Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 1.djvu/72

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STEABO. BOOK i. is general becomes particular when it is bestowed on any object par excellence. Heaven-sent, when applied to a moun- tain torrent, means something else than when it is the epithet of the ever-flowing river ; but the force of the term is doubly felt when attributed to the Nile. For as there are hyperboles of hyperboles, for instance, to be " lighter than the shadow of a cork," " more timid than a Phrygian hare," 1 " to possess an estate shorter than a Lacedaemonian epistle ; " so excellence becomes more excellent, when the title of " heaven-sent " is given to the Nile. The mountain torrent has a better claim to be called heaven-sent than other rivers, but the Nile ex- ceeds the mountain torrents, both in its size and the lengthened period of its overflow. Since, then, the wonders of this river were known to our poet, as we have shown in this defence, when he applies this epithet to the Nile, it must only be un- derstood in the way we have explained. Homer did not think it worth mentioning, especially to those who were ac- quainted with the fact, that the Nile had many mouths, since this is a common feature of numerous other rivers. Alcasus 2 does not mention it, although he tells us he had been in Egypt. One might infer the fact of its alluvial deposit, both from the rising [of the river] and what Homer tells us con- cerning Pharos. For his account, or rather the vulgar report 1 The Phrygians were considered to be more timid than any other people, and consequently the hares of their country more timid than those of any other. We see then a twofold hyperbole in the expression that a man is more timid than a Phrygian hare. 2 Alceeus of Mitylene in the island of Lesbos, the earliest of the JEo- lian lyric poets, began to flourish in the forty-second Olympiad (B. c. 610). In the second year of this Olympiad we find Cicis and Antime- nidas, the brothers of Alcams, fighting under Pittacus against Melan- chrus, who is described as the tyrant of Lesbos, and who fell in the conflict Alcaeus does not appear to have taken part with his brothers on this occa- sion ; on the contrary, he speaks of Melanchrus in terms of high praise. Alcseus is mentioned in connexion with the war in Troas, between the Athenians and Mitylenaeans, for the possession of Sigaeum. During the period which followed this war, the contest between the nobles and the people of Mitylene was brought to a crisis. The party of Alcaeus en- gaged actively on the side of the nobles, and was defeated. When he and his brother Antimenidas perceived that all hope of their restoration to Mitylene was gone, they travelled over different countries. Alcaeus visited Egypt, and appears to have written poems in which his adventures by sea were described. Horace, Carm. ii. 13. 26. See Smith's Diet, of Biog. and Mythol.