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A Portuguese fleet becomes the object of conflict between Roman gods.

Page 283 of 1164
Table of Contents

Stanza 3 16

16

“Gallia can there be seen, whose name hath flown where Caesar’s triumphs to the world are told; by Séquana ’tis watered and the Rhone, by Rhine’s deep current and Garumna cold: Here rise the ranges from Pyréne known, the Nymph ensepulchre’d in days of old, whence, legends say, the conflagrated woods rolled golden streams, and flowèd silvern floods.

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