When, again, the ambassadors of Antiochus) were recounting to those of Achaea the various multitudes composing their royal master’s forces, and ran over a long catalogue of hard names, “I supped once,” said Titus, “with a friend, and could not forbear expostulating with him at the number of dishes he had provided, and said I wondered where he had furnished himself with such a variety; ‘Sir,’ replied he, ‘to confess the truth, it is all hog’s flesh differently cooked.’ And so, men of Achaea, when you are told of Antiochus’s lancers, and pikemen, and foot-guards, I advise you not to be surprised; since in fact they are all Syrians, differently armed.”
Source:
Plutarch, John Dryden, and Arthur Hugh Clough. "Flamininus." Plutarch's Lives. New York: Modern Library, 2001. 513. Print.
Further Reading:
Ἀντίγονος Γ΄ Δώσων (Antigonus III Doson)
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