130 plint's nattteal histobt. [Book II. 



medicates them ^ Among the prodigies which have occurred, 

 there is one which happened when Dionysius, the tyrant of 

 Sicily, was expelled from his kingdom ; that, for the space 

 of one day, the water in the harbour became sweet. 



(101.) The moon, on the contrary, is said to be a feminine 

 and delicate planet, and also nocturnal ; also that it resolves 

 humours and draws them out, but does not carry them off. 

 It is manifest that the carcases of wild beasts are rendered 

 putrid by its beams, that, during sleep, it draws up the 

 accumulated torpor into the head, that it melts ice, and 

 relaxes all things by its moistening spirit^. Thus the 

 changes of nature compensate each other, and are always 

 adequate to their destined purpose ; some of them congealing 

 the elements of the stars and others dissolving them. The 

 moon is said to be fed by fresh, and the sun by salt water. 



CHAP. 105. (102.) — ^WHERE THE SEA IS THE DEEPEST. 



Pabianus^ informs us that the greatest depth of the sea is 

 15 stadia"*. We learn from others, that in the Euxine, 

 opposite to the nation of the Coraxi, at what is called the 

 Depths of the Euxine*, about 300 stadia^ from the main land, 

 the sea is immensely deep, no bottom having been found. 



* The commentators discuss at considerable length the relative merits 

 of the three hypotheses here proposed, to account for the saltness of the 

 ocean ; all of which are equally unfoimded. See Hardouin in Lemaire, 

 i. 434, 435. Aristotle's opinion on this subject is contained in his Meteor. 



2 It is not easy to ascertain the origin of the very general opinion re- 

 spectmg the pecuHar physical action of the moon. The alleged facts are, 

 for the most part, without foundation, and I am not aware of any cir- 

 cumstance which could, originally, have made them a part of the popular 

 creed of so many nations, ancient as well as modern. Perhaps some of 

 the effects which have been ascribed to the specific action of the moon, 



•may be explained by the lower temperature and greater dampness of the 

 air, during the absence of the sun. 



3 There appears to be some doubt respecting the history of the person 

 here referred to : according to the accoimt of Hardouin, Fabianus was a 

 naturahst, who enjoyed a high repution ; he hved in the time of Tiberius : 

 see Lemaire, i. 188. 



■* This would be a depth of 3125 yards, not very far short of two 

 miles ; see Adam's Rom. Antiq. p. 503. 



5 " BaOea Ponti ;" Aristotle refers to this as one of those parts where 

 -the sea is unfathomable ; Meteor, i. 13. 



* A distance of nearly nine and a half miles. 



