Page:Travels to Discover the Source of the Nile - In the Years 1768, 1769, 1770, 1771, 1772, and 1773 volume 1.djvu/591

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
THE SOURCE OF THE NILE.
467


name, and being in danger of his life, he fled and embarked on the Red Sea, sailed round the peninsula of Africa, crossed the Atlantic Ocean, and came safely to Cadiz.

The spirit of inquiry, and desire of travelling, spread itself instantly through Egypt, upon this voyage of Eudoxus; and different travellers pushed their discoveries into the heart of the country, where some of the nations are reported to have been so ignorant as not to know the use of fire: ignorance almost incredible, had we not an instance of it in our own times. It was in the reign of Ptolemy IX. that Agatharcides *[1] drew up his description of the Red Sea.

The reigns of the other Ptolemies ending in the XIIIth of that name, though full of great events, have nothing material to our present subject. Their constant expence and profusion must have occasioned a great consumption of trading articles, and very little else was wanting; or, if there had, it must have arrived at its height in the reign of the celebrated Cleopatra; whose magnificence, beauty, and great talents, made her a wonder, greater than any in her capital. In her time, all nations flocked, as well for curiosity as trade, to Alexandria; Arabs, Ethiopians, Troglodytes, Jews, and Medes; and all were received and protected by this princess, who spokc to each of them in his own language †[2].

The discovery of Spain, and the possession of the mines of Attica from which they drew their silver, and the revo-

  1. * Dodwell's Dissertat. vol. I. Scrip. Græc. Min. Id. Ox. 1698. 8vo.
  2. † Plut. Vita. Ant. p. 913. tom. 1. part 2. Lubec. 1624. fol.
3 N 2
lution

  • Dodwell's Dissertat. vol. I. Scrip. Græc. Min. Id. Ox. 1698. 8vo.

† Plut. Vita. Ant. p. 913. tom. 1. part 2. Lubec. 1624. fol.