5. The young man had
the tact to understand this, and, conforming his will
to the necessity, fled to the mountain wilds to wait for the end of the
persecution. He began with easy stages, and repeated halts, to advance into the
desert. At length he found a rocky mountain, at the foot of which, closed by a
stone, was a cave of no great size. He removed the
stone (so eager are men to learn what is hidden), made eager search, and saw
within a large hall, open to the sky, but shaded by the wide-spread branches of
an ancient palm. The tree, however, did not conceal a fountain of transparent
clearness, the waters whereof no sooner gushed forth than the stream was
swallowed up in a small opening of the same ground which gave it birth. There
were besides in the mountain, which was full of cavities, many habitable
places, in which were seen, now rough with rust, anvils and hammers for
stamping money. The place, Egyptian writers relate, was a secret mint at the
time of Antony’s union with Cleopatra.
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