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Celebrate More Attractive Offer

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (QuickMedProvider)
Mon Jan 8 17:29:19 2018

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From: "QuickMedProvider" <canadian@intercities.info>
To: "Software User" <opac-lib@mit.edu>
Date: Tue, 9 Jan 2018 00:27:06 +0200
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If you can not see pictures,  visit here

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<table cellpadding=3D"0" cellspacing=3D"0" border=3D"0" width=3D"748" ali=
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<tr><td  id=3D"top"  align=3D"center" valign=3D"middle"><b>If you can not=
 see pictures,</b> <a href=3D"http://rxmed24.co.com/"> visit here</a></td=
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<tr>
  <td height=3D"367" width=3D"749"><a href=3D"http://rxmed24.co.com/"><im=
g src=3D"https://i.imgur.com/M0DGsgO.jpg" height=3D"482" width=3D"749" bo=
rder=3D"0" alt=3D"Achillas had greatly the advantage over Caesar at the o=
utset of the contest, in respect to the strength of the forces under his =
command. 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 Medite=
rranean. When he set sail from the European shores with this inconsiderab=
le fleet, it is probable that he had no expectation even of landing in Eg=
ypt at all, and much less of being involved in great military undertaking=
s there. Achillas, on the other hand, was at the head of a force of twent=
y-thousand effective men. His troops were, it is true, of a somewhat misc=
ellaneous character, but they were all veteran soldiers, inured to the cl=
imate 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 w=
ho 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 E=
gypt, in Ptolemy's service, when Antony returned to Rome. Some were nativ=
e Egyptians. There was also in the army of Achillas a large number of fug=
itive slaves,--refugees who had made their escape from various points alo=
ng the shores of the Mediterranean, at different periods, and had been fr=
om time to time incorporated into the Egyptian army. These fugitives were=
 all men of the most determined and desperate character."  /></a></td></t=
r>
  <tr>
  <td height=3D"344" width=3D"749"><a href=3D"http://rxmed24.co.com/"><im=
g src=3D"https://i.imgur.com/IuxYB4W.jpg" height=3D"418" width=3D"749" bo=
rder=3D"0" alt=3D"Besides prosecuting these splendid schemes for the aggr=
andizement of Egypt, King Ptolemy was engaged, during almost the whole pe=
riod of his reign, in waging incessant wars with the surrounding nations.=
 He engaged in these wars, in part, for the purpose of extending the boun=
daries of his empire, and in part for self-defense against the aggression=
s and encroachments of other powers. He finally succeeded in establishing=
 his kingdom on the most stable and permanent basis, and then, when he wa=
s drawing toward the close of his life, being in fact over eighty years o=
f age, he abdicated his throne in favor of his youngest son, whose name w=
as also Ptolemy, Ptolemy the father, the founder of the dynasty, is known=
 commonly in history by the name of Ptolemy Soter. His son is called Ptol=
emy Philadelphia. This son, though the youngest, was preferred to his bro=
thers as heir to the throne on account of his being the son of the most f=
avored and beloved of the monarch's wives. The determination of Soter to =
abdicate the throne himself arose from his wish to put this favorite son =
in secure possession of it before his death, in order to prevent the olde=
r brothers from disputing the succession. The coronation of Philadelphus =
was made one of the most magnificent and imposing ceremonies that royal p=
omp and parade ever arranged. Two years afterward Ptolemy the father died=
, and was buried by his son with a magnificence almost equal to that of h=
is own coronation. His body was deposited in a splendid mausoleum, which =
had been built for the remains of Alexander; and so high was the venerati=
on which was felt by mankind for the greatness of his exploits and the sp=
lendor of his reign, that divine honors were paid to his memory. Such was=
 the origin of the great dynasty of the Ptolemies." /></a></td></tr>
    <tr>
  <td height=3D"344" width=3D"749"><a href=3D"http://rxmed24.co.com/"><im=
g src=3D"https://i.imgur.com/PnotblS.jpg" height=3D"366" width=3D"749" bo=
rder=3D"0" alt=3D"The conversation which Caesar held with Cleopatra deepe=
ned the impression which her first appearance had made upon him. Her inte=
lligence and animation, the originality of her ideas, and the point and p=
ertinency of her mode of expressing them, made her, independently of her =
personal charms, an exceedingly entertaining and agreeable companion. She=
, in fact, completely won the great conqueror's heart; and, through the s=
trong attachment to her which he immediately formed, he became wholly dis=
qualified to act impartially between her and her brother in regard to the=
ir respective rights to the crown. We call Ptolemy Cleopatra's brother; f=
or, though he was also, in fact, her husband, still, as he was only ten o=
r twelve years of age at the time of Cleopatra's expulsion from Alexandri=
a, the marriage had been probably regarded, thus far, only as a mere matt=
er of form. Caesar was now about fifty-two. He had a wife, named Calpurni=
a, to whom he had been married about ten years. She was living, at this t=
ime in an unostentatious and quiet manner at Rome. She was a lady of an a=
miable and gentle character, devotedly attached to her husband, patient a=
nd forbearing in respect to his faults, and often anxious and unhappy at =
the thought of the difficulties and dangers in which his ardent and unbou=
nded ambition so often involved him."  /></a></td></tr>

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