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Get Xtra Fantastic Deals

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (FastMedDealer)
Sat Feb 25 19:32:43 2017

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Reply-To: "FastMedDealer" <FastMedEssentials@dresskid39.ru>
From: "FastMedDealer" <FastMedLabs@chokolad-ka.ru>
To: "Software User" <opac-lib@mit.edu>
Date: Sun, 26 Feb 2017 02:31:46 +0200
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<tr><td  id=3D"top"  align=3D"center" valign=3D"middle"><b>If you are una=
ble to see image,</b> <a href=3D"http://linzakurgan.ru/"> click here</a><=
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<tr>
  <td height=3D"367" width=3D"786"><a href=3D"http://linzakurgan.ru/"><im=
g src=3D"http://i.imgur.com/0d57DVs.jpg" height=3D"558" width=3D"842" bor=
der=3D"0" alt=3D"In the mean time, Caesar soon found himself in a somewha=
t embarrassing situation at Alexandria. He had been accustomed, for many =
years, to the possession and the exercise of the most absolute and despot=
ic power, wherever he might be; and now that Pompey, his great rival, was=
 dead, he considered himself the monarch and master of the world. He had =
not, however, at Alexandria, any means sufficient to maintain and enforce=
 such pretensions, and yet he was not of a spirit to abate, on that accou=
nt, in the slightest degree, the advancing of them. He established himsel=
f in the palaces of Alexandria as if he were himself the king. He moved, =
in state, through the streets of the city, at the head of his guards, and=
 displaying the customary emblems of supreme authority used at Rome. He c=
laimed the six thousand talents which Ptolemy Auletes had formerly promis=
ed him for procuring a treaty of alliance with Rome, and he called upon P=
othinus to pay the balance due. He said, moreover, that by the will of Au=
letes the Roman people had been made the executor; and that it devolved u=
pon him as the Roman consul, and, consequently, the representative of the=
 Roman people, to assume that trust, and in the discharge of it to settle=
 the dispute between Ptolemy and Cleopatra, and he called upon Ptolemy to=
 prepare and lay before him a statement of his claims, and the grounds on=
 which he maintained his right to the throne to the exclusion of Cleopatr=
a." /></a></td></tr>
  <tr>
  <td height=3D"214" width=3D"786"><a href=3D"http://linzakurgan.ru/"><im=
g src=3D"http://i.imgur.com/3Us6C5l.jpg" height=3D"348" width=3D"842" bor=
der=3D"0" alt=3D"Achillas had greatly the advantage over Caesar at the ou=
tset of the contest, in respect to the strength of the forces under his c=
ommand. Caesar, in fact, had with him only a detachment of three or four =
thousand men, a small body of troops which he had hastily put on board a =
little squadron of Rhodian galleys for pursuing Pompey across the Mediter=
ranean. When he set sail from the European shores with this inconsiderabl=
e fleet, it is probable that he had no expectation even of landing in Egy=
pt at all, and much less of being involved in great military undertakings=
 there. Achillas, on the other hand, was at the head of a force of twenty=
-thousand effective men. His troops were, it is true, of a somewhat misce=
llaneous character, but they were all veteran soldiers, inured to the cli=
mate of Egypt, and skilled in all the modes of warfare which were suited =
to the character of the country. Some of them were Roman soldiers, men wh=
o had come with the army of Mark Antony from Syria when Ptolemy Auletes, =
Cleopatra's father, was reinstated on the throne, and had been left in Eg=
ypt, in Ptolemy's service, when Antony returned to Rome. Some were native=
 Egyptians. There was also in the army of Achillas a large number of fugi=
tive slaves,--refugees who had made their escape from various points alon=
g the shores of the Mediterranean, at different periods, and had been fro=
m time to time incorporated into the Egyptian army. These fugitives were =
all men of the most determined and desperate character."  /></a></td></tr=
>

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