POMPEY. 135
when he cried out, " Good friends, you must not expect to gather any figs in Tusculum this year." But Lucius Afranius, who had lain under an imputation of treach- ery for the loss of the army in Spain, when he saw Pom- pey purposely declining an engagement, declared openly, that he could not but admire, why those who were so ready to accuse him, did not go themselves and fight this buyer and seller of their provinces. With these and many such speeches they wrought upon Pompey, who never could bear reproach, or resist the expectations of his friends; and thus they forced him to break his measures, so that he forsook his own prudent resolution to follow their vain hopes and desires : weak- ness that would have been blamable in the pilot of a ship, how much more hi the sovereign commander of such an army, and so many nations. But he, though he had often commended those physicians who did not comply with the capricious appetites of their patients, yet him- self could not but j'ield to the malady and disease of his companions and advisers in the war, rather than use some severity in their cure. Truly who could have said that health was not disordered and a cure not required in the case of men who went up and down the camp, suing already for the consulship and office of praetor, while Spinther, Domitius, and Scipio made friends, raised fac- tions, and quarrelled among themselves, who should suc- ceed Caesar in the dignity of his high-priesthood, esteem- ing all as lightly, as if they were to engage only with Ti- granes, king of Armenia, or some petty Nabathrcan king, not with that Ciesar and his army that had stormed a thousand towns, and subdued more than three hundred several nations; that had fought innumerable battles with the Germans and Gauls, and always carried the victory ; that had taken a million of men prisoners, and slain as
many upon the spot in pitched battles?