104/402
[ arrêter le diaporama ]

Ship dashed against ship, till the Persian dead strewed the deep ‘like flowers,’

Ship dashed against ship, till the Persian dead strewed the deep ‘like flowers,’.jpg Babylonian Brick with the inscriptionMiniaturesShe changed her into a spiderBabylonian Brick with the inscriptionMiniaturesShe changed her into a spiderBabylonian Brick with the inscriptionMiniaturesShe changed her into a spiderBabylonian Brick with the inscriptionMiniaturesShe changed her into a spiderBabylonian Brick with the inscriptionMiniaturesShe changed her into a spiderBabylonian Brick with the inscriptionMiniaturesShe changed her into a spiderBabylonian Brick with the inscriptionMiniaturesShe changed her into a spider

Meantime the Persian ships were driven into the narrow strait. Ship dashed against ship till the Persian dead strewed the deep ‘like flowers.’ When evening fell, two hundred Persian ships had been destroyed and the Greeks had won the great sea-battle of Salamis. The glory of the victory was due to Themistocles. There might indeed have been no battle at Salamis had he not tricked both the Persian king and the Greek admirals.