96 HISTOEY OF GREECE. farther impressed with involuntary admiration of the little de- tachment which had here opposed to him a resistance so unex- pected and so nearly invincible, — he now learned to be anxious respecting the resistance which remained behind. " Demaratus (said he to the exiled Spartan king at his side), thou art a good man : all thy predictions have turned out true : now tell me, how many Lacedsemonians are there remaining, and are they all such warriors as these fallen men?" "O king (replied Demaratus), the total of the Lacedsemonians and of their towns is great ; in Sparta alone, there are eight thousand adult warriors, all equal to those who have here fought ; and the other Lacedfemonians, though inferior to them, are yet excellent soldiers." " Tell me (rejoined Xerxes), what will be the least difficult way of con- quering such men ? " Upon which Demaratus advised him to send a division of his fleet to occupy the island of Kythera, and from thence to make war on the southern coast of Laconia, which would distract the attention of Sparta, and prevent her from cooperating in any combined scheme of defence against his land- force. Unless this were done, the entire force of Peloponnesus would be assembled to maintain the narrow isthmus of Corinth, where the Persian king would have far more terrible battles to fight than anything which he had yet witnessed.^ Happily for the safety of Greece, Achaemenes, the brother of Xerxes, interposed to dissuade the monarch from this prudent plan of action ; not without aspersions on the temper and mo- tives of Demaratus, who, he aflSrmed, like other Greeks, hated all power, and envied all good fortune, above his own. The fleet, added he, after the damage sustained by the recent storm, would bear no farther diminution of number : and it was essen- tial to keep the entire Persian force, on land as well as on sea, in one undivided and cooperating mass.2 A few such remarks were sufficient to revive in the monarch his habitual sentiment of confidence in overpowering number : yet while rejecting the advice of Demaratus, he emphatically repelled the imputations against the good faith and sincere attachment of that exiled piince.3 ' Herodot. vii, 235. * Herodot. vii, 236. ^ Herodot. vii, 237. " The citizen (Xei-xes is made to observe) does in-