untenable, neutrality. After the deputies from
the towns most closely attached to Macedonia —Dyme,
Megalopolis, and Argos—had left the diet,
it resolved to join the coalition against Philip.
Cycliades and other leaders of the Macedonian party
went into exile; the troops of the Achaeans immediately
united with the Roman fleet and hastened to invest
Corinth by land, which city—the stronghold
of Philip against the Achaeans —had been
guaranteed to them on the part of Rome in return for
their joining the coalition. Not only, however,
did the Macedonian garrison, which was 1300 strong
and consisted chiefly of Italian deserters, defend
with determination the almost impregnable city, but
Philocles also arrived from Chalcis with a division
of 1500 men, which not only relieved Corinth but also
invaded the territory of the Achaeans and, in concert
with the citizens who were favourable to Macedonia,
wrested from them Argos. But the recompense of
such devotedness was, that the king delivered over
the faithful Argives to the reign of terror of Nabis
of Sparta. Philip hoped, after the accession
of the Achaeans to the Roman coalition, to gain over
Nabis who had hitherto been the ally of the Romans;
for his chief reason for joining the Roman alliance
had been that he was opposed to the Achaeans and since
550 was even at open war with them. But the
affairs of Philip were in too desperate a condition
for any one to feel satisfaction in joining his side
now. Nabis indeed accepted Argos from Philip,
but he betrayed the traitor and remained in alliance
with Flamininus, who, in his perplexity at being now
allied with two powers that were at war with each other,
had in the meantime arranged an armistice of four
months between the Spartans and Achaeans.
Vain Attempts to Arrange a Peace
Thus winter came on; and Philip once more availed
himself of it to obtain if possible an equitable peace.
At a conference held at Nicaea on the Maliac gulf
the king appeared in person, and endeavoured to come
to an understanding with Flamininus. With haughty
politeness he repelled the forward insolence of the
petty chiefs, and by marked deference to the Romans,
as the only antagonists on an equality with him, he
sought to obtain from them tolerable terms. Flamininus
was sufficiently refined to feel himself flattered
by the urbanity of the vanquished prince towards himself
and his arrogance towards the allies, whom the Roman
as well as the king had learned to despise; but his
powers were not ample enough to meet the king’s
wishes. He granted him a two months’ armistice
in return for the evacuation of Phocis and Locris,
and referred him, as to the main matter, to his government.
The Roman senate had long been at one in the opinion
that Macedonia must give up all her possessions abroad;
accordingly, when the ambassadors of Philip appeared
in Rome, they were simply asked whether they had full
powers to renounce all Greece and in particular Corinth,