all its integrity; but how little any serious apprehensions
of Macedonia were or could be entertained in Rome,
is best shown by the small number of troops—who
yet were never compelled to fight against a superior
force—with which Rome carried on the next
war. The senate doubtless would have gladly
seen Macedonia humbled; but that humiliation would
be too dearly purchased at the cost of a land war
carried on in Macedonia with Roman troops; and accordingly,
after the withdrawal of the Aetolians, the senate
voluntarily concluded peace at once on the basis of
the -status quo-. It is therefore far from made
out, that the Roman government concluded this peace
with the definite design of beginning the war at a
more convenient season; and it is very certain that,
at the moment, from the thorough exhaustion of the
state and the extreme unwillingness of the citizens
to enter into a second transmarine struggle, the Macedonian
war was in a high degree unwelcome to the Romans.
But now it was inevitable. They might have acquiesced
in the Macedonian state as a neighbour, such as it
stood in 549; but it was impossible that they could
permit it to acquire the best part of Asiatic Greece
and the important Cyrene, to crush the neutral commercial
states, and thereby to double its power. Further,
the fall of Egypt and the humiliation, perhaps the
subjugation, of Rhodes would have inflicted deep wounds
on the trade of Sicily and Italy; and could Rome remain
a quiet spectator, while Italian commerce with the
east was made dependent on the two great continental
powers? Rome had, moreover, an obligation of
honour to fulfil towards Attalus her faithful ally
since the first Macedonian war, and had to prevent
Philip, who had already besieged him in his capital,
from expelling him from his dominions. Lastly,
the claim of Rome to extend her protecting arm over
all the Hellenes was by no means an empty phrase:
the citizens of Neapolis, Rhegium, Massilia, and Emporiae
could testify that that protection was meant in earnest,
and there is no question at all that at this time
the Romans stood in a closer relation to the Greeks
than any other nation—one little more remote
than that of the Hellenized Macedonians. It is
strange that any should dispute the right of the Romans
to feel their human, as well as their Hellenic, sympathies
revolted at the outrageous treatment of the Cians
and Thasians.
Preparations and Pretexts for Second Macedonian War
Thus in reality all political, commercial, and moral motives concurred in inducing Rome to undertake the second war against Philip—one of the most righteous, which the city ever waged. It greatly redounds to the honour of the senate, that it immediately resolved on its course and did not allow itself to be deterred from making the necessary preparations either by the exhaustion of the state or by the unpopularity of such a declaration of war. The propraetor Marcus Valerius Laevinus made his appearance as early