A fresh illustration had been afforded of the truth,
that of all haphazards none is more hazardous than
an absolute hereditary monarchy. Philip was
not the man whom Macedonia at that time required;
yet his gifts were far from insignificant He was a
genuine king, in the best and worst sense of the term.
A strong desire to rule in person and unaided was
the fundamental trait of his character; he was proud
of his purple, but he was no less proud of other gifts,
and he had reason to be so. He not only showed
the valour of a soldier and the eye of a general,
but he displayed a high spirit in the conduct of public
affairs, whenever his Macedonian sense of honour was
offended. Full of intelligence and wit, he won
the hearts of all whom he wished to gain, especially
of the men who were ablest and most refined, such
as Flamininus and Scipio; he was a pleasant boon companion
and, not by virtue of his rank alone, a dangerous wooer.
But he was at the same time one of the most arrogant
and flagitious characters, which that shameless age
produced. He was in the habit of saying that
he feared none save the gods; but it seemed almost
as if his gods were those to whom his admiral Dicaearchus
regularly offered sacrifice—Godlessness
(-Asebeia-) and Lawlessness (-Paranomia-). The
lives of his advisers and of the promoters of his schemes
possessed no sacredness in his eyes, nor did he disdain
to pacify his indignation against the Athenians and
Attalus by the destruction of venerable monuments
and illustrious works of art; it is quoted as one of
his maxims of state, that “whoever causes the
father to be put to death must also kill the sons.”
It may be that to him cruelty was not, strictly,
a delight; but he was indifferent to the lives and
sufferings of others, and relenting, which alone renders
men tolerable, found no place in his hard and stubborn
heart. So abruptly and harshly did he proclaim
the principle that no promise and no moral law are
binding on an absolute king, that he thereby interposed
the most serious obstacles to the success of his plans.
No one can deny that he possessed sagacity and resolution,
but these were, in a singular manner, combined with
procrastination and supineness; which is perhaps partly
to be explained by the fact, that he was called in
his eighteenth year to the position of an absolute
sovereign, and that his ungovernable fury against
every one who disturbed his autocratic course by counter-argument
or counter-advice scared away from him all independent
counsellors. What various causes cooperated to
produce the weak and disgraceful management which
he showed in the first Macedonian war, we cannot tell;
it may have been due perhaps to that indolent arrogance
which only puts forth its full energies against danger
when it becomes imminent, or perhaps to his indifference
towards a plan which was not of his own devising and
his jealousy of the greatness of Hannibal which put
him to shame. It is certain that his subsequent
conduct betrayed no further trace of the Philip, through
whose negligence the plan of Hannibal suffered shipwreck.