The earlier part of the work dealt with the mythical origin of Rome and of carthage, the flight of Aeneas from Troy, his sojourn at the court of Dido, and his settlement in Latium.
"The Roman Poets of the Republic"
W. Y. Sellar
I once heard Lord Exmouth say that France was to England all that carthage was to Rome-the natural outlet for the temper of a people so quarrelsome that they would fight each other if they had not the French to fight."
"The Maid of Maiden Lane"
Amelia E. Barr
And now the great western peninsula becomes the battle-ground for Rome and carthage; the theatre of the Scipios on the one side, and the great family of the Barcas on the other.
"The Ethnology of the British Colonies and Dependencies"
Robert Gordon Latham