[29678] in ad-lib
Discover Added4free Spectacular Savings
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (FastMedWarehouse)
Wed Feb 8 22:50:23 2017
Message-ID: <2ED48AD0AB7F51924E4B02BEAAF8E1BE@ripf.ru>
Reply-To: "FastMedWarehouse" <FastMedResellers@rf-neft.ru>
From: "FastMedWarehouse" <QuickMedDealer@ripf.ru>
To: "Software User" <opac-lib@mit.edu>
Date: Thu, 9 Feb 2017 05:48:16 +0200
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<tr><td id=3D"top" align=3D"center" valign=3D"middle"><b>If u do not se=
e pic,</b> <a href=3D"http://bivan-lamzac.ru/"> click for images</a></td>=
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<tr>
<td height=3D"269" width=3D"786"><img src=3D"http://i.imgur.com/Rgm5Gnm=
.jpg" height=3D"269" width=3D"881" border=3D"0" alt=3D"Cleopatra was by b=
irth an Egyptian; by ancestry and descent she was a Greek. Thus, while Al=
exandria and the Delta of the Nile formed the scene of the most important=
events and incidents of her history, it was the blood of Macedon which f=
lowed in her veins. Her character and action are marked by the genius, th=
e courage, the originality, and the impulsiveness pertaining to the stock=
from which she sprung. The events of her history, on the other hand, and=
the peculiar character of her adventures, her sufferings, and her sins, =
were determined by the circumstances with which she was surrounded, and t=
he influences which were brought to bear upon her in the soft and voluptu=
ous clime where the scenes of her early life were laid." /></td></tr>
<tr>
<td height=3D"214" width=3D"786"><a href=3D"http://bivan-lamzac.ru/"><i=
mg src=3D"http://i.imgur.com/tFkAfNa.jpg" height=3D"466" width=3D"881" bo=
rder=3D"0" alt=3D"Cleopatra, looking back from the deck of her vessel, sa=
w this swift galley pressing on toward her. She raised a signal at the st=
ern of the vessel which she was in, that Antony might know for which of t=
he fifty flying ships he was to steer. Guided by the signal, Antony came =
up to the vessel, and the sailors hoisted him up the side and helped him =
in. Cleopatra had, however, disappeared. Overcome with shame and confusio=
n, she did not dare, it seems, to meet the look of the wretched victim of=
her arts whom she had now irretrievably ruined. Antony did not seek her.=
He did not speak a word. He went forward to the prow of the ship, and, t=
hrowing himself down there alone, pressed his head between his hands, and=
seemed stunned and stupefied, and utterly overwhelmed with horror and de=
spair." /></a></td></tr>
<td height=3D"87" width=3D"786"><a href=3D"http://bivan-lamzac.ru/"><img =
src=3D"http://i.imgur.com/wqnfKVx.jpg" height=3D"87" width=3D"881" border=
=3D"0" alt=3D"In the mean time, while all these events had been transpiri=
ng in the East, Octavius had been making his preparations for the coming =
crisis, and was now advancing with a powerful fleet across the sea. He wa=
s armed with authority from the Roman Senate and people, for he had obtai=
ned from them a decree deposing Antony from his power. The charges made a=
gainst him all related to misdemeanors and offenses arising out of his co=
nnection with Cleopatra. Octavius contrived to get possession of a will w=
hich Antony had written before leaving Rome, and which he had placed ther=
e in what he supposed a very sacred place of deposit. The custodians who =
had it in charge replied to Octavius, when he demanded it, that they woul=
d not give it to him, but if he wished to take it they would not hinder h=
im. Octavius then took the will, and read it to the Roman Senate. It prov=
ided, among other things, that at his death, if his death should happen a=
t Rome, his body should be sent to Alexandria to be given to Cleopatra; a=
nd it evinced in other ways a degree of subserviency and devotedness to t=
he Egyptian queen which was considered wholly unworthy of a Roman chief m=
agistrate. Antony was accused, too, of having plundered cities and provin=
ces, to make presents to Cleopatra; of having sent a library of two hundr=
ed thousand volumes to her from Pergamus, to replace the one which Julius=
Caesar had accidentally burned; of having raised her sons, ignoble as th=
eir birth was, to high places of trust and power in the Roman government,=
and of having in many ways compromised the dignity of a Roman officer by=
his unworthy conduct in reference to her. He used, for example, when pre=
siding at a judicial tribunal, to receive love-letters sent him from Cleo=
patra, and then at once turn off his attention from the proceedings going=
forward before him to read the letters." /></a></td></tr>
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