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The whole district whereof we have here discoursed has winters of
exceeding rigour. During eight months the frost is so intense that
water poured upon the ground does not form mud, but if a fire be
lighted on it mud is produced. The sea freezes, and the Cimmerian
Bosphorus is frozen over. At that season the Scythians who dwell
inside the trench make warlike expeditions upon the ice, and even drive
their waggons across to the country of the Sindians. Such is the
intensity of the cold during eight months out of the twelve; and even
in the remaining four the climate is still cool. The character of the
winter likewise is unlike that of the same season in any other country;
for at that time, when the rains ought to fall in Scythia, there is
scarcely any rain worth mentioning, while in summer it never gives over
raining; and thunder, which elsewhere is frequent then, in Scythia
is unknown in that part of the year, coming only in summer, when it is
very heavy. Thunder in the winter-time is there accounted a prodigy;
as also are earthquakes, whether they happen in winter or summer.
Horses bear the winter well, cold as it is, but mules and asses are
quite unable to bear it; whereas in other countries mules and asses are
found to endure the cold, while horses, if they stand still, are frost-bitten.
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