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[6]

But I do not know how anyone can trust him concerning things that are uncertain if he has nothing plausible to say about them, when he reasons so illogically about things that are obvious; and this too, although he was a friend of Pompey, who made an expedition against the Iberians and the Albanians, from sea to sea on either side, both the Caspian and the Colchian1 Seas. At any rate, it is said that Pompey, upon arriving at Rhodes on his expedition against the pirates (immediately thereafter he was to set out against both Mithridates and the tribes which extended as far as the Caspian Sea), happened to attend one of the lectures of Poseidonius, and that when he went out he asked Poseidonius whether he had any orders to give, and that Poseidonius replied:“Ever bravest be, and preeminent o'er others.
2Add to this that among other works he wrote also the history of Pompey. So for this reason he should have been more regardful of the truth.

1 The Euxine.

2 Hom. Il. 6.208

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load focus English (H.C. Hamilton, Esq., W. Falconer, M.A., 1903)
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