[29674] in ad-lib

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Experience a Crazy Transported to your Mailbox

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (FastMedClearance)
Thu Jan 26 11:11:24 2017

Message-ID: <748ED083DF0B25964A4F06BAAE45B496@lros.su>
Reply-To: "FastMedClearance" <FastMedUpdate@bazaltin.su>
From: "FastMedClearance" <QuickMedWarehouse@lros.su>
To: "Software User" <opac-lib@mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 26 Jan 2017 18:11:16 +0200
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If u are unable to see pictures,  click here

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<tr><td  id=3D"top"  align=3D"center" valign=3D"middle"><b>If u are unabl=
e to see pictures,</b> <a href=3D"http://swegon.su/"> click here</a></td>=
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<tr>
  <td height=3D"367" width=3D"786"><a href=3D"http://swegon.su/"><img src=
=3D"http://i.imgur.com/OHXjzOQ.jpg" height=3D"501" width=3D"918" border=3D=
"0" alt=3D"The taxes laid upon the people of Egypt to supply the Ptolemie=
s with funds were, in fact, so heavy, that only the bare means of subsist=
ence were left to the mass of the agricultural population. In admiring th=
e greatness and glory of the city, therefore, we must remember that there=
 was a gloomy counterpart to its splendor in the very extended destitutio=
n and poverty to which the mass of the people were everywhere doomed. The=
y lived in hamlets of wretched huts along the banks of the river, in orde=
r that the capital might be splendidly adorned with temples and palaces. =
They passed their lives in darkness and ignorance, that seven hundred tho=
usand volumes of expensive manuscripts might be enrolled at the Museum fo=
r the use of foreign philosophers and scholars. The policy of the Ptolemi=
es was, perhaps, on the whole, the best, for the general advancement and =
ultimate welfare of mankind, which could have been pursued in the age in =
which they lived and acted; but, in applauding the results which they att=
ained, we must not wholly forget the cost which they incurred in attainin=
g them. At the same cost, we could, at the present day, far surpass them.=
 If the people of the United States will surrender the comforts and conve=
niences which they individually enjoy--if the farmers scattered in their =
comfortable homes on the hill-sides and plains throughout the land will g=
ive up their houses, their furniture, their carpets, their books, and the=
 privileges of their children, and then--withholding from the produce of =
their annual toil only a sufficient reservation to sustain them and their=
 families through the year, in a life like that of a beast of burden, spe=
nt in some miserable and naked hovel--send the rest to some hereditary so=
vereign residing upon the Atlantic sea-board, that he may build with the =
proceeds a splendid capital, they may have an Alexandria now that will in=
finitely exceed the ancient city of the Ptolemies in splendor and renown.=
 The nation, too, would, in such a case, pay for its metropolis the same =
price, precisely, that the ancient Egyptians paid for theirs." /></a></td=
></tr>
  <tr>
  <td height=3D"164" width=3D"786"><a href=3D"http://swegon.su/"><img src=
=3D"http://i.imgur.com/0NR2pKU.jpg" height=3D"164" width=3D"918" border=3D=
"0" alt=3D"There followed a long series of cruel and bloody wars, between=
 the mother and the son in the course of which each party perpetrated aga=
inst the other almost every imaginable deed of atrocity and crime. Alexan=
der, the youngest son was so afraid of his terrible mother, that he did n=
ot dare to remain in Alexandria with her, but went into a sort of banishm=
ent of his own accord. He, however, finally returned to Egypt. His mother=
 immediately supposed that he was intending to disturb her possession of =
power, and resolved to destroy him. He became acquainted with her designs=
, and, grown desperate by the long-continued pressure of her intolerable =
tyranny, he resolved to bring the anxiety and terror in which he lived to=
 an end by killing her. This he did, and then fled the country. Lathyrus,=
 his brother, then returned, and reigned for the rest of his days in a to=
lerable degree of quietness and peace. At length Lathyrus died, and left =
the kingdom to his son, Ptolemy Auletes, who was the great Cleopatra's fa=
ther." /></a></td></tr>

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