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30.

Xerxes said this and made good his words, then journeyed ever onward. Passing by the Phrygian town called Anaua, and the lake from which salt is obtained, he came to Colossae, a great city in Phrygia; there the river Lycus plunges into a cleft in the earth and disappears,1 until it reappears about five stadia away; this river issues into the Maeander. [2] From Colossae the army held its course for the borders of Phrygia and Lydia, and came to the city of Cydrara, where there stands a pillar set up by Croesus which marks the boundary with an inscription.

1 The Lycus here flows in a narrow gorge, but there is no indication of its ever having flowed underground, except for a few yards.

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