[77]
But when I had dismissed my fellow legates, and sent them back to
Jerusalem, I took care to have arms provided, and the cities fortified.
And when I had sent for the most hardy among the robbers, I saw that it
was not in my power to take their arms from them; but I persuaded the multitude
to allow them money as pay, and told them it was better for them to give
them a little willingly, rather than to [be forced to] overlook them when
they plundered their goods from them. And when I had obliged them to take
an oath not to come into that country, unless they were invited to come,
or else when they had not their pay given them, I dismissed them, and charged
them neither to make an expedition against the Romans, nor against those
their neighbors that lay round about them; for my first care was to keep
Galilee in peace. So I was willing to have the principal of the Galileans,
in all seventy, as hostages for their fidelity, but still under the notion
of friendship. Accordingly, I made them my friends and companions as I
journeyed, and set them to judge causes; and with their approbation it
was that I gave my sentences, while I endeavored not to mistake what justice
required, and to keep my hands clear of all bribery in those determinations.
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