he insufficiently appreciated the difficulties and
dangers of enterprises—while a fatal obstinacy
prevented him from acknowledging and retrieving an
error while retrieval was possible. The Persians,
we may be sure, grew dispirited under such a leader;
and the Egyptians naturally took heart. It seems
to have been shortly after the return of Cambyses
from his abortive expedition against Ethiopia that
symptoms of an intention to revolt began to manifest
themselves in Egypt. The priests declared an incarnation
of Apis, and the whole country burst out into rejoicings.
It was probably now that Psammenitus, who had hitherto
been kindly treated by his captor, was detected in
treasonable intrigues, condemned to death, and executed.
At the same time, the native officers who had been
left in charge of the city of Memphis were apprehended
and capitally punished. Such stringent measures
had all the effect that was expected from them; they
wholly crushed the nascent rebellion; they left, however,
behind them a soreness, felt alike by the conqueror
and the conquered, which prevented the establishment
of a good understanding between the Great King and
his new subjects. Cambyses knew that he had been
severe, and that his severity had made him many enemies;
he suspected the people, and still more suspected
the priests, their natural leaders; he soon persuaded
himself that policy required in Egypt a departure from
the principles of toleration which were ordinarily
observed towards their subjects by the Persians, and
a sustained effort on the part of the civil power
to bring the religion, and its priests, into contempt.
Accordingly, he commenced a serious of acts calculated
to have this effect. He stabbed the sacred calf,
believed to be incarnate Apis; he ordered the body
of priests who had the animal in charge to be publicly
scourged; he stopped the Apis festival by making participation
in it a capital offence; he opened the receptacles
of the dead, and curiously examined the bodies contained
in them, he intruded himself into the chief sanctuary
at Memphis, and publicly scoffed at the grotesque
image of Phtha; finally, not content with outraging
in the same way the inviolable temple of the Cabeiri,
he wound up his insults by ordering that their images
should be burnt. These injuries and indignities
rankled in the minds of the Egyptians, and probably
had a large share in producing that bitter hatred
of the Persian yoke which shows itself in the later
history on so many occasions; but for the time the
policy was successful: crushed beneath the iron
heel of the conqueror—their faith in the
power of their gods shaken, their spirits cowed, their
hopes shattered—the Egyptian subjects of
Cambyses made up their minds to submission. The
Oriental will generally kiss the hand that smites him,
if it only smite hard enough. Egypt became now
for a full generation the obsequious slave of Persia,
and gave no more trouble to her subjugator than the
weakest or the most contented of the provinces.