Polybius, Histories (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Polyb.]. | ||
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As I have started this topic I must not, as most historians do, leave any point undiscussed, or only barely stated. My object is rather to give information, and to clear up doubtful points for my readers. This is the peculiarity of the present day, in which every sea and land has been thrown open to travellers; and in which, therefore, one can no longer employ the evidence of poets and fabulists, as my predecessors have done on very many points, "offering," as Heraclitus says, "tainted witnesses to disputed facts,"—but I must try to make my narrative in itself carry conviction to my readers.
I say then the
now: and further, that in process of time both it and the
Propontis, assuming the same local conditions to be maintained, and the causes of the alluvial deposit to continue
active, will be entirely filled up. For time being infinite, and
the depressions most undoubtedly finite, it is plain that, even
though the amount of deposit be small, they must in course of
time be filled. For a finite process, whether of accretion or
decrease, must, if we presuppose infinite time, be eventually
completed, however infinitesimal its progressive stages may be.
In the present instance the amount of soil deposited being not
small, but exceedingly large, it is plain that the result I
mentioned will not be remote but rapid. And, in fact, it is
evident that it is already taking place. The Maeotic lake is
already so much choked up, that the greater part of it is only
from seven to five fathoms deep, and accordingly cannot any
longer be passed by large ships without a pilot. And having
moreover been originally a sea precisely on a level with the
Polybius, Histories (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Polyb.]. | ||
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