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[17] And to palliate their fault or the deception which they had suffered from greater cleverness, they bombarded the ears of the emperor (most retentive of all gossip) with false charges against Papa, alleging that he was wonderfully skilled through the incantations of Circe 1 in changing and weakening men's bodies; and they added that, having by arts of that kind spread darkness round himself, 2 and by changing his own form and that of his followers, having passed through their lines, [p. 305] if he survived this trickery, he would cause sad troubles.

1 Cf. Odyss. x. 233 ff.

2 Offusa sibi caligine refers to Papa, meaning that he had wrapped himself in a cloud.

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