< Page:Plutarch's Lives (Clough, v.2, 1865).djvu
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^MILIUS PAULUS. , 163

slew twenty-five hundred practised soldiers, and took six liuadred prisoners; and, surprising their fleet as they rode at anchor before Oreus, he took twenty ships of bui'den with all their lading, sunk the rest that were freighted with corn, and, besides this, made himself master of four galleys with five banks of oars. He fought a second bat- tle with Hostilius, a consi;lar officer, as he was making his way into the country at Elimite, and forced him to re- .treat; and, when he afterwards by stealth designed an invasion through Thessaly, challenged him to fight, which the other feared to accept. Nay more, to show his con- tempt of the Romans, and that he wanted employment, as a war by the by, he made an expedition against the Dardanians, in which he slew ten thousand of those bar- barian people, and brought a great spoil away. He pri- vately, moreover, solicited the Gauls (also called Baster- nse), a warlike nation, and famous for horsemen, dwelling near the Danube ; and incited the Elyrians, by the means of Genthius their king, to join with him in the war. It was also reported, that the barbarians, allured by pro- mise of rewards, were to make an irruption into Italy, through the lower Gaul by the shore of the Adriatic Sea. The Romans, being advertised of these things, thought it necessary no longer to choose their commanders by favor or solicitation, but of their own motion to select a general of wisdom and capacity for the management of great affairs. And such was Paulus ^milius, advanced in years, being nearly threescore, yet vigorous in his own person, and rich in valiant sons and sons-in-law, besides a great number of influential relations and friends, all of whom joined in urging him to yield to the desires of the people, who called him to the consulship. He at first manifested some shyness of the people, and withdrew himself from their importunity, professing reluctance to

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