[Cleopatra by Jacob Abbott]@TWC D-Link bookCleopatra CHAPTER VIII 1/20
CHAPTER VIII. CLEOPATRA A QUEEN. The Alexandrine war very short .-- Its extent .-- Revenues of Egypt .-- The city repaired .-- The library rebuilt .-- A new collection of manuscripts .-- Luxury and splendor .-- Deterioration of Cleopatra's character .-- The young Ptolemy .-- Cleopatra assassinates him .-- Career of Caesar .-- His rapid course of conquest .-- Cleopatra determines to go to Rome .-- Feelings of the Romans .-- Caesar's four triumphs .-- Nature of triumphal processions .-- Arsinoe .-- Sympathy of the Roman people .-- Caesar overacts his part .-- Feasts and festivals .-- Riot and debauchery .-- Public combats .-- The artificial lake .-- Combat upon it .-- Land combats .-- The people shocked .-- Cleopatra's visit .-- Caesar's plans for making himself king .-- Conspiracy against Caesar .-- He is assassinated .-- Arsinoe released .-- Calpurnia mourns her husband's death .-- Calpurnia looks to Mark Antony as her protector. The war by which Caesar reinstated Cleopatra upon the throne was not one of very long duration.
Caesar arrived in Egypt in pursuit of Pompey about the first of August; the war was ended and Cleopatra established in secure possession by the end of January; so that the conflict, violent as it was while it continued, was very brief, the peaceful and commercial pursuits of the Alexandrians having been interrupted by it only for a few months. Nor did either the war itself, or the derangements consequent upon it, extend very far into the interior of the country.
The city of Alexandria itself and the neighboring coasts were the chief scenes of the contest until Mithradates arrived at Pelusium.
He, it is true, marched across the Delta, and the final battle was fought in the interior of the country.
It was, however, after all, but a very small portion of the Egyptian territory that was directly affected by the war.
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