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In this place they continued two years, but at the end of that time,
as their ill luck still followed them, they left the island to the care
of one of their number, and went in a body to Delphi, where they made
complaint at the shrine to the effect that, notwithstanding they had
colonised Libya, they prospered as poorly as before. Hereon the
Pythoness made them the following answer:
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Knowest thou better than I, fair Libya abounding in fleeces?
Better the stranger than he who has trod it? Oh! Clever Theraeans!
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Battus and his friends, when they heard this, sailed back to
Platea: it was plain the god would not hold them acquitted of the
colony till they were absolutely in Libya. So, taking with them the
man whom they had left upon the island, they made a settlement on the
mainland directly opposite Platea, fixing themselves at a place called
Aziris, which is closed in on both sides by the most beautiful hills,
and on one side is washed by a river.
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