About mid-day he recalled the troops, and dividing
them into two parts, ordered one to be led round by
the foot of the mountain to a rock, which was of equal
height with the citadel, and seemed as if it had been
broken off from it, leaving a hollow between; but the
summits of these eminences are so nearly contiguous
that weapons may be thrown into the citadel from the
top of the other. With the other half of the
troops the consul intended to march, up from the city
to the citadel, and waited to receive a signal from
those who were to mount the rock on the farther side.
The Aetolians in the citadel could not support the
shout of the party which had seized the rock, and the
consequent attack of the Romans from the city; for
their courage was now broken, and the place was by
no means in a condition to hold out a siege of any
continuance; the women, children, and great numbers
of other helpless people, being crowded together in
a fort, which was scarce capable of containing, much
less of affording protection to such a multitude.
On the first assault, therefore, they laid down their
arms and submitted. Among the rest was delivered
up Damocritus, chief magistrate of the Aetolians,
who at the beginning of the war, when Titus Quinctius
asked for a copy of the decree passed by the Aetolians
for inviting Antiochus, told him, that, “in Italy,
when the Aetolians were encamped there, it should
be delivered to him.” On account of this
presumptuous insolence of his, his surrender was a
matter of greater satisfaction to the victors.
25. At the same time, while the Romans were employed
in the reduction of Heraclea, Philip, by concert,
besieged Lamia. He had an interview with the
consul, as he was returning from Boeotia, at Thermopylae,
whither he came to congratulate him and the Roman people
on their successes, and to apologize for his not having
taken an active part in the war, being prevented by
sickness; and then they went from thence, by different
routes, to lay siege to the two cities at once.
The distance between these places is about seven miles;
and as Lamia stands on high ground, and has an open
prospect, particularly towards the region of Mount
Oeta, the distance seems very short, and every thing
that passes can be seen from thence. The Romans
and Macedonians, with all the emulation of competitors
for a prize, employed the utmost exertions, both night
and day, either in the works or in fighting; but the
Macedonians encountered greater difficulty on this
account, that the Romans made their approaches by
mounds, covered galleries, and other works, which
were all above ground; whereas the Macedonians worked
under ground by mines, and, in that stony soil, often
met a flinty rock, which iron could not penetrate.
The king, seeing that his undertaking succeeded but
ill, endeavoured, by conversations with the principal
inhabitants, to prevail on the townspeople to surrender
the place; for he was fully persuaded, that if Heraclea
should be taken first, the Lamians would then choose