The
Comparison of Philopoemen with Flamininus
By
Plutarch
Translated
by John Dryden
First them, as for the greatness of the benefits which Titus
conferred on Greece, neither Philopoemen, nor
many braver men than he, can make good the parallel. They were Greeks fighting
against Greeks, but Titus, a stranger to Greece, fought for her. And at the
very time when Philopoemen went over into Crete, destitute of means to succour
his besieged countrymen, Titus, by a defeat given to Philip in the heart of Greece, set
them and their cities free. Again, if we examine the battles they fought,
Philopoemen, whilst he was the Achaeans' general, slew more Greeks than Titus,
in aiding the Greeks, slew Macedonians. As to their failings, ambition was
Titus's weak side, and obstinacy Philopoemen's in the former, anger was easily
kindled; in the latter, it was as hardly quenched. Titus reserved to Philip the
royal dignity; he pardoned the Aetolians, and stood their friend; but
Philopoemen, exasperated against his country, deprived it of its supremacy over
the adjacent villages. Titus was ever constant to those he had once befriended;
the other, upon any offence, as prone to cancel kindnesses. He
who had once been a benefactor to the Lacedaemonians, afterwards laid their
walls level with the ground, wasted their country, and in the end changed and
destroyed the whole frame of their government. He seems, in truth, to have
prodigalled away his own life, through passion and perverseness; for he fell
upon the Messenians, not with that conduct and caution that characterized the
movements of Titus, but with unnecessary and unreasonable haste.
The many battles he fought, and the many trophies he won,
may make us ascribe to Philopoemen the more thorough knowledge of war. Titus
decided the matter betwixt Philip and himself in two engagements; but
Philopoemen came off victorious in ten thousand encounters, to all which
fortune had scarcely any pretence, so much were they owing to his skill.
Besides, Titus got his renown, assisted by the power of a flourishing Rome; the other flourished under a declined Greece, so that his successes may be accounted
his own; in Titus's glory Rome
claims a share. The one had brave men under him, the
other made his brave, by being over them. And though Philopoemen was
unfortunate, certainly, in always being opposed to his countrymen, yet this
misfortune is at the same time a proof of his merit. Where the circumstances
are the same, superior success can only be ascribed to superior merit. And he
had, indeed, to do with the two most warlike nations of all Greece, the
Cretans on the one hand, and the Lacedaemonians on the other, and he mastered
the craftiest of them by art and the bravest of them by valour. It may also be
said that Titus, having his men armed and disciplined to his hand, had in a
manner his victories made for him; whereas Philopoemen was forced to introduce
a discipline and tactics of his own, and to new-mould and model his soldiers;
so that what is of greatest import towards insuring a victory was in his case
his own creation, while the other had it ready provided for his benefit.
Philopoemen effected many gallant things with his own hand, but Titus none; so
much so that one Archedemus, an Aetolian, made it a jest against him that while
he, the Aetolian, was running with his drawn sword, where he saw the
Macedonians drawn up closest and fighting hardest, Titus was standing still,
and with hands stretched out to heaven, praying to the gods for aid.
It is true Titus acquitted himself admirably, both as a
governor and as an ambassador; but Philopoemen was no less serviceable and
useful to the Achaeans in the capacity of a private man than in that of a
commander. He was a private citizen when he restored the Messenians to their
liberty, and delivered their city from Nabis; he was also a private citizen
when he rescued the Lacedaemonians, and shut the gates of Sparta against the general Diophanes and
Titus. He had a nature so truly formed for command that he could govern even
the laws themselves for the public good; he did not need to wait for the
formality of being elected into command by the governed, but employed their
service, if occasion required, at his own discretion; judging that he who
understood their real interests was more truly their supreme magistrate, than
he whom they had elected to the office. The equity, clemency, and humanity of
Titus towards the Greeks display a great and generous nature; but the actions
of Philopoemen, full of courage, and forward to assert his country's liberty
against the Romans, have something yet greater and nobler in them. For it is
not as hard a task to gratify the indigent and distressed, as to bear up
against and to dare to incur the anger of the powerful. To conclude, since it
does not appear to be easy, by any review or discussion, to establish the true
difference of their merits and decide to which a preference is due, will it be
an unfair award in the case, if we let the Greek bear away the crown for
military conduct and warlike skill, and the Roman for justice and clemency?
THE END