Page:Curious myths of the Middle Ages (1876).djvu/542

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certain is, that from the chain of ideas which lead Mela to cite this fact as indisputable, one may conclude that in his time it was believed in Rome that these swarthy men sent from Germany into Gaul had come across the ocean which bathes the East and North of Asia[1].”

The canoes, bodies, timber, and nuts, washed up on the western coasts of Europe, may have originated the belief in there being a land beyond the setting sun; and this country, when once supposed to exist, was variously designated as Meropis, the continent of Kronos, Ogygia, Atlantis, the Fortunate Isles, or the Garden of the Hesperides. Strabo says distinctly that the only hindrance in the way of passing west from Iberia to India is the vastness of the Atlantic ocean, but that “in the same temperate zone as we inhabit, and especially about the parallel passing through Thinæ and traversing the Atlantic, there may exist two inhabited countries, and perhaps even more than two[2].” A more distinct prophecy of America than the vague expressions of Seneca—“Finitam cuique rei magnitudinem natura dederat, dedit et modum: nihil infinitum

  1. Humboldt, Essai sur l’Hist. de la Géographic du N. Continent, ii. p. 264, note 2.
  2. Strabo, Geog. lib. i.