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as food for slaves. They also made an agreeable wine of it, but which would not keep above ten days. See Pope's note _in loco_. [393] _In skins confin'd the blust'ring winds control._--The gift of AEolus to Ulysses. "The adverse winds in leathern bags he brac'd, Compress'd their force, and lock'd each struggling blast: For him the mighty sire of gods assign'd, The tempest's lord, the tyrant of the wind; His word alone the list'ning storms obey, To smooth the deep, or swell the foamy sea. These, in my hollow ship the monarch hung, Securely fetter'd by a silver thong; But Zephyrus exempt, with friendly gales } He charg'd to fill, and guide the swelling sails: } Rare gift! but oh, what gift to fools avails?" } POPE, Odyss. x. 20. The companions of Ulysses imagined that these bags contained some valuable treasure, and opened them while their leader slept. The tempests bursting out, drove the fleet from Ithaca, which was then in sight, and was the cause of a new train of miseries. [394] See the third AEneid. [395] See the sixth AEneid, and the eleventh Odyssey. [396] Alexander the Great.--_Ed._ [397] Achilles, son of Peleus.--_Ed._ [398] Virgil, born at Mantua.--_Ed._ [399] Don Francisco de Gama, grandson of Vasco de Gama, the hero of the Lusiad.--_Ed._ [400] Cleopatra. [401] Every display of eastern luxury and magnificence was lavished in the fishing parties on the Nile, with which Cleopatra amused Mark Antony, when at any time he showed symptoms of uneasiness, or seemed inclined to abandon the effeminate life which he led with his mistress. At one of these parties, Mark Antony, having procured divers to put fishes upon his hooks while under the water, he very gallantly boasted to his mistress of his great dexterity in angling. Cleopatra perceived his art, and as gallantly outwitted him. Some other divers received her orders, and in a little while Mark Antony's line brought up a fried fish in place of a live one, to the vast entertainment of the queen, and all the convivial company. Octavius was at this time on his march to decide who should be master of the world. [402] The friendship of the Portuguese and Melindians was of long continuance. Alvaro Cabral, the second admiral who made the voyage to India, in an engagement with the Moors off the coast of Sofala, took two ships richly freighted from the mines of that count
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