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.ANABASIS
ALEXANDRI:
BOOK VIII (INDICA)
BY ARRIANTranslated by E. Iliff Robson(1933)
I.
All the territory that lies west of the river Indus up to the river Cophen
is inhabited by Astacenians and Assacenians, Indian tribes. But they are
not, like the Indians dwelling within the river Indus, tall of stature,
nor similarly brave in spirit, nor as black as the greater part of the
Indians. These long ago were subject to the Assyrians; then to the Medes,
and so they became subject to the Persians; and they paid tribute to Cyrus
son of Cambyses from their territory, as Cyrus commanded. The Nysaeans are
not an Indian race; but part of those who came with Dionysus to India;
possibly even of those Greeks who became past service in the wars which
Dionysus waged with Indians; possibly also volunteers of the neighbouring
tribes whom Dionysus settled there together with the Greeks, calling the
country Nysaea from the mountain Nysa, and the city itself Nysa. And the
mountain near the city, on whose foothills Nysa is built, is called Merus
because of the incident at Dionysus' birth. All this the poets sang about
Dionysus; and I leave it to the narrators of Greek or Eastern history to
recount them. Among the Assacenians is Massaca, a great city, where
resides the chief authority of the Assacian land; and another city Peucela,
this also a great city, not far from the Indus. These places then are
inhabited on this side of the Indus towards the west, as far as the river
Cophen.
II.
But the parts from the Indus eastward, these I shall call India, and its
inhabitants Indians. The boundary of the land of India towards the north
is Mount Taurus. It is not still called Taurus in this land; but Taurus
begins from the sea over against Pamphylia and Lycia and Cilicia; and
reaches as far as the Eastern Ocean, running right across Asia. But the
mountain has different names in different places; in one, Parapamisus, in
another Hemodus; elsewhere it is called Imaon, and perhaps has all sorts
of other names; but the Macedonians who fought with Alexander called it
Caucasus; another Caucasus, that is, not the Scythian; so that the story
ran that Alexander came even to the far side of the Caucasus. The western
part of India is bounded by the river Indus right down to the ocean, where
the river runs out by two mouths, not joined together as are the five
mouths of the Ister; but like those of the Nile, by which the Egyptian
delta is formed; thus also the Indian delta is formed by the river Indus,
not less than the Egyptian; and this in the Indian tongue is called
Pattala. Towards the south this ocean bounds the land of India, and
eastward the sea itself is the boundary. The southern part near Pattala
and the mouths of the Indus were surveyed by Alexander and Macedonians,
and many Greeks; as for the eastern part, Alexander did not traverse this
beyond the river Hyphasis. A few historians have described the parts which
are this side of the Ganges and where are the mouths of the Ganges and the
city of Palimbothra, the greatest Indian city on the Ganges.
III.
I hope I may be allowed to regard Eratosthenes of Cyrene as worthy of
special credit, since he was a student of Geography. He states that
beginning with Mount Taurus, where are the springs of the river Indus,
along the Indus to the Ocean, and to the mouths of the Indus, the side of
India is thirteen thousand stades in length. The opposite side to this
one, that from the same mountain to the Eastern Ocean, he does not reckon
as merely equal to the former side, since it has a promontory running well
into the sea; the promontory stretching to about three thousand stades. So
then he would make this side of India, to the eastward, a total length of
sixteen thousand stades. This he gives, then, as the breadth of India. Its
length, however, from west to east, up to the city of Palimbothra, he
states that he gives as measured by reed-measurements; for there is a
royal road; and this extends to ten thousand stades; beyond that, the
information is not so certain. Those, however, who have followed common
talk say that including the promontory, which runs into the sea, India
extends over about ten thousand stades; but farther north its length is
about twenty thousand stades. But Ctesias of Cnidus affirms that the land
of India is equal in size to the rest of Asia, which is absurd; and
Onesicritus is absurd, who says that India is a third of the entire world;
Nearchus, for his part, states that the journey through the actual plain
of India is a four months' journey. Megasthenes would have the breadth of
India that from east to west which others call its length; and he says
that it is of sixteen thousand stades, at its shortest stretch. From north
to south, then, becomes for him its length, and it extends twenty-two
thousand three hundred stades, to its narrowest point. The Indian rivers
are greater than any others in Asia; greatest are the Ganges and the
Indus, whence the land gets its name; each of these is greater than the
Nile of Egypt and the Scythian Ister, even were these put together; my own
idea is that even the Acesines is greater than the Ister and the Nile,
where the Acesines having taken in the Hydaspes, Hydraotes, and Hyphasis,
runs into the Indus, so that its breadth there becomes thirty stades.
Possibly also other greater rivers run through the land of India.
IV.
As for the yonder side of the Hyphasis, I cannot speak with confidence,
since Alexander did not proceed beyond the Hyphasis. But of these two
greatest rivers, the Ganges and the Indus, Megasthenes wrote that the
Ganges is much greater than the Indus, and so do all others who mention
the Ganges; for (they say) the Ganges is already large as it comes from
its springs, and receives as tributaries the river Cainas and the
Erannoboas and the Cossoanus, all navigable; also the river Sonus and the
Sittocatis and the Solomatis, these likewise navigable. Then besides there
are the Condochates and the Sambus and Magon and Agoranis and Omalis; and
also there run into it the Commenases, a great river, and the Cacuthis and
Andomatis, flowing from the Indian tribe of the Mandiadinae; after them
the Amystis by the city Catadupas, and the Oxymagis at the place called
Pazalae, and the Errenysis among the Mathae, an Indian tribe, also meet
the Ganges. Megasthenes says that of these none is inferior to the
Maeander, where the Maeander is navigable. The breath therefore of the
Ganges, where it is at its narrowest, runs to a hundred stades; often it
spreads into lakes, so that the opposite side cannot be seen, where it is
low and has no projections of hills. It is the same with the Indus; the
Hydraotes, in the territory of the Cambistholians, receives the Hyphasis
in that of the Astrybae, and the Saranges from the Cecians, and the
Neydrus from the Attacenians, and flows, with these, into the Acesines.
The Hydaspes also among the Oxydracae receives the Sinarus among the
Arispae and it too flows out into the Acesines. The Acesines among the
Mallians joins the Indus; and the Tutapus, a large river, flows into the
Acesines. All these rivers swell the Acesines, and proudly retaining its
own name it flows into the Indus. The Cophen, in the Peucelaetis, taking
with it the Malantus, the Soastus, and the Garroeas, joins the Indus.
Above these the Parenus and Saparnus, not far from one another, flow into
the Indus. The Soanus, from the mountains of the Abissareans, without any
tributary, flows into it. Most of these Megasthenes reports to be
navigable. It should not then be incredible that neither Nile nor Ister
can be even compared with Indus or Ganges in volume of water. For we know
of no tributary to the Nile; rather from it canals have been cut through
the land of Egypt. As for the Ister, it emerges from its springs a meagre
stream, but receives many tributaries; yet not equal in number to the
Indian tributaries which flow into Indus or Ganges; and very few of these
are navigable; I myself have only noticed the Enus and the Saus. The Enus
on the line between Norica and Rhaetia joins the Ister, the Saus in
Paeonia. The country where the rivers join is called Taurunus. If anybody
is aware of other navigable rivers which form tributaries to the Ister, he
certainly does not know many.
V.
I hope that anyone who desires to explain the cause of the number and size
of the Indian rivers will do so; and that my remarks may be regarded as
set down on hearsay only. For Megasthenes has recorded names of many other
rivers, which beyond the Ganges and the Indus run into the eastern and
southern outer ocean; so that he states the number of Indian rivers in all
to be fifty-eight, and these all navigable. But not even Megasthenes, so
far as I can see, travelled over any large part of India; yet a good deal
more than the followers of Alexander son of Philip did. For he states that
he met Sandracottus, the greatest of the Indian kings, and Porus, even
greater than he was. This Megasthenes says, moreover, that the Indians
waged war on no men, nor other men on the Indians, but on the other hand
that Sesostris the Egyptian, after subduing the most part of Asia, and
after invading Europe with an army, yet returned back; and Indathyrsis the
Scythian who started from Scythia subdued many tribes of Asia, and invaded
Egypt victoriously; but Semiramis the Assyrian queen tried to invade
India, but died before she could carry out her purposes; it was in fact
Alexander only who actually invaded India. Before Alexander, too, there is
a considerable tradition about Dionysus as having also invaded India, and
having subdued the Indians; about Heracles there is not much tradition. As
for Dionysus, the city of Nysa is no mean memorial of his expedition, and
also Mount Merus, and the growth of ivy on this mountain then the habit of
the Indians themselves setting out to battle with the sound of drums and
cymbals; and their dappled costume, like that worn by the bacchanals, of
Dionysus. But of Heracles the memorials are slight. Yet the story of the
rock Aornos, which Alexander forced, namely, that Heracles could not
capture it, I am inclined to think a Macedonian boast; just as the
Macedonians called Parapamisus by the name of Caucasus, though it has
nothing to do with Caucasus. And besides, learning that there was a cave
among the Parapamisadae, they said that this was the cave of Prometheus
the Titan, in which he was crucified for his theft of the fire. Among the
Sibae, too, an Indian tribe, having noticed them clad with skins they used
to assert that they were relics of Heracles' expedition. What is more, as
the Sibae carried a club, and they brand their cattle with a club, they
referred this too to some memory of Heracles' club. If anyone believes
this, at least it must be some other Heracles, not he of Thebes, but
either of Tyre or of Egypt, or some great king of the higher inhabited
country near India.
VI.
This then must be regarded as a digression, so that too much credence may
not be given to the stories which certain persons have related about the
Indians beyond the Hyphasis; for those who served under Alexander are
reasonably trustworthy up to the Hyphasis. For Megasthenes tells us this
also about an Indian river; its name is Silas, it flows from a spring of
the same name as the river through the territory of the Sileans, the
people also named both from river and spring; its water has the following
peculiarity; nothing is supported by it, nothing can swim in it or float
upon it, but everything goes straight to the bottom; so far is this water
thinner and more aery than any other. In the summer there is rain through
India; especially on the mountains, Parapamisus and Hemodus and the Imaus,
and from them the rivers run great and turbulent. The plains of India also
receive rain in summer, and much part of them becomes swamp; in fact
Alexander's army retired from the river Acesines in midsummer, when the
river had overflowed on to the plains; from these, therefore, one can
gauge the flooding of the Nile, since probably the mountains of Ethiopia
receive rain in summer, and from them the Nile is swollen and overflows
its banks on to the land of Egypt the Nile therefore also runs turbid this
time of the year, as it probably would not be from melting snow; nor yet
if its stream was dammed up by the seasonal winds which blow during the
summer; and besides, the mountains of Ethiopia are probably not
snowcovered, on account of the heat. But that they receive rain as India
does is not outside the bounds of probability; since in other respects
India is not unlike Ethiopia, and the Indian rivers have crocodiles like
the Ethiopian and Egyptian Nile; and some of the Indian rivers have fish
and other large water animals like those of the Nile, save the
river-horse: though Onesicritus states that they do have the river-horse
also. The appearance of the inhabitants, too, is not so far different in
India and Ethiopia; the southern Indians resemble the Ethiopians a good
deal, and, are black of countenance, and their hair black also, only they
are not as snub-nosed or so woolly-haired as the Ethiopians; but the
northern Indians are most like the Egyptians in appearance.
VII.
Megasthenes states that there are one hundred and eighteen Indian tribes.
That there are many, I agree with Megasthenes; but I cannot conjecture how
he learnt and recorded the exact number, when he never visited any great
part of India, and since these different races have not much intercourse
one with another. The Indians, he says, were originally nomads, as are the
non-agricultural Scythians, who wandering in their waggons inhabit now one
and now another part of Scythia; not dwelling in cities and not
reverencing any temples of the gods; just so the Indians also had no
cities and built no temples; but were clothed with the skins of animals
slain in the chase, and for food ate the bark of trees; these trees were
called in the Indian tongue Tala, and there grew upon them, just as on the
tops of palm trees, what look like clews of wool. They also used as food
what game they had captured, eating it raw, before, at least, Dionysus
came into India. But when Dionysus had come, and become master of India,
he founded cities, and gave laws for these cities, and became to the
Indians the bestower of wine, as to the Greeks, and taught them to sow
their land, giving them seed. It may be that Triptolemus, when he was sent
out by Demeter to sow the entire earth, did not come this way; or perhaps
before Triptolemus this Dionysus whoever he was came to India and gave the
Indians seeds of domesticated plants; then Dionysus first yoked oxen to
the plough and made most of the Indians agriculturists instead of
wanderers, and armed them also with the arms of warfare. Further, Dionysus
taught them to reverence other gods, but especially, of course, himself,
with clashings of cymbals and beating of drums and dancing in the Satyric
fashion, the dance called among Greeks the 'cordax'; and taught them to
wear long hair in honour of the god, and instructed them in the wearing of
the conical cap and the anointings with perfumes; so that the Indians came
out even against Alexander to battle with the sound of cymbals and drums.
VIII.
When departing from India, after making all these arrangements, he made
Spatembas king of the land, one of his Companions, being most expert in
Bacchic rites; when Spatembas died, Budyas his son reigned in his stead;
the father was King of India fifty-two years, and the son twenty years;
and his son, again, came to the throne, one Cradeuas; and his descendants
for the most part received the kingdom in succession, son succeeding
father; if the succession failed, then the kings were appointed for some
pre-eminence. But Heracles, whom tradition states to have arrived as far
as India, was called by the Indians themselves 'Indigenous.' This Heracles
was chiefly honoured by the Surasenians, an Indian tribe, among whom are
two great cities, Methora and Cleisobora, and the navigable river Iobares
flows through their territory. Megasthenes also says that the garb which
this Heracles wore was like that of the Theban Heracles, as also the
Indians themselves record; he also had many sons in his country, for this
Heracles too wedded many wives; he had only one daughter, called Pandaea;
as also the country in which she was born, and to rule which Heracles
educated her, was called Pandaea after the girl; here she possessed five
hundred elephants given by her father, four thousand horsemen, and as many
as a hundred and thirty thousand foot-soldiers. This also some writers
relate about Heracles; he traversed all the earth and sea, and when he had
rid the earth of evil monsters he found in the sea a jewel much affected
by women. And thus, even to our day, those who bring exports from India to
our country purchase these jewels at great price and export them, and all
Greeks in old time, and Romans now who are rich and prosperous, are more
eager to buy the sea pearl, as it is called in the Indian tongue for that
Heracles, the jewel appearing to him charming, collected from all the sea
to India this kind of pearl, to adorn his daughter. And Megasthenes says
that this oyster is taken with nets; that it is a native of the sea, many
oysters being together, like bees; and that the pearl oysters have a king
or queen, as bees do. Should anyone by chance capture the king, he can
easily surround the rest of the oysters; but should the king slip through,
then the others cannot be taken; and of those that are taken, the Indians
let their flesh rot, but use the skeleton as an ornament. For among the
Indians this pearl sometimes is worth three times its weight in solid
gold, which is itself dug up in India.
IX.
In this country where Heracles' daughter was queen, the girls are
marriageable at seven years, and the men do not live longer than forty
years. About this there is a story among the Indians, that Heracles, to
whom when in mature years this daughter was born, realizing that his own
end was near, and knowing of no worthy husband to whom he might bestow his
daughter, himself became her husband when she was seven, so that Indian
kings, their children, were left behind. Heracles made her then
marriageable, and hence all the royal race of Pandaea arose, with the same
privilege from Heracles. But I think, even if Heracles was able to
accomplish anything so absurd, he could have lengthened his own life, so
as to mate with the girl when of maturer years. But really if this about
the age of the girls in this district is true, it seems to me to tend the
same way as the men's age, since the oldest of them die at forty years.
For when old age comes on so much sooner and death with age, maturity will
reasonably be earlier, in proportion to the end; so that at thirty the men
might be on the threshold of old age, and at twenty, men in their prime,
and manhood at about fifteen, so that the women might reasonably be
marriageable at seven. For that the fruits ripen earlier in this country
than elsewhere, and perish earlier, this Megasthenes himself tells us.
From Dionysus to Sandracottus the Indians counted a hundred and
fifty-three kings, over six thousand and forty-two years, and during this
time thrice [Movements were made] for liberty . . . this for three hundred
years; the other for a hundred and twenty years; the Indians say that
Dionysus was fifteen generations earlier than Heracles; but no one else
ever invaded India, not even Cyrus son of Cambyses, though he made an
expedition against the Scythians, and in all other ways was the most
energetic of the kings in Asia; but Alexander came and conquered by force
of arms all the countries he entered; and would have conquered the whole
world had his army been willing. But no Indian ever went outside his own
country on a warlike expedition, so righteous were they.
X.
This also is related; that Indians do not put up memorials to the dead;
but they regard their virtues as sufficient memorials for the departed,
and the songs which they sing at their funerals. As for the cities of
India, one could not record their number accurately by reason of their
multitude; but those of them which are near rivers or near the sea, they
build of wood; for if they were built of brick, they could not last long
because of the rain, and also because their rivers overflow their banks
and fill the plains with water. But such cities as are built on high and
lofty places, they make of brick and clay. The greatest of the Indian
cities is called Palimbothra, in the district of the Prasians, at the
confluence of the Erannoboas and the Ganges; the Ganges, greatest of all
rivers; the Erannoboas may be the third of the Indian rivers, itself
greater than the rivers of other countries; but it yields precedence to
the Ganges, when it pours into it its tributary stream. And Megasthenes
says that the length of the city along either side, where it is longest,
reaches to eighty stades its breadth to fifteen; and a ditch has been dug
round the city, six plethra in breadth, thirty cubits high; and on the
wall are five hundred and seventy towers, and sixty-four gates. This also
is remarkable in India, that all Indians are free, and no Indian at all is
a slave. In this the Indians agree with the Lacedaemonians. Yet the
Lacedaemonians have Helots for slaves, who perform the duties of slaves;
but the Indians have no slaves at all, much less is any Indian a slave.
XI.
The Indians generally are divided into seven castes. Those called the wise
men are less in number than the rest, but chiefest in honour and regard.
For they are under no necessity to do any bodily labour; nor to contribute
from the results of their work to the common store; in fact, no sort of
constraint whatever rests upon these wise men, save to offer the
sacrifices to the gods on behalf of the people of India. Then whenever
anyone sacrifices privately, one of these wise men acts as instructor of
the sacrifice, since otherwise the sacrifice would not have proved
acceptable to the gods. These Indians also are alone expert in prophecy,
and none, save one of the wise men, is allowed to prophesy. And they
prophesy about the seasons of the year, or of any impending public
calamity: but they do not trouble to prophesy on private matters to
individuals, either because their prophecy does not condescend to smaller
things, or because it is undignified for them to trouble about such
things. And when one has thrice made an error in his prophecy, he does not
suffer any harm, except that he must for ever hold his peace; and no one
will ever persuade such a one to prophesy on whom this silence has been
enjoined. These wise men spend their time naked, during the winter in the
open air and sunshine, but in summer, when the sun is strong, in the
meadows and the marsh lands under great trees; their shade Nearchus
computes to reach five plethra all round, and ten thousand men could take
shade under one tree; so great are these trees. They eat fruits in their
season, and the bark of the trees; this is sweet and nutritious as much as
are the dates of the palm. Then next to these come the farmers, these
being the most numerous class of Indians; they have no use for warlike
arms or warlike deeds, but they till the land; and they pay the taxes to
the kings and to the cities, such as are self-governing; and if there is
internal war among the Indians, they may not touch these workers, and not
even devastate the land itself; but some are making war and slaying all
comers, and others close by are peacefully ploughing or gathering the
fruits or shaking down apples or harvesting. The third class of Indians
are the herdsmen, pasturers of sheep and cattle, and these dwell neither
by cities nor in the villages. They are nomads and get their living on the
hillsides, and they pay taxes from their animals; they hunt also birds and
wild game in the country.
XII
The fourth class is of artisans and shopkeepers; these are workers, and
pay tribute from their works, save such as make weapons of war; these are
paid by the community. In this class are the shipwrights and sailors, who
navigate the rivers. The fifth class of Indians is the soldiers' class,
next after the farmers in number; these have the greatest freedom and the
most spirit. They practise military pursuits only. Their weapons others
forge for them, and again others provide horses; others too serve in the
camps, those who groom their horses and polish their weapons, guide the
elephants, and keep in order and drive the chariots. They themselves, when
there is need of war, go to war, but in time of peace they make merry; and
they receive so much pay from the community that they can easily from
their pay support others. The sixth class of Indians are those called
overlookers. They oversee everything that goes on in the country or in the
cities; and this they report to the King, where the Indians are governed
by kings, or to the authorities, where they are independent. To these it
is illegal to make any false report; nor was any Indian ever accused of
such falsification. The seventh class is those who deliberate abbut the
community together with the King, or, in such cities as are
self-governing, with the authorities. In number this class is small, but
in wisdom and uprightness it bears the palm from all others; from this
class are selected their governors, district governors, and deputies,
custodians of the treasures, officers of army and navy, financial
officers, and overseers of agricultural works. To marry out of any class
is unlawful -- as, for instance, into the farmer class from the artisans,
or the other way; nor must the same man practise two pursuits; nor change
from one class into another, as to turn farmer from shepherd, or shepherd
from artisan. It is only permitted to join the wise men out of any class;
for their business is not an easy one, but of all most laborious.
XIII.
Most wild animals which the Greeks hunt the Indians hunt also, but these
have a way of hunting elephants unlike all other kinds of hunting, just as
these animals are unlike other animals. It is this they choose a place
that is level and open to the sun's heat, and dig a ditch in a circle,
wide enough for a great army to camp within it. They dig the ditch five
fathoms broad, and four deep. The earth which they throw out of the ditch
they heap on either side of the ditch, and so use it as a wall; then they
make shelters for themselves, dug out of the wall on the outside of the
ditch, and leave small windows in them; through these the light comes in,
and also they watch the animals coming in and charging into the enclosure.
Then within the enclosure they leave some three or four of the females,
those that are tamest, and leave only one entrance by the ditch, making a
bridge over it; and here they heap much earth and grass so that the
animals cannot distinguish the bridge, and so suspect any guile. The
hunters then keep themselves out of the way, hiding under the shelters dug
in the ditch. Now the wild elephants do not approach inhabited places by
daylight, but at night they wander all about and feed in herds, following
the largest and finest of their number, as cows do the bulls. And when
they approach the ditch and hear the trumpeting of the females and
perceive them by their scent, they rush to the walled enclosure; and when,
working round the outside edge of the ditch, they find the bridge, they
push across it into the enclosure. Then the hunters, perceiving the entry
of the wild elephants, some smartly remove the bridge, others hurrying to
the neighbouring villages report that the elephants are caught in the
enclosure; and the inhabitants on hearing the news mount the most
spirited, and at the same time most disciplined elephants, and then drive
them towards the enclosure, and when they have driven them thither they do
not at once join battle, but allow the wild elephants to grow distressed
by hunger and to be tamed by thirst. But when they think they are
sufficiently distressed, then they erect the bridge again, and enter the
enclosure; and at first there is a fierce battle between the tamed
elephants and the captives, and then, as one would expect, the wild
elephants are tamed, distressed as they are by a sinking of their spirits
and by hunger. Then the riders dismounting from the tamed elephants tie
together the feet of the now languid wild ones; then they order the tamed
elephants to punish the rest by repeated blows, till in their distress
they fall to earth; then they come near them and throw nooses round their
necks; and climb on them as they lie there. And that they may not toss
their drivers nor do them any injury, they make an incision in their necks
with a sharp knife, all round, and bind their noose round the wound, so
that by reason of the sore they keep their heads and necks still. For were
they to turn round to do mischief, the wound beneath the rope chafes them.
And so they keep quiet, and perceiving that they are conquered, they are
led of by the tamed elephants by the rope.
XIV.
Such elephants as are not yet full grown or from some defect are not worth
the acquiring, they allow to depart to their own laim, Then they lead of
their captives to the villages and first of all give them green shoots and
grass to eat; but they, from want of heart, are not willing to eat
anything; so the Indians range themselves about them and with songs and
drums and cymbals, beating and singing, lull them to sleep. For if there
is an intelligent animal, it is the elephant. Some of them have been
known, when their drivers have perished in battle, to have caught them up
and carried them to burial; others have stood over them and protected
them. Others, when they have fallen, have actively fought for them; one,
indeed, who in a passion slew his driver, died from remorse and grief. I
myself have seen an elephant clanging the cymbals, and others dancing; two
cymbals were fastened to the player's forelegs, and one on his trunk, and
he rhythmically beat with his trunk the cymbal on either leg in turn; the
dancers danced in circle, and raising and bending their forelegs in turn
moved also rhythmically, as the player with the cymbals marked the time
for them. The elephants mate in spring, as do oxen and horses, when
certain pores about the temples of the females open and exhale; the female
bears its offispring sixteen months at the least, eighteen at most; it has
one foal, as does a mare; and this it suckles till its eighth year. The
longest-lived elephants survive to two hundred years; but many die before
that by disease; but as far as mere age goes, they reach this age. If
their eyes are affected, cow's milk injected cures them; for their other
sicknesses a draught of dark wine, and for their wounds swine's flesh
roast, and laid on the spot, are good. These are the Indian remedies for
them.
XV.
The Indians regard the tiger as much stronger than the elephant. Nearchus
writes that he had seen a tiger's skin, but no tiger; the Indians record
that the tiger is in size as great as the largest horse, and its swiftness
and strength without parallel, for a tiger, when it meets an elephant,
leaps on to the head and easily throttles it. Those, however, which we see
and call tigers are dappled jackals, but larger than ordinary jackals.
Nay, about ants also Nearchus says that he himself saw no ant, of the sort
which some writers have described as native of India; he saw, however,
several of their skins brought into the Macedonian camp.Megasthenes,
however confirms the accounts given about these ants; that ants do dig up
gold, not indeed for the gold, but as they naturally burrow, that they may
make holes, just as our small ants excavate a small amount of earth; but
these, which are bigger than foxes, dig up earth also proportionate to
their size; the earth is auriferous, and thus the Indians get their gold.
Megasthenes, however, merely quotes hearsay, and as I have no certainty to
write on the subject, I readily dismiss this subject of ants. But Nearchus
describes, as something miraculous, parrots, as being found in India, and
describes the parrot, and how it utters a human voice. But I having seen
several, and knowing others acquainted with this bird, shall not dilate on
them as anything remarkable; nor yet upon the size of the apes, nor the
beauty of some Indian apes, and the method of capture. For I should only
say what everyone knows, except perhaps that apes are anywhere beautiful.
And further Nearchus says that snakes are hunted there, dappled and swift;
and that which he states Peithon son of Antigenes to have caught, was
upwards of sixteen cubits; but the Indians (he proceeds) state that the
largest snakes are much larger than this. No Greek physicians have
discovered a remedy against Indian snake-bite; but the Indians themselves
used to cure those who were struck. And Nearchus adds that Alexander had
gathered about him Indians very skilled in physic, and orders were sent
round the camp that anyone bitten by a snake was to report at the royal
pavilion. But there are not many illnesses in India, since the seasons are
more temperate than with us. If anyone is seriously ill, they would inform
their wise men, and they were thought to use the divine help to cure what
could be cured.
XVI.
The Indians wear linen garments, as Nearchus says, the linen coming from
the trees of which I have already made mention. This linen is either
brighter than the whiteness of other linen, or the people's own blackness
makes it appear unusually bright. They have a linen tunic to the middle of
the calf, and for outer garments, one thrown round about their shoulders,
and one wound round their heads. They wear ivory ear-rings, that is, the
rich Indians; the common people do not use them. Nearchus writes that they
dye their beards various colours; some therefore have these as
white-looking as possible, others dark, others crimson, others purple,
others grass-green. The more dignified Indians use sunshades against the
summer heat. They have slippers of white skin, and these too made neatly;
and the soles of their sandals are of different colours, and also high, so
that the wearers seem taller. Indian war equipment differs; the infantry
have a bow, of the height of the owner; this they poise on the ground, and
set their left foot against it, and shoot thus; drawing the bowstring a
very long way back; for their arrows are little short of three cubits, and
nothing can stand against an arrow shot by an Indian archer, neither
shield nor breastplate nor any strong armour. In their left hands they
carry small shields of untanned hide, narrower than their bearers, but not
much shorter. Some have javelins in place of bows. All carry a broad
scimitar, its length not under three cubits; and this, when they have a
hand-to-hand fight -- and Indians do not readily fight so among themselves
-- they bring down with both hands in smiting, so that the stroke may be
an effective one. Their horsemen have two javelins, like lances, and a
small shield smaller than the infantry's. The horses have no saddles, nor
do they use Greek bits nor any like the Celtic bits, but round the end of
the horses' mouths they have an untanned stitched rein fitted; in this
they have fitted, on the inner side, bronze or iron spikes, but rather
blunted; the rich people have ivory spikes; within the mouth of the horses
is a bit, like a spit, to either end of which the reins are attached. Then
when they tighten the reins this bit masters the horse, and the spikes,
being attached thereto, prick the horse and compel it to obey the rein.
XVII.
The Indians in shape are thin and tall and much lighter in movement than
the rest of mankind. They usually ride on camels, horses, and asses; the
richer men on elephants. For the elephant in India is a royal mount; then
next in dignity is a four-horse chariot, and camels come third; to ride on
a single horse is low. Their women, such as are of great modesty, can be
seduced by no other gift, but yield themselves to anyone who gives an
elephant; and the Indians think it no disgrace to yield thus on the gift
of an elephant, but rather it seems honourable for a woman that her beauty
should be valued at an elephant. They marry neither giving anything nor
receiving anything; such girls as are marriageable their fathers bring out
and allow anyone who proves victorious in wrestling or boxing or running
or shows pre-eminence in any other manly pursuit to choose among them. The
Indians eat meal and till the ground, except the mountaineers; but these
eat the flesh of game. This must be enough for a description of the
Indians, being the most notable things which Nearchus and Megasthenes, men
of credit, have recorded about them. But as the main subject of this my
history was not to write an account of the Indian customs but the way in
which Alexander's navy reached Persia from India, this must all be
accounted a digression.
XVIII.
For Alexander, when his fleet was made ready on the banks of the Hydaspes,
collected together all the Phoenicians and all the Cyprians and Egyptians
who had followed the northern expedition. From these he manned his ships,
picking out as crews and rowers for them any who were skilled in
seafaring. There were also a good many islanders in the army, who
understood these things, and Ionians and Hellespontines. As commanders of
triremes were appointed, from the Macedonians, Hephaestion son of Amyntor,
and Leonnatus son of Eunous, Lysimachus son of Agathocles, and
Asclepiodorus son of Timander, and Archon son of Cleinias, and Demonicus
son of Athenaeus, Archias son of Anaxidotus, Ophellas son of Seilenus,
Timanthes son of Pantiades; all these were of Pella. From Amphipolis these
were appointed officers: Nearchus son of Androtimus, who wrote the account
of the voyage; and Laomedon son of Larichus, and Androsthenes son of
Callistratus; and from Orestis. Craterus son of Alexander, and Perdiccas
son of Orontes. Of Eordaea, Ptolemaeus son of Lagos and Aristonous son of
Peisaeus; from Pydna, Metron son of Epicharmus and Nicarchides son of
Simus. Then besides, Attalus son of Andromenes, of Stympha Peucestas son
of Alexander, from Mieza; Peithon son of Crateuas, of Alcomenae; Leonnatus
son of Antipater, of Aegae; Pantauchus son of Nicolaus, of Aloris; Mylleas
son of Zoilus, of Beroea; all these being Macedonians. Of Greeks, Medius
son of Oxynthemis, of Larisa; Eumenes son of Hieronymus, from Cardia;
Critobulus, son of Plato, of Cos; Thoas son of Menodorus, and Maeander,
son of Mandrogenes, of Magnesia; Andron son of Cabeleus, of Teos; of
Cyprians, Nicocles son of Pasicrates, of Soh; and Nithaphon son of
Pnytagoras, of Salamis. Alexander appointed also a Persian trierarch,
Bagoas son of Pharnuces; but of Alexander's own ship the helmsman was
Onesicritus of Astypalaea; and the accountant of the whole fleet was
Euagoras son of Eucleon, of Corinth. As admiral was appointed Nearchus,
son of Androtimus, Cretan by race, and he lived. in Amphipolis on the
Strymon. And when Alexander had made all these dispositions, he sacrificed
to the gods, both the gods of his race and all of whom the prophets had
warned him, and to Poseidon and Amphitrite and the Nereids and to Ocean
himself and to the river Hydaspes, whence he started, and to the Acesines,
into which the Hydaspes runs, and to the Indus, into which both run; and
he instituted contests of art and of athletics, and victims for sacrifice
were given to all the army, according to their detachments.
XIX.
Then when he had made all ready for starting the voyage, Alexander ordered
Craterus to march by the one side of the Hydaspes with his army, cavalry
and infantry alike; Hephaestion had already started along the other, with
another army even bigger than that under Craterus. Hephaestion took with
him the elephants, up to the number of two hundred. Alexander himself took
with him all the peltasts, as they are called, and all the archers, and of
the cavalry, those called 'Companions'; in all, eight thousand. But
Craterus and Hephaestion, with their forces, were ordered to march ahead
and await the fleet. But he sent Philip, whom he had made satrap of this
country, to the banks of the river Acesines, Philip also with a
considerable force; for by this time a hundred and twenty thousand men of
fighting age were following him, together with those whom he himself had
brought from the sea-coast; and with those also whom his officers, sent to
recruit forces, had brought back; so that he now led all sorts of Oriental
tribes, and armed in every sort of fashion. Then he himself loosing his
ships sailed down the Hydaspes to the meeting-place of Acesines and
Hydaspes. His whole fleet of ships was eighteen hundred, both ships of war
and merchantmen, and horse transports besides and others bringing
provisions together with the troops. And how his fleet descended the
rivers, and the tribes he conquered on the descent, and how he endangered
himself among the Mallians, and the wound he there received, then the way
in which Peucestas and Leonnatus defended him as he lay there -- all this
I have related already in my other history, written in the Attic dialect.
This my present work, however, is a story of the voyage, which Nearchus
successfully undertook with his fleet starting from the mouths of the
Indus by the Ocean to the Persian Gulf, which some call the Red Sea.
XX.
On this Nearchus writes thus: Alexander had a vehement desire to sail the
sea which stretches from India to Persia; but he disliked the length of
the voyage and feared lest, meeting with some country desert or without
roadsteads, or not properly provided with the fruits of the earth, his
whole fleet might be destroyed; and this, being no small blot on his great
achievements, might wreck all his happiness; but yet his desire to do
something unusual and strange won the day; still, he was in doubt whom he
should choose, as equal to his designs; and also as the right man to
encourage the personnel of the fleet, -- sent as they were on an
expedition of this kind, so that they should not feel that they were being
sent blindly to manifest dangers. And Nearchus says that Alexander
discussed with him whom he should select to be admiral of this fleet; but
as mention was made of one and another, and as Alexander rejected some, as
not willing to risk themselves for his sake, others as chicken-hearted,
others as consumed by desire for home, and finding some objection to each;
then Nearchus himself spoke and pledged himself thus : '0 King, I
undertake to lead your fleet! And may God help the emprise! I will bring
your ships and men safe to Persia, if this sea is so much as navigable and
the undertaking not above human powers.' Alexander, however, replied that
he would not allow one of his friends to run such risks and endure such
distress; yet Nearchus, did not slacken in his request, but besought
Alexander earnestly; till at length Alexander accepted Nearchus' willing
spirit, and appointed him admiral of the entire fieet, on which the part
of the army which was detailed to sail on this voyage and the crews felt
easier in mind, being sure that Alexander would never have exposed
Nearchus to obvious danger unless they also were to come through safe.
Then the splendour of the whole preparations and the smart equipment of
the ships, and the outstanding enthusiasm of the commanders of the
triremes about the different services and the crews had uplifted even
those who a short while ago were hesitating, both to bravery and to higher
hopes about the whole affair; and besides it contributed not a little to
the general good spirits of the force that Alexander himself had started
down the Indus and had explored both outlets, even into the Ocean, and had
offered victims to Poseidon, and all the other sea gods, and gave splendid
gifts to the sea. Then trusting as they did in Alexander's generally
remarkable good fortune, they felt that there was nothing that he might
not dare, and nothing that he could not carry through.
XXI.
Now when the trade winds had sunk to rest, which continue blowing from the
Ocean to the land all the summer season, and hence render the voyage
impossible, they put to sea, in the archonship at Athens of Cephisodorus,
on the twentieth day of the month Boedromion, as the Athenians reckon it;
but as the Macedonians and Asians counted it, it was ... the eleventh year
of Alexander's reign. Nearchus also sacrificed, before weighing anchor, to
Zeus the Saviour, and he too held an athletic contest. Then moving out
from their roadstead, they anchored on the first day in the Indus river
near a great canal, and remained there two days; the district was called
Stura; it was about a hundred stades from the roadstead. Then on the third
day they started forthand sailed to another canal, thirty stades'
distance, and this canal was already-salt; for the sea came up into it,
especially at full tides, and then at the ebb the water remained there,
mingled with the river water. This place was called Caumara. Thence they
sailed twenty stades and anchored at Coreestis, still on the river. Thence
they started again and sailed not so very far, for they saw a reef at this
outlet of the river Indus, and the waves were breaking violently on the
shore, and the shore itself was very rough. But where there was a softer
part of the reef, they dug a channel, five stades long, and brought the
ships down it, when the flood tide came up from the sea. Then sailing
round, to a distance of a hundred and fifty stades, they anchored at a
sandy island called Crocala, and stayed there through the next day; and
there lives here an Indian race called Arabeans, of whom I made mention in
my larger history; and that they have their name from the river Arabis,
which runs through their country and finds its outlet in the sea, forming
the boundary between this country and that of the Oreitans. From Crocala,
keeping on the right hand the hill they call Irus, they sailed on, with a
low-lying island on their left; and the island running parallel with the
shore makes a narrow bay. Then when they had sailed through this, they
anchored in a harbour with good anchorage; and as Ne'archus considered the
harbour a large and fine one, he called it Alexander's Haven. At the heads
of the harbour there lies an island, about two stades away, called Bibacta;
the neighbouring region, however, is called Sangada. This island, forming
a barrier to the sea, of itself makes a harbour. There constant strong
winds were blowing off the ocean. Nearchus therefore, fearing lest some of
the natives might collect to plunder the camp, surrounded the place with a
stone wall. He stayed there thirty-three days; and through that time, he
says, the soldiers hunted for mussels, oysters, and razor-fish, as they
are called; they were all of unusual size. much larger than those of our
seas. They also drank briny water.
XXII.
On the wind falling, they weighed anchor; and after sailing sixty stades
they moored off a sandy shore; there was a desert island near the shore.
They used this, therefore, as a breakwater and moored there: the island
was called Domai. On the shore there was no water, but after advancing
some twenty stades inland they found good water. Next day they sailed up
to nightfall to Saranga, some three hundred stades, and moored off the
beach, and water was found about eight stades from the beach. Thence they
sailed and moored at Sacala, a desert spot. Then making their way through
two rocks, so close together that the oar-blades of the ships touched the
rocks to port and starboard, they moored at Morontobara, after sailing
some three hundred stades. The harbour is spacious, circular, deep, and
calm, but its entrance is narrow. They called it, in the natives'
language, 'The Ladies' Pool,' since a lady was the first sovereign of this
district. When they had got safe through the rocks, they met great waves,
and the sea running strong; and moreover it seemed very hazardous to sail
seaward of the cliffs. For the next day, however, they sailed with an
island on their port beam, so as to break the sea, so close indeed to the
beach that one would have conjectured that it was a channel cut between
the island and the coast. The entire passage was of some seventy stades.
On the beach were many thick trees, and the island was wholly covered with
shady forest. About dawn, they sailed outside the island, by a narrow and
turbulent passage; for the tide was still falling. And when they had
sailed some hundred and twenty stades they anchored in the mouth of the
river Arabis. There was a fine large harbour by its mouth; but there was
no drinking water; for the mouths of the Arabis were mixed with sea-water.
However, after penetrating forty stades inland they found a water-hole,
and after drawing water thence they returned back again. By the harbour
was a high island, desert, and round it one could get oysters and all
kinds of fish. Up to this the country of the Arabeans extends; they are
the last Indians settled in this direction; from here on the territory, of
the Oreitans begins.
XXIII.
Leaving the outlets of the Arabis they coasted along the territory of the
Oreitans, and anchored at Pagala, after a voyage of two hundred stades,
near a breaking sea; but they were able all the same to cast anchor. The
crews rode out the seas in their vessels, though a few went in seach of
water, and procured it. Next day they sailed at dawn, and after making
four hundred and thirty stades they put in towards evening at Cabana, and
moored on a desert shore. There too was a heavy surf, and so they anchored
their vessels well out to sea. It was on this part of the voyage that a
heavy squall from seaward caught the fleet, and two warships were lost on
the passage, and one galley; the men swam off and got to safety, as they
were sailing quite near the land. But about midnight they weighed anchor
and sailed as far as Cocala, which was about two hundred stades from the
beach off which they had anchored. The ships kept the open sea and
anchored, but Nearchus disembarked the crews and bivouacked on shore;
after all these toils and dangers in the sea, they desired to rest awhile.
The camp was entrenched, to keep off the natives. Here Leonnatus, who had
been in charge of operations against the Oreitans, beat in a great battle
the Oreitans, along with others who had joined their enterprise. He slew
some six thousand of them, including all the higher officers; of the
cavalry with Leonnatus, fifteen fell, and of his infantry, among a few
others, Apollophanes satrap of Gadrosia. This I have related in my other
history, and also how Leonnatus was crowned by Alexander for this exploit
with a golden coronet before the Macedonians. There provision of corn had
been gathered ready, by Alexander's orders, to victual the host; and they
took on board ten days' rations. The ships which had suffered in the
passage so far they repaired; and whatever troops Nearchus thought were
inclined to malinger he handed over to Leonnatus, but he himself recruited
his fleet from Leonnatus' soldiery.
XXIV.
Thence they set sail and progressed with a favouring wind; and after a
passage of five hundred stades the anchored by a torrent, which ,was
called Tomerus. There was a lagoon at the mouths of the river, and the
depressions near the bank were inhabited by natives in stifling cabins.
These seeing the convoy sailing up were astounded, and lining along the
shore stood ready to repel any who should attempt a landing. They carried
thick spears, about six cubits long; these had no iron tip, but the same
result was obtained by hardening the point with fire. They were in number
about six hundred. Nearchus observed these evidently standing firm and
drawn up in order, and ordered the ships to hold back within range, so
that their missiles might reach the shore; for the natives' spears, which
looked stalwart, were good for close fighting, but had no terrors against
a volley. Then Nearchus took the lightest and lightest-armed troops, such
as were also the best swimmers, and bade them swim off as soon as the word
was given. Their orders were that, as soon as any swimmer found bottom, he
should await his mate, and not attack the natives till they had their
formation three deep; but then they were to raise their battle cry and
charge at the double. On the word, those detailed for this service dived
from the ships into the sea, and swam smartly, and took up their formation
in orderly manner, and having made a phalanx, charged, raising, for their
part, their battle cry to the God of War, and those on shipboard raised
the cry along with them; and arrows and missiles from the engines were
hurled against the natives. They, astounded at the flash of the armour,
and the swiftness of the charge, and attacked by showers of arrows and
missiles, half naked as they were, never stopped to resist but gave way.
Some were killed in flight; others were captured; but some escaped into
the hills. Those captured were hairy, not only their heads but the rest of
their bodies; their nails were rather like beasts' claws; they used their
nails (according to report) as if they were iron tools; with these they
tore asunder their fishes, and even the less solid kinds of wood;
everything else they cleft with sharp stones; for iron they did not
possess. For clothing they wore skins of animals, some even the thick
skins of the larger fishes.
XXV.
Here the crews beached their ships and repaired such as had suffered. On
the sixth day from this they set sail, and after voyaging about three
hundred stades they came to a country which was the last point in the
territory of the Oreitans: the district was called Malana. Such Oreitans
as live inland, away from the sea, dress as the Indians do, and equip
themselves similarly for warfare; but their dialect and customs differ.
The length of the coasting voyage along the territory of the Arabeis was
about a thousand, stades from the point of departure; the length of the
Oreitan coast sixteen hundred. As they sailed along the land of India for
thence onward the natives are no longer Indians --Nearchus states that
their shadows weree not cast in the same way; but where they were making
for the high seas and steering a southerly course, their shadows appeared
to fall southerly too; but whenever the sun was at midday, then everything
seemed shadowless. Then such of the stars as they had seen hitherto in the
sky, some were completely hidden, others showed themselves low down
towards the earth; those they had seen continually before were now
observed both setting, and then at once rising again. I think this tale of
Nearchus' is likely; since in Syene of Egypt, when the sun is at the
summer solstice, people show a well where at midday one sees no shade; and
in Meroe, at the same season, no shadows are cast. So it seems reasonable
that in India too, since they are far southward, the same natural
phenomena may occur, and especially in the Indian Ocean, just because it
particularly runs southward. But here I must leave this subject.
XXVI.
Next to the Oreitans, more inland, dwelt the Gadrosians, whose country
Alexander and his army had much pains in traversing; indeed they suffered
more than during all the rest of his expedition: all this I have related
in my larger history. Below the Gadrosians, as you follow the actual
coast, dwell the people called the Fish-eaters. The fleet sailed past
their country. On the first day they unmoored about the second watch, and
put in at Bagisara; a distance along the coast of about six hundred stades.
There is a safe harbour there, and a village called Pasira, some sixty
stades from the sea; the natives about it are called Pasireans. The next
day they weighed anchor earlier than usual and sailed round a promontory
which ran far seaward, and was high, and precipitous. Then they dug wells;
and obtained only a little water, and that poor and for that day they rode
at anchor, because there was heavy surf on the beach. Next day they put in
at Colta after a voyage of two hundred stades. Thence they departed at
dawn, and after voyaging six hundred stades anchored at Calyba. A village
is on the shore, a few date-palms grew near it, and there were dates,
still green, upon them. About a hundred stades from the beach is an island
called Carnine. There the villagers brought gifts to Nearchus, sheep and
fishes; the mutton, he says, had a fishy taste, like the flesh of the
sea-birds, since even the sheep feed on fish; for there is no grass in the
place. However, on the next day they sailed two hundred stades and moored
off a beach, and a village about thirty stades from the sea; it was called
Cissa, an Carbis was the name of the strip of coast. There they found a
few boats, the sort which poor fishermen might use; but the fishermen
themselves they did not find, for they had run away as soon as they saw
the ships anchoring. There was no corn there, and the army had spent most
of its store; but they caught and embarked there some goats, and so sailed
away. Rounding a tall cape running some hundred and fifty stades into the
sea, they put in at a calm harbour; there was water there, and fishermen
dwelt near; the harbour was called Mosarna.
XXVII.
Nearchus tells us that from this point a pilot sailed with them, a
Gadrosian called Hydraces. He had promised to take them as far as Carmania;
from thence on the navigation was not difficult, but the districts were
better known, up to the Persian Gulf. From Mosarna they sailed at night,
seven hundred and fifty stades, to the beach of Balomus. Thence again to
Barna, a village, four hundred stades, where there were many date-palms
and a garden; and in the garden grew myrtles and abundant flowers, of
which wreaths were woven by the natives. There for the first time they saw
garden-trees, and men dwelling there not entirely like animals. Thence
they coasted a further two hundred stades and reached Dendrobosa and the
ships kept the roadstead at anchor. Thence about midnight they sailed and
came to a harbour Cophas, after a voyage of about four hundred stades;
here dwelt fishermen, with small and feeble boats; and they did not row
with their oars on a rowlock, as the Greeks do, but as you do in a river,
propelling the water on this side or that like labourers digging I the
soil. At the harbour was abundant pure water. About the first watch they
weighed anchor and arrived at Cyiza, after a passage of eight hundred
stades, where there was a desert beach and a heavy surf. Here, therefore,
they anchored, and each ship took its own meal. Thence they voyaged five
hundred stades and arrived at a small town built near the shore on a hill.
Nearchus, who imagined that the district must be tilled, told Archias of
Pella, son of Anaxidotus, who was sailing with Nearchus, and was a notable
Macedonian, that they must surprise the town, since he had no hope that
the natives would give the army provisions of their good-will; while he
could not capture the town by force, but this would require a siege and
much delay; while they in the meanwhile were short of provisions. But that
the land did produce corn he could gather from the straw which they saw
lying deep near the beach. When they had come to this resolve, Nearchus
bade the fleet in general to get ready as if to go to sea; and Archias, in
his place, made all ready for the voyage; but Nearchus himself was left
behind with a single ship and went off as if to have a look at the town.
XXVIII.
As Nearchus approached the walls, the natives brought him, in a friendly
way, gifts from the city; tunny-fish baked in earthen pans; for there
dwell the westernmost of the Fish-eating tribes, and were the first whom
the Greeks had seen cooking their food; and they brought also a few cakes
and dates from the palms. Nearchus said that he accepted these gratefully;
and desired to visit the town, and they permitted him to enter. But as
soon as he passed inside the gates, he bade two of the archers to occupy
the postern, while he and two others, and the interpreter, mounted the
wall on this side and signalled to Archias and his men as had been
arranged: that Nearchus should signal, and Archias understand and do what
had been ordered. On seeing the signal the Macedonians beached their ships
with all speed; they leapt in haste into the sea, while the natives,
astounded at this manoeuvre, ran to their arms. The interpreter with
Nearchus cried out that they should give corn to the army, if they wanted
to save their city; and the natives replied that they had none, and at the
same time attacked the wall. But the archers with Nearchus shooting from
above easily held them up. When, however, the natives saw that their town
was already occupied and almost on the way to be enslaved, they begged
Nearchus to take what corn they had and retire, but not to destroy the
town. Nearchus, however, bade Archias to seize the gates and the
neighbouring wall; but he sent with the natives some soldiers to see
whether they would without any trick reveal their corn. They showed freely
their flour, ground down from the dried fish; but only a small quantity of
corn and barley. In fact they used as flour what they got from the fish;
and loaves of corn flour they used as a delicacy. When, however, they had
shown all they had, the Greeks provisioned themselves from what was there,
and put to sea, anchoring by a headland which the inhabitants regarded as
sacred to the Sun: the headland was called Bageia.
XXIX.
Thence, weighing anchor about midnight, they voyaged another thousand
stades to Talmena, a harbour giving good anchorage. Thence they went to
Canasis, a deserted town, four hundred stades farther; here they found a
well sunk; and near by were growing wild date-palms. They cut out the
hearts of these and ate them; for the army had run short of food. In fact
they were now really distressed by hunger, and sailed on therefore by day
and night, and anchored off a desolate shore. But Nearchus, afraid that
they would disembark and leave their ships from faint-heartedness,
purposely kept the ships in the open roadstead. They sailed thence and
anchored at Canate, after a voyage of seven hundred and fifty stades. Here
there are a beach and shallow channels. Thence they sailed eight hundred
stades, anchoring at Troea; there were small and poverty-stricken villages
on the coast. The inhabitants deserted their huts and the Greeks found
there a small quantity of corn, and dates from the palms. They slaughtered
seven camels which had been left there, and ate the flesh of them. About
daybreak they weighed anchor and sailed three hundred stades, and anchored
at Dagaseira; there some wandering tribe dwelt. Sailing thence they sailed
without stop all night andday, and after a voyage of eleven hundred stades
they got past the country of the Fish-eaters, where they had been much
distressed by want of food. They did not moor near shore, for there was a
long line of surf, but at anchor, in the open. The length of the voyage
along the coast of the Fish-eaters is a little above ten thousand stades.
These Fish-eaters live on fish; and hence their name; only a few of them
fish, for only a few have proper boats and have any skill in the art of
catching fish; but for the most part it is the receding tide which
provides their catch. Some have made nets also for this kind of fishing;
most of them about two stades in length. They make the nets from the bark
of the date-palm, twisting the bark like twine. And when the sea recedes
and the earth is left, where the earth remains dry it has no fish, as a
rule; but where there are hollows, some of the water remains, and in this
a large number of fish, mostly small, but some large ones too. They throw
their nets over these and so catch them. They eat them raw, just as they
take them from the water, that is, the more tender kinds; the larger ones,
which are tougher, they dry in the sun till they are quite sere and then
pound them and make a flour and bread of them; others even make cakes of
this flour. Even their flocks are fed on the fish, dried; for the country
has no meadows and produces no grass. They collect also in many places
crabs and oysters and shell-fish. There are natural salts in the country;
from these they make oil. Those of them who inhabit the desert parts of
their country, treeless as it is and with no cultivated parts, find all
their sustenance in the fishing but a few of them sow part of their
district, using the corn as a relish to the fish, for the fish form their
bread. The richest among them have built huts; they collect the bones of
any large fish which the sea casts up, and use them in place of beams.
Doors they make from any flat bones which they can pick up. But the
greater part of them, and the poorer sort, have huts made from the fishes'
backbones.
XXX.
Large whales live in the outer ocean, and fishes much larger than those in
our inland sea. Nearchus states that when they left Cyiza, about daybreak
they saw water being blown upwards from the sea as it might be shot
upwards by the force of a waterspout. They were astonished, and asked the
pilots of the convoy what it might be and how it was caused; they replied
that these whales as they rove about the ocean spout up the water to a
great height; the sailors, however, were so startled that the oars fell
from their hands. Nearchus went and encouraged and cheered them, and
whenever he sailed past any vessel, he signalled them to turn the ship's
bow on towards the whales as if to give them battle; and raising their
battle cry with the sound of the surge to row with rapid strokes and with
a great deal of noise. So they all took heart of grace and sailed together
according to signal. But when they actually were nearing the monsters,
then they shouted with all the power of their throats, and the bugles
blared, and the rowers made the utmost splashings with their oars. So the
whales, now visible at the bows of the ships, were scared, and dived into
the depths; then not long afterwards they came up astern and spouted the
sea-water on high. Thereupon joyful applause welcomed this unexpected
salvation, and much praise was showered on Nearchus for his courage and
prudence. Some of these whales go ashore at different parts of the coast;
and when the ebb comes, they are caught in the shallows; and some even
were cast ashore high and dry; thus they would perish and decay, and their
flesh rotting off them would leave the bones convenient to be used by the
natives for their huts. Moreover, the bones in their ribs served for the
larger beams for their dwellings; and the smaller for rafters; the
jawbones were the doorposts, since many of these whales reached a length
of five-and-twenty fathoms.
XXXI.
While they were coasting along the territory of the Fish-eaters, they
heard a rumour about an island,' which lies some little distance from the
mainland in this direction, about a hundred stades, but is uninhabited.
The natives said that it was sacred to the Sun and was called Nosala, and
that no human being ever of his own will put in there; but that anyone who
ignorantly touched there at once disappeared. Nearchus, however, says that
one of his galleys with an Egyptian crew was lost with all hands not far
from this island, and that the pilots stoutly averred about it that they
had touched ignorantly on the island and so had disappeared. But Nearchus
sent a thirty-oar to sail round the island, with orders not to put in, but
that the crew should shout loudly, while coasting round as near as they
dared; and should call on the lost helmsman by name, or any of the crew
whose name they knew. As no one answered, he tells us that he himself
sailed up to the island, and compelled his unwilling crew to put in; then
he went ashore and exploded this island fairy-tale. They heard also
another current story about this island, that one of the Nereids dwelt
there; but the name of this Nereid was not told. She showed much
friendliness to any sailor who approached the island; but then turned him
into a fish and threw him into the sea. The Sun then became irritated with
the Nereid, and bade her leave the island; and she agreed to remove
thence, but begged that the spell on her be removed; the Sun consented;
and such human beings as she had turned into fishes he pitied, and turned
them again from fishes into human beings, and hence arose the people
called Fish-eaters, and so they descended to Alexander's day. Nearchus
shows that all this is mere legend; but I have no commendation for his
pains and his scholarship; the stories are easy enough to demolish; and I
regard it as tedious to relate these old tales and then prove them all
false.
XXXII.
Beyond these Fish-eaters the Gadrosians inhabit the interior, a poor and
sandy territory; this was where Alexander's army and Alexander himself
suffered so seriously, as I have already related in my other book. But
when the fleet, leaving the Fish-eaters, put in at Carmania, they anchored
in the open, at the point where they first touched Carmania; since there
was a long and rough line of surf parallel with the coast. From there they
sailed no further due west, but took a new course and steered with their
bows pointing between north and west. Carmania is better wooded than the
country of the Fisheaters, and bears more fruits; it has more grass, and
is well watered. They moored at an inhabited place called Badis, in
Carmania; with many cultivated trees growing, except the olive tree, and
good vines; it also produced corn. Thence they set out and voyaged eight
hundred stades, and moored off a desert shore; and they sighted a long
cape jutting out far into the ocean; it seemed as if the headland itself
was a day's sail away. Those who had knowledge of the district said that
this promontory belonged to Arabia, and was called Maceta; and that thence
the Assyrians imported cinnamon and other spices. From this beach of which
the fleet anchored in the open roadstead, and the promontory, which they
sighted opposite them, running out into the sea, the bay (this is my
opinion, and Nearchus held the same) runs back into the interior, and
would seem to be the Red Sea. When they sighted this cape, Onesicritus
bade them take their course from it and sail direct to it, in order not to
have the trouble of coasting round the bay. Nearchus, however, replied
that Onesicritus was a fool, if he was ignorant of Alexander's purpose in
despatching the expedition. It was not because he was unequal to the
bringing all his force safely through on foot that he had despatched the
fleet; but he desired to reconnoitre the coasts that lay on the line of
the voyage, the roadsteads, the islets; to explore thoroughly any bay
which appeared, and to learn of any cities which lay on the sea-coast; and
to find out what land was fruitful, and what was desert. They must
therefore not spoil Alexander's undertaking, especially when they were
almost at the close of their toils, and were, moreover, no longer in any
difficulty about provisions on their coasting cruise. His own fear was,
since the cape ran a long way southward, that they would find the land
there waterless and sun-scorched. This view prevailed; and I think that
Nearchus evidently saved the expeditionary force by this decision; for it
is generally held that this cape and the country about it are entirely
desert and quite denuded of water.
XXXIII.
They sailed then, leaving this part of the shore, hugging the land; and
after voyaging some seven hundred stades they anchored off another beach,
called Neoptana. Then at dawn they moved off seaward, and after traversing
a hundred stades, they moored by the river Anamis; the district was called
Harmozeia. All here was friendly, and produced fruit of all sorts, except
that olives did hot grow there. There they disembarked, and had a welcome
rest from their long toils, remembering the miseries they had endured by
sea and on the coast of the Fish-eaters; recounting one to another the
desolate character of the country, the almost bestial nature of the
inhabitants, and their own distresses. Some of them advanced some distance
inland, breaking away from the main force, some in pursuit of this, and
some of that. There a man appeared to them, wearing a Greek cloak, and
dressed otherwise in the Greek fashion, and speaking Greek also. Those who
first sighted him said that they burst into tears, so strange did it seem
after all these miseries to see a Greek, and to hear Greek spoken. They
asked whence he came, who he was; and he said that he had become separated
from Alexander's camp, and that the camp, and Alexander himself, were not
very far distant. Shouting aloud and clapping their hands they brought
this man to Nearchus; and he told Nearchus everything, and that the camp
and the King himself were distant five days' journey from the coast. He
also promised to show Nearchus, the governor of this district and did so;
and Nearchus took counsel with him how to march inland to meet the King.
For the moment indeed he returned to the ship; but at dawn he had the
ships drawn up on shore, to repair any which had been damaged on the
voyage; and also because he had determined to leave the greater part of
his force behind here. So he had a double stockade built round the ships'
station, and a mud wall with a deep trench, beginning from the bank of the
river and going on to the beach, where his ships had been dragged ashore.
XXXIV.
While Nearchus was busied with these arrangements, the governor of the
country, who had been told that Alexander felt the deepest concern about
this expedition, took for granted that he would receive some great reward
from Alexander if he should be the first to tell him of the safety of the
expeditionary force, and that Nearchus would presently appear before the
King. So then he hastened by the shortest route and told Alexander: 'See,
here is Nearchus coming from the ships.' On this Alexander, though not
believing what was told him, yet, as he naturally would be, was pleased by
the news itself. But when day succeeded day, and Alexander, reckoning the
time when he received the good news, could not any longer believe it,
when, moreover, relay sent after relay, to escort Nearchus, either went a
part of the route, and meeting no one, came back unsuccessful, or went on
further, and missing Nearchus' party, did not themselves return at all,
then Alexander bade the man be arrested for spreading a false tale and
making things all the worse by this false happiness; and Alexander showed
both by his looks and his mind that he was wounded with a very poignant
grief. Meanwhile, however, some of those sent to search for Nearchus, who
had horses to convey him, and chariots, did meet on the way Nearchus and
Archias, and five or six others; that was the number of the party which
came inland with him. On this meeting they recognized neither Nearchus nor
Archias -- so altered did they appear; with their hair long, unwashed,
covered with brine, wizened, pale from sleeplessness and all their other
distresses; when, however, they asked where Alexander might be, the search
party gave reply as to the locality and passed on. Archias, however, had a
happy thought, and said to Nearchus: 'I suspect, Nearchus, that these
persons who are traversing the same road as ours through this desert
country have been sent for the express purpose of finding us; as for their
failure to recognize us, I do not wonder at that; we are in such a sorry
plight as to be unrecognizable. Let us tell them who we are and ask them
why they come hither.' Nearchus approved; they did ask whither the party
was going; and they replied: 'To look for Nearchus and his naval force.'
Whereupon, 'Here am I, Nearchus,' said he, 'and here is Archias. Do you
lead on; we will make a full report to Alexander about the expeditionary
force.'
XXXV.
The soldiers took them up in their cars and drove back again. Some of them
, anxious to be beforehand with the good news, ran forward and told
Alexander: 'Here is Nearchus; and with him Archias and five besides,
coming to your presence.' They could not, however, answer any questions
about the fleet. Alexander thereupon became possessed of the idea that
these few had been miraculously saved, but that his whole army had
perished; and did not so much rejoice at the safe arrival of Nearchus and
Archias, as he was bitterly pained by the loss of all his force. Hardly
had the soldiers told this much, when Nearchus and Archias approached;
Alexander could only with great difficulty recognize them; and seeing them
as he did long-haired and ill-clad, his grief for the whole fleet and its
personnel received even greater surety. Giving his right hand to Nearchus
and leading him aside from the Companions and the bodyguard, for a long
time he wept; but at length recovering himself he said: 'That you come
back safe to us, and Archias here, the entire disaster is tempered to me;
but how perished the fleet and the force?' 'Sir,' he replied, 'your ships
and men are safe; we are come to tell with our own lips of their safety.'
On this Alexander wept the more, since the safety of the force had seemed
too good to be true; and then he enquired where the ships were anchored.
Nearchus replied: 'They are all drawn up at the mouth of the river Anamis,
and are undergoing a refit.' Alexander then called to witness Zeus of the
Greeks and the Libyan, Ammon that in good truth he rejoiced more at this
news than because he had conquered all Asia since the grief he had felt at
the supposed loss of the fleet cancelled all his other good fortune.
XXXVI.
The governor of the province, however, whom Alexander had arrested for his
false tidings, seeing Nearchus there on the spot, fell at his feet:
XXXVII.
When therefore Nearchus had thus duly performed all his religious duties,
they weighed anchor. Coasting along a rough and desert island, they
anchored off another island, a large one, and inhabited; this was after a
voyage of three hundred stades, from their point of departure. The desert
island was called Organa, and that off which they moored Oaracta. Vines
grew on it and date-palms; and it produced corn; the length of the island
was eight hundred stades. The governor of the island, Mazenes, sailed with
them as far as Susa as a volunteer pilot. They said that in this island
the tomb of the first chief of this territory was shown; his name was
Erythres, and hence came the name of the sea. Thence they weighed anchor
and sailed onward, and when they had coasted about two hundred stades
along this same island they anchored off it once more and sighted another
island, about forty stades from this large one. It was said to be sacred
to Poseidon, and not to be trod by foot of man. About dawn they put out to
sea, and were met by so violent an ebb that three of the ships ran ashore
and were held hard and fast on dry land, and the rest only just sailed
through the surf and got safe into deep water. The ships, however, which
ran aground were floated off when next flood came, and arrived next day
where the main fleet was. They moored at another island, about three
hundred stades from the mainland, after a voyage of four hundred stades.
Thence they sailed about dawn, and passed on their port side a desert
island; its name was Pylora. Then they anchored at Sisidona, a desolate
little township, with nothing but water and fish; for the natives here
were fish-eaters whether they would or not, because they dwelt in so
desolate a territory. Thence they got water, and reached Cape Tarsias,
which runs right out into the sea, after a voyage of three hundred stades.
Thence they made for Cataea, a desert island, and low-lying; this was said
to be sacred to Hermes and Aphrodite; the voyage was of three hundred
stades. Every year the natives round about send sheep and goats as sacred
to Hermes and Aphrodite, and one could see them, now quite wild from lapse
of time and want of handling.
XXXVIII.
So far extends Carmania; beyond this is Persia. The length of the voyage
along the Carmanian coast is three thousand seven hundred stades. The
natives' way of life is like that of the Persians, to whom they are also
neighbours; and they wear the same military equipment. The Greeks moved on
thence, from the sacred island, and were already coasting along Persian
territory; they put in at a place called Eas, where a harbour is formed by
a small desert island, which is called Cecandrus; the voyage thither is
four hundred stades. At daybreak they sailed to another island, an
inhabited one, and anchored there; here, according to Nearchus, there is
pearl fishing, as in the Indian Ocean. They sailed along the point of this
island, a distance of forty stades, and there moored. Next they anchored
off a tall hill, called Ochus, in a safe harbour; fishermen dwelt on its
banks. Thence they sailed four hundred and fifty stades, and anchored off
Apostana; many boats were anchored there, and there was a village near,
about sixty stades from the sea. They weighed anchor at night and sailed
thence to a gulf, with a good many villages settled round about. This was
a voyage of four hundred stades; and they anchored below a mountain, on
which grew many date-pahns and other fruit trees such as flourish in
Greece. Thence they um-noored and sailed along to Gogana, about six
hundred stades, to an inhabited district; and they anchored off the
torrent, called Areon, just at its outlet. The anchorage there was
uncomfortable; the entrance was narrow, just at the mouth, since the ebb
tide caused shallows in all the neighbourhood of the outlet. After this
they anchored again, at another river-mouth, after a voyage of about eight
hundred stades. This river was called Sitacus. Even here, however, they
did not find a pleasant anchorage; in fact this whole voyage along Persia
was shallows, surf, and lagoons. There they found a great supply of corn;
brought together there by the King's orders, for their provisioning; there
they abode twenty-one days in all; they drew up the ships, and repaired
those that had suffered, and the others too they put in order.
XXXIX.
Thence they started and reached the city of Hieratis, a populous place.
The voyage was of seven hundred and fifty stades; and they anchored in a
channel running from the river to the sea and called Heratemis. At sunrise
they sailed along the coast to a torrent called Padagrus; the entire
district forms. a peninsula. There were many gardens, and all sorts of
fruit trees were growing there; the name of the place was Mesambria. From
Mesambria they sailed and after a voyage of about two hundred stades
anchored at Taoce on the river Granis. Inland from here was a Persian
royal residence, about two hundred stades from the mouth of the river. On
this voyage, Nearchus says, a great whale was seen, stranded on the shore,
and some of the sailors sailed past it and measured it, and said it was of
ninety cubits' length. Its hide was scaly, and so thick that it was a
cubit in depth; and it had many oysters, limpets, and seaweeds growing on
it. Nearchus also says that they could see many dolphins round the whale,
and these larger than the Mediterranean dolphins. Going on hence, they put
in at the torrent Rogonis, in a good harbour; the length of this voyage
was two hundred stades. Thence again they sailed four hundred stades and
bivouacked on the side of a torrent; its name was Brizana. Then they found
difficult anchorage; there were surf, and shallows, and reefs showing
above the sea. But when the flood tide came in, they were able to anchor;
when, however,, the tide retired again, the ships were left high and dry.
Then when the flood duly returned, they sailed out, and anchored in a
river called Oroatis, greatest, according to Nearchus, of all the rivers
which on this coast run into the Ocean.
XL.
The Persians dwell up to this point and the Susians next to them. Above
the Susians lives another independent tribe; these are called Uxians, and
in my earlier history I have described them as brigands. The length of the
voyage along the Persian coast was four thousand four hundred stades. The
Persian land is divided, they say, into three climatic zones. The part
which lies by the Red Sea is sandy and sterile, owing to the heat. Then
the next zone, northward, has a temperate climate; the country is grassy
and has lush meadows and many
XLI.
Then after traversing five hundred stades they anchored in the mouth of a
lake, full of fish, called Cataderbis: at the mouth was a small island
called Margastana. Thence about daybreak they sailed out and passed the
shallows in columns of single ships; the shallows were marked on either
side by poles driven down, just as in the strait between the island Leucas
and Acarnania signposts have been set up for navigators so that the ships
should not ground on the shallows. However, the shallows round Leucas are
sandy and render it easy for those aground to get off; but here it is mud
on both sides of the channel, both deep and tenacious; once aground there,
they could not possibly get of. For the punt-poles sank into the mud and
gave them no help, and it proved impossible for the crews to disembark and
push the ships off, for they sank up to their breasts in the ooze. Thus
then they sailed out with great difficulty and traversed six hundred
stades, each crew abiding by its ship; and then they took thought for
supper. During the night, however, they were fortunate in reaching deep
sailing water and next day also, up to the evening; they sailed nine
hundred stades, and anchored in the mouth of the Euphrates near a village
of Babylonia, called Didotis; here the merchants gather together
frankincense from the neighbouring country and all other sweet-smelling
spices which Arabia produces. From the mouth of the Euphrates to Babylon
Nearchus says it is a voyage of three thousand three hundred stades.
XLII. There they heard that Alexander was departing towards Susa. They therefore sailed back, in order to sail up the Pasitigris and meet Alexander. So they sailed back, with the land of Susia on their left, and they went along the lake into which the Tigris runs. It flows from Armenia past the city of Ninus, which once was a great and rich city, and so makes the region between itself and the Euphrates; that is why it is called 'Between the Rivers.' The voyage from the lake up |