Strabo, Geography (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Str.].
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-- 217 --

the Coraxi, note and remarkable for its beauty. Rams for the pur- pose of covering fetch a talent. The stuffs manufactured by the Saltiatae note are of incomparable texture. There is a super- abundance of cattle, and a great variety of game: while, on the other hand, of destructive animals there are scarcely any, with the exception of certain little hares which burrow in the ground, and are called by some leberides. note These creatures destroy both seeds and trees by gnawing their roots. They are met with throughout almost the whole of Iberia, note and extend to Marseilles, infesting likewise the islands. It is said that formerly the inhabitants of the Gymnesian islands note sent a deputation to the Romans soliciting that a new land might be given them, as they were quite driven out of their country by these animals, being no longer able to stand against their vast multitudes. note It is possible that people should be obliged to have recourse to such an expedient for help in waging war in so great an extremity, which however but seldom happens, and is a plague produced by some pestilential state of the atmosphere, which at other times has produced serpents and rats in like abundance; but for the ordinary increase of these little hares, many ways of hunting have been devised, amongst others by wild cats from Africa, note trained for the purpose. Having muzzled these, they turn them into the holes, when they either drag out the animals they find there with their claws, or compel them to fly to the surface of the earth, where they are taken by people standing by for that purpose. The large amount of the exports from Turdetania is evinced by the size and number of their ships. Merchant- vessels of the greatest size sail thence to Dicaearchia note and

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Strabo, Geography (English) (XML Header) [genre: prose] [word count] [lemma count] [Str.].
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