Chap. 1.] ACCOUNT OF COUNTEIES, ETC. 381 



and it is a -well-known fact, that on the flight of the bar- 

 barians our troops reached Mount Atlas. It became a boast, 

 not only among men of consular rank, and generals selected 

 from the senate, who at that time held the command, but 

 among persons of equestrian rank as well, who after that 

 period held the government there, that they had penetrated as 

 far as Mount Atlas. There are, as we have already stated, five 

 Eoman colonies in this province ; and it may very possibly ap- 

 pear, if we listen only to what report says, that this mountain 

 is easily accessible. Upon trial, however, it has been pretty 

 generally shown, that all such statements are utterly fal- 

 lacious ; and it is too true, that men in high station, when 

 they are disinclined to take the trouble of inquiring into 

 the truth, through a feeling of shame at their ignorance arc 

 not averse to be guilty of falsehood ; and never is implicit 

 credence more readily given, than when a falsehood is sup- 

 ported by the authority of some personage of high considera- 

 tion. For my own part, I am far less surprised that there are 

 still some facts remaining undiscovered by men of the eques- 

 trian order, and even those among them who have attained 

 senatorial rank, than that the love of luxury has left any- 

 thing unascertained; the impulse of which must be great 

 indeed, and most powerfully felt, when the very forests are 

 ransacked for their ivory and citron- wood \ and all the rocks 

 of Q-aetulia are searched for the murex and the purple. 



From the natives, however, we learn, that on the coast, at 

 a distance of 150 miles from the Salat, the river Asana'^ pre- 

 sents itself; its waters are salt, but it is remarkable for its 

 fine harbour. They also say that after this we come to a 

 river known by the name of Fut^, and then, after crossing 

 another called Vior which lies on the road, at a distance of 

 200 miles we arrive at Dyris'', such being the name which in 

 their language they give to Mount Atlas. According to their 



had been on terms of strict alliance with the Eoman people, who had 

 decreed him a toga picta and a sceptre, as a mark of their friendship. 



^ Ivory and citron- wood, or cedar, were used for the making and in- 

 laying of the tables used by the Roman nobility. See B. xiii. c. 23. 



2 Supposed by some geographers to be the modem Wadi-Tensift. It 

 has been also confounded with the Anatis (see note ^, p. 369) ; while 

 others again identify it with the Anidus. It is more commonly spelt 

 * Asama.' » Or Phuth. It does not appear to have been identified. 



■* The range is still called by the name of Daran. 



