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POMPEY. g5

admitted into the small and half-peopled towns of the Cilicians, who for an enlargement of their territories, were willing to receive them. Others he planted in the city of the Solians, which had been lately laid waste by Tigranes, king of Armenia, and which he now restored. But the largest number were settled in Dyme, the town of Achsea, at that time extremely depopulated, and pos- sessing an abundance of good land. However, these proceedings could not escape the envy and censure of his enemies ; and the course he took against Metellus in Crete was disapproved of even by the chiefest of his friends. For Metellus, a relation of Pompey's for- mer colleague in Spain, had been sent praetor into Crete, before this province of the seas was assigned to Pompey. Now Crete was the second source of pirates next to Ci- licia, and Metellus having shut up a number of them in their strong-holds there, was engaged in reducing and ex- tirpating them. Those that were yet remaining and be- sieged sent their supplications to Pompey, and invited him into the island as a part of his province, alleging it to fall, every part of it, within the distance from the sea specified in his commission, and so within the precincts of his charge. Pompey receiving the submission, sent let- ters to Metellus, commanding him to leave off the war ; and others in like manner to the cities, in which he charged them not to yield any obedience to the com- mands of Metellus. And after these, he sent Lucius Oc- tavius, one of his lieutenants, to act as general, who entering the besieged fortifications, and fighting in de- fence of the pirates, rendered Pompey not odious only, but even ridiculous too ; that he should lend his name as a guard to a nest of thieves, that knew neither god nor law, and make his reputation serve as a sanctuary to them, only out of pure envy and emulation to Metellus.

For neither was Achilles thought to act the part of a

 
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