Read Virtues of War Online

Authors: Steven Pressfield

Virtues of War

CONTENTS

TITLE PAGE

DEDICATION

EPIGRAPH

DRAMATIS PERSONAE

CHRONOLOGY

A NOTE TO THE READER

Book One

Chapter One

Chapter Two

Chapter Three

Chapter Four

Book Two

Chapter Five

Chapter Six

Chapter Seven

Chapter Eight

Book Three

Chapter Nine

Chapter Ten

Book Four

Chapter Eleven

Book Five

Chapter Twelve

Chapter Thirteen

Chapter Fourteen

Chapter Fifteen

Chapter Sixteen

Book Six

Chapter Seventeen

Chapter Eighteen

Chapter Nineteen

Book Seven

Chapter Twenty

Chapter Twenty-one

Chapter Twenty-two

Chapter Twenty-three

Chapter Twenty-four

Chapter Twenty-five

Chapter Twenty-six

Book Eight

Chapter Twenty-seven

Chapter Twenty-eight

Chapter Twenty-nine

Chapter Thirty

Chapter Thirty-one

Chapter Thirty-two

Book Nine

Chapter Thirty-three

Chapter Thirty-four

Chapter Thirty-five

Chapter Thirty-six

EPILOGUE

IN GRATITUDE

OTHER BOOKS BY STEVEN PRESSFIELD

Excerpt from The Profession

COPYRIGHT PAGE

For Mike and Chrissy

H
e ruled over these nations, even though they did not speak the same language as he, nor one nation the same as another; for all that, he was able to cover so vast a region with the fear which he inspired, that he struck all men with terror and no one tried to withstand him; and he was able to awaken in all so lively a desire to please him, that they always wished to be guided by his will.

—X
ENOPHON,
“T
HE
E
DUCATION OF
C
YRUS

DRAMATIS PERSONAE

Alexander, son of Philip

         

King of Macedon, conqueror of Persian empire

Philip of Macedon

         

Alexander's father, extraordinary general in his
own right

Olympias

         

Philip's wife, Alexander's mother

Cyrus the Great

         

Founder of Persian empire, circa 547
B.C.

Darius III

         

Great King of Persia, defeated by Alexander

Epaminondas

         

General of Thebes, inventor of the “oblique order”

Parmenio

         

Philip and Alexander's senior general

Antipater

         

Senior Macedonian general, garrisoned
Greece

Antigonus One-Eye

         

“Monophthalmos,” senior general

Aristotle

         

Philosopher, tutor of Alexander

Hephaestion

         

Alexander's general and dearest friend

Telamon

         

Arcadian mercenary, friend and mentor to Alexander

Craterus

         

Alexander's general

Perdiccas

         

Alexander's general

Ptolemy

         

Alexander's general; later dynast of Egypt

Seleucus

         

Alexander's general

Coenus

         

Alexander's general

Eumenes

         

Alexander's Counselor-at-War

Leonnatus

         

Alexander's friend and Bodyguard

Philotas

         

Parmenio's son; Commander of Companion Cavalry

Nicanor

         

Parmenio's son; Commander of Royal Guards brigades

Black Cleitus

         

Commander of Royal Squadron of Companion Cavalry; murdered by Alexander in Maracanda

Roxanne

         

Alexander's Bactrian bride, “Little Star”

Itanes

         

Roxanne's brother; later a Royal Page in Alexander's service and, later still, a Companion

Oxyartes

         

Bactrian warlord, father of Roxanne

Memnon of Rhodes

         

Greek mercenary general, commander under Darius

Barsine

         

Alexander's mistress, daughter of Artabazus, widow of Memnon

Artabazus

         

Persian noble, father of Barsine; Alexander's satrap of Bactria

Bessus

         

Darius's satrap of Bactria, commander of the Persian left at Gaugamela; murderer of Darius and pretender to the throne

Mazaeus

         

Satrap of Mesopotamia, commander of Persian right at Gaugamela; later Alexander's governor of Babylonia

Spitamenes

         

Rebel commander in Bactria and Sogdiana

Bucephalus

         

Alexander's horse

Porus

         

King of Punjab in India; defeated by Alexander at Battle of Hydaspes River

Tigranes

         

Persian cavalry commander, later friend of Alexander

CHRONOLOGY B.C.

C
IRCA 547

C
YRUS THE
G
REAT CONQUERS
A
SSYRIA,
B
ABYLONIA; ESTABLISHES
P
ERSIAN
E
MPIRE

490

A
RMY OF
D
ARIUS
I
INVADES
G
REECE;
B
ATTLE OF
M
ARATHON

480/479

X
ERXES INVADES
G
REECE;
B
ATTLES OF
T
HERMOPYLAE,
S
ALAMIS,
P
LATAEA

356

A
LEXANDER BORN TO
P
HILIP AND
O
LYMPIAS

338

B
ATTLE OF
C
HAERONEA;
P
HILIP OF
M
ACEDON DEFEATS ALLIED
G
REEKS

336

A
SSASSINATION OF
P
HILIP;
A
LEXANDER BECOMES KING, AGE TWENTY

334

A
LEXANDER
'
S ARMY CROSSES TO
A
SIA;
B
ATTLE OF THE
G
RANICUS
R
IVER

333

B
ATTLE OF
I
SSUS;
A
LEXANDER DEFEATS
D
ARIUS
III

332

S
IEGES OF
T
YRE AND
G
AZA;
A
LEXANDER TAKES
E
GYPT

331

B
ATTLE OF
G
AUGAMELA

331/330

A
LEXANDER CAPTURES
B
ABYLON,
S
USA,
P
ERSEPOLIS,
E
CBATANA; DEATH OF
D
ARIUS

330
–
327

A
NTIGUERRILLA CAMPAIGN IN
A
FGHANISTAN

326

A
LEXANDER CROSSES
H
INDU
K
USH TO
I
NDIA;
B
ATTLE OF THE
H
YDASPES

326

A
LEXANDER
'
S TROOPS REFUSE TO GO FARTHER

323

A
LEXANDER RETURNS TO
B
ABYLON

323

D
EATH OF
A
LEXANDER AT THIRTY-TWO

A NOTE TO THE READER

W
hat follows is fiction, not history. Scenes and characters have been invented; license has been taken. Words have been put into the mouths of historical figures, which are entirely the product of the author's imagination.

Although nothing in this telling is untrue to the spirit of Alexander's life as I understand it, still I have transposed certain historical events in the interest of the theme and the storytelling. The speech that Arrian tells us Alexander gave at Opis, I have made his eulogy for Philip. I have Parmenio in Ecbatana, when Curtius tells us he was still at Persepolis. The harangue that I have Alexander delivering at the Hydaspes, he actually made at the Hyphasis, while the plea of his men, which Arrian tells us Coenus voiced at the latter, I have him offering at the former. I note this so that the knowledgeable reader will not believe that events are migrating perversely of their own will.

I have taken the liberty of using, on occasion, contemporary place names, such as Afghanistan, the Danube, and words such as miles, yards, acres, which obviously did not exist in Alexander's time, as well as such latter-day concepts as chivalry, mutiny, knight, guerrilla, and others, which technically have no equivalent in Greco-Macedonian thought but which, in my judgment, communicate to the modern reader so vividly and so closely in spirit to the ancient import that their employment may be by the purist, perhaps, forgiven.

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