32.33
The 
Roman commander thought it only right that the one who had asked for the 
conference should begin the conversation, the king considered that the 
discussion should be opened by the men who proposed terms of peace, not 
by the one who was to accept them. Thereupon the Roman observed that 
what he had to say would be quite simple and straightforward; he should 
merely state those conditions without which peace would be impossible. 
"The king must withdraw his garrisons from all the cities in Greece; the 
prisoners and deserters must be handed back to the allies of Rome; those 
places in Illyria which he had seized after the conclusion of peace in Epirus 
must be restored to Rome; the cities which he had taken forcible possession 
of after the death of Ptolemy Philopator must be given back to Ptolemy, the 
king of Egypt. These," he said, "are my conditions and those of the people of 
Rome, but it is right and proper that the demands of our allies should also be 
heard." The representative of King Attalus demanded the restoration of the 
ships and prisoners that had been taken in the sea-fight off Chius, and also 
that the Nicephorium and the temple of Venus which the king had plundered 
and desolated should be restored to their former condition. The Rhodians 
demanded the cession of Peraea, a district on the mainland opposite their 
island and formerly under their sway, and insisted upon the withdrawal of 
Philip's garrisons from Iasos, Bargyliae and Euromus, as well as from Sestos 
and Abydos on the Hellespont, the restoration of Perinthus to the Byzantines 
with the re-establishment of their old political relations and the freedom of 
all the markets and ports in Asia. Phaeneas, as representing the Aetolians, 
demanded, almost in the same terms as the Romans, the evacuation of 
Greece and the restoration of the cities which had formerly been under the 
rule of the Aetolians.  
He was followed by a leading Aetolian, named Alexander, who 
was, for an Aetolian, an eloquent speaker. He had long remained silent, he 
said, not because he thought that the conference would lead to any result, 
but simply because he did not want to interrupt any of the speakers who 
represented his allies. "Philip," he continued, "is not straightforward in 
discussing terms of peace nor has he shown true courage in the way he has 
conducted war. In negotiation he is deceitful and tricky, in war he does not 
encounter his enemy on fair ground or fight a set battle. He keeps out of his 
adversary's way, plunders and burns his cities, and when vanquished destroys 
what should be the prizes of the victors. The former kings of Macedonia did 
not behave in this way; they trusted to their battle-line, and spared the cities 
as far as possible that their dominions might be all the richer. What sort of 
policy is that of destroying the very things which a man is fighting to secure, 
and leaving nothing for himself but the mere war? Last year Philip laid waste 
more cities in Thessaly, though they belonged to his allies, than any enemy 
that Thessaly ever had. Even from us Aetolians he has taken more cities 
since he became our ally than he did while he was our enemy. He seized 
Lysimachia after expelling the Aetolian garrison and its commandant; in the 
same way he completely destroyed Cius, a member of our league. By similar 
treachery he is now master of Thebes, Phthiae, Echinus. Larisa and 
Pharsalus."