THE DIVINE HISTORY OF JESUS CHRIST |
THE LIFE AND TIMES OF CLEOPATRA, QUEEN OF EGYPTPART
II.
CLEOPATRA
AND ANTONY
CHAPTER XVIII.
CLEOPATRA’S
ATTEMPT TO BEGIN AGAIN.
Crushed and broken
by her misfortunes, it might have been expected that Cleopatra would now give
up the fight. She was not made, however, of ordinary stuff; and she
could not yet bring herself to believe that her cause was hopeless. On her
voyage across the Mediterranean she seems to have pulled herself together
after the first shock of defeat; and, with that wonderful recuperative
power, of which we have already seen many instances in her life, she
appears, so to speak, to have regained her feet, standing up once more,
eager and defiant, to face the world. The defeat of Antony, though it
postponed for many years all chance of obtaining a footing in Rome, did
not altogether preclude that possibility. He would now probably kill himself,
and though the thought of his suicide must have been very distressing to
her, she could but feel that she would be well rid of him. A drunken and
discredited outlaw with a price upon his head was not a desirable
consort for a Queen; and he had long since ceased to make an appeal
to any quality in her, save to her pity. Octavian would hunt him down, and
would not rest until he had driven him to the land of the shades; but she
herself might possibly be spared and her throne be saved in recognition of
the fact that she had been the great Dictator’s “wife.” Then, some chance
occurrence, such as the death of Octavian, might give her son Caesarion the
opportunity of putting himself forward once more as Caesar’s heir.
Antony was now a
terrible encumbrance. His presence with her endangered her own life, and, what
was more important, imperilled the existence of
her royal dynasty. Had he not the courage, like defeated Cato at Utica,
like her uncle Ptolemy of Cyprus, like Brutus after Philippi, and
like hundreds of others, to kill himself and so end his misfortunes ? It
is to be remembered that suicide after disaster was a doctrine
emphatically preached throughout the civilised world at this time, and so frequently was it practised that it was felt to be far less terrible than we are now accustomed to
think it. The popular spectacle of gladiatorial fights, the many wars
conducted in recent years, and the numerous political murders and
massacres, had made people very familiar with violent death. The case
of Arria, the wife of Paetus,
is an illustration of the light manner in which the termination of life
was regarded. Her husband having been condemned to death, Arria determined to anticipate the executioner; and
therefore, having driven a dagger into her breast, she coolly handed the
weapon to him, with the casual words, Paete non
dole, “It isn’t painful.” I do not think, therefore, that Cleopatra need
be blamed if she now hoped that Antony would make his exit from
the stage of life.
Her fertile brain
turned to the consideration of other means of holding her throne should
Octavian’s clemency not be extended to her. Her dominant hope was now the
keeping of Egypt independent of Rome. The founding of an Egypto-Roman empire
having been indefinitely postponed by the defeat at Actium, her whole
energies would have to be given to the retention of some sort of crown
for her son. The dominions which Antony had given her she could hardly
expect to hold: but for Egypt, her birthright, she must fight while breath
remained in her body. Under this inspiration her thoughts turned
to the Orient, to Media, Persia, Parthia, and India. Was there not
some means of forming an alliance with one or all of these distant
countries, thereby strengthening her position? Her son Alexander Helios
was prospective King of Media. Could not she find in Persia or India
an extension of the dominions which she could hand on to Caesarion?
And could not some great amalgamation of these nations, which had never
been conquered by Rome, be effected?
I imagine that her
thoughts ran in these channels as she sailed over the sea; but when she had
dropped Antony at Paraetonium and was heading
for Alexandria the more immediate question of her entry into the
capital must have filled her mind. It was essential to prevent the
news of the defeat from being spread in the capital until after she had
once more obtained control of affairs. She therefore seems to have
arranged to sail into the harbour some days
before the arrival of the fleet, and she caused her flagship to be
decorated as though in celebration of a victory. Her arrival took place at
about the end of September BC 31; and, with music playing, sailors
dancing, and pennants flying, the ship passed under the shadow of the
white Pharos and entered the Great Harbour.
Having moored the vessel at the steps of the Palace, Cleopatra was carried
ashore in royal state, and was soon safely ensconced behind the walls of
the Lochias. She brought, no doubt, written
orders from Antony to the legions stationed in Alexandria;
and, relying on the loyalty of these troops, she soon took the
sternest measures to prevent any revolt or rioting in the city as the news
of the disaster began to filter through. Several prominent citizens who
attempted to stir up trouble were promptly arrested and put to death; and
by the time that full confirmation of the news of the defeat had arrived,
Cleopatra was in absolute control of the situation.
She now began to
carry out her schemes in regard to the East, in pursuance of which her first
step was, naturally, the confirmation of her treaty with the King
of Media. It will be remembered that the elder son of Cleopatra and
Antony, Alexander Helios, had been married to the King of Media’s
daughter, on the understanding, apparently, that he should be heir to
the kingdoms of Media and Armenia. The little princess was now living
at Alexandria; and it will be recalled that Artavasdes,
the dethroned King of Armenia, the greater part of whose kingdom had been
handed over to Media, remained a prisoner in the Egyptian
capital, where he had been incarcerated since the Triumph in BC 34,
three years previously. The defeat of Antony, however, would probably
cause the reinstatement of the rulers deposed by him ; and it seemed very
probable that Octavian would restore Artavasdes to his lost kingdom, and that Media, on the other hand, by reason of
its support of the Antonian party, would be stripped of as much
territory as the Romans dared to seize. In order to prevent this by removing
the claimant to the Armenian throne, and perhaps owing to some attempt on the
part of Artavasdes to escape or to communicate
with Octavian, Cleopatra ordered him to be put to death; and she thereupon
sent an embassy to Media bearing his head to the King as a token of her
good faith. I think it is probable that at the same time she sent the
little Alexander and his child-wife Iotapa to
the Median court in order that they might there live in safety; and there
can be little doubt that she made various proposals to the King
for joint action.
She then began an
undertaking which Plutarch describes as “a most bold and wonderful enterprise.”
The northernmost inlet of the Red Sea, the modern Gulf of Suez, was
separated from the waters of the Mediterranean by a belt of low-lying
desert not more than thirty-five miles in breadth. Across the northern
side of this isthmus the Pelusian branch of the
Nile passed from the Delta down to the Mediterranean. Somewhat further
south lay the Lakes of Balah and Timsah, and between these and the Gulf of Suez lay the
so-called Bitter Lakes. These pieces of water had been linked together by
a canal opened nearly five hundred years previously by the great
Persian conqueror Darius I,, who had thus sent his ships through from one
sea to the other by a route not far divergent from that of the modern
Suez Canal. King Ptolemy Philadelphus, three hundred years later, had
reopened the waterway, and had built a great system of locks at its southern
end, near the fortress of Clysma; but now a
large part of the canal had become blocked up once more by the encroaching
sand, and any vessel which had to be transported from
the Mediterranean to the Red Sea would have to be dragged for several
miles over the desert. In spite of the enormous labour involved, however, Cleopatra determined to transfer immediately all her
battleships which had survived Actium to the Red Sea, where they would be
safe from the clutches of Octavian, and would be in a position to
sail to India or to Southern Persia whenever she might require them to do
so. She also began with startling energy to build other vessels at Suez,
in the hope of there fitting out an imposing fleet. Plutarch states simply
that her object was to go “with her soldiers and her treasure to secure
herself a home where she might live in peace, far away from war and
slavery ”; but, viewing the enterprise in connection with the
embassy to Media, it appears to me that she had determined to put
into partial execution the schemes of which she seems to have talked with
Julius Caesar while he was staying with her in Alexandria, in regard to
the conquest of the East
Media, Parthia, and
India were all outside the influence of Rome. Of these countries Media was now
bound to Egypt by the closest ties of blood, while India was engaged
in a thriving trade with Cleopatra’s kingdom. Parthia, now the enemy of
Media, lay somewhere between these vast lands; and if the Egyptian fleet
could sail round the coasts of Arabia and effect a junction with the
Median armies in the Persian Gulf, some sort of support might be given to
the allies by the Indian States, and Parthia could be conquered or
frightened into joining the confederacy. Syria and Armenia could then
be controlled, and once more the fight with the West might be undertaken.
In the meantime these far countries offered a safe hiding-place for
herself and her family; and having, as I suppose, despatched her son Alexander to his future kingdom of Media, she now began to
consider the sending of her beloved Caesarion to India, there to prepare
the way for the approach of her fleet.
In these great
schemes Antony played no part. During their undertaking he was wandering about
the desolate shores of Paraetonium, engrossed in
his misfortunes and bemoaning the ingratitude of his generals and
friends whom, in forgetfulness of his own behaviour at Actium, he accused of deserting him. Cleopatra, as she toiled at
the organisation of her new projects, and
struggled by every means, fair or foul, to raise money for the great
task, must have heartily wished her husband out of the way; and it must
have been with very mixed feelings that she presently received the news of
his approach. On his arrival, perhaps in November, he was astonished
at the Queen’s activities; but, being opposed to the idea of keeping up
the struggle and of setting out for the East, he tried to discourage her
by talking hopefully about the loyalty of the various garrisons of whose
desertion he had not yet heard. He seems also to have pointed out to her
that some sort of peace might be made with Octavian, which
would secure her throne to her family; and, in one way and another,
he managed to dishearten her and to dull her energies. He himself desired now
to retire from public life, and to take up his residence in some city,
such as Athens, where he might live in the obscurity of private citizenship.
He well knew the contempt in which Cleopatra held him, and at this time he
thought it would be best, in the long-run, if he left her to her fate. At
all events, he seems to have earnestly hoped that she would not expect
him to set out on any further adventures; and in this his views must have
met hers, for she could have had no use for him. Her son Caesarion was
growing to manhood, and in the energy of his youth he would be worth a
hundred degenerate Antonys.
An unexpected
check, however, was put to her schemes, and once again misfortune seemed to dog
her steps. The Nabathaean Arabs from the neighbourhood of Petra, being on bad terms with the
Egyptians, raided the new docks at Suez and, driving off the troops
stationed there, burnt the first galleys which had been dragged across
from the Mediterranean and those which were being built in the docks.
Cleopatra could not spare troops enough to protect the work, and therefore
the great enterprise had to be abandoned.
Shortly after this Canidius himself arrived in Alexandria, apparently bringing
the news that all Antony’s troops in all parts of the dominions had surrendered
to Octavian, and that nothing now remained to him save Egypt and its
forces. Thereupon, by the code of honour then in
recognition, Antony ought most certainly to have killed himself; but a new
idea had entered his head, appealing to his sentimental and theatrical
nature. He decided that he would not die, but would live, like
Timon of Athens, the enemy of all men. He would build himself a little
house, the walls buffeted by the rolling swell of the sea; and there in
solitude he would count out the days of his life, his hand turned against
all men. There was a pier jutting out into the Great Harbour1 just
to the west of the Island of Antirrhodos, close
to the Forum and the Temple of Neptune. Though a powerful construction,
some three hundred yards long, it does not appear to have been then in
use; and Antony hit upon the idea of repairing it and building himself a
little villa at its extreme end, wherein he might dwell in
solitude. Cleopatra was far too much occupied with the business of
life to care what her husband did; and she seems to have humoured him as she would a child, and to have caused
a nice little house to be built for him on this site, which, in honour of the misanthrope whom Antony desired to
emulate, she named the Timonium. It appears that she was entirely
estranged from him at this time, and he was, no doubt, glad enough to
remove himself from the scorn of her eyes and tongue. From his
new dwelling he could look across the water to Cleopatra’s palace;
and at night the blaze of the Pharos beacon, and the many gleaming windows
on the Lochias Promontory and around the harbour, all reflected with the stars in the dark
water, must have formed a spectacle romantic enough for any dreamer. In
the daytime he could watch the vessels entering or leaving the
port; and behind him the noise and bustle of Cleopatra’s busy Alexandrians
was wafted to his ears to serve as a correct subject for his Timonian curses.
The famous Timon, I
need hardly say, was a citizen of Athens, who lived during the days of the
Peloponnesian war, and figures in the comedies of Aristophanes and Plato.
He heartily detested his fellow-men, his only two associates being Alcibiades,
whom he esteemed because he was likely to do so much mischief to
Athens, and Apemantus, who also was a confirmed
misanthrope. Once when Timon and Apemantus were
celebrating a drinking festival alone together, the latter, wishing
to show how much he appreciated the fact that no other of his hated
fellow-men was present, remarked: “ What a pleasant little party, Timon! ”
“Well, it would be,” replied Timon, “if you were not here.” Upon
another occasion, during an assembly in the public meetingplace,
Timon mounted into the speaker’s place and addressed the crowd. “ Men of
Athens,” he said, “ I have a little plot of ground, and in it grows a
fig-tree, from the branches of which many citizens have been pleased
to hang themselves; and now, having resolved to build on that site, I wish
to announce it publicly, that any of you who may so wish may go and
hang yourselves there before I cut it down.” Before his death he
composed two epitaphs, one of which reads—
“ Timon, the
misanthrope, am I below,
Go, and revile me,
stranger—only go!”
The other, which
was inscribed upon his tomb, reads—
“ Freed from a
tedious life, I lie below.
Ask not my name,
but take my curse and go.”
Such was the man
whom Antony now desired to imitate ; and for the present the fallen Autocrator may be left seated in glum solitude, while
Cleopatra’s eager struggle for her throne occupies our attention.
The Queen’s activities were now directed to urgent affairs of State. She
engaged herself in sending embassies to the various neighbouring kingdoms in the attempt to confirm her earlier friendships. Alexandria and
Egypt had to be governed with extreme firmness, in order to prevent
any insurrections or riots in these critical days; and, at the same time,
her subjects had to be heavily taxed so that she might raise money for her
projects. The task of government must have been peculiarly anxious,
and the dread of the impending reckoning with Octavian hung over her like
a dark cloud. It was quite certain that Octavian would presently
invade Egypt; but for the moment he was prevented from doing so,
mainly by financial embarrassments. After his visit to Athens he had
crossed into Asia Minor, and now he was making arrangements for an
advance through Syria to Egypt, as soon as he should have collected
enough money for the expedition.
Towards the close
of the year BC 31, the Jewish King Herod seems to have come to Alexandria to
discuss the situation with Antony, his former friend and
patron. Herod’s dislike of Cleopatra, and his desire to put her to
death when she was passing through his country, will be recalled;1 and now, after paying the necessary compliments to the Queen, he appears
to have engaged himself in earnest conversation with Antony,
perhaps visiting him in his sea-girt hermitage. Josephus tells us
that he urged the fallen triumvir to arrange for the assassination of
Cleopatra, declaring that only by so doing could he hope to have his life
spared by Octavian. Antony, however, would not entertain this proposal,
for, though anxious to escape his impending doom, he was not prepared
to do so at the cost of his wife. Herod’s object, of course, was to rid his
horizon of the fascinating queen, who might very possibly play upon
Octavian’s sympathies and retain her Egyptian and Syrian dominions, thus
remaining an objectionable and exacting neighbour to the kingdom of Judea. But failing to obtain Antony’s co-operation in
this plot, he returned to Jerusalem, and presently sailed for Rhodes to
pay his respects to Octavian. Antony, hearing of his intention, sent after
him a certain Alexis of Laodicea, to urge him not to abandon his cause,
This Alexis had been instrumental in persuading Antony to
divorce Octavia, and Cleopatra had often used him in persuading her
husband to actions in regard to which he was undetermined; but he now
showed the misapplication of the trust placed in him both by Antony and
the Queen, for he did not return to Egypt from Herod’s court, going
on instead to place himself at the disposal of Octavian. His connection
with Octavia’s divorce, however, had not been forgotten by her revengeful
brother, and his treachery was rewarded by a summary death. Herod,
meanwhile, by boldly admitting that he had been Antony’s friend, but was
now prepared to change his allegiance, managed to win the favour of the conqueror, and his throne was not taken from
him, although practically all the other kings and princes who had assisted
Antony were dispossessed.
About the beginning
of February BC 30, Octavian returned to Italy to quell certain disturbances
arising from his inability to pay his disbanded troops, and there he
stayed about a month, sailing once more for Asia Minor early in March.
Dion tells us that the news of his voyage to Rome and that of his return
to Asia Minor were received simultaneously in Alexandria, probably late in
April; but I think it very unlikely that the news of the first voyage was
so long delayed, and, at any rate, some rumours of Octavian’s retirement to Rome must have filtered through to Cleopatra
during the month of March.
The news of this
respite once more fired the Queen with hope, and she determined to make the
best possible use of this precious gift of time. It will be remembered
that her son Caesarion, if I am not in error, was born at the beginning of
July BC 47; but a short time afterwards, some eighty days were
added to the calendar in order to correct the existing inexactitude, the
real anniversary of the boy’s birthday thereby being made to fall at about
the middle of April. The preparations for the celebration in
this year BC 30, of his seventeenth birthday, were thus beginning to
be put into motion at the time when Octavian was still thought to be
struggling in Rome with his discontented troops. Cleopatra therefore
determined to mark the festival by very great splendour, and
to celebrate it more particularly by a public declaration of the fact that
Caesarion was now of age. I do not think it can be determined with
certainty whether or not the seventeenth birthday was the customary age at
which the state of manhood was supposed to be reached by an Egyptian sovereign,
but it may certainly be said that the coming of age was seldom, if ever,
postponed to a later period. Cleopatra seems to have wished to make a very
particular point of this fact of her son’s majority, which would
demonstrate to the Alexandrians, as Dion says, “that they now had a man as
King.” Let the public think, if they were so minded, that she herself was
a defeated and condemned woman; but from this time onwards they had a
grown man to lead them, a son of the divine Julius Caesar, for whose
rights she had fought while he was a boy, but who was henceforth
capable of defending himself. Whatever her own fate might be, her son
would, at any rate, have a better chance of retaining his throne by being
firmly established upon it in the capacity of a grown man. In future
she herself could work, as it were, behind the scenes, and her son
could carry on the great task which she had so long striven to accomplish.
When the news of
the coming celebrations was conveyed to Antony in his hermitage, he seems to
have been much disturbed by it. Caesarion and his rights had been to a
large extent the cause of his ruin, and he must have been somewhat
frightened at the audacity of the Queen in thus giving Octavian further
cause for annoyance. Here was Alexandria preparing to celebrate in the
most triumphant manner the coming of age of Octavian’s rival, the claimant
to Julius Caesar’s powers and estate. Was the move to be regarded
as clever policy or as reckless effrontery ? Leaving the passive
solitude of his little Timonium, he seems to have entered once more into
active discussions with Cleopatra ; and as a result of these conversations,
he appears to have received the impression that his wife’s desire was now
to resign her power to a large extent into her son’s hands, thus leaving
to the energy of youth the labours which middle
age had failed to accomplish. This aspect of the movement appealed to him,
and he determined in like manner to be represented in future by a
younger generation. His son by Fulvia, Antyllus, who was a year or so younger than Caesarion,
was living in the Alexandrian Palace; and Antony therefore arranged
with Cleopatra that the two youths should together be declared of age
(ephebi), Antyllus thenceforth being authorised to wear the legal dress of Roman manhood.
Cleopatra then appears to have persuaded her husband to give up his
ridiculous affectation of misanthropy, and either to make himself useful
in organising her schemes of defence,
or to leave Egypt altogether. Antony was by this time heartily
tired of his solitary life, and he was glad enough to abandon his Timonian pose. He therefore took up his residence once
more in the Palace, and both he and Cleopatra made some attempt to renew
their old relationship. Their paths had diverged, however, too far ever
to resume any sort of unity. Antony had brooded in solitude over his
supposed wrongs, and he now regarded his wife with a sort of suspicion;
and she, on her part, accepted him no longer as her equal, but as a
creature deserving her contempt, though arousing to some extent her
generous pity.
The birthday
celebrations were conducted on the most magnificent lines, and the whole city
was given over to feasting and revelling for
many days. The impending storm was put away from the minds of all, and it
would have been indeed difficult for a visitor to Alexandria during
that time to believe that he had entered a city whose rulers had recently been
defeated by an enemy already preparing to invade Egypt itself. Cleopatra,
in fact, could not be brought to admit that the game was up; and in
spite of the misery and anxiety weighing upon her mind she kept a cheerful
and hopeful demeanour which ought to have won
for her the admiration of all historians. Antony, on the other hand, was
completely demoralised by the situation; and the
birthday festivities having whetted his appetite once more for the
pleasures of riotous living, he decided to bring his life to a
close in a round of mad dissipation. Calling together the members of
the order of Inimitable Livers, the banqueting club which he had founded some
years before, he invited them to sign their names to the roll
of membership of a new society which he named the Synapotha-noumenoi or the “ Die-togethers.” “ Let us eat, drink, and be merry, for tomorrow
we die,” must have been his motto; and he seems to have thrown himself
into this new phase with as much shallow profundity as he had displayed
in his adoption of the Timonian pose. Having no
longer a world-wide audience before whom he could play the jovial role of
Bacchus or Hercules, he now acted his dramatic parts before the eyes of
an* inner love of pretence; and with a kind of
honest and boyish charlatanism he paraded the halls of the Palace in
the grim but not original character of the reveller who banqueted with his good friend Death. Antony actually had no
intention of dying: he hoped to be allowed to retire, like his late
colleague, Lepidus, the third triumvir, into an unmolested private life;
but the paradoxical situation in which he now found himself, that of a
state prisoner sent back, as it were, on bail to the luxuries of his home, could
not fail to be turned to account by this “ colossal child.”
Cleopatra, on the
other hand, was prepared for all eventualities; and, while she hoped somehow to
be able to win her way out of her dilemma, she did not fail to make
ready for the death which she might have to face. The news of Octavian’s
return to Asia Minor was presently received in Alexandria, and she must
have felt that her chances of successfully circumventing her
difficulties were remote. She therefore busied herself in making a
collection of all manner of poisonous drugs, and she often went down to
the dungeons to make eager experiments upon the persons of condemned
criminals. Anxiously she watched the death-struggles of
the prisoners to whom the different poisons had been administered, discarding
those drugs which produced pain and convulsions, and continuing her tests
and trials with those which appeared to offer an easy liberation from
life. She also experimented with venomous snakes, subjecting animals and
human beings to their poisonous bites; and Plutarch tells us that “ she
pretty well satisfied herself that nothing was comparable to the bite
of the asp, which, without causing convulsion or groaning, brought on
a heavy drowsiness and coma, with a gentle perspiration on the face, the
senses being stupefied by degrees, and the victim being apparently
sensible of no pain, but only annoyed when disturbed or
awakened, like one who is in a profound natural sleep.”1 If
the worst came to the worst, she decided that she would take her life
in this manner; and this question being settled, she turned her undivided
attention once more to the problems which beset her.
By May Octavian had
marched into Syria, where all the garrisons surrendered to him. He sent
Cornelius Gallus to take command of the legions which had surrendered
to him in North Africa, and this army had now taken possession of Paraetonium, where Antony had stayed after his flight
from Actium. The news that this frontier fortress had passed into the
hands of the enemy had not yet reached Alexandria, but that
of Octavian’s advance through Syria was already known in the city,
and must have caused the greatest anxiety. Cleopatra thereupon decided
upon a bold and dignified course of action. Towards the end of May she
sent her son Caesarion, with his tutor Rhodon,
up the Nile to Koptos, and thence across the
desert to the port of Berenice, where as many ships as she could collect
were ordered to be in waiting for him. The young Caesar travelled, it
would seem, in considerable state, and carried with him a huge sum of
money. He was expected to arrive at Berenice by about the end
of June; and when, towards the middle of July, the merchants
journeying to India began to set out upon their long voyage, it was
arranged that he should also set sail for those distant lands, there to
make friends with the Kings of Hindustan, and perhaps to organise the great amalgamation of eastern nations of
which Cleopatra had so often dreamed. She herself decided to
remain at Alexandria, first to negotiate with Octavian for
the retention of her throne, and in the event of this proving unsuccessful,
to fight him to the death. No thought of flight entered her mind; and though, with a mother’s solicitous care, she made these adventurous
arrangements for the safety of her beloved son, it does not seem to have
occurred to her to accompany him to the East, where she might have
expected at any rate to find a temporary harbour of refuge. Her parting with him must have been one of the most unhappy
events of her unfortunate life. For his safety and for his rights
she had struggled for seventeen years; and now it was necessary to
send him with the Indian merchants across perilous seas to strange lands
in order to save him from the clutches of his successful rival Octavian,
while she herself remained to face their enemies and to fight
for their joint throne. Her thoughts in these days of distress were
turning once more to the memory of the boy’s father, the great Julius
Caesar, for often, it would seem, she gazed at his pictures or read over
again the letters which he had written to her; and now as she despatched the young Caesar upon his distant voyage to
those lands which had always so keenly interested his father,
she must have invoked the aid of that deified spirit which all the
Roman world worshipped as Divus Julius,
and, in an agony of supplication, must have implored him to come to
the assistance of his only earthly son and heir.
CHAPTER XIX.
OCTAVIAN’S INVASION OF EGYPT AND THE DEATH OF ANTONY
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