THE GOLDEN HOPE

A STORY OF THE TIME OF
KING ALEXANDER THE GREAT

BY

ROBERT H. FULLER

NEW YORK
GROSSET & DUNLAP
PUBLISHERS

Copyright, 1905,
By THE MACMILLAN COMPANY.
Set up and electrotyped. Published March, 1905. Reprinted May, 1906.

Norwood Press
J. S. Cushing & Co.—Berwick & Smith Co.
Norwood, Mass., U.S.A.

"For what was all his war in Asia after the death of Philippus, but tempests, extreme heats, wonderful deep rivers, marvellous high mountains, monstrous beasts for greatness to behold, wild savage fashions of life, change and alteration of governors upon every occasion, yea treasons and rebellions of some? At the beginning of his voyage, Greece did yet lay their heads together, for the remembrance of the wars that Philippus made upon them: the towns gathered together: Macedonia inclined to some change and alteration: divers people far and near lay in wait to see what their neighbours would do: the gold and silver of Persia flowing in the orators' purses, and governors of the people did raise up Peloponnese: Philippus' treasure and coffers were empty, and the debts were great. In despite of all these troubles, and in the middest of his poverty, a young man, but newly come to man's estate, durst in his mind think of the conquest of Asia, yea of the empire of the whole world, with thirty thousand footmen and five thousand horse, ... howbeit he was furnished with magnanimity, with temperance, with wisdom, and valour: being more holpen in this martial enterprise, with that he had learned of his tutor Aristotle, than with that which his father Philippus had left him.... In Alexander's actions they see, that his valiantness is gentle, his gentleness valiant: his liberality, husbandry, his choler soon down, his loves temperate, his pastimes not idle, and his travels gracious. What is he that hath mingled feasting with wars, and military expeditions with sports? Who hath intermingled in the middest of his besieging of towns: and in the middest of skirmishes and fights, sports, banquets, and wedding songs? Who was ever more enemy to those that did wrong, nor more gracious to the afflicted? Who was ever more cruel to those that fought, or more just unto suppliants?"

—NORTH'S Plutarch.

CONTENTS

CHAPTER
I. [THREE FRIENDS MEET]
II. [WARNING FROM THE GODS]
III. [ARISTON LAYS A PLOT]
IV. [THE VOICE OF DEMOSTHENES]
V. [THE BANQUET]
VI. [SYPHAX EARNS HIS REWARD]
VII. [THE RESPONSE OF THE ORACLE]
VIII. [THE THUNDERBOLT FALLS]
IX. [THE DOOM OF THEBES]
X. [CHARES BARTERS HIS SWORD]
XI. [THAIS]
XII. [MENA READS A LETTER]
XIII. [THE UNQUENCHABLE FIRE]
XIV. [ACROSS THE HELLESPONT]
XV. [THAIS AND ARTEMISIA]
XVI. [IN THE CAMP OF THE MERCENARIES]
XVII. [THE TRAGEDY OF THE MARSH]
XVIII. [GREEK AND BARBARIAN]
XIX. [THE ROUT OF THE SATRAPS]
XX. [MENA MAKES A DISCOVERY]
XXI. [PHRADATES TRIUMPHS]
XXII. [THE VISION OF DANIEL, THE VICEROY]
XXIII. [IN THE WHIRLWIND'S TRACK]
XXIV. [THE GORDIAN KNOT]
XXV. [BESSUS COMES TO BABYLON]
XXVI. [THE GREAT KING IS ANGRY]
XXVII. [NATHAN KEEPS HIS WORD]
XXVIII. [BETWEEN EARTH AND SKY]
XXIX. [THE SLUICE GATE]
XXX. [LEONIDAS UNDERTAKES A MISSION]
XXXI. [ALEXANDER IS SURPRISED]
XXXII. [THE WORLD AT STAKE]
XXXIII. [THE CHESTNUT MARE]
XXXIV. [IN THE PAVILION OF THE QUEENS]
XXXV. [PHRADATES MAKES A WAGER]
XXXVI. [TYRE ACCEPTS THE CHALLENGE]
XXXVII. [THE JEST OF KING AZEMILCUS]
XXXVIII. [MENA REVEALS A SECRET]
XXXIX. [JOEL BRINGS BAD NEWS]
XL. [THE GAP OF DEATH]
XLI. [PRINCE HUR'S COUNTERPLOT]
XLII. [A TRAITOR IN PURPLE]
XLIII. [THI KING TAKES HIS REVENGE]
XLIV. [THE REVOLT OF THE ISRAELITES]
XLV. [MOLOCH CLAIMS HIS SACRIFICE]
XLVI. [THE PASSING OF A GOD]
XLVII. [SYPHAX SQUARES HIS ACCOUNT]
XLVIII. [THAIS GIVES A FEAST]
XLIX. [CHARES FINDS REST]
L. [PROMISES FULFILLED]
LI. [AMID FRAGMENTS OF EMPIRE]

THE GOLDEN HOPE