Agrippa continued to bear down upon them,and they took refuge, not on the beach, but among the shoals formed in the sea by river deposits.Agrippa's pilots prevented him from running his large ships on the shoals.He cast anchor in the open sea, intending to blockade the enemy and to fight a battle by night if necessary:but his friends advised him not to be carried away by rashness and not to wear out his soldiers with excessive toil and want of sleep,and not to trust to that tempestuous sea.So in the evening he reluctantly withdrew.The Pompeians made sail to their harbors, having lost thirty of their ships,and sunk five of the enemy's,and having inflicted considerable other damage and suffered as much in return.
Pompeius praised his own men because they had resisted such formidable vessels, saying they had fought against walls rather than against ships;and he rewarded them as though they had been victorious.He encouraged them to believe that, as they were lighter, they would prevail over the enemy in the straits on account of the current.So ended the naval battle of Mylae, between Agrippa and Papias.But Pompeius suspected that Octavian had gone to the camp of Taurus for the purpose of attacking Tauromenium,which was the case. So, directly after supper, he sailed to Messana, leaving a part of his forces at Mylae so that Agrippa might think that he was still there.Agrippa,as soon as he had given his army sufficient rest,
だがPompeiusは、Octavianが問題となっていたTauromeniumを攻撃するためにTaurusの宿営地に行ったのではないかと疑った。そこで、Agrippaが自分はまだそこにいるように思わせるためにMylaeにいた自分の軍の一部を残して、夕食が済むと直接Messanaにむけ出航した。Agrippaは兵士らを十分休ませるとすぐに、
set sail for Tyndaris,which was apparently ready to surrender.He entered the town, but the garrison fought valiantly and drove him out. Some other towns espoused his cause and received his garrisons, and he returned that evening to Hiera. In the meantime, Octavian had sailed from Scylacium to Leucopetra, having learned for a certainty that Pompeius had gone from Messana to Mylae on account of Agrippa. He was about to cross the straits from Leucopetra to Tauromenium by night, but learning of the sea‑fight he changed his mind, thinking that a victor ought not to steal his passage, but to cross with his army boldly by daylight; for he was fully convinced that Pompeius was still confronting Agrippa.