Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 2.djvu/345

 B. xii. c, vni. 21. PHRYGIA. 337 the disciples of Erasistratus under the conduct of Hicesius. At present there is nothing of this kind. 21. The names of some Phrygian tribes, as the Berecyntes [and Cerbesii], are mentioned, which no longer exist. And Alcman says, "He played the Cerbesian, a Phrygian air." They speak also of a Cerbesian pit which sends forth destruc- tive exhalations ; this however exists, but the people have no longer the name of Cerbesii. ^Eschylus in his Niobe 1 con- founds them ; Niobe says that she shall remember Tantalus, and his story ; " those who have an altar of Jupiter, their paternal god. on life Idaean hill," and again ; " Sipylus in the Idaean land," and Tantalus says, " I sow the furrows of the Berecynthian fields, extending twelve days' journey, where the seat of Adrasteia and Ida resound with the lowing of herds and the bleating of sheep ; all the plain re-echoes with their cries." 1 The Niobe, a lost tragedy of Sophocles, is often quoted ; this is pro- bably here meant.