to Rome, since he had given him such a pledge of his
hatred of it, and had involved himself in war with
it by such a crime, deprived the poor man of his three
hundred talents, and shortly afterwards looked calmly
on while he and his family were plucked out of their
kingdom, like birds out of a nest, by Lucius Anicius,
who was sent with an army against him. Aemilius,
when he came to contend with such a rival as this,
despised him as a man, but was surprised at the force
which he had at his disposal. These were four
thousand cavalry, and of infantry soldiers of the
Macedonian phalanx nearly forty thousand. Encamped
by the sea-shore, near the skirts of Mount Olympus,
on ground nowhere accessible, and strongly fortified
by himself with outworks and defences of wood, Perseus
lived in careless security, thinking that by time and
expense he should wear out Aemilius’s attack.
But he, while he busied his mind with every possible
mode of assault, perceiving that his army in consequence
of its past want of discipline was impatient, and usurped
the general’s province by proposing all sorts
of wild schemes, severely reprimanded the soldiers,
and ordered them not to meddle with what was not their
concern, but only take care that they and their arms
were ready, and to use their swords as Romans should
when their general should give the word. He ordered
the night sentries to go on guard without their spears,
that they might be more attentive and less inclined
to sleep, having no arms to defend themselves against
the enemy.
XIV. The army was chiefly troubled by want of
water; for only a very little bad water ran or rather
dripped out of a spring near the sea. Aemilius
perceiving that Olympus, immediately above him, was
a large and well-wooded mountain, and guessing from
the greenness of the foliage that it must contain
some springs which had their courses underground,
dug many pits and wells along the skirts of the mountain,
which immediately were filled with pure water, which
by the pressure above was driven into these vacant
spaces. Yet some say that there are no hidden
fountains of water, lying ready in such places as these,
and say that it is not because they are dug out or
broken into that they flow, but that they have their
origin and cause in the saturation of the surrounding
earth which becomes saturated by its close texture
and coldness, acting upon the moist vapours, which
when pressed together low down turn into water.
For just as women’s breasts are not receptacles
full of milk ready to flow, but change the nutriment
which is in them into milk, and so supply it, so also
the cold places which are full of springs have no
water concealed in them, nor any such reservoirs as
would be needed to send out deep rivers from any fixed
point, but by their pressure they convert the air
and vapour which is in them into water. At any
rate, those places which are dug over break more into
springs and run more with water, in answer to this
treatment of their surface, just as women’s