Philip Advances Southward
The peoples of Dyme, Pharae, and Tritaea having
been worsted in their attempt to relieve the country, and
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afraid of what would happen from this capture of the fort,
first sent messengers to the Strategus, Aratus, to
inform him of what had happened and to ask for
aid, and afterwards a formal embassy with the
same request. noteBut Aratus was unable to get the
mercenaries together, because in the Cleomenic
war the Achaeans had failed to pay some of the wages of the hired
troops: and his entire policy and management of the whole war
was in a word without spirit or nerve. Accordingly Lycurgus
seized the Athenaeum of Megalopolis, and Euripidas followed
up his former successes by taking Gortyna note in the territory of
Telphusa. But the people of Dyme, Pharae, and Tritaea,
despairing of assistance from the Strategus, came to a mutual
agreement to cease paying the common contribution to the
Achaean league, and to collect a mercenary army on their own
account, three hundred infantry and fifty horse; and to secure
the country by their means. In this action they were considered to have shown a prudent regard for their own interests,
but not for those of the community at large; for they were
thought to have set an evil example, and supplied a precedent
to those whose wish it was to break up the league. But in
fact the chief blame for their proceeding must rightfully be assigned to the Strategus, who pursued such a dilatory policy, and
slighted or wholly rejected the prayers for help which reached
him from time to time. For as long as he has any hope, from
relations and allies, any man who is in danger will cling to
them; but when in his distress he has to give up that hope, he
is forced to help himself the best way he can. Wherefore we
must not find fault with the people of Tritaea, Pharae, and
Dyme for having mercenaries on their own account, when the
chief magistrate of the league hesitated to act: but some blame
does attach to them for renouncing the joint contribution.
They certainly were not bound to neglect to secure their own
safety by every opportunity and means in their power; but
they were bound at the same time to keep up their just dues
to the league: especially as the recovery of such payment was
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perfectly secured to them by the common laws; and most of
all because they had been the originators of the Achaean
confederacy. note