天下书楼
会员中心 我的书架

CHAPTER XXVI.

(快捷键←)[上一章]  [回目录]  [下一章](快捷键→)

siege of massaga.

in the first place alexander led his forces against massaga,607 the largest of the cities in that district; and when he was approaching the walls, the barbarians being emboldened by the mercenaries whom they had obtained from the more distant indians to the number of 7,000, when they saw the macedonians pitching their camp, advanced against them with a run. alexander, seeing that the battle was about to be fought near the city, was anxious to draw them further away from their walls, so that if they were put to rout, as he knew they would be, they might not be able easily to preserve themselves by fleeing for refuge into the city close at hand. when therefore he saw the barbarians running out, he ordered the macedonians to turn round and retreat to a certain hill distant something about seven stades from the place where he had resolved to encamp. the enemy being emboldened, as if the macedonians had already given way, rushed upon them with a run and with no kind of order. but when the arrows began to reach them, alexander at once wheeled round at the appointed signal, and led his phalanx against them with a run. his horse-lancers, agrianians, and archers first ran forward and engaged with the barbarians, while he himself led the phalanx in regular order. the indians were alarmed at this unexpected man?uvre, and as soon as the battle became a hand-to-hand conflict, they gave way and fled into the city. about 200 of them were killed, and the rest were shut up within the walls. alexander then led his phalanx up to the wall, from which he was soon after slightly wounded in the ankle with an arrow. 255on the next day he brought up his military engines and easily battered down a piece of the wall; but the indians so gallantly kept back the macedonians who were trying to force an entrance where the breach had been made, that he recalled the army for this day. but on the morrow the macedonians themselves made a more vigorous assault, and a wooden tower was drawn up to the walls, from which the archers shot at the indians, and missiles were hurled from the military engines which repulsed them to a great distance. but not even thus were they able to force their way within the wall. on the third day he led the phalanx near again, and throwing a bridge from a military engine over to the part of the wall where the breach had been made, by this he led up the shield-bearing guards, who had captured tyre for him in a similar way.608 but as many were urged on by their ardour, the bridge received too great a weight, and was snapped asunder, so that the macedonians fell with it. the barbarians, seeing what was taking place, raised a great shout, and shot at them from the wall with stones, arrows, and whatever else any one happened to have at hand, or whatever any one could lay hold of at the time. others issued forth by the small gates which they had between the towers in the wall, and at close quarters struck the men who had been thrown into confusion by the fall.

先看到这(加入书签) | 推荐本书 | 打开书架 | 返回首页 | 返回书页 | 错误报告 | 返回顶部