Res Gestae

Ammianus Marcellinus

Ammianus Marcellinus. Ammianus Marcellinus, with an English translation, Vols. I-III. Rolfe, John C., translator. Cambridge, MA; London: Harvard University Press; W. Heinemann, 1935-1940 (printing).

Therefore when Greece was toiling in a ten years’ war in order that a foreigner[*](Paris, the cause of the Trojan War.) might not evade the penalty for separating a royal pair, a scourge of this kind raged and many men perished by the darts of Apollo,[*](See Iliad, i. 9 ff. and 43 ff. Apollo was angry because the request of his priest was denied. Ammianus rationalizes the myth, attributing the pestilence to the heat of the sun, and likening its rays to the arrows of the god.) who is regarded as the sun.

And, as Thucydides shows,[*](Cf. Thuc. ii. 4, 7.) that calamity which, at the beginning of the Peloponnesian war, harassed the Athenians with a grievous kind of sickness, gradually crept

v1.p.489
all the way from the torrid region of Africa and laid hold upon Attica.

Others believe that when the air, as often happens, and the waters are polluted by the stench of corpses or the like, the greater part of their healthfulness is spoiled, or at any rate that a sudden change of air causes minor ailments.