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a council of the Magnetes had been called. It was necessary to employ more carefully-chosen language at this council because some of the chiefs were alienated from the Romans and wholly devoted to Antiochus and the Aetolians because, when itB.C. 192 was reported that Philip's son, who was a hostage, was being returned to him and the tribute which had been imposed remitted,Livy does not mention any embassy to Philip at this time and says nothing of any proposal to return his son until 191 B.C. (XXXVI. xxxv. 13), when Demetrius was restored to his father. Diodorus (XXVIII. xvi), however, speaks of an embassy which promised both these things to Philip. The Magnetes, then, may have had some grounds for their suspicions, as even Livy's language (note especially spes incisa in sect. 7 below) indicates. among other falsehoods it was said that Demetrias also would be given back to him by the Romans. To prevent this from happening, Eurylochus, the chief of the Magnetes, and s