33.10
With a
small body of horse and foot Philip occupied the highest point on the hills in
order to see what fortune his left wing had met with. When he became aware
of their disorderly flight and saw the Roman standards and arms flashing on
all the hills he too left the field. Quinctius, who was pressing on the retiring
foe, saw the Macedonians suddenly holding their spears upright, and as he
was doubtful as to what they intended by this unfamiliar maneuver he held
up the pursuit for a few minutes. On learning that it was the Macedonian
signal of surrender, he made up his mind to spare them. The soldiers,
however, unaware that the enemy were no longer resisting and ignorant of
their general's intention, commenced an attack upon them, and when those in
front had been cut down the rest scattered in flight. Philip himself rode off at
a hard gallop in the direction of Tempe and drew rein at Gomphi, where he
remained for a day to pick up any survivors from the battle. The Romans
broke into the hostile camp in hopes of plunder, but they found that it had to
a large extent been cleared out by the Aetolians. 8000 of the enemy perished
that day; 5000 were made prisoners. Of the victors about 700 fell. If we are
to believe Valerius, who is given to boundless exaggeration, 40,000 of the
enemy were killed and -here his invention is not so wild -5700 made
prisoners and 249 standards captured. Claudius too writes that 32,000 of the
enemy were killed and 4300 made prisoners. We have taken the smaller
number, not because it is the smaller, but because we have followed
Polybius, who is no untrustworthy authority on Roman history especially
when the scene of it is in Greece.