[Cleopatra by Jacob Abbott]@TWC D-Link book
Cleopatra

CHAPTER IV
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The difference in the men, in one respect, was very clearly evinced by the objects toward which their interest and attention were respectively turned after this great battle.

While the contest had been going on, the king and queen of Egypt, Archelaus and Berenice, were, of course, in the view both of Antony and Ptolemy, the two most conspicuous personages in the army of their enemies; and while Antony would naturally watch with the greatest interest the fate of his friend, the king, Ptolemy, would as naturally follow with the highest concern the destiny of his daughter.
Accordingly, when the battle was over, while the mind of Ptolemy might, as we should naturally expect, be chiefly occupied by the fact that his _daughter_ was made a captive, Antony's, we might suppose, would be engrossed by the tidings that his _friend_ had been slain.
The one rejoiced and the other mourned.

Antony sought for the body of his friend on the field of battle, and when it was found, he gave himself wholly to the work of providing for it a most magnificent burial.

He seemed, at the funeral, to lament the death of his ancient comrade with real and unaffected grief.

Ptolemy, on the other hand, was overwhelmed with joy at finding his daughter his captive.


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