to be accused by the sovereign rabble before the Roman
senate, and to accept justice or injustice as the senate
chose; he was compelled to witness judgment constantly
going against him; he had with deep chagrin to withdraw
his garrisons from the Thracian coast and from the
Thessalian and Perrhaebian towns, and courteously
to receive the Roman commissioners, who came to see
whether everything required had been carried out in
accordance with instructions. The Romans were
not so indignant against Philip as they had been against
Carthage; in fact, they were in many respects even
favourably disposed to the Macedonian ruler; there
was not in his case so reckless a violation of forms
as in that of Libya; but the situation of Macedonia
was at bottom substantially the same as that of Carthage.
Philip, however, was by no means the man to submit
to this infliction with Phoenician patience.
Passionate as he was, he had after his defeat been
more indignant with the faithless ally than with the
honourable antagonist; and, long accustomed to pursue
a policy not Macedonian but personal, he had seen
in the war with Antiochus simply an excellent opportunity
of instantaneously revenging himself on the ally who
had disgracefully deserted and betrayed him.
This object he had attained; but the Romans, who saw
very clearly that the Macedonian was influenced not
by friendship for Rome, but by enmity to Antiochus,
and who moreover were by no means in the habit of regulating
their policy by such feelings of liking and disliking,
had carefully abstained from bestowing any material
advantages on Philip, and had preferred to confer
their favours on the Attalids. From their first
elevation the Attalids had been at vehement feud with
Macedonia, and were politically and personally the
objects of Philip’s bitterest hatred; of all
the eastern powers they had contributed most to maim
Macedonia and Syria, and to extend the protectorate
of Rome in the east; and in the last war, when Philip
had voluntarily and loyally embraced the side of Rome,
they had been obliged to take the same side for the
sake of their very existence. The Romans had
made use of these Attalids for the purpose of reconstructing
in all essential points the kingdom of Lysimachus—the
destruction of which had been the most important achievement
of the Macedonian rulers after Alexander—and
of placing alongside of Macedonia a state, which was
its equal in point of power and was at the same time
a client of Rome. In the special circumstances
a wise sovereign, devoted to the interests of his
people, would perhaps have resolved not to resume the
unequal struggle with Rome; but Philip, in whose character
the sense of honour was the most powerful of all noble,
and the thirst for revenge the most potent of all
ignoble, motives, was deaf to the voice of timidity
or of resignation, and nourished in the depths of his
heart a determination once more to try the hazard of
the game. When he received the report of fresh
invectives, such as were wont to be launched against
Macedonia at the Thessalian diets, he replied with
the line of Theocritus, that his last sun had not yet
set.(1)