of their being transported to Delium in Boeotia, and
being each of them allowed a single suit of apparel.
The island was yielded up by the Romans to king Attalus;
the spoil, and the ornaments of the city, they themselves
carried off. Attalus, desirous that the island,
of which he had got possession, might not be quite
deserted, persuaded almost all the Macedonians, and
several of the Andrians, to remain there: and,
in some time after, those who, according to the capitulation,
had been transported to Delium, were induced to return
from thence by the promises made them by the king,
in which they were disposed the more readily to confide,
by the ardent affection which they felt for their
native country. From Andros they passed over to
Cythnus; there they spent several days, to no purpose,
in assaulting the city; when, at length, finding it
scarcely worth the trouble, they departed. At
Prasiae, a place on the main land of Attica, twenty
barks of the Issaeans joined the Roman fleet.
These were sent to ravage the lands of the Carystians,
the rest of the fleet lying at Geraestus, a noted
harbour in Euboea, until the Issaeans returned from
Carystus: on which, setting sail all together,
and steering their course through the open sea, until
they passed by Scyrus, they arrived at the island
of Icus. Being detained there for a few days by
a violent northerly wind, as soon as the weather was
fair, they passed over to Sciathus, a city which had
been lately plundered and desolated by Philip.
The soldiers, spreading themselves over the country,
brought back to the ships corn and what other kinds
of provisions could be of use to them. Plunder
there was none, nor had the Greeks deserved to be plundered.
Directing their course thence to Cassandrea, they first
came to Mendis, a village on the coast of that state;
and, intending from thence to double the promontory,
and bring round the fleet to the very walls of the
city, a violent tempest arising, they were near being
buried in the waves. However, after being dispersed,
and a great part of the ships having lost their rigging,
they escaped on shore. This storm at sea was
an omen of the kind of success which they were to
meet on land; for, after collecting their vessels together,
and landing their forces, having made an assault on
the city, they were repulsed with many wounds, there
being a strong garrison of the king’s troops
in the place. Being thus obliged to retreat without
accomplishing their design, they passed over to Canastrum
in Pallene, and from thence, doubling the promontory
of Torona, conducted the fleet to Acanthus. There
they first laid waste the country, then stormed the
city itself, and plundered it. They proceeded
no farther, for their ships were now heavily laden
with booty, but went back to Sciathus, and from Sciathus
to Euboea, whence they had first set out.


