CHAPTER XCVI
TYRE IS STORMED BY ALEXANDER
Alexander did not cross the Euphrates in search of
Darius. He knew that the great king could do him no
harm, even should he again assemble a large army. So for
a time he left Darius to do as he pleased, while he himself
went on with his own plan.
Nearly all the towns in Syracuse were ready to open their gates to Alexander. Some that had found Darius a hard master, hailed him as a deliverer.
Tyre alone, while saying that she was ready to do as the king willed, refused to receive either a Persian or a Macedonian into the city.
Alexander wished to offer sacrifice to the deity of Tyre, whose temple was within the city, and when the people refused to open their gates, he was so angry that he at once laid siege to the town.
Tyre stood on an island, about half a mile from the mainland. Near the coast the water was shallow, while close to the walls of the city it was deep.
The Tyrians believed that they could hold their city against Alexander, for the walls were built high, on the top of a steep and dangerous cliff.
As the king had no fleet, he could not attack the city until he had built a causeway from the mainland to the island, so he ordered his men to begin the work without delay.
But when the causeway stretched almost to the island, the Tyrians did all that they could to hinder the workmen.