Page:The geography of Strabo (1854) Volume 2.djvu/362

 354 STRABO. CASAUB. 593. ing as a simple and savage people assumed the milder cha- racter of the second kind of community. There is, how- ever, a distinction to be observed even among these, as of rustic, half rustic, and of civilized people. Among these finally arose a gradual change, and an assumption of names, applied to polished and high character, the result of an im- proved moral condition produced by a change of situation and mode of life. Plato says that the poet describes these differences, alleging as an example of the first form of society the mode of life among the Cyclops, who subsisted on the fruits of the earth growing spontaneously, and who occupied certain caves in the heights of mountains ; " all things grow there," he says, " without sowing seed, and without the plough. " But they have no assemblies for consulting together, nor administra- tion of laws, but live on the heights of lofty mountains, in deep caves, and each gives laws to his wife and children." ' As an example of the second form of society, he alleges the mode of life und er Dardanus ; " he founded Dardania ; for sacred Ilium was not yet a city in the plain with inhabitants, but they still dwelt at the foot of Ida abounding with streams," 2 An example of the third state of society is taken from that in the time of Ilus, when the people inhabited the plains. He is said to have been the founder of Ilium, from whom the city had its name. It is probable that for this reason he was buried in the middle of the plain, because he first ventured to make a settlement in it, " they Pushed through the middle of the plain by the wild fig-tree near the tdmb of ancient Ilus, the son of Dardanus." 3 He did not, however, place entire confidence in the situation, for he did not build the city where it stands at present, but nearly thirty stadia higher to the east, towards Ida, and Dardania, near the present village of the Ilienses. The pre- sent Ilienses are ambitious of having it supposed that theirs is the ancient city, and have furnished a subject of discussion to those who form their conjectures from the poetry of Homer ; but it does not seem to be the city meant by the poet. Other vriters also relate, that the city had frequently changed its lace, but at last about the time of Cro3sus it became station- 1 Od. ix. 109, 112. 2 II. xx. 216. 3 II. xi. 16G.