was not sufficient to halt his mindless chuckling. I despaired of an answer, and stood there trembling in frustration, one old man tormenting another on a noisy street corner in Sparta.

Again he began his rhythmic, mournful chant, swaying slightly in time to his mental chorus, his face turned toward me expectantly.

The words to his song, which had remained latent for decades in my memory, in a misty corner of Mnemosyne's regions to which I rarely traveled, now echoed and rolled through my mind once again, taking on thoughts and shapes and a life of their own. A faceless, black-haired young woman leaning over me as I rested on her lap, singing a song—a lullaby?—in a low voice, an exotic, primitive melody that was more a chant than a tune, and which over the years had lent itself to endless variations in my inner thoughts. The words themselves were unintelligible to me, a language I had never spoken and do not understand. It is not the familiar Doric of Syracuse, nor even the obscure Elymi or Sicani, for I have spoken with many Sicilian merchants and soldiers in my life, and none, during my discreet queries, recognized any of the words I attempted to parrot from the recollections of my infancy. A Phoenician map-maker I once asked told me the sounds were like those of his language, though he recognized none of the words. Is memory such an ephemeral thing that even my earliest and most sacred impression, that of my own mother, has been unrecognizably corrupted?

I loosened my grip on the old man's arm, and dropped a handful of obols into the small clay bowl he was carrying, probably more money than he had ever held at one time in his life. The insane cackling ceased immediately, and he wrenched his arm away from my clench with a strength that was astonishing for one seemingly so frail. It was only with great effort and much coaxing that I was able to soothe him from his mindless babbling and elicit from him anything approaching lucidity.

"My little song?" he asked, and as he bobbed his head and resumed his chuckling, I feared I had lost him completely. He recovered his concentration, however, as quickly as it had eluded him seconds before, and my heart began alternately stopping and racing as his attention ebbed and flowed. "Those words..." he rasped, "Those words mean nothing! Ha! Ha! A nonsense rhyme I learned from my grandfather in Syracuse a century ago, who learned it from his grandfather..." He began losing his focus again as this counting of the generations broke down into more hoarse laughter. I glimpsed in my mind the faint shadows of his forgotten ancestors and mine, ancient Sicilian warriors who had lived when the gods still walked the earth, and I saw them slowly recede back into the mists from which they had just been unexpectedly summoned. Like those very deities, who once could effortlessly cross the line of mortality, assuming human form or godlike essence at will, they were dead.

I emptied my purse into his clay pot, again halting his mindless chortling when he felt the suddenly increased weight in his hand. Peering up at me with his rheumy eyes, he blessed me by nodding gravely, and as he clenched my forearm I was startled to note that his gnarly, bent fingers belied a grip forceful and unyielding, like that of a warrior with strength yet remaining for battles to be fought. His gaze locked on mine, and he recited again, in a low, cracking voice, the precise words I remembered my mother chanting from so many years before. The hair stood up on the back of my neck and then my knees weakened and I wept openly in the street, the passersby averting their eyes in embarrassment.

After a moment I stood up shakily and walked away in silence, convinced I had wrung everything from the old man that he was capable of giving. I had returned across the crowded street, my vision still a blur, when it occurred to me how singular it was to have seen a beggar here. Under this city's harsh administration, vagrancy was punishable by, what?—death? imprisonment? No reasonable man would even attempt to beg in Sparta. Panicked at the danger the old fool would face if caught, I whirled and raced back across the street, dodging the carts and mules passing in front of me, to the corner where he had stood a moment before.

It was empty.

My family: two lines of ancient and forgotten song recited by a tramp. I later taught them to Xenophon's sons, in a fruitless effort to keep them among the memory of the living.

EPILOGUE

 

 

 

 

 

Character is destiny.
—HERACLITUS THE OBSCURE

 

 

 

After a month's time spent gathering provisions and looting the surrounding Colchian countryside of its stores, the army and Xenophon made arrangements to continue back to Ionia, by ship and by foot, much to the relief of the overwhelmed townspeople, and the troops departed early one sunny spring morning. Several months and many deaths later, we arrived in Byzantium bereft of any plunder or even of those belongings with which we had started our long journey. Though poor in coin, however, Xenophon was rich in reputation and guile, and after campaigning with distinction for ten years more with the Spartan king Agesilaus, he retired wealthy to a large estate at Scillus, hard by Sparta itself, to spend the remainder of his years hunting and writing and observing from afar the affairs of Athens, which had banished him for life.

Accompanying him, as always, I too lived at Scillus. Philesia, his plain and uncomplaining Spartan wife, served him admirably in his daily care. Xenophon continued to sacrifice to the gods daily, and became closer to their world as he advanced in age, even at times maintaining running conversations with one or another of them when he thought he was alone. I, on the other hand, participated in the sacrifices not to seek omens or to entreat the gods' favor, but merely to appease them in order to avoid their notice of me one way or the other. "Pain," my countryman Epicharmus said, "is the price the gods demand we pay for all our benefits." If that is the case, I preferred their indifference.

Sparta's defeat by the Thebans at Leuctra changed our lives, driving us from beloved Scillus and forcing us to Corinth, a city without the beauty and grandeur of Athens, or the simplicity and nobility of Sparta. This move, I am certain, cost ten years of Xenophon's life. He aged as I watched him, becoming an old man before my very eyes. Even more disconcerting, he told me that I did the same. As I write this, a fanfare of trumpets and beating of drums can be heard in the distance, as Corinthian youths train for their never-ending military campaigns. Hearing such sounds revives long-dormant emotions in an old soldier, like watching a beautiful woman pass by, when there is nothing remaining to him but the memory of desire. The sway of her hips, the quiver of her breasts make the man's stomach knot. Yet though the woman beckons, her eyes filled with desire, though the trumpets brazenly summon to war—still the old man remains rooted to his chair, unable to rise.

Xenophon's two sons, who did act on such calls, died in the battles raging across Attica and the Peloponnese, and this was his final burden. Not having a son to follow one is difficult to bear, to which I can attest in my own acarpous life, though this was small comfort to him. In vain did I try to assuage his and my regret on this score.
Hous hoi theoi philousin, apothneskousi neoi,
I told him: Those whom the gods love die young. The minute these words left my mouth, however, I regretted them, for like most simplistic, pithy sayings this one was dual-edged, and of particularly small solace to those of us who die old.

I wax maudlin and sentimental, and it is with increasing effort that I try to keep my pen on the straight and narrow path of my tale. A Gallic sorceress named Yourcenar once said that no man is a king to his physician. To this I would add, nor is he a general to his squire. Both the physician and the squire, in order to be successful in caring for their wards, must be skilled to some degree in professional prevarication, omitting the bad news while yet retaining the recipient's full confidence. In the end, however, the truth must be laid bare and though neither party may quite wish it, social niceties and conventions must finally be set aside for the sake of precision.

And thus, seventy-five years after his birth, I again find myself in the position of caring for my alternately incontinent and strangurious ward, wiping his nose and cleaning his bottom as I did when he was an infant. It is a quiet role, and a not unsatisfying one, no doubt the last one I will play. But I err—for in hastily scribbling these leaves, in contemplation of my twin, my student, my benefactor, my very self, my last role will be not that of a nurse or an undertaker, but rather of a midwife, even of a god, as I strive, through these writings, to bring his true life to light.

Through this poor threnody I hope and trust that my goal will have been achieved, and that I will have shed some small bit of enlightenment on even one reader, even a hundred or more generations from now. The father of history wrote his masterpiece "in order that the memory of the past might not be erased from among men by time." Although I have no ambition myself to aspire to Herodotus' literary glory, I note nevertheless that a mere child sitting on the shoulders of a giant may see even farther than the giant himself. Perhaps purely by dint of my difference of perspective, I may be capable of seeing farther than my more worthy predecessors.

Let this, then, be the end of my narrative. I sign this document with the remnant of a songbird feather, which I have carefully saved for fifty years in a small pouch of oiled fabric; and I use my full name, to which as a man finally free and at peace, I am now entitled. Someone else, perhaps, will complete what I have left undone.

 

Themistogenes of Syracuse

1st year of the 105th Olympiad,

in the archonship of Callidemides, Corinth

AUTHOR'S POSTSCRIPT

 

 

 

 

Xenophon was born in Athens in approximately 426 B.C., and joined Cyrus' army on its fateful march in 401 B.C. He later served many years as an officer in the Spartan army under King Agesilaus, for which he was banished by Athens under penalty of death. After retiring from the military, he spent the remainder of his life writing works of philosophy and history, a memoir of Socrates, and treatises on household and farm administration. Although the Athenian government eventually repealed Xenophon's banishment, he never returned to his home city. He died in Corinth sometime after 356 B.C.

The most famous account of the March of the Ten Thousand, the
Anabasis,
was written by Themistogenes of Syracuse, which most modern scholars agree was the pseudonym of Xenophon himself.

 
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

 

 

 

 

 

Since a re-creation of a historical figure and the era in which he lived always contains large elements of conjecture, the author need not formally substantiate the evidence for the historical facts that it does contain. The meaningfulness of such a novel, however, is greatly enhanced by closely adhering to the actual events, and when all else fails, the author must make an honest and determined attempt to remain within the bounds of what "could have happened."

Hence, one of my heaviest debts in researching the historical events and background in this work is owed to the primary sources, most importantly to Xenophon himself. His
Anabasis
is a first-rate report of the odyssey of the Ten Thousand and is a gripping adventure story in its own right, even absent any feeble enhancements I may have added to it. I also relied heavily on some of his other works—in particular, the history he wrote of his times, the
Hellenica.
Thucydides and Herodotus were also indispensable for their background information on events immediately preceding the time this novel takes place, and Plato, Plutarch, Philostratus, and Diogenes Laertius for personal information on certain of the protagonists which may be found in no other sources. Homer, of course, stands alone for being the source of much inspiration. As Robert Burton, in his persona of Democritus Minor, noted: "The matter is theirs most part, and yet mine... yet it appears as something different from what 'tis taken from; that which nature doth with the aliment of our bodies—incorporate, digest, assimilate—I do dispose of what I take."

Modern-day scholars were also of great help, and I can cite the works of J.K. Anderson, Edouard Délebecque, Simon Hornblower, and A.M. Snodgrass as being just a few that contained penetrating insight into certain arcane areas of Greek arms and
Xenophontia.
Likewise, several modern-day historical novelists and memoirists, even those not dealing directly with ancient Greece, served as sources of inspiration, though more often of despair at my ever being able to rise to the heights of poetry and historical insight they attained. Most notable in this regard were Robert Graves, Erich Maria Remarque, and Marguerite Yourcenar.

There are others to whom an even greater debt is owed, most especially friends and acquaintances, several of whom had never even known me before I began pestering them for information and advice relating to their specialties. They dedicated many hours of time and burned untold quantities of synapses attempting to drill the necessary historical accuracy, literary technique, and plain good sense into my head, with mixed levels of success, and any failures to do so are attributable solely to my own obtuseness. (The Earl of Shaftesbury, in his
Characteristics of Men, Manners, Opinions, and Times
of 1711, bewailed the practice of his day whereby an author "pathetically endeavors... to reconcile his reader to those faults which he chooses rather to excuse than to amend." Clearly, very little has changed in this regard.) Here I would specifically like to thank my editor, Pete Wolverton, for his professionalism and patience; my agent, Bob Solinger, for his constant encouragement; Nicholas Sterling for his inexhaustible knowledge of Xenophon and his times; and especially my friend and teacher Mark Usher, who reviewed every page of the early manuscript for historical verisimilitude and commented copiously and invaluably. All of them gave me permission to mention their names, which I consider as being most indulgent on their part and for which I am grateful.

Naturally, unbounded gratitude is due to my parents, who from my earliest childhood have instilled in me a love of study and learning, and who were ever encouraging and understanding in making allowances for my flights of fancy and quest for travel, far beyond, I am sure, what their finances and patience could comfortably bear.

Finally, and most importantly, the greatest debt is owed to my wife, Cristina, who for many months tolerated my "graveyard shift" writing habits (and the resulting crankiness the following day), and who never flagged in her encouragement and belief in me. Her taste and skill as a critical reader (and as an expert in pancration) I trust implicitly, and her quiet and loving qualities as a Muse are unparalleled even by Calliope and Clio. It is impossible to imagine being able to write even a single page of this book without her.

M. C. F.

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