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He was succeeded on the throne, they said, by a blind man, a native
of Anysis, whose own name also was Anysis. Under him Egypt was
invaded by a vast army of Ethiopians, led by Sabacos, their king.
The blind Anysis fled away to the marsh-country, and the Ethiopian
was lord of the land for fifty years, during which his mode of rule was
the following: When an Egyptian was guilty of an offence, his plan
was not to punish him with death: instead of so doing, he sentenced
him, according to the nature of his crime, to raise the ground to a
greater or a less extent in the neighbourhood of the city to which he
belonged. Thus the cities came to be even more elevated than they were
before. As early as the time of Sesostris, they had been raised by
those who dug the canals in his reign; this second elevation of the
soil under the Ethiopian king gave them a very lofty position. Among
the many cities which thus attained to a great elevation, none (I
think) was raised so much as the town called Bubastis, where there is
a temple of the goddess Bubastis, which well deserves to be
described. Other temples may be grander, and may have cost more in
the building, but there is none so pleasant to the eye as this of
Bubastis. The Bubastis of the Egyptians is the same as the Artemis
(Diana) of the Greeks.
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