The goose also keeps a vigilant guard; a fact which is well
attested by the defence of the Capitol, at a moment when, by
the silence of the dogs, the commonwealth had been betrayed:[1]
for which reason it is that the Censors always, the first thing
of all, attend to the farming-out of the feeding of the sacred
geese. What is still more, too, there is a love-story about this
animal. At Ægium one is said to have conceived a passion for
a beautiful boy, a native of Olenos,[2] and another for Glauce,
a damsel who was lute-player to King Ptolemy; for whom at
the same time a ram is said also to have conceived a passion.
One might almost be tempted to think that these creatures
have an appreciation of wisdom:[3] for it is said, that one of
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