
Date of issue: 31.03.2005
Song language: English
March of the Ten Thousand |
In the aftermath of the Peloponnesian war |
A young Persian prince with a ruthless aim |
Cyrus assembled a vast host of mercenaries |
Thinking good pay and rich booty they’d gain |
Ten thousand Greek hoplites ready for war |
They set out eastward in March 401 B. C |
Expecting to suppress some dissident tribes |
The true goal of the endeavour they didn’t see |
In a sudden skirmish one hundred were lost |
Unrest among the men soon started to grow |
Spartan Clearchus managed to keep them in line |
But their true purpose they still didn’t know |
On the banks of the Euphrates Cyrus did speak |
Revealing his plan to overthrow his elder sibling |
To forcefully seize the throne of Persia for himself |
The army indeed a formidable threat to the king |
On towards Babylon |
Across Northern Syria into the Arabian desert |
Until they were confronted with the king’s might |
A cloud of dust first appeared on the horizon |
Then helmets and armour flashed in the sunlight |
The sides drew up in battle-order near Babylon |
Combat was engaged close to Cunaxa on a plain |
The Greeks fought against numerical supremacy |
But all became irrelevant once Cyrus was slain |
Before the Greeks could return a ploy unfolded |
Tissaphernes lured their five generals into a tent |
And slaughtered them and all their attendants |
On vengeance the treacherous satrap was bent |
The Ten Thousand now aimless and leaderless |
Seeming to be lost in these vast and hostile lands |
But one of the men received an omen from Zeus |
Xenophon rose to take matters into his hands |
He advised the officers to choose new leaders |
To all the forces a rousing speech he made |
So they decided not to lay down their arms |
But to persist against odds that were great |
The retreating army’s progress was slow, arduous |
In the mountains of Kardouchia they had to fight |
Vulnerable they were to mounted Persian archers |
But cavalry and slingers demonstrated their might |
In the Armenian mountains the weather was the foe |
By hunger and frostbite the troops disheartened |
But through personal example Xenophon led on |
And upon reaching the sea the men were elated |
There were more adventures on the long road home |
Before many of them at last to Greece returned |
Xenophon was then banished from his city Athens |
A friend of Sparta by the democratic rabble spurned |
The Ten Thousand’s march was a significant feat |
Their journey showed what the Greeks could gain |
The possibility of conquest seen for the first time |
The wealth and weakness of the Persian domain |