CHAPTER CXIV. THE LAST OF THE GREEKS
When Aratus died, the principal
man in the Achaean army was Phil-o-poe’men,
a brave and virtuous young man. He was patriotic
in the extreme, and so plain and unassuming that no
one would have suspected his rank.
On one occasion, when he had reached
the dignity of general, he was invited to dine at
a house where the hostess was a stranger to him.
When he came to the door, she took him for a servant,
on account of his plain clothes, and curtly bade him
go and split wood.
Without saying a word, Philopoemen
threw aside his cloak, seized an ax, and set to work.
The host, on coming up a few minutes later, was horrified
to see his honored guest cutting wood, and was profuse
in his apologies for a mistake which only made Philopoemen
laugh.
When Philopoemen heard how cruel Nabis
was, he wanted to free Sparta from his tyranny.
So he entered the town at the head of an armed force
of men, confiscated the treasures for the benefit of
the public, and drove Nabis away.
The Spartans were at first very grateful
to the Achaeans for freeing them, but they soon began
to feel jealous of their power, and again rose up
in revolt against them. This time Philopoemen
treated the Spartans with the utmost severity, even
razing the walls of the city, which were never rebuilt.
Philopoemen was farsighted enough
to see from the beginning that the Roman alliance
would prove bad for Greece. He soon discovered
that the Romans intended to subdue the country, and
in order to do so most easily were trying to make
the people quarrel among themselves.
All his efforts were therefore directed
toward keeping peace, and for a time he was quite
successful. But the Romans, seeing no other way
to bring about a quarrel, at last bribed the Messenians
to revolt.
In the course of the war, Philopoemen
was led into an artfully arranged ambuscade, and was
taken in chains to Messenia, where, notwithstanding
his gray hair, he was exposed to the jeers of the common
people.
After thus humiliating him, they led
him to the place of torture; but when he heard that
his army had escaped from the ambush, he fervently
cried, “I die happy, since the Achaeans are safe.”
This only hastened the end of the
brave patriot, who has been called the “Last
of the Greeks,” because he was the last to try
to maintain his country’s independence.
The Achaeans soon after took the town
of Messenia, stoned all Philopoemen’s murderers
on his tomb, and carried his ashes to Meg-a-lop’o-lis,
his native city, where they were buried with great
pomp.