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[4] As the flight took place through precipitous and almost impassable country1 many of the Phocians and their mercenaries were cut down. Philomelus, after he had fought courageously and had suffered many wounds, was driven into a precipitous area and there hemmed in, and since there was no exit from it and he feared the torture after capture, he hurled himself over the cliff and having thus made atonement to the gods ended his life

1 The decisive battle was fought at Neon (see Paus. 10.2.4). A good description of the campaign is given by Beloch, Griechische Geschichte (2), 3.1.250, note 1, and by Pickard-Cambridge, Cambridge Ancient History, 6.215 ff.

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