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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #50106 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/50106)
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-Project Gutenberg's Greece and the Ægean Islands, by Philip Sanford Marden
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Greece and the Ægean Islands
-
-Author: Philip Sanford Marden
-
-Release Date: October 1, 2015 [EBook #50106]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GREECE AND THE ÆGEAN ISLANDS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by KD Weeks, Shaun Pinder and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Note:
-
-Minor errors in punctuation and formatting have been silently corrected.
-Please see the transcriber’s note at the end of this text for details
-regarding the handling of any textual issues encountered during its
-preparation.
-
-This version of the text cannot represent certain typographical effects.
-Italics are delimited with the ‘_’ character as _italic_. The appearance
-of blackletter font in the front matter is noted here by enclosing the
-text in ‘~’ as ‘~blackletter text~’.
-
-The captions of the full-page illustrations have been indicated, moved
-slightly to appear at paragraph breaks.
-
-Footnotes have been resequenced to be unique across the text, and were
-moved to follow the referencing paragraph.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- GREECE
- AND
- THE ÆGEAN ISLANDS
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-[Illustration: ACROPOLIS, SHOWING PROPYLÆA]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- GREECE
- AND THE
- ÆGEAN ISLANDS
-
- BY
-
- PHILIP SANFORD MARDEN
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-
-
- ~London~
-
- ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE & CO., LTD.
-
- BOSTON AND NEW YORK
-
- HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN & CO.
- 1907
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- COPYRIGHT 1907 BY PHILIP S. MARDEN
- ALL RIGHTS RESERVED
-
-
- _Published November 1907_
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- PROLEGOMENA
-
-
-What follows makes no pretense whatever of being a scientific work on
-Greece, from an archæological or other standpoint. That it is written at
-all is the resultant of several forces, chief among which are the
-consciousness that no book hitherto published, so far as I am aware, has
-covered quite the same ground, and the feeling, based on the experience
-of myself and others, that some such book ought to be available.
-
-By way of explanation and apology, I am forced to admit, even to myself,
-that what I have written, especially in the opening chapters, is liable
-to the occasional charge that it has a guide-bookish sound, despite an
-honest and persistent effort to avoid the same. In the sincere desire to
-show how easy it really is to visit Hellas, and in the ardent hope of
-making a few of the rough places smooth for first visitors, I have
-doubtless been needlessly prolix and explicit at the outset, notably in
-dealing with a number of sordid details and directions. Moreover, to
-deal in so small a compass with so vast a subject as that of ancient and
-modern Athens is a task fraught with many difficulties. One certainly
-cannot in such a book as this ignore Athens utterly, despite the fact
-that so much has been published hitherto about the city and its
-monuments that no further description is at all necessary. My object is
-not to make Athens more familiar, but rather to describe other and more
-remote sites in Greece for the information, and I hope also for the
-pleasure, of past and future travelers. Athens, however, I could not
-ignore; and while such brief treatment as is possible here is
-necessarily superficial, it may help to awaken an additional interest in
-that city where none existed before.
-
-Aside from the preliminary chapters and those dealing with Athens
-itself, I hope to have been more successful. I have, at any rate, been
-free in those other places from the depressing feeling that I was
-engaged on a work of supererogation, since this part of the subject is
-by no means hackneyed even through treatment by technical writers. Since
-the publication of most of the better known books on Greek travel, a
-great deal has been accomplished in the way of excavation, and much that
-is interesting has been laid bare, which has not been adequately
-described, even in the technical works. In dealing with these additions
-and in describing journeys to less familiar inland sites, as well as
-cruises to sundry of the classic islands of the Ægean, I hope this book
-will find its real excuse for being.
-
-In adopting a system for spelling the names of Greek cities, towns, and
-islands, I have been in something of a quandary, owing to the
-possibilities presented by the various customs of authors in this field,
-each one of which has something to recommend it and something, also, of
-disadvantage. If one spells Greek names in the more common Anglicized
-fashion, especially in writing for the average traveler, one certainly
-avoids the appearance of affectation, and also avoids misleading the
-reader by an unfamiliar form of an otherwise familiar word. Hence, after
-much debate and rather against my own personal preferences and usage in
-several instances, I have adhered in the main to the forms of name most
-familiar to American eyes and ears. In cases of obscure or little known
-sites, where it is occasionally more important to know the names as
-locally pronounced, I have followed the Greek forms. This, while
-doubtless not entirely logical, has seemed the best way out of a rather
-perplexing situation, bound to be unsatisfactory whichever way one
-attempts to solve the problem.
-
-In mercy to non-Hellenic readers, I have likewise sought to exclude with
-a firm hand quotations from the Greek language, and as far as reasonably
-possible to avoid the use of Greek words or expressions when English
-would answer every purpose.
-
-If, in such places as have seemed to demand it, I have touched upon
-archæological matters, I hope not to have led any reader far from the
-truth, although one admittedly an amateur in such matters runs grave
-risk in committing himself to paper where even the doctors themselves so
-often disagree. I hope especially to have escaped advancing mere
-personal opinions on moot points, since dilettanti in such a case have
-little business to own any opinions, and none at all to exploit them to
-the untutored as if they had importance or weight. Rather I have only
-the desire to arouse others to a consciousness that it is as easy now to
-view and enjoy the visible remnants of the glory that was Greece, as it
-is to view those of the grandeur that was Rome.
-
-In the writing of these chapters an effort has been made to set forth in
-non-technical terms only what the writer himself has seen and observed
-among these haunts of remote antiquity, with the idea of confining the
-scope of this book to the needs of those who, like himself, possess a
-veneration for the old things, an amateur’s love for the classics, and a
-desire to see and know that world which was born, lived, and died before
-our own was even dreamed of as existing. If by what is written herein
-others are led to go and see for themselves, or are in any wise assisted
-in making their acquaintance with Greece, or, better still, are enabled
-the more readily to recall days spent in that most fascinating of all
-the bygone nations, then this book, however unworthily dealing with a
-great subject, will not have been written in vain.
-
- PHILIP SANFORD MARDEN.
-
-LOWELL, MASS., August, 1907.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
- I. TRAVELING IN GREECE 1
-
- II. CRETE 18
-
- III. THE ENTRANCE TO GREECE 37
-
- IV. ATHENS; THE MODERN CITY 50
-
- V. ANCIENT ATHENS: THE ACROPOLIS 76
-
- VI. ANCIENT ATHENS: THE OTHER MONUMENTS 96
-
- VII. EXCURSIONS IN ATTICA 123
-
- VIII. DELPHI 146
-
- IX. MYCENÆ AND THE PLAIN OF ARGOS 169
-
- X. NAUPLIA AND EPIDAURUS 193
-
- XI. IN ARCADIA 211
-
- XII. ANDHRITSÆNA AND THE BASSÆ TEMPLE 229
-
- XIII. OVER THE HILLS TO OLYMPIA 247
-
- XIV. THE ISLES OF GREECE: DELOS 272
-
- XV. SAMOS AND THE TEMPLE AT BRANCHIDÆ 286
-
- XVI. COS AND CNIDOS 304
-
- XVII. RHODES 318
-
- XVIII. THERA 334
-
- XIX. NIOS; PAROS; A MIDNIGHT MASS 351
-
- XX. CORFU 368
-
- INDEX 381
-
- LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
- PAGE
-
- ACROPOLIS, SHOWING PROPYLÆA _Frontispiece_
-
- MAP 1
-
- LANDING-PLACE AT CANEA 20—
-
- THRONE OF MINOS AT CNOSSOS 34
-
- STORE-ROOMS IN MINOAN PALACE, CNOSSOS 36
-
- OLD CHURCH IN TURKISH QUARTER, ATHENS 60
-
- TEMPLE OF NIKÉ APTEROS 80
-
- THE PARTHENON, WEST PEDIMENT 86
-
- TEMPLE OF OLYMPIAN ZEUS 104
-
- THE AREOPAGUS 108
-
- THE THESEUM 112
-
- TOMB AMPHORA, CERAMICUS 116
-
- TOMB RELIEF, CERAMICUS 118
-
- BRONZE EPHEBUS, NATIONAL MUSEUM, ATHENS 120
-
- THE TEMPLE AT SUNIUM 134
-
- THE APPROACH TO ÆGINA 138
-
- THE TEMPLE AT ÆGINA 138
-
- PEASANT DANCERS AT MENIDI 142
-
- THE PLAIN BELOW DELPHI 150
-
- THE VALE OF DELPHI 156
-
- CHARIOTEER, DELPHI 166
-
- AGORA, MYCENÆ 180
-
- WOMAN SPINNING ON ROAD TO EPIDAURUS 198
-
-
- EPIDAURIAN SHEPHERDS 202
-
- THEATRE AT EPIDAURUS 206
-
- AN OUTPOST OF ARCADY 224
-
- THE GORGE OF THE ALPHEIOS 226
-
- ANDHRITSÆNA 230
-
- AN ARBOREAL CAMPANILE. ANDHRITSÆNA 234
-
- THRESHING FLOOR AT BASSÆ 240
-
- TEMPLE AT BASSÆ, FROM ABOVE 244
-
- TEMPLE AT BASSÆ, FROM BELOW 244
-
- HERÆUM. OLYMPIA 258
-
- ENTRANCE TO THE STADIUM. OLYMPIA 262
-
- DELOS, SHOWING GROTTO 282
-
- GROTTO OF APOLLO, DELOS 282
-
- COLUMN BASES. SAMOS 296
-
- CARVED COLUMN-BASE. BRANCHIDÆ 296
-
- TREE OF HIPPOCRATES. COS 306
-
- CNIDOS, SHOWING THE TWO HARBORS 314
-
- SCULPTURED TRIREME IN ROCK AT LINDOS. 327
- (From a Sketch by the Author)
-
- ARCHED PORTAL OF ACROPOLIS. LINDOS 328
-
- SANTORIN 336
-
- LANDING-PLACE AT THERA 338
-
- THERA 342
-
- A THERAN STREET 346
-
- OLD COLUMNS IN CHURCH, PAROS 362
-
- “SHIP OF ULYSSES.” CORFU 374
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
- GREECE
-
- AND
-
- THE ÆGEAN ISLANDS
-
-[Illustration:
-
- SKETCH MAP
- OF
- GREECE
- AND THE
- ÆGEAN ISLANDS
-]
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER I. TRAVELING IN
- GREECE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-The days in which a visit to Greece might be set down as something quite
-unusual and apart from the beaten track of European travel have passed
-away, and happily so. The announcement of one’s intention to visit
-Athens and its environs no longer affords occasion for astonishment, as
-it did when Greece was held to be almost the exclusive stamping-ground
-of the more strenuous archæologists. To be sure, those who have never
-experienced the delights of Hellenic travel are still given to
-wonderment at one’s expressed desire to revisit the classic land; but
-even this must pass away in its turn, since few voyage thither without
-awakening that desire.
-
-It is no longer an undertaking fraught with any difficulty—much less
-with any danger—to visit the main points of interest in the Hellenic
-kingdom; and, what is more to the purpose in the estimation of many, it
-is no longer an enterprise beset with discomfort, to any greater degree
-than is involved in a journey through Italy. The result of the growing
-consciousness of this fact has been a steadily increasing volume of
-travel to this richest of classic lands—richest not alone in its
-intangible memories, but richest also in its visible monuments of a
-remote past, presenting undying evidence of the genius of the Greeks for
-expressing the beautiful in terms of marble and stone. One may, of
-course, learn to appreciate the beautiful in Greek thought without
-leaving home, embodied as it is in the imposing literary remains to be
-met with in traversing the ordinary college course. But in order fully
-to know the beauty of the sculptures and architecture, such as
-culminated in the age of Pericles, one must visit Greece and see with
-his own eyes what the hand of Time has spared, often indeed in
-fragmentary form, but still occasionally touched with even a new
-loveliness through the mellowing processes of the ages.
-
-To any thinking, reading man or woman of the present day, the memories,
-legends, and history of ancient Greece must present sufficient
-attraction. Few of us stop to realize how much of our modern thought and
-feeling was first given adequate expression by the inhabitants of
-ancient Athens, or how much of our own daily speech is directly
-traceable to their tongue. Modern politics may still learn much tact of
-Pericles, and oratorical excellence of Æschines, as modern philosophy
-has developed from Socrates, Plato, and Aristotle. Is it not even true
-that a large part of modern religious thought, the hope of glory at
-least, if not the means of grace, finds its strongest foreshadowing in
-the groping of the more enlightened Athenians for a hope of immortality
-and life beyond the grave? The transition of the crowning architectural
-glory of the Acropolis at Athens from a temple of the virgin (parthenos)
-Athena to a church of the Virgin Mary was, after all, not so violent,
-when it is remembered that the later paganism had softened from its old
-system of corrupt personal deities to an abstract embodiment of their
-chief attributes or qualities, such as wisdom, healing, love, and war.
-Down to this day the traces of the pagan, or let us say the classic
-period, are easy to discern, mingled with the modern Greek Christianity,
-often unconsciously, and of course entirely devoid of any content of
-paganism, but still unmistakably there. To this day festivals once
-sacred to Asklepios still survive, in effect, though observed on
-Christian holy days and under Christian nomenclature, with no thought of
-reverence for the Epidaurian god, but nevertheless preserving intact the
-ancient central idea, which impelled the worshiper to sleep in the
-sanctuary awaiting the healing visit of a vision. In every church in
-Greece to-day one may see scores of little metal arms, legs, eyes, and
-other bodily organs hung up as votive offerings on the iconastasis, or
-altar screen, just as small anatomical models were once laid by grateful
-patients on the shrine of Asklepios at Cos. It is most striking and
-impressive, this interweaving of relics of the old-time paganism with
-the modern Greek religion, showing as it does a well-marked line of
-descent from the ancient beliefs without violent disruption or
-transition. It has become a well-recognized fact that certain modern
-churches often directly replace the ancient temples of the spot in a
-sort of orderly system, even if it be hard occasionally to explain. The
-successors of the fanes of Athena are ordinarily churches of the Virgin
-Mary, as was the case when the Parthenon was used for Christian worship.
-In other sites the worship of Poseidon gave way to churches sacred to
-St. Nicholas. The old temples of Ares occasionally flowered again, and
-not inappropriately, as churches of the martial St. George. Dionysus
-lives once more in churches named “St. Dionysius,” though no longer
-possessing any suspicion of a Bacchic flavor. Most striking of all is
-the almost appalling number of hills and mountains in Greece named “St.
-Elias,” and often bearing monasteries or churches of that designation.
-There is hardly a site in all Greece from which it is not possible to
-see at least one “St. Elias,” and I have been told that this is nothing
-more nor less than the perpetuation of the ancient shrines of Helios
-(the sun) under a Christian name, which, in the modern Greek
-pronunciation, is of a sound almost exactly similar to the ancient one.
-The substitution, therefore, when Christianity came to its own, was not
-an unnatural, nor indeed an entirely inappropriate, one.
-
-It all conspires to show that, while the modern Greek is sincerely and
-devoutly a Christian, his transition into his new faith from the
-religion of his remotest ancestors has been accompanied by a very
-considerable retention of old usages and old nomenclature, and by the
-persistence of ineradicable traces of the idealistic residuum that
-remained after the more gross portions of the ancient mythology had
-refined away and had left to the worshiper abstract godlike attributes,
-rather than the gods and goddesses his forefathers had created in man’s
-unworthy image. So, while nobody can call in question the Christianity
-of the modern Greek, his churches nevertheless often do mingle a quaint
-perfume of the ancient and classic days with the modern incense and odor
-of sanctity. To my own mind, this obvious direct descent of many a
-churchly custom or churchly name from the days of the mythical Olympian
-theocracy is one of the most impressively interesting things about
-modern Hellas and her people.
-
-In a far less striking, but no less real way, we ourselves are of course
-the direct inheritors of the classic Greeks, legatees of their store of
-thought, literature, and culture, and followers on the path the Greeks
-first pioneered. They and not we have been the creators in civilization,
-with all its varied fields of activity from politics to art. Of our own
-mental race the Greeks were the progenitors, and it is enough to
-recognize this fact of intellectual descent and kinship in order to view
-the Athenian Acropolis and the Hill of Mars with much the same thrill
-that one to-day feels, let us say, in coming from Kansas or California
-to look upon Plymouth Rock, the old state house at Philadelphia, or the
-fields of Lexington and Concord.
-
-All this by way of introduction to the thought that to visit Hellas is
-by no means a step aside, but rather one further step back along the
-highway traversed from east to west by the slow course of empire, and
-therefore a step natural and proper to be taken by every one who is
-interested in the history of civilized man, the better to understand the
-present by viewing it in the light of the past. The “philhellene,” as
-the Greeks call their friend of to-day, needs no apologist, and it is
-notable that the number of such philhellenes is growing annually.
-
-Time was, of course, when the visit to Greece meant so much labor,
-hardship, and expense that it was made by few. To-day it is no longer
-so. One may now visit the more interesting sites of the Greek peninsula
-and even certain of the islands with perfect ease, at no greater cost in
-money or effort than is entailed by any other Mediterranean journey, and
-with the added satisfaction that one sees not only inspiring scenery,
-but hills and vales peopled with a thousand ghostly memories running far
-back of the dawn of history and losing themselves in pagan legend, in
-the misty past when the fabled gods of high Olympus strove, intrigued,
-loved, and ruled.
-
-The natural result of a growing appreciation of the attractions of
-Greece is an increase in travel thither, which in its turn has begotten
-increasing excellence of accommodation at those points where visitors
-most do congregate. Railroads have been extended, hotels have multiplied
-and improved, steamers are more frequent and more comfortable. One need
-no longer be deterred by any fear of hardship involved in such a
-journey. Athens to-day offers hostelries of every grade, as does Rome.
-The more famous towns likely to be visited can show very creditable inns
-for the wayfarer, which are comfortable enough, especially to one inured
-to the hill towns of Italy or Sicily. Railway coaches, while still much
-below the standard of the corridor cars of the more western nations, are
-comfortable enough for journeys of moderate length, and must inevitably
-improve from year to year as the hotels have done already. As for safety
-of person and property, that ceased to be a problem long ago. Brigandage
-has been unknown in the Peloponnesus for many a long year. Drunkenness
-is exceedingly rare, and begging is infinitely more uncommon than in
-most Italian provinces and cities. Time is certain to remove the
-objection of the comparative isolation of Greece still more than it has
-done at this writing, no doubt. It is still true that Greece is, to all
-intents and purposes, an island, despite its physical connection with
-the mainland of Europe. The northern mountains, with the wild and
-semi-barbaric inhabitants thereamong, serve to insulate the kingdom
-effectually on the mainland side, just as the ocean insulates it on
-every other hand, so that one is really more out of the world at Athens
-than in Palermo. All arrival and departure is by sea; and even when
-Athens shall be finally connected by rail with Constantinople and the
-north, the bulk of communication between Greece and the western world
-will still be chiefly maritime, and still subject, as now, to the delays
-and inconveniences that must always beset an island kingdom. Daily
-steamers, an ideal not yet attained, will be the one effective way to
-shorten the distance between Hellas and Europe proper—not to mention
-America.
-
-It may be added that one need not be deterred from a tour in Greece by a
-lack of knowledge of the tongue, any more than one need allow an
-unfamiliarity with Italian to debar him from the pleasures of Italy. The
-essential and striking difference in the case is the distinctive form of
-the Greek letters, which naturally tends to confuse the unaccustomed
-visitor rather more than do Italian words, written in our own familiar
-alphabet. Still, even one quite unfamiliar with the Hellenic text may
-visit the country with comparatively little inconvenience from his
-ignorance, if content to follow the frequented routes, since in these
-days perfect English is spoken at all large hotels, and French at large
-and small alike. Indeed, the prevalence of French among all classes is
-likely to surprise one at first. The Greeks are excellent linguists, and
-many a man or woman of humble station will be found to possess a fair
-working knowledge of the Gallic tongue. It is entirely probable that in
-a few more years the effect of the present strong tendency toward
-emigration to America will reflect even more than it does now a general
-knowledge of English among the poorer people. I have frequently met with
-men in obscure inland towns who spoke English well, and once or twice
-discovered that they learned it in my own city, which has drawn heavily
-on the population of the Peloponnesus within recent years.
-
-If the traveler is fortunate enough to have studied ancient Greek in his
-school and college days, and—what is more rare—retains enough of it to
-enable him to recognize a few of the once familiar words, he will
-naturally find a considerable advantage therein. It is often stated that
-Greek has changed less since Agamemnon’s time than English has altered
-since the days of Chaucer; and while this generalization may not be
-strictly true, it is very near the fact, so that it is still possible
-for any student well versed in the ancient Greek to read a modern
-Athenian newspaper with considerable ease. The pronunciation, however,
-is vastly different from the systems taught in England and in America,
-so that even a good classical student requires long practice to deliver
-his Greek trippingly on the tongue in such wise that the modern Athenian
-can understand it. Grammatically speaking, Greek is to-day vastly
-simpler than it was in the days of Plato. It has been shorn of many of
-those fine distinctions that were, and are, such terrors to the American
-schoolboy. But the appearance of the letters and words, with their
-breathings and accents, is quite unchanged, and many of the ancient
-words are perfectly good in modern Greek with their old meanings
-unimpaired. When one has mastered the modern pronunciation, even to a
-very moderate degree, one is sure to find that the once despised “dead
-language” is not a dead language at all, but one in daily use by a
-nation of people who may claim with truth that they speak a speech as
-old as Agamemnon and far more homogeneous in its descent than modern
-Italian as it comes from the Latin.
-
-It cannot be disguised, however, that it is very desirable at least to
-know the Greek alphabet, even if one does not speak or read the
-language, since this little knowledge will often serve to give one a
-clue to the names of streets or railroad stations. Aside from that, the
-few words the habitual traveler always picks up will serve as well in
-Greece as anywhere. One should know, of course, the colloquial forms of
-asking “how much?” and for saying “It is too dear.” These are the primal
-necessities of European travel, always and everywhere. With these alone
-as equipment, one may go almost anywhere on earth. In addition to these
-rudimentary essentials, the ever-versatile Bædeker supplies, I believe,
-phrases of a simple kind, devised for every possible contingency, remote
-or otherwise, which might beset the traveler—omitting, curiously enough,
-the highly useful expression for hot water, which the traveler will
-speedily discover is “zestò nerò.” Among the conveniences, though not
-essential, might be included a smattering of knowledge of the Greek
-numerals to be used in bargaining with merchants and cab-drivers. But
-since the Greek merchant, for reasons which will later appear, is never
-without his pad and pencil, and since the written figures are the same
-as our own, the custom is to conduct bargains with Europeans generally
-by written symbols. The inevitable haggling over prices in the small
-shops requires little more than the sign manual, plus a determination to
-seem indifferent at all hazards. The Greek merchant, like every other,
-regards the voyager from foreign parts as legitimate prey, and long
-experience has led him to expect his price to be questioned. Hence
-nothing would surprise a small dealer more than to be taken at his
-initial figure, and the process of arriving at some middle ground
-remotely resembling reasonableness is often a complicated but perfectly
-good-humored affair.
-
-The cab-drivers present rather more difficulty. They seldom speak French
-and they carry no writing pads. The result is a frequent
-misunderstanding as to both price and destination, while in the
-settlement of all differences at the close of the “course” both cabby
-and his fare are evidently at a mutual linguistic disadvantage. The
-trouble over the destination is twofold, as a rule. Part of the time the
-cabman is “green” and not well acquainted with the city; and part of the
-time he is wholly unable to recognize, in the name pronounced to him,
-any suggestion of a street he may know perfectly well when pronounced
-with the proper accent. The element of accent is highly important in
-speaking Greek; for unless the stress is properly laid, a word will
-often elude entirely the comprehension of the native, although every
-syllable be otherwise correctly sounded. The names of the Greek streets
-are all in the genitive case, which makes the matter still worse. It is
-of small avail to say “Hermes Street” to a driver. He must have the
-Greek for “Street of Hermes” in order to get the idea clearly in mind.
-It is not safe to generalize, but I incline to rate the Greeks as rather
-slower than Italians at grasping a foreigner’s meaning, despite their
-cleverness and quickness at acquiring other languages themselves.
-However, this is getting considerably ahead of our narrative and in
-danger of losing sight of the main point, which is that Greece is easy
-enough to visit and enjoy, even if one is ignorant of the language. For
-those who feel safer to know a trifle of it, there is ample time on the
-steamer voyage toward the Grecian goal to acquire all that ordinary
-necessities demand.
-
-Let it be said, in passing from these general and preliminary remarks to
-a more detailed discussion of Hellenic travel, that the modern Greek has
-lost none of his ancient prototype’s reverence for the guest as a person
-having the highest claims upon him and none of the ancient regard for
-the sacred name of hospitality. Whatever may be said of the modern Greek
-character, it cannot be called in question as lacking in cordiality and
-kindness to the stranger. The most unselfish entertainer in the world is
-the Greek, who conceives the idea that he may be able to add to your
-happiness by his courtesy, and this is true in the country as well as in
-the city. The native met on the highway has always a salutation for you.
-If it is the season for harvesting grapes, you are welcome to taste and
-see that they are good. He will welcome you to his house and set before
-you the best it affords, the sweet “sumadha” or almond milk, the rich
-preserved quince, the glass of pungent “mastika,” or perhaps a bit of
-smoke-cured ham from the earthen jar which is kept for just such
-occasions as this. If he sets out to entertain, nothing is done by
-halves. The Greek bearing gifts need cause no fear to-day, unless it be
-a fear of superabundant hospitality such as admits of no repayment. He
-will drive a hard bargain with you in business, no doubt. Occasionally
-an unscrupulous native will commit a petty theft, as in any other
-country where only man is vile. But once appear to him in the guise of
-friendship and he will prove himself the most obliging creature in the
-world. He may not be as well aware of the general history of his remote
-ancestors as you are yourself, but what he does know about his vicinity
-he will relate to you with pride and explicitness. Curiously enough, the
-Greek in ordinary station is likely to think you wish to see modern
-rather than ancient things. He cannot understand why you go every
-evening to the Acropolis and muse on the steps of the Parthenon while
-you omit to visit the villas of Kephissià or Tatoïs. He would rather
-show you a tawdry pseudo-Byzantine church than a ruined temple. But the
-cordial spirit is there, and everybody who ever visited Greece has had
-occasion to know it and admire it.
-
-There remains necessary a word as to the choice of routes to Greece. As
-in the case of Venice, one may enter by either the front or the back
-door, so to speak; and probably, as in the case of Venice, more actually
-elect to enter by the rear. The two gateways of Hellas are the Piræus at
-the eastern front, and Patras at the back. Either may be selected as the
-point for beginning a land journey in the kingdom, and each has certain
-advantages. In any event the visitor should enter by one portal and
-leave by the other, and the direction may safely be left to be decided
-by the convenience and aims of each particular visitor’s case. Taking
-Naples as the natural starting-point of American travelers, two routes
-lie open. One is the railroad to Brindisi, traversing the mountainous
-Italian interior to the Adriatic coast, where on stated days very
-comfortable steamers ply between Brindisi and Patras, touching at Corfù.
-The other route is from Naples to the Piræus by sea on either French or
-Italian steamers, the latter lines being slower and enabling stops in
-Sicily and in Crete. To those fortunately possessed of ample time and
-willing to see something of Magna Graecia as well as of Greece proper,
-the slower route is decidedly to be recommended.
-
-For the purposes of this book let us choose to enter Greece by her
-imposing main portal of the Piræus, setting at naught several
-considerations which incline us to believe that, on the whole, the
-advantage lies rather with the contrary choice. Whatever else may be
-said in favor of either selection, it remains true that in any case one
-immediately encounters mythology and legend in the shape of the wily
-Ulysses, and is thus at once _en rapport_ with Grecian things. The
-steamers from Naples must sail through the Strait of Messina, between
-Scylla and Charybdis, once the terror of those mariners who had the
-experiences of Homer’s wandering hero before their eyes; while not far
-below Charybdis and just off the Sicilian shore they still show the
-wondering traveler a number of small rocks, rising abruptly from the
-ocean, as the very stones that Polyphemus hurled in his blind rage after
-the fleeing Odysseus, but fortunately without doing him any harm. If, on
-the contrary, we sail from Brindisi to Patras, we must pass Corfù, which
-as all the world knows was the island on which Odysseus was cast from
-his ship and where, after he had refreshed himself with sleep, he was
-awakened by the laughter of Nausicaa and her maids as they played at
-ball after the washing was done. Whichever way we go, we soon find that
-we have run into a land older than those with which we have been
-familiar, whose legends greet us even at this distance over miles of
-tossing waves. Let those who are content to voyage with us through the
-pages that follow, be content to reserve Corfù for the homeward journey,
-and to assume that our prow is headed now toward Crete, through a
-tossing sea such as led the ancients to exclaim, “The Cretan sea is
-wide!” The shadowy mountains on the left are the lofty southern prongs
-of the Grecian peninsula. Ahead, and not yet visible above the horizon,
-is the sharp, razor-like edge of Crete, and the dawn should find us in
-harbor at Canea.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER II. CRETE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-The island of Crete, lying like a long, narrow bar across the mouth of
-the Ægean Sea, presents a mountainous and rugged appearance to one
-approaching from any side. Possessing an extreme length of about one
-hundred and sixty miles, it is nowhere more than thirty-five miles in
-width, and in places much less than that. A lofty backbone of mountain
-runs through it from end to end. In all its coast-line few decent
-harbors are to be found, and that of the thriving city of Canea, near
-the northwestern end of the island, is no exception. In ancient times
-the fortifications and moles that were built to protect the ports had in
-view the small sailing vessels of light draught which were then common,
-and today it is necessary for steamers of any size to anchor in the
-practically open roadsteads outside the harbor proper. Needless to say,
-landing in small boats from a vessel stationed at this considerable
-distance outside the breakwater is a matter largely dependent on the
-wind and weather, not only at Canea, with which we are at present
-concerned, but at Candia, of which we shall speak later. In a north
-wind, such as frequently blows for days together, a landing on the
-northern coast is often quite impossible, and steamers have been known
-to lie for days off the island waiting a chance to approach and
-discharge. This contretemps, however, is less to be feared at Canea
-because of the proximity of the excellent though isolated Suda Bay,
-which is landlocked and deep, affording quiet water in any weather, but
-presenting the drawback that it is about four miles from the city of
-Canea, devoid of docks and surrounded by flat marshes. Nevertheless,
-steamers finding the weather too rough off the port do proceed thither
-on occasion and transact their business there, though with some
-difficulty. The resort to Suda, however, is seldom made save in
-exceedingly rough weather, for the stout shore boats of the Cretans are
-capable of braving very considerable waves and landing passengers and
-freight before the city itself in a fairly stiff northwest gale, as our
-own experience in several Cretan landings has proven abundantly. It is
-not a trip to be recommended to the timorous, however, when the sea is
-high; for although it is probably not as dangerous as it looks, the row
-across the open water between steamer and harbor is certainly rather
-terrifying in appearance, as the boats rise and fall, now in sight of
-each other on the crest of the waves, now disappearing for what seem
-interminable intervals in the valleys of water between what look like
-mountains of wave tossing angrily on all sides. The boatmen are skillful
-and comparatively few seas are shipped, but even so it is a passage
-likely to be dampening to the ardor in more ways than one. On a calm
-day, when the wind is light or offshore, there is naturally no trouble,
-and the boatmen have never seemed to me rapacious or insolent, but quite
-ready to abide by the very reasonable tariff charge for the round trip.
-In bad weather, as is not unnatural, it often happens that the men
-request a gratuity over and above the established franc-and-a-half rate,
-on the plea that the trip has been "molto cattivo" and the labor
-consequently out of all proportion to the tariff charge—which is true.
-It is no light task for three or four stout natives to row a heavy boat
-containing eight people over such a sea as often is to be found running
-off Canea, fighting for every foot of advance, and easing off now and
-then to put the boat head up to an unusually menacing comber.
-
-[Illustration: LANDING-PLACE AT CANEA]
-
-The landing at Canea, if the weather permits landing at all, is on a
-long curving stone quay, lined with picturesque buildings, including a
-mosque with its minaret, the latter testifying to the considerable
-residuum of Turkish and Mohammedan population that remains in this
-polyglot island, despite its present Greek rule under the oversight of
-the Christian powers of Europe. The houses along the quay are mostly a
-grayish white, with the light green shutters one learns to associate
-with similar towns everywhere in the Ægean. Behind the town at no very
-great distance may be seen rising lofty and forbidding mountains,
-snowcapped down to early May; but a brief ride out from the city to Suda
-Bay will serve to reveal some fertile and open valleys such as save
-Crete from being a barren and utterly uninviting land. The ordinary stop
-of an Italian steamer at this port is something like six or eight hours,
-which is amply sufficient to give a very good idea of Canea and its
-immediate neighborhood. The time is enough for a walk through the
-tortuous and narrow highways and byways of the city—walks in which one
-is attended by a crowd of small boys from the start, and indeed by large
-boys as well, all most persistently offering their most unnecessary
-guidance in the hope of receiving “backsheesh,” which truly Oriental
-word is to be heard at every turn, and affords one more enduring local
-monument to the former rule of the unspeakable Turk. These lads
-apparently speak a smattering of every known language, and are as quick
-and alert as the New York or Naples gamin. Incidentally, I wonder if
-every other visitor to Canea is afflicted with "Mustapha"? On our last
-landing there we were told, as we went over the side of the steamer to
-brave the tempestuous journey ashore in the boat which bobbed below, to
-be sure to look for “Mustapha.” The captain always recommended Mustapha,
-he said, and no Americano that ever enlisted the services of Mustapha as
-guide, philosopher, and friend for four Canean hours had ever regretted
-it. So we began diligent inquiry of the boatman if he knew this
-Mustapha. Yes, he did—and who better? Was he not Mustapha himself, in
-his own proper person? Inwardly congratulating ourselves at finding the
-indispensable with such remarkable promptitude, we soon gained the
-harbor, and the subsequent landing at the quay was assisted in by at
-least forty hardy Caneans, including one bullet-headed Nubian, seven
-shades darker than a particularly black ace of clubs, who exhibited a
-mouthful of ivory and proclaimed himself, unsolicited, as the true and
-only Mustapha,—a declaration that caused an instant and spontaneous howl
-of derision from sundry other bystanders, who promptly filed their
-claims to that Oriental name and all the excellences that it implied.
-Apparently Mustapha’s other name was Legion. Search for him was
-abandoned on the spot, and I would advise any subsequent traveler to do
-the same. Search is quite unnecessary. Wherever two or three Caneans are
-gathered together, there is Mustapha in the midst of them,—and perhaps
-two or three of him.
-
-It is by no means easy to get rid of the Canean urchins who follow you
-away from the landing-place and into the quaint and narrow streets of
-the town. By deploying your landing party, which is generally
-sufficiently numerous for the purpose, in blocks of three or four, the
-convoy of youth may be split into detachments and destroyed in detail.
-It may be an inexpensive and rather entertaining luxury to permit the
-brightest lad of the lot to go along, although, as has been intimated,
-guidance is about the last thing needed in Canea. The streets are very
-narrow, very crooked, and not over clean, and are lined with houses
-having those projecting basketwork windows overhead, such as are common
-enough in every Turkish or semi-Turkish city. Many of the women go
-heavily veiled, sometimes showing the upper face and sometimes not even
-that, giving an additional Oriental touch to the street scenes. This
-veiling is in part a survival of Turkish usages, and in part is due to
-the dust and glare. It is a practice to be met with in many other Ægean
-islands as well as in Crete. It is this perpetual recurrence of
-Mohammedan touches that prevents Canea from seeming typically Greek,
-despite its nominal allegiance. To all outward seeming it is Turkish
-still, and mosques and minarets rise above its roofs in more than one
-spot as one surveys it from the harbor or from the hills. The streets
-with their narrow alleys and overshadowing archways are tempting indeed
-to the camera, and it may as well be said once and for all that it is a
-grave mistake to visit Greece and the adjacent lands without that
-harmless instrument of retrospective pleasure.
-
-As for sights, Canea must be confessed to offer none that are of the
-traditional kind, “double-starred in Bædeker.” There is no museum there,
-and no ruins. The hills are too far away to permit an ascent for a view.
-The palace of the Greek royal commissioner, Prince George, offers slight
-attraction to the visitor compared with the scenes of the streets and
-squares in the town itself, the coffee-houses, and above all the curious
-shops. Canea is no mean place for the curio hunter with an eye to
-handsome, though barbaric, blankets, saddle-bags, and the like. The
-bizarre effect of the scene is increased by the manifold racial
-characteristics of face, figure, and dress that one may observe there;
-men and women quaintly garbed in the peasant dress of half a dozen
-different nations. In a corner, sheltered from the heat or from the
-wind, as the case may be, sit knots of weazen old men, cloaks wrapped
-about their shoulders, either drinking their muddy coffee or plying some
-trifling trade while they gossip,—doubtless about the changed times.
-From a neighboring coffeehouse there will be heard to trickle a wild and
-barbaric melody tortured out of a long-suffering fiddle that cannot, by
-any stretch of euphemism, be called a violin; or men may be seen dancing
-in a sedate and solemn circle, arms spread on each other’s shoulders in
-the Greek fashion, to the minor cadences of the plaintive “bouzouki,” or
-Greek guitar. There are shops of every kind, retailing chiefly queer
-woolen bags, or shoes of soft, white skins, or sweetmeats of the Greek
-and Turkish fashion. Here it is possible for the first time to become
-acquainted with the celebrated “loukoumi” of Syra, a soft paste made of
-gums, rosewater, and flavoring extracts, with an addition of chopped
-nuts, each block of the candy rolled in soft sugar. It is much esteemed
-by the Greeks, who are notorious lovers of sweetmeats, and it is
-imitated and grossly libeled in America under the alias of “Turkish
-Delight.”
-
-From Canea a very good road leads out over a gently rolling country to
-Suda Bay. Little is to be seen there, however, save a very lovely
-prospect of hill and vale, and a few warships of various nations lying
-at anchor, representing the four or five jealous powers who maintain a
-constant watch over the destinies of this troublous isle. The
-cosmopolitan character of these naval visitants is abundantly testified
-to by the signs that one may see along the highroad near Suda, ringing
-all possible linguistic changes on legends that indicate facilities for
-the entertainment of Jack ashore, and capable of being summed up in the
-single phrase, “Army and Navy Bar.” The Greeks were ever a hospitable
-race.
-
-The road to Suda, however, is far from being lined by nothing more
-lovely than these decrepit wine shops for the audacious tar. The three
-or four miles of its length lie through fertile fields devoted to olive
-orchards and to the cultivation of grain, and one would look far for a
-more picturesque sight than the Cretan farmer driving his jocund team
-afield—a team of large oxen attached to a primitive plow—or wielding his
-cumbersome hoe in turning up the sod under his own vine and olive trees.
-It is a pleasing and pastoral spectacle. The ride out to Suda is easily
-made while the steamer waits, in a very comfortable carriage procurable
-in the public square for a moderate sum. It may be as well to remark,
-however, that carriages in Greece are not, as a rule, anywhere nearly as
-cheap as in Italy.
-
-It is a long jump from Canea to Candia, the second city of the island,
-situated many miles farther to the east along this northern shore. But
-it easily surpasses Canea in classic interest, being the site of the
-traditional ruler of Crete in the most ancient times,—King Minos,—of
-whom we shall have much to say. Candia, as we shall call it, although
-its local name is Megalokastron, is not touched by any of the steamers
-en route from the west to Athens, but must be visited in connection with
-a cruise among the islands of the Ægean. From the sea it resembles Canea
-in nature as well as in name. It shows the same harbor fortifications of
-Venetian build, and bears the same lion of St. Mark. It possesses the
-same lack of harborage for vessels other than small sailing craft. Its
-water front is lined with white houses with green blinds, and slender
-white minarets stand loftily above the roofs. Its streets and squares
-are much like Canea’s, too, although they are rather broader and more
-modern in appearance; while the crowds of people in the streets present
-a similar array of racial types to that already referred to in
-describing the former city. More handsome men are to be seen, splendid
-specimens of humanity clad in the blue baggy trousers and jackets of
-Turkish cut, and wearing the fez. Candia is well walled by a very thick
-and lofty fortification erected in Venetian times, and lies at the
-opening of a broad valley stretching across the island to the south, and
-by its topography and central situation was the natural theatre of
-activity in the distant period with which we are about to make our first
-acquaintance. Even without leaving the city one may get some idea of the
-vast antiquity of some of its relics by a visit to the museum located in
-an old Venetian palace in the heart of the town, where are to be seen
-the finds of various excavators who have labored in the island. Most of
-these belong to a very remote past, antedating vastly the Mycenæan
-period, which used to seem so old, with its traditions of Agamemnon and
-the sack of Troy. Here we encounter relics of monarchs who lived before
-Troy was made famous, and the English excavator, Evans, who has exhumed
-the palace of Minos not far outside the city gates, has classified the
-articles displayed as of the “Minoan” period. It would be idle in this
-place to attempt any detailed explanation of the subdivisions of
-“early,” “middle,” and “late Minoan” which have been appended to the
-manifold relics to be seen in the museum collection, or to give any
-detailed description of them. It must suffice to say that the period
-represented is so early that any attempt to affix dates must be
-conjectural, and that we may safely take it in general terms as a period
-so far preceding the dawn of recorded history that it was largely
-legendary even in the time of the classic Greeks, who already regarded
-Minos himself as a demi-god and sort of immortal judge in the realm of
-the shades. The museum, with its hundreds of quaint old vases, rudely
-ornamented in geometric patterns, its fantastic and faded mural
-paintings, its sarcophagi, its implements of toil, and all the manifold
-testimony to a civilization so remote that it is overwhelming to the
-mind, will serve to hold the visitor long. Nor is it to be forgotten
-that among these relics from Cnossos, Phæstos, and Gortyn, are many
-contributed by the industry and energy of the American investigator,
-Mrs. Hawes (_née_ Boyd), whose work in Crete has been of great value and
-archæological interest.
-
-Having whetted one’s appetite for the remotely antique by browsing
-through this collection of treasures, one is ready enough to make the
-journey out to Cnossos, the site of the ancient palace, only four miles
-away. There is a good road, and it is possible to walk if desired,
-although it is about as hot and uninteresting a walk as can well be
-imagined. It is easier and better to ride, although the Cretan drivers
-in general, and the Candian ones in particular, enjoy the reputation of
-being about the most rapacious in the civilized world. On the way out to
-the palace at Cnossos, the road winds through a rolling country, and
-crosses repeatedly an old paved Turkish road, which must have been much
-less agreeable than the present one to traverse. On the right, far away
-to the southwest, rises the peak which is supposed to be the birthplace
-of Zeus, the slopes of Mt. Ida. Crete is the land most sacred to Zeus of
-all the lands of the ancient world. Here his mother bore him, having
-fled thither to escape the wrath of her husband, the god Cronos, who had
-formed the unbecoming habit of swallowing his progeny as soon as they
-were born. Having been duly delivered of the child Zeus, his mother,
-Rhæa, wrapped up a stone in some cloth and presented it to Cronos, who
-swallowed it, persuaded that he had once more ridded the world of the
-son it was predicted should oust him from his godlike dignities and
-power. But Rhæa concealed the real Zeus in a cave on Ida, and when he
-came to maturity he made war on Cronos and deprived him of his dominion.
-Hence Zeus, whose worship in Crete soon spread to other islands and
-mainland, was held in highest esteem in the isle of his birth, and his
-cult had for its symbol the double-headed axe, which we find on so many
-of the relics of the Candia museum and on the walls of the ancient
-palaces, like that we are on the way to visit at Cnossos.
-
-It is necessary to remark that there were two characters named Minos in
-the ancient mythology. The original of the name was the child of Zeus
-and Europa, and he ruled over Crete, where Saturn is supposed to have
-governed before him, proving a wise law-giver for the people. The other
-Minos was a grandson of the first, child of Lycastos and Ida. This Minos
-later grew up and married Pasiphaë, whose unnatural passion begot the
-Minotaur, or savage bull with the body of a man and an appetite for
-human flesh. To house this monster Minos was compelled to build the
-celebrated labyrinth, and he fed the bull with condemned criminals, who
-were sent into the mazes of the labyrinth never to return. Still later,
-taking offense at the Athenians because in their Panathenaic games they
-had killed his own son, Minos sent an expedition against them, defeated
-them, and thereafter levied an annual tribute of seven boys and seven
-girls upon the inhabitants, who were taken to Crete and fed to the
-Minotaur. This cruel exaction continued until Theseus came to Crete and,
-with the aid of the thread furnished him by Ariadne, tracked his way
-into the labyrinth, slaughtered the monster and returned alive to the
-light of day. Of course such a network of myths, if it does nothing
-else, argues the great antiquity of the Minoan period, to which the
-ruins around Candia are supposed to belong, and they naturally lead us
-to an inquiry whether any labyrinth was ever found or supposed to be
-found in the vicinity. I believe there actually is an extensive
-artificial cave in the mountains south of Cnossos, doubtless an ancient
-subterranean quarry, which is called “the labyrinth” to-day, though it
-doubtless never sheltered the Minotaur. It is sufficiently large to have
-served once as the abode of several hundred persons during times of
-revolution, they living there in comparative comfort save for the lack
-of light; and it is interesting to know that they employed Ariadne’s
-device of the thread to keep them in touch with the passage out of their
-self-imposed prison when the political atmosphere cleared and it was
-safe to venture forth into the light of day. It seems rather more
-probable that the myth or legend of the labyrinth of Minos had its
-origin in the labyrinthine character of the king’s own palace, as it is
-now shown to have been a perfect maze of corridors and rooms, through
-which it is possible to wander at will, since the excavators have laid
-them open after the lapse of many centuries. A glance at the plans of
-the Cnossos palace in the guide-books, or a survey of them from the top
-of Mr. Evans’s rather garish and incongruous but highly useful tower on
-the spot, will serve to show a network of passageways and apartments
-that might easily have given rise to the tale of the impenetrable
-man-trap which Theseus alone had the wit to evade.
-
-The ruins lie at the east of the high road, in a deep valley. Their
-excavation has been very complete and satisfactory, and while some
-restorations have been attempted here and there, chiefly because of
-absolute necessity to preserve portions of the structure, they are not
-such restorations as to jar on one, but exhibit a fidelity to tradition
-that saves them from the common fate of such efforts. Little or no
-retouching was necessary in the case of the stupendous flights of steps
-that were found leading up to the door of this prehistoric royal
-residence, and which are the first of the many sights the visitor of
-to-day may see. It is in the so-called “throne room of Minos” that the
-restoring hand is first met. Here it has been found necessary to provide
-a roof, that damage by weather be avoided; and to-day the throne room is
-a dusky spot, rather below the general level of the place. Its chief
-treasure is the throne itself, a stone chair, carved in rather
-rudimentary ornamentation, and about the size of an ordinary chair. The
-roof is supported by the curious, top-heavy-looking stone pillars, that
-are known to have prevailed not only in the Minoan but in the Mycenæan
-period; monoliths noticeably larger at the top than at the bottom,
-reversing the usual form of stone pillar with which later ages have made
-us more familiar. This quite illogical inversion of what we now regard
-as the proper form has been accounted for in theory, by assuming that it
-was the natural successor of the sharpened wooden stake. When the
-ancients adopted stone supports for their roofs, they simply took over
-the forms they had been familiar with in the former use of wood, and the
-result was a stone pillar that copied the earlier wooden one in shape.
-Time, of course, served to show that the natural way of building
-demanded the reversal of this custom; but in the Mycenæan age it had not
-been discovered, for there are evidences that similar pillars existed in
-buildings of that period, and the representation of a pillar that stands
-between the two lions on Mycenæ’s famous gate has this inverted form.
-
-[Illustration: THRONE OF MINOS AT CNOSSOS]
-
-Many hours may be spent in detailed examination of this colossal ruin,
-testifying to what must have been in its day an enormous and impressive
-palace. One cannot go far in traversing it without noticing the traces
-still evident enough of the fire that obviously destroyed it many
-hundred, if not several thousand, years before Christ. Along the western
-side have been discovered long corridors, from which scores of long and
-narrow rooms were to be entered. These, in the published plans, serve to
-give to the ruin a large share of its labyrinthine character. It seems
-to be agreed now that these were the store-rooms of the palace, and in
-them may still be seen the huge earthen jars which once served to
-contain the palace supplies. Long rows of them stand in the ancient
-hallways and in the narrow cells that lead off them, each jar large
-enough to hold a fair-sized man, and in number sufficient to have
-accommodated Ali Baba and the immortal forty thieves. In the centre of
-the palace little remains; but in the southeastern corner, where the
-land begins to slope abruptly to the valley below, there are to be seen
-several stories of the ancient building. Here one comes upon the rooms
-marked with the so-called “distaff” pattern, supposed to indicate that
-they were the women’s quarters. The restorer has been busy here, but not
-offensively so. Much of the ancient wall is intact, and in one place is
-a bath-room with a very diminutive bath-tub still in place. Along the
-eastern side is also shown the oil press, where olives were once made to
-yield their coveted juices, and from the press proper a stone gutter
-conducted the fluid down to the point where jars were placed to receive
-it. This discovery of oil presses in ancient buildings, by the way, has
-served in more than one case to arouse speculation as to the antiquity
-of oil lamps, such as were once supposed to belong only to a much later
-epoch. Whether in the Minoan days they had such lamps or not, it is
-known that they had at least an oil press and a good one. In the side of
-the hill below the main palace of Minos has been unearthed a smaller
-structure, which they now call the “villa,” and in which several
-terraces have been uncovered rather similar to the larger building
-above. Here is another throne room, cunningly contrived to be lighted by
-a long shaft of light from above falling on the seat of justice itself,
-while the rest of the room is in obscurity.
-
-It may be that it requires a stretch of the imagination to compare the
-palace of Cnossos with Troy, but nevertheless there are one or two
-features that seem not unlike the discoveries made by Dr. Schliemann on
-that famous site. Notably so, it seems to me, are the traces of the
-final fire, which are to be seen at Cnossos as at Troy, and the huge
-jars, which maybe compared with the receptacles the Trojan excavators
-unearthed, and found still to contain dried peas and other things that
-the Trojans left behind when they fled from their sacked and burning
-city. Few are privileged to visit the site of Priam’s city, which is
-hard indeed to reach; but it is easy enough to make the excursion to
-Candia and visit the palace of old King Minos, which is amply worth the
-trouble, besides giving a glimpse of a civilization that is possibly
-vastly older than even that of Troy and Mycenæ. For those who reverence
-the great antiquities, Candia and its pre-classic suburb are distinctly
-worth visiting, and are unique among the sights of the ancient Hellenic
-and pre-Hellenic world.
-
-[Illustration: STORE-ROOMS IN MINOAN PALACE, CNOSSOS]
-
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-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER III. THE ENTRANCE
- TO GREECE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Leaving Crete behind, the steamer turns her prow northward into the
-Ægean toward Greece proper, and in the early morning, if all goes
-smoothly, will be found well inside the promontory of Sunium,
-approaching the Piræus. One ought most infallibly to be early on deck,
-for the rugged, rocky shores of the Peloponnesus are close at hand on
-the left, indented here and there by deep inlets or gulfs, and looking
-as most travelers seem to think “Greece ought to look.” If it is clear,
-a few islands may be seen on the right, though none of the celebrated
-ones are near enough to be seen with any satisfaction. Sunium itself is
-so far away to the eastward that it is impossible at this distance to
-obtain any idea of the ancient ruin that still crowns its summit.
-
-Although to enter Greece by way of the Piræus is actually to enter the
-front door of the kingdom, nevertheless, as has been hinted heretofore,
-one may vote on the whole that it is better to make this the point of
-departure instead of that of initiation. Leaving Greece as most of us do
-with a poignant sense of regret, it is not unfitting that we depart with
-the benediction of the old Acropolis of Athens, crowned with its famous
-ruins, which are to be seen even when far at sea, glowing in the
-afternoon sun, and furnishing an ideal last view of this land of golden
-memories. Simply because it makes such an ideal last view, leaving the
-crowning “glory that was Greece” last in the mind’s eye, one may well
-regard this point as the best one for leaving, whatever may be said for
-it as a place of beginning an acquaintance with Hellas. It must be
-confessed that to one approaching for the first time, save in the
-clearest weather, the view of the Acropolis from the sea is likely to be
-somewhat disappointing, because the locating of it in the landscape is
-not an easy matter. Under a cloudy sky—and there are occasionally such
-skies even in sunny Greece—it is not at all easy to pick out the
-Acropolis, lying low in the foreground and flanked by such superior
-heights as Lycabettus and Pentelicus. Hence it is that the voyager,
-returning home from a stay in Athens, enjoys the seaward view of the
-receding site far more than the approaching newcomer; and it must be
-added that, however one may reverence the Acropolis from his reading, it
-can never mean so much to him as it will after a few days of personal
-acquaintance, when he has learned to know its every stone. What slight
-disappointment one may feel on first beholding the ancient rock of
-Athena from the ocean, is, after all, only momentary and due solely to
-the distance. It is certain to be removed later when closer acquaintance
-shows it to be the stupendous rock it really is, standing alone, and
-seen to better advantage than when the hills that wall the Attic plain
-overshadow it in the perspective.
-
-As the steamer approaches, the loftier heights of Hymettus, Pentelicus,
-Parnes, Ægina, and Salamis intrude themselves and will not be denied,
-framing between them the valley in which Athens lies, obscured for the
-time being by the tall chimneys and the forest of masts that herald the
-presence of the Piræus in the immediate foreground. That city is as of
-yore the seaport of Athens, and is a thriving city in itself, although
-from its proximity to the famous capital it loses individual prestige,
-and seems rather like a dependence of the main city than a separate and
-important town, rivaling Athens herself in size, if not in history.
-
-Perhaps the most trying experience to the newcomer is this landing at
-the Piræus and the labor involved in getting ashore and up to Athens;
-but, after all, it is trying only in the sense that it is a matter for
-much bargaining, in which the unfamiliar visitor is at an obvious
-disadvantage. As in all Greek ports, the landing is to be accomplished
-only by small boats, which are manned by watermen having no connection
-at all with the steamship companies. It would seem to be the reasonable
-duty of a steamer line to provide facilities for setting its passengers
-ashore, and in time this may be done; but it is an unfortunate fact that
-it is not done now, and the passenger is left to bargain for himself
-with the crowd of small craft that surrounds the vessel as she is slowly
-and painfully berthed. The harbor itself is seen to be a very excellent
-and sheltered one, protected by two long breakwaters, which admit of
-hardly more than a single large vessel at a time between their narrow
-jaws. Within, it opens out into a broad expanse of smooth water, lined
-throughout its periphery by a low stone quay. While the steamer is being
-warped to her position, always with the stern toward the shore, a fleet
-of small boats, most of them flying the flags of hotels in Athens or of
-the several tourist agencies, eagerly swarm around and await the
-lowering of the landing stairs, meantime gesticulating violently to
-attract the attention of passengers on deck. Little that is definite,
-however, can be done until the gangway is lowered and the boatmen’s
-representatives have swarmed on the deck itself. There is time and to
-spare, so that the voyager has no occasion to hurry, but may possess his
-soul in patience and seek to make the most advantageous terms possible
-with the lowest bidder. The boatmen, be well assured, know English
-enough to negotiate the bargain.
-
-Despite the apparent competition, which ought by all the laws of
-economics to be the life of trade, it will doubtless be found quite
-impossible to make any arrangement for landing and getting up to the
-city for a sum much under twelve francs. That is the published tariff of
-the hotels which send out boats, and if one is certain of his
-stopping-place in Athens he will doubtless do well to close immediately
-with the boatman displaying the insignia of that particular hostelry.
-But it is entirely probable that any regular habitué would say that the
-hotel tariff is grossly out of proportion to the actual cost, since the
-boatman’s fee should be not more than a franc and the ride to Athens not
-more than six. As for the tourist agencies, they may be depended upon to
-ask more than the hotel runners do, and the only limit is the visitor’s
-credulity and ignorance of the place. Whatever bargain is made, the
-incoming passenger will, if wise, see to it that it is understood to
-cover everything, including the supposititious “landing tax” that is so
-often foisted upon the customer after landing in Athens as an “extra.”
-These are doubtless sordid details, but necessary ones, and matters
-which it may prove profitable to understand before venturing in. Having
-dismissed them as such, we may turn with more enjoyment to the prospect
-now presenting itself.
-
-Piræus, as all the world knows, is the port of Athens now as in classic
-times. Topographically it has three good harbors, the Piræus proper,
-Zea, and Munychia—the latter name also applying to the rocky promontory
-which juts out and separates the harbor from the Saronic Gulf. It was on
-the Munychia peninsula that Themistocles in 493 B.C. erected a town, and
-it was Themistocles, also, who conceived and carried out the scheme for
-the celebrated “long walls” which ran from the port up to Athens, and
-made the city practically impregnable by making it quite independent of
-the rest of Attica, so long as the Athenian supremacy by sea remained
-unquestioned. Thus it came to pass that, during the Peloponnesian War,
-when all the rest of the Attic plain had fallen into the hands of the
-Lacedæmonians, Athens herself remained practically undisturbed, thanks
-not only to the long walls and ships, but also to the fortifications of
-Cimon and Pericles. The Athenian navy, however, was finally overwhelmed
-in the battle of Ægospotamoi in 404 B.C., and the port fell a prey to
-the enemy, who demolished the long walls, to the music of the flute.
-
-Ten years later, when Athens had somewhat recovered from the first
-defeat, Conon rebuilt the walls, and Athens, with Piræus, for a space
-enjoyed a return of her ancient greatness and prosperity. The Roman
-under Sulla came in 86 B.C., and practically put an end to the famous
-capital, which became an inconsiderable village, and so remained down to
-the Grecian risorgimento. The present city of Piræus, and the city of
-Athens also, practically date from 1836, though the old names had been
-revived the year previous. Up to that time the spot had for years passed
-under the unclassic name of Porto Leone.
-
-Inasmuch as the fame of Athens and her empire rested on the navy as its
-foundation, and inasmuch as the navy made its home in the waters of the
-Piræus and Munychia, the locality has its glorious memories to share
-with the still more glorious traditions of the neighboring Salamis,
-where the Persians of Xerxes were put to such utter rout. It was from
-this harbor that the splendid, but ill-fated, Sicilian expedition set
-out, with flags flying, pæans sounding, and libations pouring. And it
-was to the Piræus that a lone survivor of that sorry campaign returned
-to relate the incredible news to the village barber.
-
-The harbor of the Piræus is generally full of shipping of all sorts,
-including steamers of every size and nationality, as well as high-sided
-schooners that recall the Homeric epithet of the “hollow ships.” Some
-are en route to or from Constantinople, Alexandria, Naples, the ports of
-the Adriatic, the Orient,—everywhere. The Greek coastwise vessels often
-bear their names printed in large white letters amidships, familiar
-names looking decidedly odd in the Greek characters. All are busily
-loading or discharging, for the Piræus is, as ever, a busy port. Under
-the sterns of several such ships the shore boat passes, its occupants
-ducking repeatedly under the sagging stern cables, until in a brief time
-all are set ashore at the custom-house. That institution, however, need
-give the visitor little apprehension. The examination of reasonable
-luggage is seldom or never oppressive or fraught with inconvenience,
-doubtless because the visitor is duly recognized by the government as a
-being whose presence is bound to be of profit, and who should not,
-therefore, be wantonly discouraged at the very threshold of the kingdom.
-Little is insisted on save a declaration that the baggage contains no
-tobacco or cigarettes. The porters as a rule are more tolerant of copper
-tips than the present rapidly spoiling race of Italian _facchini_.
-
-The sensible way to proceed to Athens is by carriage, taking the
-Phalerum road. The electric tram, which is a very commodious third-rail
-system resembling the subway trains of Boston or New York, is all very
-well if one is free from impedimenta. But for the ordinary voyager, with
-several valises or trunks, the carriage is not only best but probably
-the most economical in the end. The carriages are comfortable, and
-capable of carrying four persons with reasonable baggage.
-
-Little of interest will be found in driving out of the Piræus, which is
-a frankly commercial place, devoid of architectural or enduring
-classical recommendations. The long walls that once connected the port
-with Athens have disappeared almost beyond recall, although the sites
-are known. Nor is the beach of New Phalerum (pronounced Fál-eron) much
-more attractive than the Piræus itself. It reminds one strongly of
-suburban beach places at home, lined as it is with cheap cottages,
-coffee-houses, restaurants, bicycle shops, and here and there a more
-pretentious residence, while at least one big and garish hotel is to be
-seen. The sea, varying from a light green to a deep Mediterranean blue,
-laps gently along the side of the highway toward the open ocean, while
-ahead, up the straight boulevard, appears the Acropolis of Athens, now
-seen for the first time in its proper light as one of the most
-magnificent ruins of the earth. The road thither is good but
-uncomfortably new. When its long lines of pepper trees, now in their
-infancy, shall have attained their growth, it will be a highway lined
-with shade and affording a prospect of much beauty. In its present
-state, however, which is destined to endure for some years to come, it
-is a long, straight, and rather dreary boulevard, relieved only by the
-glorious prospect of the crowning ruin of Athens something like four
-miles away, but towering alone and grand, and no longer dwarfed by the
-surrounding gray hills. Still this route seems to me infinitely better,
-even to-day, than the older road from Piræus, which approaches Athens
-from the western side without going near the sea, but which is not
-without its charms, nevertheless, and certainly does give the one who
-takes it a splendid view of the imposing western front of the Acropolis
-and its array of temples, across a plain green with waving grasses.
-
-Approaching the city from the Phalerum side serves to give a very
-striking impression of the inaccessibility of the Acropolis, showing its
-precipitous southern face, crowned by the ruined Parthenon, whose
-ancient pillars, weathered to a golden brown, stand gleaming in the sun
-against the deep and brilliant blue of the Greek sky. Those who have
-pictured the temple as glistening white will be vastly surprised, no
-doubt, on seeing its actual color; for the iron and other metals present
-in the Pentelic marble, of which it was built, have removed almost
-entirely the white or creamy tints, and have given in their place a rich
-mottled appearance, due to the ripe old age of this shrine.
-
-Aside from the ever present prospect of the Acropolis and its promise of
-interest in store, the road to Athens is devoid of much to attract
-attention. The long, gray ridge of Hymettus, which runs along just east
-of the road, of course is a famous mountain by reason of its well-known
-brand of honey, if for no other reason. Halfway up the gradual incline
-to the city there is a small and rather unattractive church, said to be
-a votive offering made by the king in thankfulness at escaping the
-bullets of two would-be assassins at this point. On the left, and still
-far ahead, rises the hill, crowned by the ruined but still conspicuous
-monument of Philopappus. Situated on a commanding eminence south of the
-Acropolis, this monument is a dominant feature of almost every view of
-Athens; but it is entirely out of proportion to the importance of the
-man whose vague memory it recalls.
-
-Passing the eastern and most lofty end of the Acropolis, the carriage at
-last turns into the outskirts of the city proper and traverses a broad
-and pleasant avenue, its wide sidewalks shaded by graceful and luxuriant
-pepper trees, while the prosperous looking houses give an attractive
-first impression of residential Athens. The modern is curiously
-intermingled with the ancient; for on the right, in the fields which
-border the highway, are to be seen the few remaining colossal columns of
-the rather florid temple of Olympian Zeus and the fragmentary arch of
-Hadrian, the Roman emperor in whose reign that temple was at last
-completed. It is peculiarly fitting to enter Athens between these ruins
-on the one hand and the Acropolis on the other, for they are so
-characteristic of the great chief attraction of the place,—its immortal
-past.
-
-The city proper now opens out before, and as the carriage enters the
-great principal square of Athens, the “Syntagma,” or Place de la
-Constitution, handsome streets may be seen radiating from it in all
-directions, giving a general impression of cleanly whiteness, while the
-square itself, spreading a wide open space before the huge and rather
-barnlike royal palace, is filled with humanity passing to and fro, or
-seated at small tables in the open air, partaking of the coffee so dear
-to the heart of the Greek; and carriages dash here and there, warning
-pedestrians only by the driver’s repeated growl of “empros, empros!”
-(εμπρός), which is exactly equivalent to the golf-player’s “fore!” And
-here in the crowded square we may leave the traveler for the present,
-doubtless not far from his hotel,—for hotels are all about,—with only
-the parting word of advice that he shall early seek repose, in the
-certitude that there will be some little noise. For the Athenians are
-almost as noisy and nocturnal creatures as the Palermitans or
-Neapolitans, and the nights will be filled with music and many other
-sounds of revelry. To be sure, there are no paved streets and no
-clanging trolley cars; but the passing throngs will make up for any lack
-in that regard, even until a late hour of the night.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER IV. ATHENS; THE
- MODERN CITY
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-Athens lies in a long and narrow plain between two rocky mountain ridges
-that run down from the north. The plain to-day is neither interesting
-nor particularly fertile, although it is still tilled with some success.
-Once when it was better watered by the Cephissus and Ilissus rivers,
-whose courses are still visible though in the main dry and rocky, it was
-doubtless better able to support the local population; but to-day it is
-rather a bare and unattractive intervale between mountains quite as
-bare—gray, rocky heights, covered with little vegetation save the sparse
-gorse and thyme. At that point in the plain where a lofty, isolated, and
-nearly oblong rock, with precipitous sides, invited the foundation of a
-citadel, Athens sprang into being. And there she stands to-day, having
-pivoted around the hoary Acropolis crag for centuries, first south, then
-west, then north, until the latter has become the final abiding place of
-the modern town, while the older sites to the southward and westward lie
-almost deserted save for the activities of the archæologists and
-students, who have found them rich and interesting ground for
-exploration. Always, however, the Acropolis was the fulcrum or focus,
-and it was on this unique rock that Poseidon and Athena waged their
-immortal contest for the possession of the Attic plain. Tradition says
-that Poseidon smote with his trident and a salt spring gushed forth from
-the cleft rock, thus proving his power; but that the judgment of the
-gods was in favor of Athena, who made to spring up from the ground an
-olive tree. Wherefore the land was allotted to her, and from her the
-city took its name. Under the northern side of the towering rock and
-around to the east of it runs the thriving city of to-day, thence
-spreading off for perhaps two miles to the northward along the plain,
-first closely congested, then widening into more open modernized
-streets, and finally dwindling into scattered suburbs out in the
-countryside.
-
-The growth of Athens has left its marks of progress in well-defined
-strata. The narrow, squalid, slummy streets of the quarter nearest the
-Acropolis belong to the older or Turkish period of the city’s renascent
-life. Beyond these one meets newer and broader highways, lined in many
-cases with neat modern shops, called into life by the city’s remarkable
-growth of the past two decades, which have raised Athens from the rank
-of a dirty village to a clean and attractive metropolis—in the better
-sense of that much abused word. Still farther away are seen the natural
-products of the overflow of a thriving modern town—suburbs clustering
-around isolated mills or wine-presses. The present population is not far
-from a hundred thousand persons, so that Athens to-day is not an
-inconsiderable place. The population is chiefly the native Greek,
-modified no doubt by long submission to Turkish rule and mingled with a
-good deal of Turkish blood, but still preserving the language, names,
-and traditions that bespeak a glorious past. Despite the persistence of
-such names as Aristeides, Miltiades, Themistocles, Socrates, and the
-like among the modern Athenians, it would no doubt be rashly
-unreasonable to expect to find in a population that was to all intents
-and purposes so long enslaved by Turkey very much that savors of the
-traditional Greek character as it stood in the days of Pericles. But
-there have not been wanting eminent scholars, who have insisted that our
-exalted ideas of the ancient Greeks are really derived from a
-comparatively few exceptional and shining examples, and that the ancient
-population may have resembled the present citizens more than we are
-prone to think, in traits and general ability.
-
-On his native heath the modern Greek openly charges his own race with a
-lack of industry and love of idling too much in the coffee-houses,
-although it is an indictment which has never struck me as just, and one
-which, if coming from a foreigner, would doubtless be resented. It is
-true that the coffeehouses are seldom deserted, and the possession of an
-extra drachma or two is generally enough to tempt one to abandon his
-employ for the seclusion that the _kaffeneion_ grants, there to sip
-slowly until the cups of syrupy coffee which the money will buy are
-gone. Nevertheless, one should be slow to say that the race is indolent
-by nature, especially in view of its climatic surroundings; for there
-are too many thousand thrifty and hard-working Hellenes in Greece and in
-America as well to refute any such accusation. The one vast trouble, no
-doubt, is the lack of any spur to industrial ambition at home, or of any
-very attractive or remunerative employment compared with the
-opportunities offered by the cities of the newer world. The strong set
-of the tide of emigration to American shores has tended largely to
-depopulate Greece; but it is not unlikely that the return of the
-natives, which is by no means uncommon, will in time work large benefit
-to Hellas herself, and the attraction of her sons to foreign lands thus
-prove a blessing rather than, as was once supposed, a curse.
-
-This, however, is rather aside from any consideration of the modern city
-of Athens. Let it be said at the outset that one may go freely anywhere
-in the city and be quite unmolested either by malicious or mendicant
-persons. It is not improbable, of course, that the increasing inundation
-of Athens by foreign visitors will tend somewhat to increase the
-tendency to begging, as it has elsewhere; but it is due the Greek race
-to say that it is infinitely less lazy and infinitely less inclined to
-proletarianism, or to seeking to live without work, than the Italian.
-Small children, as in all countries, will be found occasionally begging
-a penny, especially if they have gone out of their way to render a
-fancied service, by ostentatiously opening a gate that already stood
-ajar. But there are few of the lame, halt, and blind, such as infest
-Naples and many smaller Mediterranean cities, seeking to extort money
-from sheer pity of unsightliness. Here and there in Athens one may
-indeed see a cripple patiently awaiting alms, but generally in a quiet
-and unobtrusive way. Neither is the visitor bothered by the
-importunities of carriage drivers, although the carriages are numerous
-enough and anxious for fares—a contrast that is welcome indeed to one
-newly come from Italy and fresh from the tireless pursuit of warring
-Neapolitan cabbies. The offset to this welcome peace is the fact that
-carriage fares in Athens are undoubtedly high compared with the
-astonishingly low charges produced in Naples by active and incessant
-competition of the vetturini. The sole dangers of Athenian streets are
-those incident to the fast driving of carriages over the unpaved
-roadways; for the pedestrian has his own way to make and his own safety
-to guard, as is largely true in Paris, and it is incumbent on him to
-stop, look, and listen before venturing into the highway.
-
-The street venders of laces, sponges, flowers, and postal cards are
-perhaps the nearest to an importunate class, though they generally await
-invitation to the attack, and their efforts are invariably good-humored.
-The region of the “Syntagma” square is generally full of them, lining
-the curb and laden with their wares. Men will be seen with long strips
-of fascinating island lace over their shoulders, baskets on baskets of
-flowers, heaps of curiously shaped, marvelously attractive sponges,
-fresh and white from the near-by ocean, or packets of well-executed
-postal cards picturing the city’s classic remains, all offered for sale
-to whomsoever will exhibit the faintest trace of interest. Needless to
-say, the initial prices asked are inevitably excessive and yield to
-treatment with surprising revelations of latitude.
-
-Athens is a clean city. Its streets, while unpaved, are still fairly
-hard. Its buildings are in the main of stone, covered with a stucco
-finish and given a white color, or a tint of buff or light blue. The
-prevailing tone is white, and in the glare of the brilliant sun it is
-often rather trying to the eyes. To relieve the whiteness there is
-always the feathery green of the pepper trees, and the contrast of the
-clambering vines and flowers that in their season go far to make the
-city so attractive. Most notable of all the contrasts in color is
-unquestionably the rich purple of the bougainvillea blooms splashed in
-great masses against the immaculate walls and porticoes of the more
-pretentious houses. The gardens are numerous and run riot with roses,
-iris, and hundreds of other fragrant and lovely blossoms. The sidewalks
-are broad and smooth. It is an easy town in which to stroll about, for
-the distances are not great and the street scenes are interesting and
-frequently unusual to a high degree, while vistas are constantly opening
-to give momentary views of the towering Acropolis. It is not a hilly
-city, but rather built on rolling ground, the prevailing slope of which
-is toward the west, gently down from the pointed Lycabettus to the
-ancient course of the Cephissus, along which once spread the famous
-grove of Academe. The lack of a sufficient water supply is unfortunate,
-for one misses the gushing of fountains which makes Rome so delightful,
-and the restricted volume available for domestic uses is sometimes far
-from pleasant.
-
-The Athenians had a prodigious mine to draw upon for the naming of their
-streets, in the magnificent stretch of their history and in the fabulous
-wealth of mythology. And it is a fact worth remarking that the
-mythological gods and heroes appear to have decidedly the better of the
-famous mortals in the selection of street names to do them honor. For
-example, Pericles, the greatest Athenian in many ways, is recalled by
-the name of a decidedly poor thoroughfare—hardly more than an alley;
-while Pheidias, Pindar, Homer, Solon, and a score of others fare but
-little better. On the contrary, the great gods of high Olympus, Hermes,
-Athena, Æolus, and others, give their names to the finest, broadest,
-most magnificent streets of this city that likes to call herself a
-little Paris. The result of it all is a curious mental state, for by the
-time one gets out of Athens and into the highlands of Delphi or of the
-Peloponnesus, where every peak and vale is the scene of some godlike
-encounter or amour, one is more than half ready to accept those ancient
-deities as actually having lived and done the things that legend
-ascribes to them. They become fully as real to the mind as William Tell
-or Pocahontas. The same illusion is helped on by the classic names
-affected for the engines of the Piræus-Athens-Peloponnesus Railroad, and
-by the time one has ridden for a day behind the “Hermes” or the
-“Hephaistos,” one is quite ready to expect to see Proteus rising from
-the sea, or hear old Triton blow his wreathed horn.
-
-It is at first a trifle perplexing to one not versed in the Greek
-language to find the streets all labeled in the genitive case, such as
-ὁδὸς Ἑρμοῦ (othòs Ermoù), “street of Hermes.” This soon becomes a matter
-of course, however. The main shopping district is confined to the
-greater highways of Hermes, Æolus, and Athena, and to Stadium Street—the
-latter so called because its length is about one kilometre, which is the
-modern “stadion,” instead of the lesser classic length of approximately
-six hundred feet. The name therefore has no reference to the magnificent
-athletic field of the city, in which the so-called modern “Olympic”
-games are occasionally held, and which in itself is a fine sight to see,
-as it lies in its natural amphitheatre east of the city, and brilliant
-in its newly built surfaces of purest marble. Stadium Street is perhaps
-the most modern and up-to-date street in Athens, lined with handsome
-stores, hotels, and cafés, thronged day and night, and perhaps even more
-gay and Parisian-looking by night, with its many lights and teeming
-life.
-
-Athens at this writing has no system of trolley cars, but sticks
-obstinately to an old-fashioned and quite inadequate horse-railway, the
-several lines radiating from the Omonoia Square—pronounced much like
-"Ammonia"—which, being interpreted, means the same as Place de la
-Concorde. To master the intricacies of this tramway system requires a
-considerable acquaintance with Athens, but it is vastly less involved a
-problem than the omnibuses of London and Paris, and naturally so because
-of the smaller size of the town. Odd little carriages plying between
-stated points eke out the local transportation service, while the
-third-rail, semi-underground line to the Piræus and the antiquated steam
-tram to New Phalerum give a suburban service that is not to be despised.
-In a very few years no doubt the trolley will invade Athens, for it
-already has a foothold in Greece at the thriving port of Patras; and
-when it does, one may whirl incongruously about the classic regions of
-the Acropolis as one now whirls about the Forum at Rome.
-
-The admirable Bædeker warns visitors to Hellas against assuming too
-hastily that Greece is a tropical land, merely because it is a southern
-Mediterranean country, and our own experiences have proved that even in
-April Athens can be as cold as in mid-winter, with snow capping Hymettus
-itself. But for the greater part of the year Athens is warm, and as in
-most southern cities business is practically at a standstill between the
-noon hour and two o'clock in the afternoon. In the summer months, which
-in Athens means the interval between May and late fall, this cessation
-is a practical necessity, owing to the heat and the glare of the
-noontide sun on the white streets and buildings. But the comparative
-compactness of the city makes it entirely possible to walk almost
-anywhere, even on a warm day, for the coolness of shade as compared with
-the heat of the sun is always noticeable. Thus the visitor who has
-plenty of time for his stay in the city is practically independent of
-cars and carriages. For those who find time pressing and who must cover
-the sites, or, as Bædeker sometimes says, “overtake” the points of
-interest in short order, the ingenious device once employed by a friend
-similarly situated may not come amiss. Having limited facilities of
-speech in the native tongue, and being practically without other means
-of communication with the cabman, this resourceful traveler supplied
-himself with a full set of picture post-cards dealing with the more
-celebrated features of Athens, and by dint of showing these one after
-another to his Jehu, he managed to “do” Athens in half a day—if one
-could call it that. He was not the only one to see the ancient capital
-in such short order, but it remains true that any such cavalier
-disposition of so famous a place is unfortunate and wholly inadequate.
-Athens is no place for the hasty “tripper,” for not only are the ancient
-monuments worthy of long and thoughtful contemplation, but the modern
-city itself is abundantly worthy of intimate acquaintance.
-
-[Illustration: OLD CHURCH IN TURKISH QUARTER, ATHENS]
-
-It has been spoken of as a noisy city, and it is especially so after
-nightfall, when the streets are thronged with people until a late hour
-and the coffee-houses and open-air restaurants are in full swing. Long
-after the ordinary person has gone to bed, passing Athenians will be
-heard shouting or singing in merry bands of from three to a dozen,
-especially if it be election time. The Athenian takes his politics as he
-takes his coffee—in deliberate sips, making a little go a long way. The
-general election period usually extends over something like two weeks,
-during which time the blank walls of the city blossom with the portraits
-of candidates and the night is made vocal with the rallying cries of the
-free-born. “Rallying” carriages are employed much as our own practical
-politicians employ them, to convey the decrepit or the reluctant
-able-bodied voters to the polls, with the difference that the Athenian
-rallying conveyance is generally decorated with partisan banners and not
-infrequently bears on its box, beside the driver, a musical outfit
-consisting of a drum and penny whistle, with which imposing panoply the
-proud voter progresses grandly through the streets to the ballot box,
-attended by a shouting throng. Torchlight processions, which make up in
-noise for their lack of numbers, are common every night during the
-election. The Athenian, when he does make up his mind to shout for any
-aspirant, shouts with his whole being, and with a vigor that recalls the
-days of Stentor. Noisy enough at all times, Athens is more so than ever
-in days of political excitement or on high festivals—notably on the
-night before Easter, when the joy over the resurrection of the Lord is
-manifested in a whole-hearted outpouring of the spirit, finding vent in
-explosives, rockets, and other pyrotechnics. Religious anniversaries,
-such as the birthday of a saint, or the Nativity, or the final triumph
-of Jesus, are treated by the Greek with the same pomp and circumstance
-that we accord to the Fourth of July; and, indeed, the same is true of
-all Mediterranean countries. I have never experienced a night before
-Easter in Athens, but I have been told that this, one of the most sacred
-of the festivals of the Orthodox Church, is the one occasion when it is
-at all dangerous or disagreeable to be abroad in the streets of the
-capital, and it is so only because of the exuberant and genuine joy that
-the native feels in the thought of his salvation, the idea of which
-seems annually to be a perfectly new and hitherto unexpected one.
-
-By day the chief tumult is from the ordinary press of traffic, with the
-unintelligible street-cries of itinerant peddlers offering fish, eggs,
-and divers vegetables, not to mention fire-wood. Nor should one omit the
-newsboys, for the Athenian has abandoned not a whit of his traditional
-eagerness to see or to hear some new thing, and has settled upon the
-daily paper as the best vehicle for purveying to that taste. Athens
-boasts perhaps half a dozen journals, fairly good though somewhat given
-to exaggeration, and it is a poor citizen indeed who does not read two
-or three of them as he drinks his coffee. Early morn and late evening
-are filled with the cries of the paper boys ringing clear and distinct
-over the general hubbub, and of all the street sounds their calls are by
-far the easiest to understand.
-
-Most fascinating of all to the foreign visitor must always be the
-narrower and less ornate streets of the old quarter, leading off Hermes
-and Æolus streets, and paramount in attractiveness the little narrow
-lane of the red shoes, which is a perfect bazaar. It is a mere alley,
-lined from end to end with small open booths, or shops, and devoted
-almost exclusively to the sale of shoes, mostly of red leather and
-provided with red pompons, though soft, white leather boots are also to
-be had, and to the dealing in embroidered bags, coats, pouches, belts,
-and the like. The stock in trade of each is very similar to that of
-every neighbor, and the effect of the _tout ensemble_ is highly curious
-and striking. To venture there once is to insure frequent visits, and
-one is absolutely certain sooner or later to buy. The wares seem rather
-Turkish than Greek in character. Of course, patience and tact are
-needful to enable one to avoid outrageous extortion. Nothing would
-surprise a shoe-lane dealer more, in all probability, than to find a
-foreigner willing and ready to accept his initial price as final.
-Chaffering is the order of the day, and after a sufficient amount of
-advancing and retreating, the intending purchaser is sure to succumb and
-return laden with souvenirs, from the inexpensive little embroidered
-bags to the coats heavy with gold lace, which are the festal gear of the
-peasant girls. The latter garments are mostly second-hand, and generally
-show the blemishes due to actual use. They are sleeveless over-garments
-made of heavy felt but gay with red and green cloth, on which, as a
-border, gold braid and tracery have been lavished without stint until
-they are splendid to see. Needless to say, they are the most expensive
-things in shoe lane. The process of bargaining between one who speaks no
-English and one who speaks no Greek is naturally largely a matter of
-dumb show, although the ever-ready pad and pencil figure in it. Madame
-looks inquiringly up from a handsome Greek coat, and is told by the pad
-that the price is 50 drachmas. Her face falls; she says as plainly as
-words could say it that she is very sorry, but it is out of the
-question. She turns and approaches the door. “Madame! madame!” She turns
-back, and the pad, bearing the legend 45, is shoved toward her. Again
-the retreat, and once more the summons to return and see a new and still
-lower price. Eventually the blank paper is passed to “madame,” and she
-writes thereon a price of her own—inevitably too low. Finally, however,
-the product of the extremes produces the Aristotelian golden mean, and
-the title passes. Indeed, it sometimes happens that the merchant will
-inform you of an outrageous price and add with shameless haste, “What
-will you give?” Experience will soon teach the purchaser that the
-easiest way to secure reasonable prices is to make a lump sum for
-several articles at a single sale.
-
-Shoe lane, for all its narrowness and business, is far from squalid, and
-is remarkably clean and sweet. In this it differs from the market
-district farther along, where vegetables, lambs, pigs, chickens, and
-other viands are offered for sale. The sight is interesting, but its
-olfactory appeal is stronger than the ocular. One need not venture
-there, however, to see the wayside cook at his work of roasting a whole
-sheep on the curb. Even the business streets up-town often show this
-spectacle. The stove is a mere sheet-iron chest without a cover, and
-containing a slow fire of charcoal. Over this on an iron spit, which is
-thrust through the lamb from end to end, the roast is slowly turning,
-legs, ribs, head, eyes, and all, the motive power being a little boy.
-From this primitive establishment cooked meat may be bought, as in the
-days of Socrates, either to be taken home, or to be eaten in some corner
-by the Athenian quick-lunch devotee. Farther along in the old quarter,
-not far from the Monastiri Station of the Piræus Line, is the street of
-the coppersmiths, heralded from afar by the noise of its hammers. By all
-the rules of appropriateness this should be the street of Hephaistos. In
-the gathering dusk, especially, this is an interesting place to wander
-through, for the forge fires in the dark little shops gleam brightly in
-the increasing darkness, while the busy hammers ply far into the
-evening. It is the tinkers’ chorus and the armorer’s song rolled into
-one. Here one buys the coffee-mills and the coffee-pots used in
-concocting the Turkish coffee peculiar to the East, and any visitor who
-learns to like coffee thus made will do well to secure both utensils,
-since the process is simple and the drink can easily be made at home.
-The coffee-pots themselves are little brass or copper dippers, of
-varying sizes; and the mills are cylinders of brass with arrangements
-for pulverizing the coffee beans to a fine powder. This powder, in the
-proportion of about a teaspoonful to a cup, is put into the dipper with
-an equal quantity of sugar. Boiling water is added, and the mixture set
-on the fire until it “boils up.” This is repeated three times before
-pouring off into cups, the coffee being vigorously stirred or beaten to
-a froth between the several boilings. At the end it is a thick and
-syrup-like liquid, astonishingly devoid of the insomnia-producing
-qualities commonly attributed to coffee by the makers of American
-“substitutes.” In any event the long-handled copper pots and the mills
-for grinding are quaint and interesting to possess. At the coffee-houses
-the practice is generally to bring the coffee on in its little
-individual pot, to be poured out by the patron himself. It is always
-accompanied by a huge glass of rather dubious drinking water and often
-by a bit of loukoumi, which the Greek esteems as furnishing a thirst, or
-by a handful of salty pistachio nuts, equally efficacious for the same
-purpose. The consumption of coffee by the Greek nation is stupendous.
-Possibly it is harmful, too. But in any event it cheers without
-inebriating, and a drunken Greek is a rare sight indeed.
-
-Walking homeward in the dusk of evening after a sunset on the Acropolis,
-one is sure to pass many out-of-door stoves set close to the entrances
-of humbler houses and stuffed with light wood which is blazing cheerily
-in preparation of the evening meal, the glow and the aromatic wood-smoke
-adding to the charm of the scene. Small shops, in the windows of which
-stand fresh-made bowls of giaourti (ya-oór-ti), are also to be seen,
-calling attention to that favorite Athenian delicacy, very popular as a
-dessert and not unlikely to please the palate of those not to the manner
-born. The giaourti is a sort of “junket,” or thick curd of goat’s milk,
-possessing a sour or acid taste. It is best eaten with an equal quantity
-of sugar, which renders the taste far from disagreeable. As for the
-other common foods of the natives, doubtless the lamb comes nearest to
-being the chief national dish, while chickens and eggs are every-day
-features of many a table. Unless one is far from the congested haunts of
-men, the food problem is not a serious one. That a visitor would find it
-rather hard to live long on the ordinary native cookery, however, is no
-doubt true; but fortunately there is little need to make the experiment.
-One other native dish deserves mention, in passing, and that is the
-“pilaffi,” or “pilaff,” which is rice covered with a rich meat gravy,
-and which almost any foreigner will appreciate as a palatable article of
-food.
-
-Of the ruins and museums of Athens, it is necessary to speak in detail
-in another chapter. Of the modern city and its many oddities, it is
-enough to deal here. Rambles through the town in any direction are sure
-to prove delightful, not only in the older quarter which we have been
-considering, but through the more pretentious modern streets as well,
-with their excellent shops, their pseudo-classic architecture, and their
-constant glimpses of gardens or of distant ruined temples. Occasionally
-the classic style of building rises to something really fine, as in the
-case of the university buildings, the polytechnic school, or the
-national museum itself. The local churches are by no means beautiful,
-however. Indeed the ordinary Greek church makes no pretension to outward
-attractiveness, such as the cathedrals and minor churches of the Roman
-faith possess. Perhaps the most striking of the Athenian houses of
-worship is the little brown structure which has been allowed to remain
-in the midst of Hermes Street, recalling the situation of St. Clement
-Danes, or St. Mary le Strand in London. It is a squat Byzantine edifice,
-not beautiful, but evidently old, and a familiar sight of the city.
-Within, the Greek churches are quite different in arrangement from the
-Roman. At the entrance to the altar space there is always a high screen,
-pierced by a door leading to the altar itself, and used only by the
-officiating priest. The altar screen, or “iconastasis,” is richly
-adorned as a rule with embossed work, and the “icons,” or holy pictures,
-are generally painted faces set in raised silver-gilt frames, which
-supply the figure and robes of the saints, only the facial features
-being in pigment. Images are not allowed in the Orthodox worship, but
-the relief employed to embellish the faces in the icons goes far to
-simulate imagery.
-
-The residential architecture of the city finds its best exemplification
-in the splendid marble mansions of the princes of the royal house, which
-are really fine, and which are surrounded by attractive grounds and
-gardens. The palace of the king is far less attractive, being a huge and
-barn-like structure in the centre of the city, relieved from utter
-barrenness only by a very good classic portico. But nothing could be
-lovelier than the deep dells of the palace gardens, which form a
-magnificent park well deserving the classic name of a παράδεισος, with
-its jungle of flowers, shrubs, and magnificent trees—the latter a
-welcome sight in treeless Attica.
-
-One cannot pass from the subject of modern Athens without mentioning the
-soldiery, for the soldiers are everywhere, in all degrees of rank and
-magnificence of dress, from the humble private to the glittering and
-altogether gorgeous generalissimo. The uniforms are of a variety that
-would put to blush the variegated equipment of the famous Ancient and
-Honorable Artillery Company of Boston. These manifold uniforms have
-their proper signification, however, and they are undeniably handsome.
-If the Greek soldiers could only fight as well as they look, what could
-restrain the modern Athenian empire? The army clothes are admirably
-designed with an eye to fit and color, and the men carry themselves with
-admirable military hauteur. Most picturesque of all are the king’s
-body-guard, with their magnificent physique and national dress. They are
-big, erect fellows, clad in the short fustanella skirts of the ancient
-régime, the tight-fitting leggings, the pomponed shoes, the dark
-over-jacket, and the fez. These are the only troops that wear the
-old-time garb of the Greek. But the dress is a familiar sight in the
-outside country districts, often worn by well-to-do peasants, and still
-regarded as the national dress despite the general prevalence of
-ordinary European clothes.
-
-It remains to speak briefly of the national money, for that is a subject
-the visitor cannot avoid. The drachma, which corresponds to the franc,
-is a peculiar thing. If one means the metal drachma, of silver, it is
-simple enough. It circulates at par with the franc. But the paper
-drachma varies in value from day to day at the behest of private
-speculation, and is almost never at par. I have experienced variations
-of it from a value of fourteen cents to eighteen. In small transactions,
-when the paper drachma is high, the difference is negligible. When it is
-low in value, or in large amounts, it is highly appreciable. The
-fluctuation of this money is the reason for the pads and pencils in the
-shops, for it is only by constant multiplication or division that the
-merchant is able to translate prices from francs into drachmas or _vice
-versa_, as occasion requires. Naturally when the drachma is worth only
-fourteen cents, the unsuspecting visitor is liable to pay more than he
-should, if assuming that a franc and a drachma are synonymous terms. In
-such a case a paper bill requires a considerable addition of copper
-lepta to make it equal the metal drachma or the French franc. The
-difference in value from day to day may be learned from the newspapers.
-Most bargains are made in francs, and the French money, both gold and
-silver, is freely used. Nevertheless, the local paper money is very
-useful, and it merely requires a little care in the use. Particularly is
-it desirable to know the status of the drachma in securing cash on a
-letter of credit or on a traveler’s cheque, in order that one may obtain
-the proper amount and not content himself with an inferior sum in paper;
-for although the principal banks may be relied upon as a rule to be
-honest, individual clerks may not be proof against the temptation to
-impose upon the ignorant and pocket the difference. I would advise the
-use of the Ionian Bank as far as possible, rather than the tourist
-agencies, for the latter often extort money quite without warrant, on
-the plea of needful stamps or fees for “accommodation,” that the bank
-does not require. Little trouble will be found to exist in the way of
-false coin—far less than in Italy. The one difficulty is to follow the
-paper drachma up and down, and not be mulcted to a greater or less
-extent in the exchange of silver for paper. The copper coins, which are
-either the five or ten lepta pieces, occasion no trouble, being like the
-Italian centesimi or English pence and ha' pennies.
-
-One not uncommon sight to be met with in Athenian streets is the funeral
-procession—a sight which is liable at first to give the unaccustomed
-witness a serious shock, because of the custom of carrying the dead
-uncoffined through the city. The coffin and its cover are borne at the
-head of the procession, as a rule, while the body of the deceased, in an
-open hearse, rides joltingly along in the middle of the cortège. To
-those not used to this method of honoring the dead, the exposure of the
-face to the sight of every passer-by must seem incongruous and
-revolting. But it is the custom of the place, and the passing of a
-funeral causes no apparent concern to those who calmly view the passing
-corpse from the chairs where they sip their coffee, or idly finger their
-strings of beads. The beads which are to be seen in the hand of nearly
-every native have no religious significance, as might be thought at
-first sight, but are simply one of the innocuous things that the Hellene
-finds for idle hands to do. They are large beads, of various colors,
-though the strings are generally uniform in themselves, and their sole
-function is to furnish something to toy with while talking, or while
-doing nothing in particular. There is a sufficiency of loose string to
-give some play to the beads, and they become a familiar sight.
-
-Royalty in Greece is decidedly democratic in its attitude. King George
-and his sons are frequently to be seen riding about town, much like
-ordinary citizens. Quite characteristic was an encounter of recent date,
-in which an American gentleman accosted one whom he found walking in the
-palace gardens with the inquiry as to what hour would be the best for
-seeing the royal children. The question elicited mutual interest and the
-two conversed for some time, the American asking with much curiosity for
-particulars of the household, with which his interlocutor professed to
-be acquainted. “What of the queen?” he inquired. "She’s exceedingly well
-beloved," was the reply. “She is a woman of high character and fills her
-high station admirably.” “And the king?” "Oh, the king! I regret to say
-that he is no good. He has done nothing for the country. He tries to
-give no offense—but as a king the less said of him the better!" Needless
-to say, this oracle was the king himself. Nobody else would have passed
-so harsh a judgment. King George I has been reigning since 1863, when
-the present government, with the sponsorship of the Christian powers,
-was inaugurated. He came from Denmark, being a son of the late King
-Christian, who furnished so many thrones of Europe with acceptable
-rulers and queens from his numerous and excellent family, so that the
-king is not himself a Greek at all. The years of successful rule have
-proved him highly acceptable to the Athenians and their countrymen, who
-have seen their land regain a large measure of its prosperity and their
-chief city grow to considerable proportions under the new order. The
-kingly office is hereditary, the crown prince reaching his majority at
-eighteen years.
-
-Prince Constantine, the heir to the throne, lives on the street behind
-the palace gardens, and has a family of handsome children. Prince George
-is commissioner in charge of Crete. The royal family has embraced the
-faith of the Greek Orthodox Church.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER V. ANCIENT ATHENS:
- THE ACROPOLIS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-The visible remains of the ancient city of Athens, as distinguished from
-the city of to-day, lie mainly to the south and west of the Acropolis,
-where are to be seen many distinct traces of the classic town, close
-around the base of the great rock and the Hill of Mars. How far the
-ancient city had extended around to the eastward can only be conjectured
-by the layman, for there exist almost no remains in that direction save
-the choragic monument of Lysicrates and the ruins of the temple of
-Olympian Zeus; while on the northern side of the Acropolis, although it
-is known that there once lay the agora, or market place, little is left
-but some porticoes of a late, if not of Roman, date. Not being bent on
-exact archæology, however, it is not for us here to speculate much over
-the probable sites of the ancient metes and bounds, the location of the
-fountain of nine spouts called “Enneacrunus,” nor the famous spring of
-Callirrhoë, which furnish fertile ground for dissent among those skilled
-in the art. What must now concern us most is the mass of visible ruins,
-which provide the chief charm of the city to every visitor, and most of
-all to those possessed of the desirable historic or classical
-“background” to make the ruins the more interesting.
-
-Despite her many inglorious vicissitudes, Athens has been so fortunate
-as to retain many of her ancient structures in such shape that even
-to-day a very good idea is to be had of their magnificence in the golden
-age of Hellenic empire. The Greek habit of building temples and fanes in
-high places, apart from the dwellings of men, has contributed very
-naturally to the preservation of much that might otherwise have been
-lost. The chief attractions of the classic city were set on high, and
-the degenerate modern town that succeeded the ancient capital did not
-entirely swallow them up, as was so largely the case at Rome. To be
-sure, the Turks did invade the sacred precincts of the Acropolis with
-their mosques and their munitions of war, and the latter ruined the
-Parthenon beyond hope of restoration when Morosini’s lamentable advisers
-caused the Venetian bomb to be fired at that noble edifice. Local
-vandalism and the greed of lime burners have doubtless destroyed much.
-But the whole course of these depredations has failed to remove the
-crowning treasures of Athens, and the Acropolis temples are still the
-inspiration and the despair of architects. In passing, then, to a more
-detailed and perhaps superfluous consideration of the monuments
-surviving from the ancient city, it may be remarked that the visitor
-will find more of the classic remains to reward and delight him than is
-the case at Rome, rich as that eternal city is.
-
-The Acropolis is naturally the great focus of interest, not only for
-what remains _in situ_ on its top, but because of many remnants of
-buildings that cluster about its base. The rock itself, if it were
-stripped of every building and devoid of every memory, would still be
-commanding and imposing, alone by sheer force of its height and
-steepness. As it is, with its beetling sides made the more precipitous
-by the artifices of Cimon and ancient engineers, whose walls reveal the
-use of marble column drums built into the fortifications themselves, it
-is doubly impressive for mere inaccessibility. Something like a hundred
-feet below its top it ceases to be so sheer, and spreads out into a more
-gradual slope, on the southern expanses of which were built the city’s
-theatres and a precinct sacred to Asklepios. Only on the west, however,
-was the crag at all approachable, and on that side to-day is the only
-practicable entrance to the sacred precincts.
-
-A more magnificent approach it would be hard to conceive. One must
-exempt from praise the so-called “Beulé” gate at the very entrance, at
-the foot of the grand staircase, for it is a mere late patchwork of
-marble from other ancient monuments, and is in every way unworthy of
-comparison with the majestic Propylæa at the top. It takes its name from
-the French explorer who unearthed it. As for its claim to interest, it
-must found that, if at all, on the identification of the stones which
-now compose it with the more ancient monument of some choragic victor.
-Looking up the steep incline to the Propylæa, or fore gate of the
-Acropolis, the Parthenon is completely hid. Nothing is visible from this
-point but the walls and columns of the magnificent gateway itself,
-designed to be a worthy prelude to the architectural glory of the main
-temple of the goddess. The architect certainly succeeded admirably in
-achieving the desired result. He did not at all dwarf or belittle his
-chief creation above, yet he gave it a most admirable setting. Even
-to-day, with so much of the colonnade of the Propylæa in ruins, it is a
-splendid and satisfying approach, not only when seen from a distance,
-but at close range. Not alone is it beautiful in and of itself, but it
-commands from its platform a grand view of the Attic plain below, of the
-bay of Salamis gleaming in the sun beyond, of the long cape running down
-to Sunium, and of the distant mountains of the Argolid, rolling like
-billows in the southwest far across the gulf and beyond Ægina. To pause
-for a moment on gaining this threshold of the Acropolis and gaze upon
-this imposing panorama of plain, mountain, and sea, is an admirable
-introduction to Greece.
-
-[Illustration: TEMPLE OF NIKÉ APTEROS]
-
-On either side of the stairway by which one climbs to the Propylæa are
-buttresses of rock, on one of which stands an object worthy of long
-contemplation. At the right, on a platform leveled from the solid rock,
-stands the tiny temple of Niké Apteros (the Wingless Victory),
-“restored” it is true, but nevertheless one of the most perfect little
-buildings imaginable. At one time entirely removed to make room for a
-Turkish watch-tower, it has been re-created by careful hands out of its
-original marbles; and it stands to-day, as it stood of old, on its
-narrow parapet beside the grand stairway of Athena. The process of
-rebuilding has not, indeed, been able to give the unbroken lines of the
-old temple. The stones are chipped at the corners here and there, and
-there are places where entirely new blocks have been required. But in
-the main everything, even to the delicately carved frieze around its
-top, is in place; and for once at least the oft-berated “restorer” of
-ancient buildings has triumphed and has silenced all his critics. The
-remnants of the incomparable carved balustrade, which once served as a
-railing for the parapet, are to be seen in the small museum of the
-Acropolis, revealing the extreme grace which the Greek sculptors had
-achieved in the modeling of exquisite figures in high relief. The slab,
-particularly, which has come to be known as “Niké binding her sandal”
-seems to be the favorite of all, though the others, even in their
-headless and armless state, are scarcely less lovely.
-
-As for the isolated pedestal on the other side of the stairway, known as
-the “pedestal of Agrippa,” it is not only devoid of any statue to give
-it continued excuse for being, but it is in such a state of decrepitude
-as to cause the uncomfortable thought that it is about to fall, and
-seems an object rather for removal than for perpetuation, although it
-serves to balance the effect produced by the Niké bastion.
-
-Standing on the Niké platform, the visitor finds the noble columns of
-the Propylæa towering above him close at hand. These Doric pillars give
-one for the first time an adequate idea of the perfection to which the
-column was carried by Ictinus and the builders and architects of his
-time; for although each pillar is built up drum upon drum, it is still
-true in many cases that the joints between them are almost invisible, so
-perfect are they, despite the lapse of ages and the ravages of war, not
-to mention the frequent earthquake shocks to which the whole region has
-been subjected. Age has been kind also to the Pentelic marble, softening
-its original whiteness to a golden brown without destroying its
-exquisite satin texture. Nothing more charming can well be imagined than
-the contrast of the blue Athenian sky with these stately old columns, as
-one looks outward or inward through their majestic rows.
-
-The rock rises sharply as one passes within the precinct of the
-Acropolis, and the surface of it appears to have been grooved to give a
-more secure footing to pedestrians. Stony as is the place, it still
-affords soil enough to support a growth of grasses and struggling bits
-of greenery to cradle the many fallen drums. But one has eyes only for
-the Parthenon, the western front of which now appears for the first time
-in its full effect. From its western end, the havoc wrought in its midst
-being concealed, the Parthenon appears almost perfect. The pedimental
-sculptures, it is true, are gone save for a fragment or two, having been
-carried off to England. But the massive Doric columns still stand in an
-unbroken double row before one; the walls of the cella appear to be
-intact; the pediment rises almost unbroken above; frieze, triglyphs, and
-metopes remain in sufficient degree to give an idea of the ancient
-magnificence of the shrine—and all conspire to compel instant and
-unstinted admiration. Speculation as to the ethics of the removal of the
-Parthenon sculptures by Lord Elgin has become an academic matter, and
-therefore one quite beyond our present purpose. Doubtless to-day no such
-removal would be countenanced for a moment. It is no longer possible to
-say, as former critics have said, that the local regard for the
-treasures of the place is so slight as to endanger their safety. The
-present custodianship of the priceless relics of antiquity in Athens is
-admirably careful and satisfactory. If, therefore, Greece had only come
-into her own a century or so earlier than she did, the famous sculptures
-of the miraculous birth of Athena, springing full grown from the head of
-Zeus, and the colossal representation of the strife between Athena and
-Poseidon for possession of the Attic land, might still adorn as of yore
-the eastern and western gables of the great temple; or if not that,
-might still be seen in the very excellent museum at the other end of the
-city. It is enough for us to know, however, that they are not in Athens
-but in London, and that there is no probability they will ever return to
-Greek soil; and to know, also, that had they not been removed as they
-were, they might never have been preserved at all. That is the one
-comfortable state of mind in which to view the vacant pediments of the
-Parthenon. To work up a Byronic frenzy over what cannot be helped, and
-may, after all, be for the best, is of no benefit.
-
-Writers on Athens have often called attention to the curved stylobate of
-the Parthenon—a feature which is by no means confined to this temple,
-but which is to be noticed in almost every considerable ruin of the
-sort. The base of the building curves sufficiently to make the device
-visible, rising from either end to the centre of the sides; and the
-curious may easily prove it by placing a hat at one extremity and trying
-to see it from the other, sighting along the line of the basic stones.
-The curve was necessary to cure an optical defect, for a straight or
-level base would have produced the illusion of a decided sagging
-Similarly it has long been recognized that the columns must swell at the
-middle drums, lest they appear to the eye to be concaved. In fact, as
-Professor Gardner has pointed out, there is actually hardly a really
-straight line in the Parthenon—yet the effect is of absolute
-straightness everywhere.
-
-Obviously this curvature of the base, slight though it was, imposed some
-engineering problems of no inconsiderable nature when it came to setting
-the column drums; for the columns must stand erect, and the bottom
-sections must be so devised as to meet the configuration of the convex
-stylobate. The corner columns, being set on a base that curved in both
-directions, must have been more difficult still to deal with. But the
-problem was solved successfully, and the result of this cunningly
-contrived structure was a temple that comes as near architectural
-perfection as earthly artisans are ever likely to attain. The columns
-were set up in an unfluted state, the fluting being added after the
-pillar was complete. Each drum is said to have been rotated upon its
-lower fellow until the joint became so exact as to be to all intents and
-purposes indistinguishable. In the centre of the fallen drums will be
-seen always a square hole, used to contain a peg of wood designed to
-hold the finished sections immovable, and in many cases this wooden plug
-has been found intact. All along the sides of the Parthenon, lying on
-the ground as they fell, are to be seen the fallen drums that once
-composed the columns of the sides, but which were blown out of position
-by the bomb from the Venetian fleet of Admiral Morosini. They lie like
-fallen heaps of dominoes or children’s building blocks, and the entire
-centre of the temple is a gaping void. Here and there an attempt has
-been made to reconstruct the fallen columns from the original portions,
-but the result is by no means reassuring and seems not to justify the
-further prosecution of the task. Better a ruined Parthenon than an
-obvious patchwork. The few restored columns are quite devoid of that
-homogeneity that marks the extant originals, and their joints are
-painfully felt, being chipped and uneven, where the old are all but
-imperceptible; so that the whole effect is of insecurity and lack of
-perfection entirely out of harmony with the Parthenon itself. Opinions,
-however, differ. Some still do advocate the rebuilding of the temple
-rather than leave the drums, seemingly so perfect still, lying as they
-now are amid the grasses of the Acropolis. It is one of those questions
-of taste on which debate is traditionally idle and purposeless.
-
-[Illustration: THE PARTHENON, WEST PEDIMENT]
-
-For those who must demand restorations other than those constructed by
-the mind’s eye, there are models and drawings enough extant, and some
-are to be seen in the Acropolis Museum. Most interesting of the attempts
-are doubtless the speculations as to the pedimental sculptures, the
-remains of which are in the British Museum, but which are so fragmentary
-and so ill placed in their new home that much of the original grouping
-is matter for conjecture. With the aid of drawings made by a visitor
-long years ago, before Lord Elgin had thought of tearing them down, the
-two great pediments have been ingeniously reconstructed in miniature,
-showing a multitude of figures attending on the birth of the city’s
-tutelary goddess, as she sprang full armed from the head of Zeus
-assisted by the blow of Hephaistos’s hammer, or the concourse of deities
-that umpired the contest between Athena and Poseidon for the land. The
-Acropolis Museum has only casts of the Elgin marbles, but there is still
-to be seen a good proportion of the original frieze. It would be out of
-place in any such work as this to be drawn into anything like a detailed
-account of these famous sculptures, the subjects of a vast volume of
-available literature already and sources of a considerable volume also
-of controversial writing involving conflicts of the highest authority.
-It must therefore suffice to refer the reader interested in the detailed
-story of the Parthenon, its external adornment, its huge gold-and-ivory
-statue within, and the great Panathenaic festival which its frieze
-portrayed, to any one of those learned authors who have written of all
-these things so copiously and clearly—doubtless none more so than Dr.
-Ernest Gardner in his admirably lucid and readable “Ancient Athens,” or
-in his “Handbook of Greek Sculpture,” without which no one should visit
-the museum in that city.
-
-One must remember that the Parthenon and the other features of the
-Acropolis are monuments of the age of Pericles, and not of an earlier
-day. The Persians who invaded Greece in 480 B.C. succeeded in obtaining
-possession of Athens and of the whole Attic plain, the inhabitants
-fleeing to the island of Salamis. The hordes of barbarians brought in by
-Xerxes were opposed by a very few of the citizens, some of whom erected
-a stockade around the Acropolis, thinking that thereby they satisfied
-the oracle which had promised the city salvation through the
-impregnability of its “Wooden Walls.” The Persians massed their forces
-on Mars Hill, just west of the larger rock, and a hot fight took place,
-the invaders attempting to fire the stockade by means of arrows carrying
-burning tow, while the besieged made use of round stones with
-considerable effect. Eventually the enemy discovered an unsuspected
-means of access to the citadel and took it by storm, after which they
-burned its temples and left it a sorry ruin. The rest of the Athenians
-with the allied navy at Salamis repulsed the Persian fleet, and Xerxes,
-disgusted, withdrew,—despite the fact that it would seem to have been
-quite possible for him to pursue his successes on land. It left Athens a
-waste, but on that waste grew up a city that for architectural beauty
-has never, in all probability, been surpassed. The reaction from the
-horrors of war gave us the Parthenon, the Propylæa, and the Erechtheum,
-all dating, perhaps, from the fifth century before Christ.
-
-The Erechtheum, while properly entitled to the epithet “elegant” as a
-building, seems decidedly less a favorite than the Parthenon. It is
-extremely beautiful, no doubt, in a delicate and elaborate way, and its
-ornamentation is certainly of a high order. Unlike the Parthenon, it is
-not surrounded by a colonnade, but possesses pillars only in its several
-porticoes. The columns are not Doric, but Ionic. As for its general
-plan, it is so complicated and devoted to so many obscure purposes that
-the lay visitor doubtless will find it an extremely difficult place to
-understand. There appear to have been at least three precincts involved
-in it, and the name it bears is the ancient one, given it because in
-part it was a temple of Erechtheus. That deity was of the demi-god type.
-He was an ancient Attic hero, who had received apotheosis and become
-highly esteemed, doubtless because in part he had instituted the worship
-of Athena in the city and had devised the celebrated Panathenaic
-festival. Tradition says that he was brought up by Athena herself, and
-that she intrusted him as a babe, secreted in a chest, to the daughters
-of Cecrops to guard. They were enjoined not to open the chest, but being
-overcome with curiosity they disobeyed, and discovered the babe entwined
-with serpents—whereat, terrified beyond measure, they rushed to the
-steeper part of the Acropolis and threw themselves down from the rock.
-Therein they were not alone, for it is also related that the father of
-Theseus had also thrown himself down from this eminence in despair,
-because he beheld his son’s ship returning from Crete with black sails,
-imagining therefrom that the Minotaur had triumphed over his heroic son,
-when the reverse was the fact.
-
-The complicated character of the Erechtheum is further emphasized by the
-fact that a portion of it was supposed to shelter the gash made by
-Poseidon with his trident when he was contending with Athena for the
-land, as well as the olive tree that Athena caused to grow out of the
-rock. The two relics were naturally held in veneration, and it was the
-story that in the cleft made by the trident there was a salt spring, or
-“sea” as Herodotus calls it, which gave forth to the ear a murmuring
-like that of the ocean. The cleft is still there. The olive tree,
-unfortunately, has disappeared. It was there when the Persian horde came
-to Athens, however, if we may believe Herodotus; and tradition says that
-after the invaders had burned the Acropolis over, the tree-stump
-immediately put forth a shoot which was in length a cubit, as a sign
-that the deity had not abandoned the city. It had been the custom of the
-place to deposit a cake of honey at stated intervals in the temple door
-for the food of the sacred serpents; and when, on the arrival of the
-Persians, this cake remained untouched, the inhabitants were convinced
-that even the god had left the Acropolis and that naught remained but
-ruin. The renewed and miraculous life of the olive tree dispelled this
-error. The Erechtheum in part overlaps the oldest precinct sacred to
-Athena, where stood an earlier temple supposed to have contained the
-sacred image of the goddess, made of wood, which came down from heaven.
-For exact and detailed descriptions of the Erechtheum and its uses, the
-reader must once again turn to the archæologists. As for its external
-features, the most famous of all is unquestionably the caryatid portico,
-in which the roof is borne up by a row of graceful, but undeniably
-sturdy, marble maidens. The use of the caryatid, always unnatural, is
-here rather successful on the whole, for the beholder derives no
-sensation that the maidens are restive under the weight imposed on them.
-They are entirely free from any indictment of grotesqueness.
-Nevertheless, it is questionable whether the portico is altogether
-pleasing. One of the figures is, as is well known, a reproduction of the
-one Lord Elgin carried away to the British Museum, but the remainder of
-the six are the original members.
-
-The Acropolis Museum serves to house a great many interesting fragments
-found on the spot, including a host of archaic representations of
-Athena, still bearing ample traces of the paint which the Greeks used so
-lavishly on their marble statues. This use of pigment might seem to have
-been a very doubtful exhibition of taste, as judged by modern standards,
-not only in its application to statues, but in the decoration of marble
-temples as well. It is hard for us to-day, accustomed to pure white
-marble sculpture, to imagine any added beauty from painting the hair,
-eyes, and garments of a statue; or to conceive how the polychromy so
-commonly made use of in bedecking such masterpieces as the Parthenon
-could have been anything but a blemish. Nevertheless, the fact that the
-Greeks did it, and that they were in all else so consummately tasteful,
-makes it entirely probable that their finished statues and edifices thus
-adorned were perfectly congruous—especially under that brilliant sky and
-surrounded by so many brilliant costumes. From the surviving multitude
-of statues of Athena, it is evident that the Greeks conceived her as a
-woman of majestic mien, rather almond-eyed, and possessed of abundant
-braids of the ruddy hair later vouchsafed to Queen Elizabeth. The more
-rudimentary figure of the “Typhon,” also preserved in this museum, which
-was doubtless a pedimental sculpture from some earlier acropolitan
-temple, bears abundant traces of paint on its body and on the beards of
-its triple head. It is too grotesque to furnish much of an idea of the
-use of paint on such statues as the great masters later produced. The
-remnants of the Parthenon frieze give little or no trace of any of the
-blue background, such as was commonly laid on to bring out the figures
-carved on such ornaments, nor are there any traces remaining of
-polychrome decoration on the Parthenon itself.
-
-The Acropolis, of course, has not escaped the common fate of all similar
-celebrated places—that of being “done” now and then by parties of
-tourists in absurdly hasty fashion, that to the lover of the spot seems
-little less than sacrilege. It is no infrequent sight to see a body of
-men and women numbering from a dozen to over a hundred, in the keeping
-of a voluble courier, scampering up the steps of the Propylæa, over the
-summit, through the two temples, in and out of the museum, and down
-again, amply satisfied with having spent a half hour or even less among
-those immortal ruins, and prepared to tell about it for the rest of
-their days. It is a pity, as it always is, to see a wonder of the world
-so cavalierly treated. Still, one hesitates to say that rather than do
-this, one should never visit the Acropolis of Athens. It is better to
-have looked for a moment than never to have looked at all. The Acropolis
-is no place to hurry through. Rather is it a spot to visit again and
-again, chiefly toward sunset, not merely to wander through the ruins, or
-to rest on the steps of the Parthenon musing over the remote past to
-which this place belongs, but also to see the sun sink to the west as
-Plato and Socrates must often have seen it sink from this very place,
-behind the rugged sky-line of the Argolid, which never changes,
-lengthening the purple shadows of the hills on the peaceful plain and
-touching the golden-brown of the temples with that afterglow which, once
-seen, can never be forgotten.
-
-The gates of the Acropolis are closed at sunset by the guards, and
-lingering visitors are insistently herded into groups and driven
-downward to the gate like sheep by the little band of blue-coated
-custodians. Still, they are not hard-hearted, and if a belated visitor
-finds the outer gates locked a trifle before sunset, as often happens
-with the idea of preventing needless ascent, a plea for “pende lepta”
-(five minutes) is likely to be honored even without a petty bribe. But
-at last every one must go, and the holy hill of Athena is left
-untenanted for one more of its endless round of nights. A visit to the
-Acropolis by moonlight is traditionally worth while, and the needful
-permission is not difficult to obtain once the municipal office dealing
-with such things is located. The Parthenon on a clear, moonlit night
-must be indescribably lovely, even in its lamentable ruin.
-
-Other sights of Athens, ancient and modern, are interesting, and many
-are magnificent. But the Acropolis is unquestionably the best that
-Athens has to show, and the Parthenon is incomparably the best of the
-Acropolis. It is the first and the last spot to seek in visiting
-Athena’s famous city, and the last glimpse the departing voyager—very
-likely with a not unmanly tear—catches from his ship as it sails out
-into the blue Ægean is of this hoary temple reposing in calm and serene
-indifference to mankind on its rocky height. It has seen the worship of
-Athena Parthenos give way to the reverence of another Virgin—a holier
-ideal of Wisdom set up in its own precincts, and worshiped there on the
-very spot where once the youth of Athens did honor to the pagan goddess.
-Gods and religions have risen and departed, despots have come and gone;
-but the Parthenon has stood unchanging, the unrivaled embodiment of
-architectural beauty to-day, as it was when Ictinus, Mnesicles,
-Pheidias, and those who were with them created it out of their combined
-and colossal genius, under the wise ordainment of Pericles.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER VI. ANCIENT ATHENS:
- THE OTHER MONUMENTS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-There are two favorite ways whereby those leaving the Acropolis are wont
-to descend to the modern city. One lies around to the right as you leave
-the gates, passing between the Acropolis and Mars Hill to the north side
-of the former, where steps will be found leading down to the old quarter
-and thence past Shoe Lane to Hermes Street and home. The other passes to
-the south of the Acropolis along its southerly slopes, finally emerging
-through an iron gate at the eastern end, whence a street leads directly
-homeward, rather cleaner and sweeter than the other route but hardly as
-picturesque. Since, however, this way leads to some of the other notable
-remains of classic Athens, for the present let us take it.
-
-Immediately on leaving the avenue in front of the gates of the
-Acropolis, one finds a path leading eastward directly behind and above
-the Odeon of Herodes Atticus, which is made conspicuous in the landscape
-by the lofty stone arches remaining at its front. These arches are
-blackened and bear every ear-mark of the later Roman epoch. Moreover
-they strike the beholder as rather unstable, as if some day they might
-fall unless removed. But their loss would be a pity, nevertheless, for
-they certainly present a striking and agreeable feature to the sight
-despite their lack of harmony with the received ideas of pure Greek
-architecture. It hardly repays one to descend to the pit of this
-commodious theatre, or rather concert hall, since one gets a very
-accurate idea of it from above looking down into its orchestra over the
-tiers of grass-grown seats. For more detailed inspection of ancient
-theatrical structures, the Dionysiac theatre farther along our path is
-decidedly more worth while, besides being much more ancient and more
-interesting by association.
-
-On the way thereto are passed several remnants of a long “stoa,” or
-portico, called that of Eumenes, curiously intermingled with brick
-relics of the Turkish times, and the non-archæological visitor will
-hardly care to concern himself long with either. But he will doubtless
-be interested to turn aside from the path and clamber up to the base of
-the steeper rock to inspect the damp and dripping cave where once was an
-important shrine of Asklepios, with the usual “sacred spring” still
-flowing, and still surrounded with remains of the customary porticoes,
-in which the faithful in need of healing once reposed themselves by
-night, awaiting the cure which the vision of the god might be hoped to
-bestow. The cave is now a Catholic shrine, with a picture of its
-particular saint and an oil lamp burning before it. It is dank and
-dismal, and for one to remain there long would doubtless necessitate the
-services of Asklepios himself, or of some skillful modern disciple of
-his healing art—of which, by the way, Athens can boast not a few. The
-Greek seems to take naturally to the practice of medicine, and some of
-the physicians, even in remote country districts, are said to possess
-unusual talent.
-
-Not far below the shrine lies the theatre of Dionysus, scooped out of
-the hillside as are most Greek theatres, with a paved, semi-circular
-“orchestra,” or dancing place, at its foot. Much of the original seating
-capacity is concealed by the overgrowth of grass, so that one is likely
-greatly to underestimate its former size. Once the seats rose far up
-toward the precinct of Asklepios, and the path that to-day traverses the
-slope passes through what was once the upper portion of the
-amphitheatre. It is only in the lower portions that the stones still
-remain in a fair state of preservation and serve to show us the manner
-of theatre that the Athenians knew—the same in which the earlier
-generations saw for the first time the tragedies of that famous trio of
-playwrights, Æschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. This theatre has
-undergone manifold changes since its first construction, as one will
-discover from his archæological books. It is idle for us here to seek to
-recall the successive alterations which changed the present theatre from
-that which the ancients actually saw, or to point out the traces of each
-transformation that now remain, to show that the “orchestra” was once a
-complete circle and lay much farther back. It will, however, be found
-interesting enough to clamber down over the tiers of seats to the bottom
-and inspect at leisure the carved chairs once allotted to various
-dignitaries, and bearing to this day the names of the officers who used
-them. Particularly fine is the chief seat of all, the carved chair of
-the high priest of Dionysus, in the very centre of the row, with its
-bas-relief of fighting cocks on the chair-arms still plainly to be seen.
-It is well to remember, however, that most of what the visitor sees is
-of a rather recent period as compared with other Athenian monuments, for
-it is stated that very little of the present visible theatre is of
-earlier date than the third century B.C., while much is of even a more
-recent time and is the work of the Romans. This is true, especially, of
-the conspicuous carved screen that runs along behind the orchestra
-space, and which may have supported the stage—if there was a stage at
-all. The paved orchestra will also strike one as unusual, contrasting
-with the greensward to be seen in other similar structures, such as the
-theatre at Epidaurus.
-
-The vexed question of the use of any elevated stage in Greek theatres so
-divides the skilled archæologists into warring camps even to-day that it
-ill becomes an amateur in the field to advance any opinion at all, one
-way or the other, upon the subject. There are eminent authorities who
-maintain that the use of a raised stage in such a theatre was utterly
-unknown by the ancients, and that any such development can only have
-come in comparatively modern times, under Roman auspices. Others insist,
-and with equal positiveness, that some sort of a stage was used by the
-more ancient Greeks. The arguments pro and con have waxed warm for
-several years, without convincing either side of its error. It is safe
-to say that American students generally incline to the view that there
-was no such raised stage, agreeing with the Germans, while English
-scholars appear generally to believe that the stage did exist and was
-used. As just remarked, the views of mere laymen in such a case are of
-small account, and I shall spare the reader my own, saying only that in
-the few reproductions of Greek plays that I myself have seen, there has
-been no confusion whatever produced by having the principal actors
-present in the “orchestra” space with the chorus—and this, too, without
-the aid of the distinguishing cothurnos, or sandal, to give to the
-principals any added height. From this it seems to me not unreasonable
-to contend that, if a stage did exist, it was hardly called into being
-by any pressing necessity to avoid confusion, as some have argued;
-while, on the contrary, it does seem as if the separation of the chief
-actors to the higher level would often mar the general effect. Such a
-play as the “Agamemnon” of Æschylus would, it seems to me, lose much by
-the employment of an elevated platform for those actors not of the
-chorus. In fact, there was no more need of any such difference in level,
-to separate chorus from principal, in ancient times than there is
-to-day. The ancients did, however, seek to differentiate the principals
-from the chorus players, by adding a cubit unto their stature, so to
-speak, for they devised thick-soled sandals that raised them above the
-ordinary height. Besides this they employed masks, and occasionally even
-mechanism for aerial acting, and also subterranean passages.
-
-Whatever we may each conclude as to the existence or non-existence of an
-elevated stage at the time of Pericles, we shall all agree, no doubt,
-that our modern stagecraft takes its nomenclature direct from the Greek.
-The “orchestra,” which in the old Greek meant the circle in which the
-dancing and acting took place, we have taken over as a word referring to
-the floor space filled with the best seats, and by a still less
-justifiable stretch of the meaning we have come to apply it to the
-musicians themselves. Our modern “scene” is simply the old Greek word
-σκηνή (skèné), meaning a “tent,” which the ancient actors used as a
-dressing-room. The marble or stone wall, of varying height, and pierced
-by doors for the entrance and exit of actors, was called by the Greeks
-the “proskenion,” or structure before the skèné, serving to conceal the
-portions behind the scenes and add background to the action. The word is
-obviously the same as our modern “proscenium,” though the meaning to-day
-is entirely different. In ancient times the proskenion, instead of being
-the arch framing the foreground of a “scene,” was the background, or
-more like our modern “drop” scene. Being of permanent character and made
-of stone, it generally represented a palace, with three entrances, and
-often with a colonnade. At either side of the proskenion were broad
-roads leading into the orchestra space, called the “parodoi,” by means
-of which the chorus entered and departed on occasion, and through which
-chariots might be driven. Thus, for instance, in the “Agamemnon,” that
-hero and Cassandra drove through one of the parodoi into the orchestra,
-chariots and all—a much more effective entrance than would have been
-possible had they been forced to climb aloft to a stage by means of the
-ladder represented on some of the vases as used for the purpose. The
-side from which the actor entered often possessed significance, as
-indicating whether he came from the country or from the sea. As for
-disagreeable scenes, such as the murders which form the motif of the
-Oresteian trilogy, it may not be out of place to remark that they were
-almost never represented on the stage in sight of the orchestra or
-spectators, but were supposed always to take place indoors, the audience
-being apprized of events by groans and by the explanations of the
-chorus. The ordinary theatrical performance was in the nature of a
-religious ceremony, the altar of the god being in the centre of the
-orchestra space, and served by the priest before the play began. And in
-leaving the subject, one may add that many Greek plays required sequels,
-so that they often came in groups of three, each separate from the
-other, but bearing a relation to each other not unlike our several acts
-of a single piece. So much for Greek theatres in general, and the
-theatre of Dionysus in particular.
-
-Leaving it by the iron gate above and plunging into a labyrinthine mass
-of houses just outside, one will speedily come upon an interesting
-monument called the “choragic monument of Lysicrates.” This is the only
-remaining representative of a series of pedestals erected by victors in
-musical or dancing fêtes to support tripods celebrating their victories.
-This one, which is exceedingly graceful, has managed to survive and is a
-thing of beauty still, despite several fires and vicissitudes of which
-it bears traces. The street is still called the “Street of the Tripods.”
-
-[Illustration: TEMPLE OF OLYMPIAN ZEUS]
-
-A few steps farther, and one emerges from the narrower lanes into the
-broader avenues of the city, and is confronted at once by the arch of
-Hadrian, which stands in an open field across the boulevard of Amalia.
-It is frankly and outspokenly Roman, of course, and does not flatter the
-Latin taste as compared with the Greek. It need delay nobody long,
-however, for the tall remaining columns of the temple of Olympian Zeus
-are just before, and are commanding enough to inspire attention at once.
-To those who prefer the stern simplicity of the Doric order of columns,
-the Corinthian capitals will not appeal. But the few huge, weathered
-pillars, despite the absence of roof or of much of the entablature, are
-grand in their own peculiar way, and the vast size of the temple as it
-originally stood may serve to show the reverence in which the father of
-the gods was held in the city of his great daughter, Athena. The more
-florid Corinthian capital seems to have appealed to the Roman taste, and
-it is to be remembered that this great temple, although begun by Greeks,
-was completed in the time of Hadrian and after the dawn of the Christian
-era: so that if it disappoints one in comparison with the more classic
-structures of the Acropolis, it may be set down to the decadent
-Hellenistic taste rather than to a flaw in the old Hellenic. As for the
-Corinthian order of capital, it is supposed to have been devised by a
-Corinthian sculptor from a basket of fruit and flowers which he saw one
-day on a wall, perhaps as a funeral tribute. The idea inspired him to
-devise a conventionalized flower basket with the acanthus leaf as the
-main feature, and to apply the same to the ornamentation of the tops of
-marble columns, such as these.
-
-On the northern side of the Acropolis, down among the buildings and
-alleys of the so-called “Turkish” quarter, there exist several
-fragmentary monuments, which may be passed over with little more than a
-word. The most complete and at the same time the most interesting of
-these relics is unquestionably the “Tower of the Winds,” an octagonal
-building not unlike a windmill in shape and general size, but devoted
-originally to the uses of town clock and weather bureau. On its
-cornices, just below the top, are carved eight panels facing the
-different points of the compass, the figures in high relief representing
-the several winds. The appropriate general characteristics of each wind
-are brought out by the sculpture—here an old man of sour visage brings
-snow and storms; another, of more kindly mien, brings gentle rain;
-others bring flowers and ripening fruits. A weather-vane once surmounted
-the structure. Near by, scattered among the houses, are bits of old
-porticoes, sometimes areas of broken columns, and at others quite
-perfect specimens still bearing their pedimental stones, testifying to
-the former presence of ancient market places, or public meeting places,
-in large part belonging to the later, or Roman, period. It was in this
-general vicinity that the original agora, or market place, stood, no
-doubt. In some of the porticoes were often to be found teachers of one
-sort or another, and in one “stoa” of this kind, we are told, taught
-those philosophers who, from the location of their school, came to be
-called "stoics"—giving us an adjective which to-day has lost every
-vestige of its derivative significance. Nothing remains of the other
-famous structures that are supposed to have been located in this
-vicinity, or at least nothing has been unearthed as yet, although
-possibly if some of the congested and rather mean houses of the quarter
-could be removed, some vestiges of this important section of the classic
-city might be recovered. Nothing remains of the ancient “agora,” or
-market place, in which St. Paul said he saw the altar with this
-inscription, “To the unknown god.” But the Areopagus, or Mars Hill,
-where Paul is supposed to have stood when he made his noble speech to
-the men of Athens, is still left and well repays frequent visitation.
-Its ancient fame as the place where the god Ares, or Mars, was tried for
-his life, and as the place of deliberation over the gravest Athenian
-affairs, has been augmented by the celebrity it derived from the
-apostle’s eloquent argument, in which he commented on the activity of
-the Athenian mind and its fondness for theology, a characteristic rather
-inadequately brought out by the Bible’s rendering, “too superstitious.”
-The Areopagus to-day is a barren rock devoid of vegetation or of any
-trace of building, although rough-hewn steps here and there and a rude
-leveling of the top are visible. Of the great events that have passed on
-this rocky knoll not a trace remains. With reference to the Acropolis
-towering above and close at hand, Mars Hill seems small, but the ascent
-of it from the plain is long and steep enough. It is apparently no more
-than an outlying spur of the main rock of the Acropolis, from which it
-is separated by a slight depression; but it shares with the holy hill of
-Athena a celebrity which makes it the object of every thoughtful
-visitor’s attention. From its top one may obtain almost the best view of
-the afterglow of sunset on the temples and the Propylæa of the
-Acropolis, after the custodians of the latter have driven all visitors
-below; and sitting there as the light fades one may lose himself readily
-in a reverie in which the mighty ones of old, from Ares himself down to
-the mortal sages of later days, pass in grand review, only to fade away
-from the mind and leave the eloquent apostle of the newer religion
-saying to the citizens gathered around him, “Whom, therefore, ye
-ignorantly worship, Him declare I unto you.” Let us, if we will, believe
-that it was “in the midst of Mars Hill” that Paul preached his sonorous
-sermon, despite a tendency among scholars to suggest that he probably
-stood somewhere else, “close by or near to” rather than “in the midst
-of” the spot. If we paid undue heed to these iconoclastic theories of
-scientists, what would become of all our cherished legends? The traveler
-in Greece loses half the charm of the place if he cannot become as a
-little child and believe a good many things to be true enough that
-perhaps can hardly stand the severe test of archæology. And why should
-he not do this?
-
-[Illustration: THE AREOPAGUS]
-
-Peopled with ghostly memories also is the long, low ridge of rocky
-ground to the westward, across the broad avenue that leads from the
-plain up to the Acropolis, still bearing its ancient name of the “Pnyx.”
-In the valley between lie evidences of a bygone civilization, the
-crowded foundations of ancient houses, perhaps of the poorer class,
-huddled together along ancient streets, the lines of which are faintly
-discernible among the ruins, while here and there are traces of old
-watercourses and drains, with deep wells and cisterns yawning up at the
-beholder. Thus much of the older town has been recovered, lying as it
-does in the open and beyond the reach of the present line of dwellings.
-Above this mass of ruin the hill rises to the ancient assembling place
-of the enfranchised citizens—the “Bema,” or rostrum, from which speeches
-on public topics were made to the assembled multitude. The Bema is still
-in place, backed by a wall of huge “Cyclopean” masonry. Curiously enough
-the ground slopes downward from the Bema to-day, instead of upward as a
-good amphitheatre for auditors should do, giving the impression that the
-eloquence of the Athenian orators must literally have gone over the
-heads of their audiences. That this was anciently the case appears to be
-denied, however, and we are told that formerly the topography was quite
-the reverse of modern conditions, made so artificially with the aid of
-retaining walls, now largely destroyed. Until this is understood, the
-Bema and its neighborhood form one of the hardest things in Athens to
-reconstruct in memory. It is from the rocky platform of this old rostrum
-that one gets the ideal view of the Acropolis, bringing out the perfect
-subordination of the Propylæa to the Parthenon, and giving even to-day a
-very fair idea of the appearance of the Acropolis and its temples as the
-ancients saw them. Fortunate, indeed, is one who may see these in the
-afternoon light standing out sharply against a background of opaque
-cloud, yet themselves colored by the glow of the declining sun. Of all
-the magnificent ruins in Greece, this is the finest and best,—the
-Acropolis from the Bema, or from any point along the ridge of the Pnyx.
-
-Of course that temple which is called, though possibly erroneously, the
-Theseum, is one of the best preserved of all extant Greek temples of
-ancient date, and is one of the most conspicuous sights of Athens, after
-the Acropolis and the temples thereon. And yet, despite that fact, it
-somehow fails to arouse anything like the same enthusiasm in the average
-visitor. Just why this is so it may be rash to attempt to say, but I
-suspect it is chiefly because the Theseum is, after all, a rather
-colorless and uninspiring thing by comparison with the Parthenon,
-lacking in individuality, although doubtless one would look long before
-finding real flaws in its architecture or proportions. It simply suffers
-because its neighbors are so much grander. If it stood quite alone as
-the temple at Segesta stands, or as stand the magnificent ruins at
-Pæstum, it would be a different matter. As it is, with the Parthenon
-looking down from the Acropolis not far away, the Theseum loses
-immeasurably in the effect that a specimen of ancient architecture so
-obviously perfect ought, in all justice, to command. It seems entirely
-probable that the failure of this smaller temple to inspire and lay hold
-on Athenian visitors is due to the overshadowing effect of its greater
-neighbors, which it feebly resembles in form without at all equaling
-their beauty, and in part also, perhaps, to the uncertainty about its
-name. That it was really a temple of Theseus, an early king of Athens,
-seems no longer to be believed by any, although no very satisfactory
-substitute seems to be generally accepted. It will remain the Theseum
-for many years to come, no doubt, if not for all time. Theseus certainly
-deserved some such memorial as this, and it is not amiss to believe that
-the bones of the hero were actually deposited here by Cimon when he
-brought them back from Scyros. The services of Theseus to the city were
-great. If we may, in childlike trust, accept the testimony of legend,
-Theseus was the son of King Ægeus and Æthra, but was brought up in the
-supposition that he was a son of Poseidon, in the far city of Tr[oe]zen.
-When he grew up, however, he was given a sword and shield and sent to
-Athens, where his father, Ægeus, was king. Escaping poisoning by Medea,
-he appeared at the Athenian court, was recognized by his armor, and was
-designated by Ægeus as his rightful successor. He performed various
-heroic exploits, freed Athens of her horrid tribute of seven boys and
-seven girls paid to the Cretan Minotaur, came back triumphant to Athens
-only to find that Ægeus, mistaking the significance of his sails, which
-were black, had committed suicide by hurling himself in his grief from
-the Acropolis; and thereupon, Theseus became king. He united the Attic
-cities in one state, instituted the democracy and generously abdicated a
-large share of the kingly power, devised good laws, and was ever after
-held in high esteem by the city—although he died in exile at Scyros, to
-which place he withdrew because of a temporary coolness of his people
-toward him. Cimon brought back his bones, however, in 469 B.C., and
-Theseus became a demi-god in the popular imagination. The Theseum owes
-its splendid preservation to the fact that it was used, as many other
-temples were, as a Christian church, sacred to St. George of Cappadocia.
-
-[Illustration: THE THESEUM]
-
-Infinitely more pregnant with definite interest is the precinct of the
-Ceramicus, near the Dipylon, or double gate, of the city, which gave
-egress to the Eleusis road on the western side of the town, the remains
-of which are easily to be seen to-day. The excavations at this point
-have recently been pushed with thoroughness and some very interesting
-fragments have come to light, buried for all these centuries in the
-“Themistoclean wall” of the city. It will be recalled that the Spartans,
-being jealous of the growing power of Athens, protested against the
-rebuilding of the walls. Themistocles, who was not only a crafty soul
-but in high favor at Athens at the time, undertook to go to Sparta and
-hold the citizens of that town at bay until the walls should be of
-sufficient height for defense. Accordingly he journeyed down to Sparta
-and pleaded the non-arrival of his ambassadorial colleagues as an excuse
-for delaying the opening of negotiations on the subject of the wall.
-Days passed and still the colleagues did not come, much to the
-ostensible anxiety and disgust of Themistocles, who still asserted they
-must soon arrive. Meantime every man, woman, and child in Athens was
-working night and day to build those walls, heaping up outworks for the
-city from every conceivable material, sparing nothing, not even the
-gravestones of the Ceramicus district, in their feverish anxiety to get
-the walls high enough to risk an attack. The Roman consul worked no more
-assiduously at hewing down the famous bridge, nor did Horatius labor
-more arduously at his task, than did Themistocles in diplomatic duel
-with the men of Sparta. At last the news leaked out—but it was too late.
-The walls were high enough at last, and all further pretense of a
-delayed embassy was dropped. The diplomacy of the wily Themistocles had
-triumphed—and by no means for the first time. Out of this so-called
-Themistoclean wall there have recently been taken some of the grave
-“stelae,” or flat slabs sculptured in low relief, from the places where
-the harassed Athenians cast them in such haste more than four centuries
-before Christ. They are battered and broken, but the figures on them are
-still easily visible, and while by no means sculpturally remarkable the
-relics possess an undoubted historical interest.
-
-The tombs of the Ceramicus district, which form an important part of the
-sculptural remains of Athenian art, are still numerous enough just
-outside the Dipylon Gate, although many examples have been housed in the
-National Museum for greater protection against weather and vandals. Of
-those that fortunately remain _in situ_ along what was the beginning of
-the Sacred Way to Eleusis, there are enough to give a very fair idea of
-the appearance of this ancient necropolis, while the entire collection
-of tombstones affords one of the most interesting and complete exhibits
-to be seen in Athens. The excellence of the work calls attention to the
-high general level of skill achieved by the artisans of the time, for it
-is hardly to be assumed that these memorials of the dead were any more
-often the work of the first Athenian artists of that day than is the
-case among our own people at present.
-
-The whole question of the Greek tomb sculpture is a tempting one, and a
-considerable volume of literature already exists with regard to it. The
-artistic excellence of the stelae in their highest estate, the
-quaintness of the earlier efforts, the ultimate regulation of the size
-and style by statute to discourage extravagance, the frequent
-utilization of an older stone for second-hand uses, and a score of other
-interesting facts, might well furnish forth an entire chapter. As it is,
-we shall be obliged here briefly to pass over the salient points and
-consider without much pretense of detail the chief forms of tomb
-adornment that the present age has to show, preserved from the day when
-all good Athenians dying were buried outside the gates on the Eleusinian
-way. Not only carved on the stelae themselves, but also placed on top of
-them, are to be seen reliefs or reproductions of long-necked amphorae,
-or two-handled vases, in great numbers. These are now known to have had
-their significance as referring to the unmarried state of the deceased.
-They are nothing more nor less than reproductions of the vases the Greek
-maidens used to carry to the spring Callirrhoë for water for the nuptial
-bath, and the use of them in the tomb sculpture, on the graves of those
-who died unmarried, is stated to have grown out of the idea that “those
-who died unwed had Hades for their bridegroom.” These vases come the
-nearest to resembling modern grave memorials of any displayed at Athens,
-perhaps. The rest of the gravestones are entirely different both in
-appearance and in idea from anything we are accustomed to-day to use in
-our cemeteries, and it is likely to be universally agreed that they far
-eclipse our modern devices in beauty. The modern graveyard contents
-itself in the main with having its graves marked with an eye to
-statistics, rather than artistic effect, save in the cases of the very
-rich, who may invoke the aid of eminent sculptors to adorn their burial
-plots. In Athens this seems not to have been so. There is very little in
-the way of inscription on the stones, save for the name. The majority
-are single panels containing bas-reliefs, which may or may not be
-portraits of the departed.
-
-[Illustration: TOMB AMPHORA, CERAMICUS]
-
-The usual type of tomb relief of this sort seems to be a group of
-figures, sometimes two, sometimes three or four, apparently representing
-a leave-taking, or frequently the figure of a person performing some
-characteristic act of life. Of the latter the well-known tomb of Hegeso,
-representing a woman attended by her maid fingering trinkets in a jewel
-casket, is as good a type as any, and it has the added merit of standing
-in its original place in the street of the tombs. Others of this kind
-are numerous enough in the museum. The aversion to the representation of
-death itself among the ancient Greeks is well understood, and many have
-argued from it that these tomb reliefs indicate an intention to recall
-the deceased as he or she was in life, without suggestion of mourning.
-Nevertheless, the obvious attitudes of sorrowful parting visible in many
-of the tomb stelae seem to me to do violence to this theory in its full
-strength. Among those which seem most indicative of this is a very
-well-executed one showing three figures,—an old man, a youth, and a
-little lad. The old man stands looking intently, but with a far-away
-gaze, at a splendidly built but thoughtful-visaged young man before him,
-while the lad behind is doubled up in a posture plainly indicating
-extreme grief, with his face apparently bathed in tears. The calm face
-of the youth, the grave and silent grief of the paternal-looking man,
-and the unbridled emotion of the boy, all speak of a parting fraught
-with intense sorrow. It might be any parting—but is it not more
-reasonable to assume that it means the parting which involves no return?
-
-The more archaic gravestones are best typified by the not unfamiliar
-sculpture, in low relief, of a warrior leaning on a spear, or by the
-well-known little figure of Athena, similarly poised, mourning beside
-what appears to be a gravestone of a hero. It was one of the former type
-that we saw exhumed from the Themistoclean wall, with the warrior’s
-figure and portions of the spear still easily discernible.
-
-[Illustration: TOMB RELIEF, CERAMICUS]
-
-It remains to speak, though very briefly and without much detail, of the
-National Museum itself, which is one of the chief glories of Athens, and
-which divides with the Acropolis the abiding interest and attention of
-every visitor. It is in many ways incomparable among the great museums
-of the world, although others can show more beautiful and more famous
-Greek statues. The British Museum has the Elgin marbles from the
-Parthenon, which one would to-day greatly prefer to see restored to
-Athens; the Vatican holds many priceless and beautiful examples of the
-highest Greek sculptural art; Munich has the interesting pedimental
-figures from the temple at Ægina; Naples and Paris have collections not
-to be despised; but nowhere may one find under a single roof so wide a
-range of Greek sculpture, from the earliest strivings after form and
-expression to the highest ultimate success, as in the Athenian National
-Museum, with its priceless treasures in marble and in bronze. The wealth
-of statues, large and small, quaintly primitive or commandingly lovely,
-in all degrees of relief and in the round, is stupendous. And while it
-may be heresy to pass over the best of the marbles for anything else, it
-is still a fact that many will turn from all the other treasures of the
-place to the “bronze boy” as we will call him for lack of a better name.
-This figure of a youth, of more than life size and poised lightly as if
-about to step from his pedestal, with one hand extended, and seemingly
-ready to speak, is far less well known than he deserves to be, chiefly
-because it is but a few years since the sponge divers found him in the
-bed of the ocean and brought him back to the light of day. At present
-nobody presumes to say whether this splendid figure represents any
-particular hero. He might be Perseus, or Paris, or even Hermes. His hand
-bears evidence of having at one time clasped some object, whether the
-head of Medusa, the apple, or the caduceus, it is impossible to say. But
-the absence of winged sandals appears to dismiss the chance that he was
-Hermes, and the other identifications are so vague as to leave it
-perhaps best to refer to him only as an “ephebus,” or youth. The bronze
-has turned to a dark green, and such restorations as had to be made are
-quite invisible, so that to all outward seeming the statue is as perfect
-as when it was first cast. The eyes, inlaid with consummate skill to
-simulate real eyes, surpass in lifelike effect those of the celebrated
-bronze charioteer at Delphi. That a more detailed description of this
-figure is given here is not so much that it surpasses the other statues
-of the museum, but because it is so recent in its discovery that almost
-nothing has been printed about it for general circulation.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- _National Museum, Athens_
- BRONZE EPHEBUS
-]
-
-It would be almost endless and entirely profitless to attempt any
-detailed consideration of the multitude of objects of this general
-sculptural nature which the museum contains, and volumes have been
-written about them all, from the largest and noblest of the marbles to
-the smallest of the island gems. It may not be out of place, however, to
-make brief mention of the spoils of Mycenæ which are housed here, and
-which reproductions have made generally familiar, because later we shall
-have occasion to visit Mycenæ itself and to discuss in more detail that
-once proud but now deserted city, the capital which Agamemnon made so
-famous. In a large room set apart for the purpose are to be seen the
-treasures that were taken from the six tombs, supposed to be royal
-graves, that were unearthed in the midst of the Mycenæan agora,
-including a host of gold ornaments, cups, rosettes, chains, death masks,
-weapons, and human bones. Whether Dr. Schliemann, as he so fondly hoped
-and claimed, really laid bare the burial place of the conqueror of Troy,
-or whether what he found was something far less momentous, the fact
-remains that he did exhume the bodies of a number of personages buried
-in the very spot where legend said the famous heroes and heroines were
-buried, together with such an array of golden gear that it seems safe to
-assert that these were at any rate the tombs of royalty. If one can
-divest his mind of the suspicions raised by the ever-cautious
-archæologist and can persuade himself that he sees perhaps the skeleton
-and sword of the leader of the Argive host that went to recapture Helen,
-this Mycenæan room is of literally overwhelming interest. Case after
-case ranged about the room reveals the cunningly wrought ornaments that
-gave to Mycenæ the well-deserved Homeric epithet “rich-in-gold.” From
-the grotesque death masks of thin gold leaf to the heavily embossed
-Vaphio cups, everything bears testimony to the high perfection of the
-goldsmith’s art in the pre-Homeric age. Of all this multitude of
-treasures, the chief objects are unquestionably the embossed daggers and
-the large golden cups, notably the two that bear the exceedingly
-well-executed golden bulls, and the so-called “Nestor” cup, which, with
-its rather angular shape and its double handle, reproduces exactly the
-cup that Homer describes as belonging to that wise and reverend
-counselor.
-
-As has been hinted, the scientific archæologists, less swept away by
-Homeric enthusiasm than was Schliemann, have proved skeptical as to the
-identification of the tombs which Schliemann so confidently proclaimed
-at first discovery. The unearthing of a sixth tomb, where the original
-excavator had looked for only five, is supposed to have done violence to
-the Agamemnonian theory. But what harm can it do if we pass out of the
-Mycenæan room with a secret, though perhaps an ignorant, belief that we
-have looked upon the remains and accoutrements of one who was an epic
-hero, the victim of a murderous queen, the avenger of a brother’s honor,
-and the conqueror of a famous city? It is simply one more of those cases
-in which one gains immeasurably in pleasure if he can dismiss scientific
-questionings from his mind and pass through the scene unskeptical of the
-heroes of the mighty past, if not of the very gods of high Olympus
-themselves. It may be wrong; to a scientific investigator such guileless
-trust is doubtless laughable. But on our own heads be it if therein we
-err!
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER VII. EXCURSIONS IN
- ATTICA
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-As the admirable Baedeker well says, the stay in Athens is undoubtedly
-the finest part of a visit to Greece, and it is so not merely because of
-the many attractions and delights of the city itself, but because also
-of the numerous short trips aside which can be made in a day’s time,
-without involving a night’s absence. Such little journeys include the
-ascent of Pentelicus, whose massive peak rises only a few miles away,
-revealing even from afar the great gash made in his side by the ancients
-in quest of marble for their buildings and statues; the ride out to the
-battlefield of Marathon; the incomparable drive to Eleusis; the jaunt by
-rail or sea to Sunium; and last, but by no means least, the sail over to
-Ægina. Marathon has no ruins to show. Aside from the interest attaching
-to that famous battleground as a site, there is nothing to call one
-thither, if we except the tumulus, or mound, which marks the exact spot
-of the conflict which was so important to the history of western Europe.
-Neither Marathon nor Thermopylæ can offer much to-day but memories. But
-Sunium, Ægina, and Eleusis possess ruins decidedly worth a visit in
-addition to much scenic loveliness, and the last-named is a spot so
-interwoven with the highest and best in Greek tradition that it offers a
-peculiar charm.
-
-It is perfectly possible to journey to Eleusis by train, but to elect
-that method of approach is to miss one of the finest carriage rides to
-be had in the vicinity of Athens. The road leads out of the city through
-its unpretentious western quarter, by the “street of the tombs” to the
-vale of the Cephissus, where it follows the line of the old “sacred way”
-to Eleusis, over which, on the stated festivals, the procession of
-torch-bearing initiates wended its way by night to the shrine of
-Demeter. From the river—which to-day is a mere sandy channel most of the
-year—the smooth, hard highway rises gradually from the Attic plain to
-the mountain wall of Parnes, making straight for a narrow defile still
-known as the Pass of Daphne. This pass affords direct communication
-between the Attic and Thriasian plains, and save for the loftier valley
-farther north, through which the Peloponnesian railroad runs, is the
-only break in the mountain barrier. Eleusis and Attica were always so
-near—and yet so far apart. When the Spartans invaded the region, Athens
-felt no alarm from their proximity until they had actually entered her
-own plain, so remote seemed the valley about Eleusis, despite its scant
-ten miles of distance, simply because it was so completely out of sight.
-As the carriage ascends the gentle rise to the pass, the plain of Attica
-stretches out behind, affording an open vista from the Piræus to the
-northern mountains, a green and pleasant vale despite its dearth of
-trees, while the city of Athens dominates the scene and promises a fine
-spectacle by sunset as one shall return from the pass at evening, facing
-the commanding Acropolis aglow in the after-light.
-
-A halt of a few moments at the top of the pass gives an opportunity to
-alight and visit an old church just beside the road. It was once
-adjoined by some monastic cloisters, now in ruins. Unlike most of the
-Greek churches, this one possesses a quaint charm from without, and
-within displays some very curious old mosaics in the ceiling. On either
-side of its doorway stand two sentinel cypresses, their sombre green
-contrasting admirably with the dull brown tones of the building, while
-across the close, in a gnarled old tree, are hung the bells of the
-church. The use of the neighboring tree as a campanile is by no means
-uncommon in Greece, and a pretty custom it is. The groves were God’s
-first temples; and if they are no longer so, it is yet true in Greece at
-least that the trees still bear the chimes that call the devout to
-prayer. Inside the building, in addition to the quaint Byzantine
-decorations, one may find something of interest in the curious votive
-offerings, before referred to as common in Greek churches, suspended on
-the altar screen. Thanks for the recovered use of arms, eyes, legs, and
-the like seem to be expressed by hanging in the church a small
-white-metal model of the afflicted organ which has been so happily
-restored. I believe I have called attention to this practice as a direct
-survival of the old custom of the worshipers of Asklepios, which finds a
-further amplification in many churches farther west,—in Sicily, for
-example,—where pictures of accidents are often found hung in churches by
-those who have been delivered from bodily peril and who are desirous to
-commemorate the fact. In the church in Daphne Pass we found for the
-first time instances of the votive offering of coins, as well as of
-anatomical models. The significance of this I do not pretend to know,
-but by analogy one might assume that the worshiper was returning thanks
-for relief from depleted finances. The coins we saw in this church were
-of different denominations, all of silver, and representing several
-different national currency systems.
-
-Behind the church on either side rise the pine-clad slopes of the Parnes
-range, displaying a most attractive grove of fragrant trees, through the
-midst of which Daphne’s road permits us to pass. And in a brief time the
-way descends toward the bay of Salamis, shining in the sun, directly at
-one’s feet, while the lofty and extensive island of that immortal name
-appears behind it. So narrow are the straits that for a long time
-Salamis seems almost like a part of the mainland, while the included bay
-appears more like a large and placid lake than an arm of a tideless sea.
-The carriage road skirts the wide curve of the bay for several level
-miles, the village of Eleusis—now called Levsina—being always visible at
-the far extremity of the bay and marked from afar by prosaic modern
-factory chimneys. It lies low in the landscape, which is a pastoral one.
-The highway winds along past a score of level farms, and at least two
-curious salt lakes are to be seen, lying close to the road and said to
-be tenanted by sea fish, although supplied apparently from inland
-sources. They are higher in level than the bay, and there is a strong
-outflow from them to the sea waters beyond. Nevertheless, they are said
-to be salt and to support salt-water life.
-
-Eleusis as a town is not attractive. The sole claim on the visitor is
-found in the memories of the place and in the ruined temples, which are
-in the heart of the village itself. The secret of the mysteries, despite
-its wide dissemination among the Athenians and others, has been well
-kept—so well that almost nothing is known of the ceremony and less of
-its teaching. In a general way there is known only the fact that it had
-to do with the worship of Demeter, the goddess of the harvest, and that
-the mysteries concerned in some way the legend of the rape of Kora
-(Proserpine) by Hades (Pluto). There are hints as to certain priests,
-sacred vessels, symbols and rites, some of which appear not to have been
-devoid of grossness—but nothing definite is known, and probably nothing
-definite ever will be. The general tone of the mysteries seems to have
-been high, for no less an authority than Cicero, who was initiated into
-the cult in the later and decadent days of the Greek nation, regarded
-the teachings embodied in the Eleusinian rites as the highest product of
-the Athenian culture, and averred that they “enabled one to live more
-happily on earth and to die with a fairer hope.” It was, of course,
-unlawful for anybody to reveal the secrets; and although the initiation
-was apparently open to any one who should seek it, so that the number of
-devotees was large during a long succession of years, the secret was
-faithfully kept by reason of the great reverence in which the mysteries
-were held. That some of the features verged on wanton license has been
-alleged, and it may have been this that inspired the wild and brilliant
-young Alcibiades to burlesque the ceremony, to the scandal of pious
-Athenians and to his own ultimate undoing. For it was a trial on this
-charge that recalled Alcibiades from Sicily and led to his disgrace.
-
-The approach to the vast main temple is unusual, in that it is by an
-inclined plane rather than by steps. Even to-day the ruts of chariot
-wheels are to be distinguished in this approaching pavement. The temple
-itself was also most unusual, for instead of a narrow cella sufficient
-only for the colossal image of the deity, there was a vast nave, and
-room for a large concourse of worshipers. On the side next the hillock
-against which the temple was built there is a long, low flight of hewn
-steps, possibly used for seats, while the many column bases seem to
-argue either a second story or a balcony as well as a spacious roof.
-Much of the original building is distinguishable, despite the fact that
-the Romans added a great deal; for the Latin race seems to have found
-the rites to its liking, so that it took care to preserve and beautify
-the place after its own ideas of beauty. If the surviving medallion of
-some Roman emperor which is to be seen near the entrance of the Propylæa
-is a fair sample, however, one may doubt with reason the effectiveness
-of the later additions to the buildings on the spot. The Roman Propylæa
-was built by Appius Claudius Pulcher, but if the medallion portrait is
-his own, one must conclude that the “Pulcher” was gross flattery.
-
-The ruins are extensive, but mainly flat, so that their interest as
-ruins is almost purely archæological. The ordinary visitor will find the
-chief charm in the memories of the place. Of course there is a museum on
-the spot, as in every Greek site. It contains a large number of
-fragments from the temples and Propylæa, bits of statuary and bas-relief
-having chiefly to do with Demeter and her attendant goddesses. By far
-the most interesting and most perfect of the Eleusinian reliefs,
-however, is in the national museum at Athens—a large slab representing
-Demeter and Proserpine bestowing the gift of seed corn on the youth
-Triptolemus, who is credited with the invention of the plow. For some
-reason, doubtless because of the hospitality of his family to her,
-Triptolemus won the lasting favor of Demeter, who not only gave him corn
-but instructed him in the art of tilling the stubborn glebe. It seems
-entirely probable that Triptolemus and Kora shared in the mystic rites
-at Eleusis. As for the dying with a “fairer hope” spoken of by Cicero as
-inculcated by the ceremonies of the cult, one may conjecture that it
-sprang from some early pagan interpretation of the principle later
-enunciated in the Scriptural “Except a grain of wheat fall into the
-ground and die.”
-
-Eleusis itself lies on a low knoll in the midst of the Thriasian plain,
-which in early spring presents a most attractive appearance of fertility
-on every side, appropriately enough to the traditions of the spot. From
-the top of the hillock behind the great temple and the museum, one
-obtains a good view of the vale northward and of the sacred way winding
-off toward Corinth by way of Megara. Where the plain stops and the
-mountain wall approaches once again close to the sea, this road grows
-decidedly picturesque, recalling in a mild way the celebrated Amalfi
-drive as it rises and falls on the face of the cliff. Nor should one
-pass from the subject of Eleusis without mentioning the numerous little
-kids that frisk over the ruins, attended by anxious mother-goats, all
-far from unfriendly. Kids are common enough sights in Greece, and to
-lovers of pets they are always irresistible; but nowhere are they more
-so than at Eleusis, where they add their mite of attractiveness to the
-scene. The grown-up goat is far from pretty, but by some curious
-dispensation of nature the ugliest of animals seem to have the most
-attractive young, and the frisking lambs and kids of Greece furnish
-striking examples of it.
-
-The ride back to the city must be begun in season to get the sunset
-light on the west front of the Acropolis, which is especially effective
-from the Eleusis road all the way from Daphne’s Pass to the city proper.
-As for Salamis, which is always in sight until the pass is crossed, it
-is enough to say that, like Marathon, it is a place of memories only.
-The bay that one sees from the Eleusis road is not the one in which the
-great naval battle was fought. That lies on the other side, toward the
-open gulf, and is best seen from the sea. Few care to make a special
-excursion to the island itself, which is rocky and barren, and after all
-the chief interest is in its immediate waters. The account of the battle
-in Herodotus is decidedly worth reading on the spot, and to this day
-they will show you a rocky promontory supposed to have been the point
-where Xerxes had his throne placed so that he might watch the fight
-which resulted so disastrously to his ships. The battle, by the way, was
-another monument to the wiles of Themistocles, who recognized in the
-bulwarks of the ships the “wooden walls” which the oracle said would
-save Athens, and who, when he found the commanders weakening, secretly
-sent word to the Persians urging them to close in and fight. This was
-done; and the navy being reduced to the necessity of conflict acquitted
-itself nobly.
-
-Of the other local excursions, that to Marathon is easily made in a day
-by carriage. There is little to see there, save a plain, lined on the
-one hand by the mountains which look on Marathon, and on the other by
-the sea, largely girt with marshes. The lion which once crowned the
-tumulus is gone, nobody knows whither. It is much, however, from a
-purely sentimental point of view, to have stood upon the site itself,
-the scene of one of the world’s famous battles. Some grudging critics,
-including the erudite Mahaffy, incline to believe that Marathon was a
-rather small affair, judged by purely military standards—a conflict of
-one undisciplined host with an even less disciplined one, in an age when
-battles ordinarily were won by an endurance of nerve in the face of a
-hand-to-hand charge rather than by actual carnage. These maintain that
-the chief celebrity of Marathon rests not on its military glories, but
-on the fame which the Athenians, a literary race, gave it in song and
-story. But even these have to admit that Marathon meant much to history,
-and that the psychological effect of it was enormous, as showing that
-the Persians were by no means invincible, so that ten years later
-Salamis put the finishing blow to Persian attempts on the west. For
-those who do not care to make the long ride to the field itself, it is
-quite possible to obtain a view of the plain from the summit of
-Pentelicus, something like fifteen miles away, although this does not
-reveal the mound marking the actual site.
-
-That mountain’s chief celebrity is, of course, to be found in the great
-marble quarries from which came the stone for the Acropolis temples, and
-it is these rather than the view of Marathon that draw climbers to the
-famous height. The ancient quarries lie far up on the side of the slope,
-and the marks of the old chisels are still plainly to be discerned. The
-difficulties of getting out perfect stone in the ancient days seem to
-have been enormous; but that they were surmounted is obvious from the
-fact that the great blocks used in building the Parthenon and Propylæa
-were handled with comparative speed, as shown by the relatively few
-years occupied in erecting them. It seems probable that the stone was
-slid down the mountain side in chutes to the point where it was feasible
-to begin carting it. Inherent but invisible defects naturally occurred,
-and these the ancients managed to detect by sounding with a mallet.
-Samples of these imperfect blocks are to be seen lying where they fell
-when the builders rejected them, not only on the road by the quarries
-but on the Acropolis itself.
-
-[Illustration: THE TEMPLE AT SUNIUM]
-
-Sunium, the famous promontory at the extremity of the Attic peninsula,
-may be reached by a train on the road that serves the ancient silver
-mines of Laurium, but as the trains are slow and infrequent it is
-better, if one can, to go down by sea. Our own visit was so made, the
-vessel landing us accommodatingly at the foot of the promontory on which
-a few columns of the ancient temple are still standing. The columns that
-remain are decidedly whiter than those on the Acropolis, and the general
-effect is highly satisfying to one’s preconceived ideas of Greek ruins.
-Dispute is rife as to the particular deity to whom this shrine was
-anciently consecrated, and the rivalry lies between those traditional
-antagonists, Athena and Poseidon, each of whom advances plausible
-claims. How the case can be decided without another contest between the
-two, like that supposed to have taken place on the Acropolis itself and
-depicted by Pheidias, is not clear. For who shall decide when doctors of
-archæology disagree?
-
-The chief architectural peculiarity of the Sunium temple is the
-arrangement of its frontal columns "in antis,"—that is to say, included
-between two projecting ends of the side walls. And, in addition, one
-regrets to say that the ruin is peculiar in affording evidences of
-modern vandalism more common in our own country than in Hellas, namely,
-the scratching of signatures on the surface of the stone. All sorts of
-names have been scrawled there,—English, French, Italian, American,
-Greek,—and most famous of all, no doubt, the unblushing signature of no
-less a personage than Byron himself! Perhaps, however, it is not really
-his. There may be isolated instances of this low form of vandalism
-elsewhere, but I do not recall any that can compare with the volume of
-defacing scrawls to be seen at Sunium.
-
-Lovelier far than Sunium is the situation of the temple in Ægina,
-occupying a commanding height in that large and lofty island on the
-other side of the gulf, opposite the Piræus and perhaps six or seven
-miles distant from that port. The journey to it is necessarily by sea,
-and it has become a frequent objective point for steamer excursions
-landing near the temple itself rather than at the distant town. In the
-absence of a steamer, it is possible to charter native boats for a small
-cost and with a fair breeze make the run across the bay in a
-comparatively brief time. From the cove where parties are generally
-landed the temple cannot be seen, as the slopes are covered with trees
-and the shrine itself is distant some twenty minutes on foot. Donkeys
-can be had, as usual, but they save labor rather than time, and the
-walk, being through a grove of fragrant pines, is far from arduous or
-fatiguing. The odor of the pines is most agreeable, the more so because
-after one has sojourned for a brief time in comparatively treeless
-Attica one is the more ready to welcome a scent of the forest. The
-pungency of the grove is due, however, less to the pine needles and
-cones than to the tapping, or rather “blazing,” of the trunks for their
-resin. Under nearly every tree will be found stone troughs, into which
-the native juice of the tree oozes with painful slowness. The resin, of
-course, is for the native wines, which the Greek much prefers flavored
-with that ingredient. The drinking of resinated wine is an acquired
-taste, so far as foreigners are concerned. Some solemnly aver that they
-like it,—and even prefer it to the unresinated kind; but the average man
-not to the manner born declares it to be only less palatable than
-medicine. The Greeks maintain that the resin adds to the healthfulness
-of the wines, and to get the gum they have ruined countless pine groves
-by this tapping process so evident in the Ægina woods, for the gashes
-cut in the trees have the effect of stunting the growth.
-
-After a steady ascent of a mile or so, the temple comes suddenly into
-view, framed in a foreground of green boughs, which add immensely to the
-effectiveness of the picture, and which make one regret the passing of
-the Greek forests in other places. Once upon a time the ordinary temple
-must have gained greatly by reason of its contrast with the foliage of
-the surrounding trees; but to-day only those at Ægina and at Bassæ
-present this feature to the beholder. This Ægina temple is variously
-attributed to Athena and to Zeus Panhellenius, so that, as at Sunium,
-there is a chance for doubt. The chief peculiarity seems to be that the
-entrance door, which is as usual in the eastern side, is not exactly in
-the centre of the cella. The columns are still standing to a large
-extent, but the pedimental sculptures have been removed to Munich, so
-that the spot is robbed, as the Acropolis is, of a portion of its charm.
-It is a pity, because the Æginetan pedimental figures were most
-interesting, furnishing a very good idea of the Æginetan style of
-sculpture of an early date. The figures which survive, to the number of
-seventeen, in a very fair state of preservation, represent warriors in
-various active postures, and several draped female figures, including a
-large statue of Athena. Those who have never seen these at Munich are
-doubtless familiar with the reproductions in plaster which are common in
-all first-class museums boasting collections of Greek masterpieces.
-
-[Illustration: THE APPROACH TO ÆGINA]
-
-[Illustration: THE TEMPLE AT ÆGINA]
-
-The island of Ægina, which is large and mountainous, forms a conspicuous
-feature of the gulf in which it lies. It is close to the Peloponnesian
-shore, and from the temple a magnificent view is outspread in every
-direction, not only over the mountains of the Argolid but northward
-toward Corinth,—and on a clear day it is said that even the summit of
-Parnassus can be descried. Directly opposite lies Athens, with which
-city the island long maintained a successful rivalry. The chief
-celebrity of the spot was achieved under its independent existence,
-about the seventh century B.C., and before Athens subjugated it. It was
-then tenanted by colonists from Epidaurus, who had the commercial
-instinct, and who made Ægina a most prosperous place. The name is said
-to be derived from the nymph Ægina, who was brought to the island by
-Zeus. The hardy Æginetan sailors were an important factor in the battle
-of Salamis, to which they contributed not only men but sacred images;
-and they were not entirely expelled from their land by the Athenian
-domination until 431 B.C. Thereafter the prominence of the city dwindled
-and has never returned.
-
-It remains to describe an excursion which we made to the north of Athens
-one day shortly after Easter, to witness some peasant dances. These
-particular festivities were held at Menidi, and were rather less
-extensive than the annual Easter dances at Megara, but still of the same
-general type; and as they constitute a regular spring feature of Attic
-life, well worth seeing if one is at Athens at the Easter season, it is
-not out of place to describe them here. Either Megara or Menidi may be
-reached easily by train, and Menidi is not a hard carriage ride, being
-only six miles or so north of Athens, in the midst of the plain. It may
-be that these dances are direct descendants of ancient rites, like so
-many of the features of the present Orthodox church; but whatever their
-significance and history, they certainly present the best opportunity to
-see the peasantry of the district in their richest gala array, which is
-something almost too gorgeous to describe.
-
-The drive out to the village over the old north road was dusty and hot,
-and we were haunted by a fear that the dances might be postponed, as
-occasionally happens. These doubts were removed, however, when Menidi at
-last hove in sight as we drove over an undulation of the plain and came
-suddenly upon the village in holiday dress, flags waving, peasant girls
-and swains in gala garb, and streets lined with booths for the vending
-of sweetmeats, Syrian peanuts, pistachio nuts, loukoumi, and what the
-New England merchant would call “notions.” Indeed, it was all very
-suggestive of the New England county fair, save for the gorgeousness of
-the costumes. The streets were thronged and everybody was in a high
-good-humor. What it was all about we never knew. Conflicting reports
-were gleaned from the natives, some to the effect that it was, and some
-that it was not, essentially a churchly affair; but all agreed
-apparently that it had no connection with the Easter feast, although it
-was celebrated something like five days thereafter. Others mentioned a
-spring as having something to do with it,—suggesting a possible pagan
-origin. This view gained color from the energy with which lusty youths
-were manipulating the town pump in the village square, causing it to
-squirt a copious stream to a considerable distance,—a performance in
-which the bystanders took an unflagging and unbounded delight. That the
-celebration was not devoid of its religious significance was evident
-from the open church close by thronged with devout people coming and
-going, each obtaining a thin yellow taper to light and place in the huge
-many-branched candelabrum. The number of these soon became so great that
-the priests removed the older ones and threw them in a heap below, to
-make room for fresh-lighted candles. Those who deposited coins in the
-baptismal font near the door were rewarded with a sprinkling of water by
-the attendant priest, who constantly dipped a rose in the font and shook
-it over those who sought this particular form of benison.
-
-Outside, the square was thronged with merrymakers, some dancing in the
-solemn Greek fashion, in a circle with arms extended on each others’
-shoulders, moving slowly around and around to the monotonous wail of a
-clarionet. Others were seated under awnings sipping coffee, and to such
-a resort we were courteously escorted by the local captain of the
-gendarmerie, whose acquaintance we had made in Athens and who proved the
-soul of hospitality. Here we sat and drank the delicious thick coffee,
-accompanied by the inevitable huge beaker of water drawn from the rocky
-slopes of Parnes, and watched the dancers and the passing crowds. The
-dress of the men was seldom conspicuous. Many wore European clothes like
-our own, although here and there might be seen one in the national
-costume of full white skirts and close-fitting leggings, leather wallet,
-and zouave jacket. But the women were visions of incomparable
-magnificence. Their robes were in the main of white, but the skirts were
-decked with the richest of woolen embroideries, heavy and thick,
-extending for several inches upward from the lower hem, in a profusion
-of rich reds, blues, and browns. Aprons similarly adorned were worn
-above. Most impressive of all, however, were the sleeveless overgarments
-or coats, such as we had seen and bickered over in Shoe Lane,—coats of
-white stuff, bordered with a deep red facing and overlaid with intricate
-tracery in gold lace and gold braid. These were infinitely finer than
-any we had seen in the Athens shops, and they made the scene gay indeed
-with a barbaric splendor. To add to the gorgeousness of the display, the
-girls wore flat caps, bordered with gold lace and coins, giving the
-effect of crowns, flowing veils which did not conceal the face but fell
-over the shoulders, and on their breasts many displayed a store of gold
-and silver coins arranged as bangles—their dowries, it was explained.
-Most of these young women were betrothed, it developed, and custom
-dictated this parade of the marriage portion, which is no small part of
-the Greek wedding arrangement. The cuffs of the full white sleeves were
-embroidered like the aprons and skirt bottoms, and the whole effect was
-such as to be impossible of adequate description.
-
-[Illustration: PEASANT DANCERS AT MENIDI]
-
-One comely damsel, whose friends clamored us to photograph her,
-scampered nimbly into her courtyard, only to be dragged forth bodily by
-a proud young swain, who announced himself her betrothed and who
-insisted that she pose for the picture, willy-nilly,—which she did,
-joining amiably in the general hilarity, and exacting a promise of a
-print when the picture should be finished. The ice once broken, the
-entire peasant population became seized with a desire to be
-photographed, and it was only the beginning of the great dance that
-dissolved the clamoring throng.
-
-The dance was held on a broad level space, just east of the town, about
-which a crowd had already gathered. We were escorted thither and duly
-presented to the demarch, or mayor, who bestowed upon us the freedom of
-the city and the hospitality of his own home if we required it. He was a
-handsome man, dressed in a black cut-away coat and other garments of a
-decidedly civilized nature, which seemed curiously incongruous in those
-surroundings, as indeed did his own face, which was pronouncedly
-Hibernian and won for him the sobriquet of "O'Sullivan" on the spot. His
-stay with us was brief, for the dance was to begin, and nothing would do
-but the mayor should lead the first two rounds. This he did with much
-grace, though we were told that he did not relish the task, and only did
-it because if he balked the votes at the next election would go to some
-other aspirant. The dance was simple enough, being a mere solemn
-circling around of a long procession of those gorgeous maidens,
-numbering perhaps a hundred or more, hand in hand and keeping time to
-the music of a quaint band composed of drum, clarionet, and a sort of
-penny whistle. The demarch danced best of all, and after two stately
-rounds of the green inclosure left the circle and watched the show at
-his leisure, his face beaming with the sweet consciousness of political
-security and duty faithfully performed.
-
-How long the dance went on we never knew. The evening was to be marked
-by a display of fireworks, the frames for which were already in evidence
-and betokened a magnificence in keeping with the costumes of the
-celebrants. For ourselves, satiated with the display, we returned to our
-carriage laden with flowers, pistachio nuts, and strings of beads
-bestowed by the abundant local hospitality, and bowled home across the
-plain in time to be rewarded with a fine sunset glow on the Parthenon as
-a fitting close for a most unusual and enjoyable day.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
-
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII. DELPHI
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-The pilgrimage to Delphi, which used to be fraught with considerable
-hardship and inconvenience, is happily so no longer. It is still true
-that the Greek steamers plying between the Piræus and Itea, the port
-nearest the ancient oracular shrine, leave much to be desired and are by
-no means to be depended upon to keep to their schedules; but aside from
-this minor difficulty there is nothing to hinder the ordinary visitor
-from making the journey, which is far and away the best of all ordinary
-short rambles in Greece, not only because of the great celebrity of the
-site itself, but because of the imposing scenic attractions Delphi has
-to show. The old-time drawback, the lack of decent accommodation at
-Delphi itself, or to be more exact, at the modern village of Kastri, has
-been removed by the presence of two inns, of rather limited capacity, it
-is true, but still affording very tolerable lodging. Indeed, hearsay
-reported the newer of these tiny hostelries to be one of the best in
-Greece outside of Athens, while the other quaint resort, owned and
-operated by the amiable Vasili Paraskevas, one of the “local characters”
-of the place, has long been esteemed by Hellenic visitors. Vasili, in
-appearance almost as formidable as the ancient Polyphemus, but in all
-else as gentle as the sucking dove, has felt the force of competition,
-and his advertisements easily rival those of the Hotel Cecil. As a
-matter of fact, the establishment is delightfully primitive, seemingly
-hanging precariously to the very edge of the deep ravine that lies just
-under lofty Delphi, boasting several small rooms and even the promise of
-a bath-tub, although Vasili was forced to admit that his advertisement
-in that respect was purely prospective and indicative of intention
-rather than actuality.
-
-The truly adventurous may still approach Delphi over the ancient road by
-land from the eastward, doubtless the same highway that was taken by old
-King Laios when he was slain on his way to the oracle, all unwitting of
-the kinship, by his own son [OE]dipus,—possibly because of a dispute as
-to which should yield the road. For the old road was a narrow one, with
-deep ruts, suitable for a single chariot, but productive of frequent
-broils when two such haughty spirits met on the way. To come to Delphi
-over this road and to depart by sea is doubtless the ideal plan. That we
-elected not to take the land voyage was due to the early spring season,
-with its snows on the shoulder of Parnassus, around which the path
-winds. For those less hindered by the season, it is said that the
-journey overland from Livadià to Delphi, passing through the tiny hamlet
-of Arákhova and possibly spending a night in the open air on Parnassus,
-is well worth the trouble, and justifies the expense of a courier and
-horses, both of which are necessary.
-
-The way which we chose, besides being infinitely easier, is far from
-being devoid of its interesting features. We set sail in the early
-afternoon from the Piræus, passing over a glassy sea by Psyttalea, and
-the famous waters in front of Salamis, to Corinth, where the canal
-proved sufficiently wide to let our little craft steam through to the
-gulf beyond. It was in the gathering dusk that we entered this unusual
-channel, but still it was light enough to see the entire length of the
-canal, along the deep sides of which electric lamps glimmered few and
-faint as a rather ineffectual illuminant of the tow-path on either hand.
-The walls towered above, something like two hundred feet in spots, and
-never very low, making this four-mile ribbon of water between the narrow
-seas a gloomy cavern indeed. It was wide enough for only one craft of
-the size of our own, therein resembling the land highway to Delphi; but
-fortunately, owing to the system of semaphore signals, no [OE]dipus
-disputed the road with us, and we shot swiftly through the channel,
-between its towering walls of rock, under the spidery railroad bridge
-that spans it near the Corinth end, and out into the gulf beyond. It is
-rather a nice job of steering, this passage of the canal. Everybody was
-ordered off the bow, three men stood nervously at the wheel, and the
-jack staff was kept centred on the bright line that distantly marked the
-opening between the precipitous sides of the cleft, a line of light that
-gradually widened, revealing another sea and a different land as we drew
-near and looked out of our straight and narrow path of water into the
-Corinthian Gulf beyond. The magnificence of the prospect would be hard
-indeed to exaggerate. On either side of the narrow gulf rose billowy
-mountains, the northern line of summits dominated by the snowy dome of
-Parnassus, the southern by Cyllene, likewise covered with white. They
-were ghostly in the darkness, which the moon relieved only a little,
-shining fitfully from an overcast sky. The Corinthian Gulf is fine
-enough from the railway which skirts it all the way to Patras, but it is
-finer far from the sea, whence one sees both sides at once in all the
-glory of their steep gray mountains. Happily the night was calm, and the
-gulf, which can be as bad as the English Channel at its worst, was
-smooth for once as we swung away from the little harbor of modern
-Corinth and laid our course for the capes off Itea, something like forty
-miles away. And thus we went to rest, the steamer plowing steadily on
-through the night with Parnassus towering on the starboard quarter.
-
-A vigorous blowing of the whistle roused the ship’s company at dawn. The
-vessel was at anchor off Itea, a starveling village not at all praised
-by those who have been forced to sample its meagre accommodations for a
-night. Fortunately it is no longer necessary to rely on these, for one
-may drive to Delphi in a few hours, and on a moonlight night the ride,
-while chilly, is said to be most delightful. Arriving as we did at early
-dawn, we were deprived of this experience, and set out from the village
-at once on landing to cover the nine miles to Kastri, some riding in
-carriages or spring carts,—locally called "sustas,"—some on mules, and
-others proceeding on foot. From afar we could already see the village,
-perched high on the side of the foothills of Parnassus, which rise
-abruptly some three miles away across a level plain. The plain proved to
-be delightful. Walled in on either hand by rocky cliffs, its whole
-bottom was filled with olive trees, through which vast grove the road
-wound leisurely along. Brooks babbled by through the grass of the great
-orchard, and the green of the herbage was spangled with innumerable
-anemones and other wild-flowers in a profusion of color. Far behind us
-in the background towered the Peloponnesian mountains, and before rose
-the forbidding cliffs that shut in Delphi. Above the distant Kastri,
-there was always the lofty summit of Parnassus, somewhat dwarfed by
-proximity and therefore a trifle disappointing to one whose preconceived
-notions of that classic mountain demanded splendid isolation, but still
-impressive.
-
-[Illustration: THE PLAIN BELOW DELPHI]
-
-Naturally on this long, level plain the carriages soon passed us, and
-disappeared in the hills ahead, while the footpath left the highway and
-plunged off boldly into the olive grove in the general direction of
-Delphi. When it attained the base of the sharp ascent of the
-mountain-side, it went straight up, leaving the road to find its more
-gradual way by zigzags and détours,—windings so long that it soon
-developed that the carriages which so long ago had distanced us were in
-turn displaced and were later seen toiling up the steep behind us! The
-prospect rearward was increasingly lovely as we climbed and looked down
-upon the plain. It resembled nothing so much as a sea of verdure, the
-olive trees pouring into it from the uplands like a river, and filling
-it from bank to bank. No wonder this plain was deemed a ground worth
-fighting for by the ancients.
-
-Despite the fact that the snows of Parnassus were apparently so near,
-the climb was warm. The rocky hillside gave back the heat of the April
-sun, although it was cloudy, and progress became necessarily slow, in
-part because of the warmth and in larger part because of the increasing
-splendor of the view. The path bore always easterly into a narrow gorge
-between two massive mountains, a gorge that narrowed and narrowed as the
-climb proceeded. Before very long we passed through a wayside hamlet
-that lies halfway up the road, exchanged greetings with the inhabitants,
-who proved a friendly people anxious to set us right on the way to
-Delphi, and speedily emerged from the nest of buildings on the path
-again, with Kastri always ahead and above, and seemingly as distant as
-ever. It was Palm Sunday, we discovered, and the populace of the tiny
-village all bore sprigs of greenery, which they pressed upon us and
-which later turned out to be more political than religious in their
-significance, since it was not only the day of the Lord’s triumphal
-entry but the closing day of the general elections as well.
-
-Admiration for the green and fertile valley far behind now gave place to
-awe at the grim gorges before and the beetling cliffs towering overhead,
-up through which, like dark chimney flues, ran deep clefts in the rock,
-gloomy and mysterious, and doubtless potent in producing awe in the
-ancient mind by thus adding to the impressiveness of god-haunted Delphi.
-On the left the mountain rose abruptly and loftily to the blue; on the
-right the cliff descended sharply from the path to the dark depths of
-the ravine, while close on its other side rose again a neighboring
-mountain that inclosed this ever-narrowing gulch.
-
-At last after a three-hour scramble over the rocks we attained Kastri,
-and found it a poor town lined with hovels, but, like Mount Zion,
-beautiful for situation. A brawling brook, fed by a spring above, dashed
-across the single street and lost itself in the depths of the ravine
-below. On either hand towered the steep sides of the surrounding cliffs,
-while before us the valley wound around a shoulder of the mountain and
-seemingly closed completely. Kastri did not always occupy this site, but
-once stood farther along around the mountain’s sharp corner, directly
-over the ancient shrine itself; and it was necessary for the French
-excavators who laid bare the ancient sites to have the village moved
-bodily by force and arms before any work could be done,—a task that was
-accomplished with no little difficulty, but which, when completed,
-enabled the exploration of what was once the most famous of all Pagan
-religious shrines. Curiously enough the restoration of the temples at
-Delphi fell to the hands of the French, the descendants of those very
-Gauls who, centuries before, had laid waste the shrines and treasuries
-of Loxias. We stopped long enough at Vasili’s to sample some
-"mastika,"—a native liqueur resembling anisette, very refreshing on a
-warm day,—and then walked on to the ruins which lie some few minutes’
-walk farther around the shoulder of the mountain.
-
-Nothing could well be more impressive than the prospect that opened out
-as we came down to the famous site itself. No outlet of the great vale
-was to be seen from this point, for the gorge winds about among the
-crags which rise high above and drop far below to the base of the rocky
-glen. Human habitation there is none. Kastri was now out of sight
-behind. On the roadside and in the more gradual slopes of the ravine
-below one might find olive trees, and here and there a plane. Beyond,
-through the mysterious windings of the defile runs the road to Arakhova.
-It was on this spot that Apollo had his most famous shrine, the abode of
-his accredited priestesses gifted with prophecy; and no fitter
-habitation for the oracle could have been found by the worshipers of old
-time than this gloomy mountain glen where nature conspires with herself
-to overawe mankind by her grandeur.
-
-The legend has it that Apollo, born as all the world knows in far-off
-Delos, transferred his chief seat to Delphi just after his feat of
-slaying the Python. He is said to have followed that exploit by leaping
-into the sea, where he assumed the form of a huge dolphin (delphis), and
-in this guise he directed the course of a passing Cretan ship to the
-landing place at Itea, or Crissa. There, suddenly resuming his proper
-shape of a beautiful youth he led the wondering crew of the vessel up
-from the shore to the present site of Delphi, proclaimed himself the
-god, and persuaded the sailors to remain there, build a temple and
-become his priests, calling the spot “Delphi.” Tradition also asks us to
-believe that there then existed on the spot a cavern, from which issued
-vapors having a peculiar effect on the human mind, producing in those
-who breathed them a stupor in which the victim raved, uttering words
-which were supposed to be prophetic. Over this cave, if it existed, the
-temple was erected; and therein the priestess, seated on a tripod where
-she might inhale the vapors, gave out her answers to suppliants, which
-answers the corps of priests later rendered into hexameter verses having
-the semblance of sense, but generally so ambiguous as to admit of more
-than one interpretation. All sorts of tales are told of the effect of
-the mephitic gas on the pythoness—how she would writhe in uncontrollable
-fury, how her hair would rise on her head as she poured forth her
-unintelligible gibberish, and so forth; stories well calculated to
-impress a credulous race “much given to religion” as St. Paul so sagely
-observed. If there ever was any such cavern at all, it has disappeared,
-possibly filled with the débris of the ruins or closed by earthquake.
-Perhaps there never was any cave at all. In any event the wonders of the
-Delphic oracle were undoubtedly explicable, as such phenomena nearly
-always are, by perfectly natural facts. It has been pointed out that the
-corps of priests, visited continually as they were by people from all
-parts of the ancient world, were probably the best informed set of men
-on earth, and the sum total of their knowledge thus gleaned so far
-surpassed that of the ordinary mortal and so far exceeded the average
-comprehension that what was perfectly natural was easily made to appear
-miraculous. To the already awed suppliant, predisposed to belief and
-impressed by the wonderful natural surroundings of the place, it was not
-hard to pass off this world-wide information as inspired truth. Nor was
-it a long step from this, especially for clever men such as the priests
-seem to have been, to begin forecasting future events by basing shrewd
-guesses on data already in hand—these guesses being received with full
-faith by the worshiper as god-given prophecy. As an added safeguard the
-priests often handed down their predictions in ambiguous form, as, for
-example, in the famous answer sent to Cr[oe]sus, when he asked if he
-should venture an expedition against Cyrus—“If Cr[oe]sus shall attack
-Cyrus, he will destroy a great empire.” Such answers were of course
-agreeable to the suppliant, for they admitted of flattering
-interpretation; and it was only after trial that Cr[oe]sus discovered
-that the “great empire” he was fated to destroy was his own. At other
-times the guesses, not in ambiguous form, went sadly astray—as in the
-case where the Pythian, after balancing probabilities and doubtless
-assuming that the gods were always on the side of the heaviest
-battalions, advised the Athenians not to hope to conquer the invading
-Persians. This erroneous estimate was the natural one for informed
-persons to make,—and it is highly probable that it was influenced in
-part by presents from the Persian king, for such corruption of the
-oracle was by no means unknown. In fact it led to the ultimate
-discrediting of the oracle, and it was not long before the shrine ceased
-to be revered as a fountain of good advice. Nevertheless for many
-hundred years it was held in unparalleled veneration by the whole
-ancient world. Pilgrims came and went. Cities and states maintained rich
-treasuries there, on which was founded a considerable banking system.
-Games in honor of Pythian Apollo were celebrated in the stadium which is
-still to be seen high up on the mountain-side above the extensive ruins
-of the sacred precinct. Temple after temple arose about the great main
-shrine of the god. Even distant Cnidus erected a treasury, and
-victorious powers set up trophy after trophy there for battles won by
-land or sea—the politeness of the time preventing the mention of any
-Hellenic victim by name.
-
-[Illustration: THE VALE OF DELPHI]
-
-All these remains have been patiently uncovered and laboriously
-identified and labeled, with the assistance of the voluminous writings
-of that patron saint of travelers, Pausanias. The work was done under
-the direction of the erudite French school, and the visitor of to-day,
-provided with the plan in his guide-book and aided by the numerous
-guide-posts erected on the spot, will find his way about with much ease.
-One of the buildings, the “treasury of the Athenians,” a small structure
-about the size of the Niké Apteros temple, is being “restored” by the
-excavators, but with rather doubtful success. Aside from this one
-instance, the ruins are mainly reconstructible only in the imagination
-from the visible ground-plans and from the fragments lying all about. In
-the museum close by, however, some fractional restorations indoors serve
-to give a very excellent idea of the appearance of at least two of the
-ancient buildings.
-
-Space and the intended scope of this narrative alike forbid anything
-like a detailed discussion of the numerous ruins that line the zigzag
-course of the old “sacred way.” The visitor, thanks to the ability of
-the French school, is left in no doubt as to the identity of the
-buildings, and the wayfaring man, though no archæologist, need not err.
-One may remark in passing, however, the curious polygonal wall of curved
-stones still standing along a portion of the way and still bearing the
-remnant of a colonnade, with an inscription indicating that once a
-trophy was set up here by the Athenians,—possibly the beaks of conquered
-ships. Of course the centre and soul of the whole precinct was the great
-temple of Apollo, now absolutely flat in ruins, but once a grand edifice
-indeed. The Alcmæonidæ, who had the contract for building it, surprised
-and delighted everybody by building better than the terms of their
-agreement demanded, providing marble ends for the temple and pedimental
-adornment as well, when the letter of the contract would have been
-satisfied with native stone. Thus shrewdly did a family that was in
-temporary disfavor at Athens win its way back to esteem!
-
-However easy it may be to explain with some plausibility the ordinary
-feats of the oracle at Delphi as accomplished by purely natural means,
-there was an occasional _tour de force_ that even to-day would pass for
-miraculous—supposing that there be any truth in the stories as
-originally told. The most notable instance was one in which Cr[oe]sus
-figured. That wealthy monarch was extremely partial to oracles, and
-generally consulted them before any considerable undertaking. On the
-occasion in question he contemplated an expedition against Cyrus—the
-same which he eventually undertook because of the enigmatic answer
-before referred to—and made extraordinary preparations to see that the
-advice given him was trustworthy. For Cr[oe]sus, with all his credulity,
-was inclined to be canny, and proposed to test the powers of the more
-famous oracular shrines by a little experiment. So he sent different
-persons, according to Herodotus, to the various oracles in Greece and
-even in Libya, "some to Phocis, some to Dodona, others to Amphiaraus and
-Trophonius, and others to Branchidæ of Milesia, and still others to
-Ammon in Libya. He sent them in different ways, desiring to make trial
-of what the oracle knew, in order that, if they should be found to know
-the truth, he might send a second time to inquire whether he should
-venture to make war on the Persians. He laid upon them the following
-orders: That, computing the days from the time of their departure from
-Sardis, they should consult the oracles on the hundredth day by asking
-what Cr[oe]sus, the son of Alyattes, was then doing. They were to bring
-back the answer in writing. Now what the answers were that were given by
-the other oracles is mentioned by none; but no sooner had the Lydian
-ambassadors entered the temple at Delphi and asked the question than the
-Pythian spoke thus, in hexameter verse: 'I know the number of the sands
-and the measure of the sea; I understand the dumb and hear him that does
-not speak; the savor of the hard-shelled tortoise boiled in brass with
-the flesh of lambs strikes on my senses; brass is laid beneath it and
-brass is put over it.' Now of all the answers opened by Cr[oe]sus none
-pleased him but only this. And when he had heard the answer from Delphi
-he adored it and approved it, and was convinced that the pythoness of
-Delphi was a real oracle because she alone had interpreted what he had
-done. For when he sent out his messengers to the several oracles,
-watching for the appointed day, he had recourse to the following
-contrivance, having thought of what it was impossible to discover or
-guess at. He cut up a tortoise and a lamb and boiled them himself
-together in a brazen caldron, and laid over it a cover of brass."[1]
-
------
-
-Footnote 1:
-
- Herodotus, Book I, sections 46-48.
-
-Thus, on one occasion, the oracle is supposed to have performed a feat
-of what we should now set down as telepathy, and which, if it really
-happened, would be explicable in no other way. It sufficed to establish
-Delphi as a shrine to be revered, in the mind of Cr[oe]sus, and to
-propitiate the god he sent magnificent gifts. And as these may serve to
-give some idea of the vast riches of the spot in bygone ages, it may be
-well to relate here what Cr[oe]sus is supposed to have sent. Herodotus
-relates that he made a prodigious sacrifice, in the flames of which he
-melted down an incredible amount of gold and silver. "Out of the metal
-thus melted down he cast half-bricks, of which the longest was six palms
-in length, the shortest three; and in thickness, each was one palm.
-Their number was one hundred and seventeen. Four of these, of pure gold,
-weighed each two talents and a half. The other bricks, of pale gold,
-weighed two talents each. He made also the figure of a lion, of fine
-gold, weighing ten talents. This lion, when the temple at Delphi was
-burned down, fell from its pedestal of half-bricks, for it was placed
-upon them. It now lies in the treasury of the Corinthians, weighing only
-six talents and a half,—for three talents and a half were melted from it
-in the fire. Cr[oe]sus, having finished these things, sent them to
-Delphi, and with them the following: two large bowls, one of gold and
-one of silver. The golden one was placed on the right as one enters the
-temple, and that of silver on the left; but they were removed when the
-temple was burning, and the gold bowl was set in the treasury of the
-Clazomenæ; while the silver one, which contains six hundred amphorae,
-lies in a corner of the Propylæa, and is used for mixing wine on the
-Theophanian festival. The Delians said it was the work of Theodorus the
-Samian, which was probably true, for it was no common work. He sent also
-four casks of silver, which also stand in the Corinthian treasury; and
-he dedicated two lustral vases, one of gold and the other of silver. The
-Spartans claim that the golden one was their offering, for it bears an
-inscription, ‘From the Lacedæmonians;’ but this is wrong, for Cr[oe]sus
-gave it. He sent many other offerings, among them some round silver
-covers, and also a golden statue of a woman, three cubits high, which
-the Delphians say is the image of Cr[oe]sus’s baking-woman. And to all
-these things he added the necklaces and girdles of his wife."[2]
-
-Such is the account given by Herodotus of the gifts bestowed by the king
-regarded as the richest of all the ancient monarchs. In return for his
-gifts he got the answer that “if Cr[oe]sus shall make war on the
-Persians he will destroy a mighty empire.” Cr[oe]sus was so delighted at
-this that he sent more gifts, “giving to each of the inhabitants of
-Delphi two staters of gold.” A further question as to how long he was
-destined to rule elicited the response, “When a mule shall become king
-of the Medes, then, tender-footed Lydian, flee over the pebbly Hermus;
-nor delay, nor blush to be a coward.” There is even less of apparent
-enigma about that statement; yet nevertheless Cr[oe]sus lived to see the
-day when a man, whom he deemed a “mule,” did become ruler of the Medes,
-and he likewise saw his own mighty empire destroyed. The case of
-Cr[oe]sus is typical in many ways of the attitude of the ancients toward
-the oracle,—their belief in it as inspired, and their frequent attempts
-to predispose it to favor by gifts of great magnificence. Not everybody
-could give such offerings as Cr[oe]sus, to be sure. But the presents
-piled up in the buildings of the sacred precinct must have been of
-enormous value, and the contemplation of them somewhat overpowering. By
-the way, recent estimates have been published showing that the wealth of
-Cr[oe]sus, measured by our modern standards, would total only about
-$11,000,000.
-
------
-
-Footnote 2:
-
- Herodotus, Book I, sections 50-51.
-
-Doubtless the awe felt for the spot sufficed in the main to protect the
-treasures from theft. When Xerxes came into Greece and approached the
-shrine, the inhabitants proposed that the valuables be buried in the
-earth. Ph[oe]bus, speaking through the priestess, forbade this, however,
-saying that “he was able to protect his own.” And, in fact, he proved to
-be so, for the approaching host were awed by the sight of the sacred
-arms of the god, moved apparently by superhuman means from their armory
-within the temple to the steps outside. And moreover while the invaders
-were approaching along the vale below, where the temple of Athena
-Pronoia still stands, a storm broke, and two great crags were dashed
-from the overhanging cliffs above, killing some and demoralizing the
-rest. A war shout was heard from the temple of Athena, and the Delians,
-taking heart at these prodigies, swept down from the hills and destroyed
-many of the fleeing Medes.
-
-The most successful attempt to prejudice and corrupt the oracle seems to
-have been that of the Alcmæonidæ, who have been referred to as the
-builders of the great temple after its destruction by fire. They had
-been driven out of Athens by the Pisistratidæ, and during their exile
-they contracted with the Amphictyons to rebuild the great shrine of
-Apollo. That they imported Parian marble for the front of the edifice
-when the contract would have been amply satisfied with Poros stone seems
-to have been less a disinterested act than an effort to win the favor of
-the god. The Athenians long maintained that the builders still further
-persuaded the oracle by gifts of money to urge upon the Spartans the
-liberation of Athens from the tyrants; and in the end the Pisistratidæ
-were driven out, in obedience to this mandate, while the Alcmæonidæ came
-back in triumph, as had been their design from the first.
-
-It was rather a relief at last to turn from the bewildering array of
-ruins to the museum itself. It is not large, but it contains some
-wonderfully interesting things, and chief of all, no doubt, the bronze
-figure of the charioteer. I cannot bring myself to believe that he
-surpasses the bronze “ephebus” at Athens, whom he instantly recalls both
-from the material and from the treatment of the eyes; but he is
-wonderful, nevertheless, as he stands slightly leaning backward as one
-might in the act of driving, the remnants of a rein still visible in one
-hand. His self-possession and rather aristocratic mien have often been
-remarked, and a careful examination will reveal what is doubtless the
-most curious thing about the whole statue—namely, the little fringe of
-eye-lashes, which those who cast the image allowed to protrude around
-the inlaid eye-ball. They might easily be overlooked by a casual
-observer, but their effect is to add a subtle something that gives the
-unusual naturalness to the eyes. One other statue, a marble replica of
-an original bronze by Lysippus, deserves a word of comment also, because
-it is held by good authorities to be a better example of the school of
-Lysippus than the far better known “Apoxyomenos” in the Braccio Nuovo at
-Rome. Each of the figures is the work of a pupil of Lysippus, but the
-claim is made that the copy of a youth at Delphi was doubtless made by a
-pupil working under the master’s own supervision, while the Apoxyomenos
-was carved after Lysippus had died. From this it is natural enough to
-infer that the Delphi example is a more faithful reproduction than the
-Vatican’s familiar figure. In this museum also is a carved stone which
-is known as the “omphalos,” because of its having marked the supposed
-navel of the earth. The legend is that Zeus once let fly two eagles from
-opposite sides of the world, bidding them fly toward one another with
-equal wing. They met at Delphi, which therefore shares this form of
-celebrity with Dodona in Epirus.
-
-[Illustration: CHARIOTEER—DELPHI]
-
-Of course we visited the Castalian spring, which still gushes forth from
-a cleft in the rock, as it did in the days when suppliants came thither
-first of all to purify themselves. After a long journey one is not loath
-to rest beside this ancient fount after washing and drinking deep of its
-unfailing supply, for the water is good and the chance to drink fresh
-water in Greece is rare enough to be embraced wherever met. The cleft
-from which the spring emerges is truly wonderful. It is narrow and dark
-enough for a colossal chimney, running far back into the bowels of the
-mountain heights behind. An old stone trough hewn out of the side of the
-cliff was once filled by this spring, but the flow has now been diverted
-and it runs off in a babbling stream over the pebbles. Not the least
-inspiring thing at Delphi is to stand here and reflect, as one enjoys
-the Castalian water, how many of the great in bygone ages stood on this
-very spot and listened to the same murmur of this brook which goes on
-forever.
-
-Hard by the spring, under two great plane trees that we fondly believed
-were direct descendants of those planted on the spot by Agamemnon, we
-sat down to lunch, a stone khan across the way affording shelter and
-fire for our coffee. And in the afternoon we rambled among the ruins
-below on the grassy slopes of the lower glen, where are to be seen a
-ruined gymnasium, a temple of Athena Pronoia, and a fascinating circular
-“tholos,” all of which, though sadly shattered, still present much
-beauty of detail. If the site were devoid of every ruined temple it
-would still be well worth a visit, not merely from the importance it
-once enjoyed as Apollo’s chief sanctuary, but also for the grandeur and
-impressiveness of its setting, so typical of Greece at her best.
-Fortunate indeed are those who may tarry here awhile, now that local
-lodging has been robbed of its ancient hardships. To-day, as in the days
-of the priests, Delphi is in touch with the uttermost parts of the earth
-by means of the telegraph, the incongruous wires of which accompany the
-climber all the way from Itea, so that details of arrival, departure, or
-stay may be arranged readily enough from afar. Long sojourn, however,
-was not to be our portion, and we were forced to depart, though with
-reluctant steps, down along the rough side of the mountain, through the
-vast and silent olive groves, back into the world of men, to sordid Itea
-and our ship.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER IX. MYCENÆ AND THE
- PLAIN OF ARGOS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-We journeyed down to Mycenæ from Athens by train. The moment the
-railroad leaves Corinth it branches southward into the Peloponnesus and
-into a country which, for legendary interest, has few equals in the
-world. Old Corinth herself, mother of colonies, might claim a preëminent
-interest from the purely historical point of view, but she must forever
-subordinate herself to the half-mythical charm that surrounds ruined and
-desolate Mycenæ, the famous capital of Atreus and his two celebrated
-sons, Menelaus and Agamemnon. As for Corinth herself, the ancient site
-has lately been explored under the auspices of the American school at
-Athens, and these excavations, with the steep climb to the isolated and
-lofty Acrocorinth, furnish the attractions of the place to-day. The
-train runs fairly close to the mountain, so that even from the car
-window the fortifications on its top may be distinguished; but evidently
-they are Venetian battlements rather than old Greek remains that are
-thus visible. As a purely natural phenomenon the Acrocorinth is
-immensely impressive, resembling not a little the Messenian Acropolis at
-Ithome. It is a precipitous rock, high enough to deserve the name of a
-mountain, and sufficiently isolated to be a conspicuous feature of the
-landscape for miles as you approach Corinth from the sea or from Athens
-by train. Circumstances have never permitted us to ascend it, but the
-view from the summit over the tumbling surface of the mountainous
-Peloponnesus is said to be indescribably fine, giving the same effect as
-that produced by a relief map, while the prospect northward across the
-Gulf of Corinth is of course no less magnificent.
-
-Fate ordained that we should stick to the line of the railway and
-proceed directly to the site of Mycenæ, in which interest had been
-whetted by the remarkable display of Mycenæan relics in the museum at
-Athens, as well as by the consciousness that we were about to visit the
-home of the conqueror of Troy and of his murderous queen. The train did
-some steep climbing as it rounded the shoulder of the Acrocorinth, and
-for two hours or so it was a steady up-grade, winding around long
-valleys in spacious curves, the old road from Sparta generally visible
-below. At every station the mail car threw off bundles of newspapers,
-which the crowds gathered on the platform instantly snatched and
-purchased with avidity. The love of news is by no means confined to
-Athenians, but has spread to their countrymen; and every morning the
-same scene is enacted at every railroad station in Hellas on the arrival
-of the Athens train. At every stop the air was vocal with demands for
-this or that morning daily, and each, having secured the journal of his
-choice, retired precipitately to the shade of a near-by tree, while
-those who could not read gathered near and heard the news of the world
-retailed by the more learned, at second-hand. The peasant costumes were
-most interesting, for we were now in the country of the shepherds, far
-from the madding crowd and dressed for work. The dress of each was
-substantially the same,—a heavy capote of wool, if it was at all chilly,
-the tight drawers gartered below the knee, the heavy leather wallet on
-the front of the belt, the curious tufted shoes whose pompons at the
-toe, if large denoted newly bought gear, or if sheared small meant that
-the footwear was old. For the custom is to cut down these odd bits of
-adornment as they become frayed, a process that is repeated until the
-tuft is entirely removed, when it is time to buy new shoes.
-
-The landscape was most striking now. The plains were small and separated
-from one another by walls of rugged hills, whose barriers were not to be
-despised in days when communication was primitive and slow, and which
-bore an important part in keeping the several ancient states so long
-apart, instead of allowing them permanently to unite. The neighboring
-peaks began to be increasingly redolent of mythology, chiefly relating
-to various heroic exploits of Herakles. Indeed the train stopped at
-Nemea itself, and the site of the struggle with the Nemean lion was
-indicated to us from afar, while a distant summit was said to be near
-the lake where were slain the Stymphalian birds. Shortly beyond the
-grade began to drop sharply, until, rushing through a pass of incredible
-narrowness,—the site of a bloody modern battle between the Greek
-patriots and the Turks,—the train dashed out into the broad plain of
-Argos, once famous as the breeder of horses. The narrow and rather
-sterile valleys hemmed in by bare hills of gray rock gave place to this
-immense level tract of sandy soil leading down to the sea, which gleamed
-in the distance under the noonday sun. On either side of the broad
-expanse of plain towered the mountain wall, always gray and bare of
-trees, though in the old days it was doubtless well wooded. With the
-departure of trees came the drouth, and to-day the rivers of the Argolid
-are mere sandy channels, devoid of water save in the season of the
-melting mountain snows.
-
-The train halted at Phychtia, the station for Mycenæ, and there we found
-waiting a respectable carriage that had seen better days in some city,
-but which was now relegated to the task of conveying the curious to
-various points in the Argolic plain. It was there in response to the
-inevitable telegraph, which we had the forethought to employ. Otherwise
-we should have had to go over to the site of Mycenæ on foot, a task
-which the heat of the day rather than the distance would have made
-arduous. Mycenæ to-day is absolutely deserted and desolate, lying
-perhaps two miles eastward from the railway, on the spurs of two
-imposing mountain peaks. Toward this point the road rises steadily, and
-before long we had passed through a starveling village of peasant huts
-and came suddenly upon a two-story structure bearing the portentous
-sign, “Grand Hotel of Helen and Menelaus!” To outward view it was in
-keeping with the rest of the hamlet, which was chiefly remarkable for
-its children and dogs. It proved, on closer inspection, to be a queer
-little inn, boasting a few sleeping rooms in its upper story, to be
-reached only by an outside stairway. On the ground floor—which was a
-ground floor in the most literal sense of that overworked expression—was
-a broad room, used partly as a dining-room and partly as a store and
-office. The actual eating-place was separated from the remainder of the
-apartment by a grill-work of laths, or pickets, with a wicket gate,
-through which not only the guests and the proprietor, but sundry dogs,
-chickens, and cats passed from the main hall to the table. This, being
-the only available hotel in the region, and bearing so resounding and
-sonorous a title, proved irresistible. Lunch, consisting of very
-excellent broiled chickens, and sundry modest concomitants, was promptly
-served by a tall slip of a girl, the daughter of the house, and probably
-named Helen, too. During the meal various hens, perhaps the ancestors of
-our _pièces de résistance_, clucked contentedly in and out, and a
-mournful hound sneaked repeatedly through the gate, only to be as
-repeatedly thrust into the outer darkness of the office by the cook and
-waitress. In former times, before the “Grand Hotel of Helen and
-Menelaus” sprang into being, it was necessary to carry one’s food and
-eat it under the shadow of the famous Lion Gate on the site of the old
-town itself—a place replete with thrills. Nevertheless it seems well
-that the vicinity now has a place of public entertainment, and doubly
-well that it has been so sonorously named.
-
-It may not have been more than half a mile farther to the ruins, but it
-was up hill and very warm work reaching them. On either side of the high
-road, where presumably once lay the real every-day city of Mycenæ, there
-was little in the way of remains to be seen, save for the remarkable
-avenue leading to the subterranean tomb, or treasury, of which it will
-be best to speak somewhat later. The slopes were covered with grass, and
-here and there a trace of very old “Cyclopean” masonry was all that
-remained to bear witness to the previous existence of a city wall, or
-possibly an ancient highway with a primitive arch-bridge spanning a
-gully. Back over the plain the view was expansive. The several
-strongholds of Agamemnon’s kingdom were all in sight,—Mycenæ, Nauplia,
-Argos, and Tiryns,—at the corners of the great plain, which one might
-ride all around in a day; so that from his chief stronghold on the
-height at Mycenæ Agamemnon might well claim to be monarch of all he
-surveyed. Behind the valley, the twin peaks at whose base the stronghold
-lay rose abruptly, bearing no trace of the forests of oak that once
-covered them; and on a rocky foothill stood the acropolis of the city,
-admirably fitted by nature for defense. It was on this high ground that
-the ruins were found, and the visitor is informed that this was the
-citadel rather than the main town—the place to which the beleaguered
-inhabitants might flock for safety in time of war, and in which Atreus
-and his line had their palace. It was here that Dr. Schliemann conducted
-his remarkable researches, of which we shall have much to say. It is a
-remarkable fact that the events of the past twenty years or so have
-given a most astonishing insight into the dimness of the so-called
-“heroic” age—the age that long after was sung by Homer—so that it is
-actually possible now to say that we know more of the daily life and
-conditions of the time of Troy’s besiegers than we do of the time of
-Homer himself, and more about the heroes than about those who sang their
-exploits. Knowledge of the more remote periods seems to vary directly
-with the distance. The dark ages, as has been sagely remarked, were too
-dark altogether to admit men to read the story told by the ancient
-monuments such as survived at Mycenæ, and it is only lately that light
-has increased sufficiently to enable them to be understood with such
-clearness that the dead past has suddenly seemed to live again. From the
-remains at Mycenæ the savants have unearthed the houses, walls, palaces,
-reservoirs, ornaments, weapons, and daily utensils of the pre-Homeric
-age. Bones and other relics cast aside in rubbish heaps give an idea of
-the daily food of the people. The tombs have revealed how they were
-buried at death, and have yielded a wealth of gold ornaments showing a
-marvelous skill in working metals.
-
-This upper city of Mycenæ was built on a rock, which we soon discovered
-to be separated from the rest of the mountain by ravines, leaving the
-sides very steep and smooth, so that on nearly every hand the place was
-inaccessible. The gorges toward the mountains were natural moats, and
-wide enough to prevent assault or even the effective hurling of missiles
-from above into the citadel. The stronghold, however, was vastly
-strengthened by artificial construction and proved to be walled entirely
-about, the fortress being especially strong on the more exposed
-portions, and most especially at the main gate, where the enormous
-blocks of stone and the tremendous thickness of the wall were most in
-evidence. The road winds up the last steep ascent until it becomes a
-mere narrow driveway, scarcely wide enough for more than a single
-chariot, and right ahead appears suddenly the famed Lion Gate, flanked
-on one hand by a formidable wall facing the side of the native rock, and
-on the other by a projecting bastion of almost incredible thickness. The
-stones are of remarkable size, hewn to a sort of rough regularity by the
-Cyclopean builders, and the wonder is that, in so rude and primitive an
-age, men were able to handle such great blocks with such skill. No
-wonder the tale gained currency that it was the work of the Cyclopes,
-imported from abroad—and indeed the tale is not without its abiding
-plausibility, since there are evidences enough in scattered Ph[oe]nician
-sites elsewhere to warrant the assumption that the builders of these
-numerous fortresses in Argolis did come from over seas.
-
-Of all the ruins at Mycenæ the “gate of the lions” is unquestionably the
-most impressive. It spans the end of the long and narrow vestibule
-between the walls of rock, its jambs made of huge upright stones that
-even to-day show the slots cut for hinges and the deep holes into which
-were shot the ancient bolts. Over the top is another massive single
-stone, forming the lintel. It is a peculiarity of the Cyclopean doorways
-at Mycenæ that the weight on the centre of the lintel is almost
-invariably lightened by leaving a triangular aperture in the stonework
-above, and in the main gate the immense blocks of the wall were so
-disposed as to leave such an opening. Even the massive lintel of this
-broad gate would probably have failed to support the pressure of the
-walls had not some such expedient been devised. As it is, the light
-stone slab that was used to fill the triangular opening is still in
-place, and it is what gives the name to the gateway, from the rudely
-sculptured lions that grace it. These two lions, minus their heads, are
-sitting facing each other—“heraldically opposed,” as the phrase is—each
-with his fore feet resting on the base of an altar bearing a sculptured
-column, which marks the centre of the slab. The column is represented as
-larger at the top than at the base, a peculiarity of the stone columns
-of the Mycenæan age, and recalling the fact that the first stone pillars
-were faithful copies of the sharpened stakes that had been used as
-supports in a still earlier day. The missing heads of the lions were
-doubtless of metal,—bronze, perhaps,—and were placed so as to seem to be
-gazing down the road. They are gone, nobody knows whither. It used to be
-stated that this quaint bas-relief was the “oldest sculpture in Europe,”
-but this is another of the comfortable delusions that modern science has
-destroyed. Nobody, however, can deny that the Gate of the Lions is
-vastly impressive, or that it is so old that we may, without serious
-error, feel that we are looking on something that Agamemnon himself
-perhaps saw over his shoulder as he set out for Troy. Just inside the
-gate we found a narrow opening in the stones, leading to a sort of
-subterranean chamber, presumably for the sentry. The impression produced
-by the gate and its massive flanking walls is that of absolute
-impregnability, and it was easy enough to fancy the Argive javelin-men
-thronging the bastion above and pouring death and destruction down upon
-the exposed right hands of the invaders jammed tight in the constricted
-vestibule below.
-
-Inside the gate, the old market-place opens out, and it was here that
-were discovered the tombs from which came the numerous relics seen at
-Athens. The market place is still encircled by a curious elliptical
-structure, which is in effect a double ring of flat stones, with slabs
-laid flat across the top, forming what looks like a sort of oval bench
-all around the inclosure. We were asked to believe that these actually
-were seats to be occupied by the old men and councilors of the city; but
-if that is the truth, there were indeed giants in the land in those
-times. Other authorities conjecture that it was a retaining wall for a
-sort of mound heaped up over the graves within—an hypothesis which it
-seems almost as hard to adopt. Whatever the purpose of this remarkable
-circle of stone slabs, it is hardly to be doubted that it did once
-inclose an “agora,” and it was within this space that Schliemann sunk
-his shafts and brought up so much that was wonderful from the tombs
-below. Tombs in so central a spot, and filled with such a plethora of
-gold, certainly might well be deemed to have been the last resting-place
-of royalty, and it is agreeable to believe that they were sovereigns of
-the Agamemnonian line, if the “prince of men” himself be not one of
-them. It is the fashion to aver that Schliemann was too ready to jump at
-conclusions prompted by his own fond hopes and preconceived ideas, and
-to make little of his claim that he had unearthed the grave of the
-famous warrior who overcame Priam’s city; and perhaps this is justified.
-But one cannot forget that the old legend insisted that Atreus,
-Agamemnon, Cassandra, Electra, Eurymedon, and several others were buried
-in the market place of Mycenæ,—which was doubtless what prompted the
-excavation at this point; excavations which moreover proved to be so
-prolific of royal reward.
-
-[Illustration: AGORA—MYCENÆ]
-
-On the heights above, where it was far too steep for chariots to follow,
-there is a pathway direct to the royal palace itself, which it will
-doubtless do no harm to call Agamemnon’s. Of course it is practically
-flat to-day, with little more than traces of the foundation, save for a
-bit of pavement here and there, or a fragment of wall on which possibly
-one may detect a faint surviving touch of fresco. All around the citadel
-below are traces of other habitations, so congested as to preclude any
-application of Homer’s epithet, “Mycenæ of the broad streets,” to this
-particular section of the city. All around the summit ran the wall, even
-at points where it would seem no wall was necessary. As we explored the
-site the guide kept gathering handfuls of herbage that grew all about,
-and speedily led us to a curious Cyclopean “arch,” made by allowing two
-sloping stones to fall toward each other at the top of an approaching
-row of wall-blocks, which it developed was the entrance to a
-subterranean gallery that led down to the reservoir of the fort. It was
-a dark and tortuous place, and its descent to the bowels of the hill was
-quite abrupt, so that we did not venture very far, but allowed the guide
-to creep gingerly down until he was far below; whereupon he set fire to
-the grasses he had been accumulating and lighted up this interior
-gallery for us. The walls of this passageway had been polished smooth
-for centuries by passing goats which had rubbed against the stone, and
-it gleamed and glittered in the firelight, revealing a long tunnel
-leading downward and out of sight to a cavern far below, where was once
-stored the water supply conveyed thither from a spring north of the
-citadel. Stones cast down the tunnel reverberated for a long distance
-along its slippery floor, and at last apparently came against a final
-obstacle with a crash. Then came the upward rush of smoke from the
-impromptu torch, and we were forced hastily to scramble out into the
-open air. We returned later, however, for a passing shower swept down
-from the mountains and threatened a drenching, which rendered the
-shelter of the ancient aqueduct welcome indeed. It was soon over,
-however, and afforded us a chance to sit on the topmost rock of the
-acropolis, looking down over what was once the most important of the
-Greek kingdoms, from the mountains on the north and west down to the
-sea—a pleasing sight, which was cut short only by the reflection that we
-had still to visit the so-called “treasury of Atreus” beside the road
-below.
-
-This is one more of the odd structures of the place over which
-controversy has raged long and fiercely, the problem being whether or
-not it was a tomb. There are a number of these underground chambers near
-by, but the most celebrated one just mentioned is the common type and is
-completely excavated so that it is easily to be explored. The approach
-is by a long cut in the hillside, walled on both sides with well-hewn
-stone, the avenue terminating only when a sufficient depth had been
-reached to excavate a lofty subterranean chamber. A tall and narrow door
-stands at the end of this curious lane, placed against the hill, its
-lintel made of a noticeably massive flat stone, with the inevitable
-triangular opening over it; but in this case the block which presumably
-once closed it is gone, and nobody knows whether it, like its mate at
-the main gateway, bore sculptured lions or not. Within, the tomb is
-shaped like an old-fashioned straw beehive, lined throughout with stone,
-which bears marks indicating that it in turn was once faced with bronze
-plates. It is a huge place, in which the voice echoes strangely, and it
-is lighted only from the door and its triangular opening above. Just off
-the northern side is a smaller chamber, where light is only to be had by
-lighting some more of the dry grasses gathered without. Those who adhere
-to the idea that this was a tomb maintain that the real sepulchre was in
-the smaller adjoining chamber. Respectable authority exists, however,
-for saying that these chambers were not tombs at all, but treasuries,
-and a vast amount of controversial literature exists on the subject,
-over which one may pore at his leisure if he desires. If it was a tomb,
-it is obvious from the other burial-place discovered on the acropolis
-above that there must have been at least two different styles of
-burial,—and the tombs above appear to have contained people of
-consequence, such as might be expected to have as honorable and imposing
-sepulchres as there were. No bones were found in the “treasury of
-Atreus,” and plenty of bones were found elsewhere, a fact which might
-seem significant and indeed conclusive if it were not known that bones
-had been found in beehive tombs like this elsewhere in Greece, notably
-near Menidi, where six skeletons were discovered in a similar structure.
-Of course it might be true that the bodies found on the heights at
-Mycenæ and taken to Athens belonged to an entirely different epoch from
-those that were buried in the beehive tombs, and that the beehive tombs
-might easily have been looted long before the existence of any such
-booty as the marketplace graves yielded had even been suspected. The
-layman is therefore left to suit himself, whether he will call this
-underground chamber a tomb or a treasury, and devote his time to
-admiring the ingenuity with which the stone lining of the place was
-built, each tier of stone slightly projecting above its lower fellow so
-as at last to converge at the top in a point. The perfection of this
-subterranean treasure-house seems no less remarkable than the ease with
-which the ancient builders managed large masses of rock.
-
-As for the history of Mycenæ, its greatest celebrity is unquestionably
-that which it achieved in the time of the Atreidai, when it was the home
-of the kings of Argos. It is supposable that in the palace on the height
-Clytæmnestra spent the ten years of her lord’s absence at Troy, and that
-therein she murdered him on his return. The poets have woven a great web
-of song and story about the place, largely imaginative and legendary, to
-be sure. But the revelations of the later excavations have revealed that
-the poets came exceedingly close to fact in their descriptions of
-material things. The benches before the doors, the weapons and shields
-of heroes, the cups,—such as Nestor used, for example,—all these find
-their counterparts in the recently discovered actualities and give the
-more color to the events that the ancient writers describe. That Mycenæ
-was practically abandoned soon after her great eminence doubtless
-accounts for the wealth of relics that the excavators found, and her low
-estate during the centuries of neglect curiously but not unnaturally
-insured her return to celebrity, with a vast volume of most interesting
-testimony to her former greatness quite unimpaired.
-
-From Mycenæ down to the Argive Heræum, the ancient temple of Hera which
-was once the chief shrine of this region, is something like two miles;
-but as it was over a rough ground, and as time failed us, it was found
-necessary to eliminate this, which to a strenuous archæologist might
-doubtless prove highly interesting as an excursion, and more especially
-so to Americans, since it was a site explored by the American school. It
-lies off on the hills that border the plain of Argos on the east, on the
-direct line between Mycenæ and Nauplia. Our own road led us back to
-Phychtia again and down the centre of the plain over a very good
-carriage road, passing through broad fields of waving grain, in the
-midst of which, breast deep, stood occasional horses contentedly
-munching without restraint. Almost the only buildings were isolated
-stone windmills, some still in use and others dismantled. At last the
-road plunged down a bank and into the sandy bed of what was doubtless at
-some time of year a river,—but at this season, and probably most of the
-year as well, a mere broad flat expanse of sand as destitute of water as
-the most arid part of Sahara. The railroad, which had borne us friendly
-company for a few miles, was provided with an iron bridge, spanning this
-broad desert with as much gravity as if it were a raging torrent, which
-doubtless it sometimes is. Just beyond we rattled into Argos.
-
-Argos is a rather large place, but decidedly unattractive save for its
-many little gardens. Nearly every house had them, and from our high
-seats in the respectable but superannuated depot carriage we were able
-to look into the depths of many such, to marvel at their riot of roses
-and greenery. As for the houses, they were little and not over-clean.
-The populace, however, was exceeding friendly, sitting _en masse_ along
-the highway, the young women blithely saluting and the children
-bombarding us with nosegays in the hope of leptà. Over Argos towers a
-steep hill, known as a “larisa” or acropolis, from the top of which we
-could imagine a wonderful view over the whole kingdom of the Argives and
-over the mountains as well, not to mention the Gulf of Nauplia; but as
-time was speeding on toward the dusk and we were still far from Nauplia,
-we had to be content with the imagination alone, and with the news that
-a little monastery about halfway up the hillside had been set on fire on
-the Easter Sunday previous by too enthusiastic celebrants, who had been
-over-free with the inevitable rockets and Roman candles. Also we had to
-give short shrift to the vast theatre, hewn out of the solid rock at the
-foot of the larisa, and said to be one of the largest in Greece. It was
-sadly grass-grown, however, and infinitely less attractive than the
-smallest at Athens, not to mention the splendid playhouse at Epidaurus,
-which we promised ourselves for the morrow. So we were not reluctant to
-swing away from old Argos, with her shouting villagers and high-walled
-gardens, and to skirt the harbor, now close at hand along the dusty
-Nauplia road. Across the dancing waters lay Nauplia herself, a white
-patch at the foot of a prodigious cliff far around the bay. By the
-roadside the country seaward was marshy, while inland rolled the great
-plain back to the gray hills which showed the northern bounds of the old
-kingdom, and the lofty rock of Mycenæ from which the sons of Atreus had
-looked down over their broad acres.
-
-It was not long before we were aware that “well-walled” Tiryns was at
-hand and that we were not to close a day already well marked by memories
-of Cyclopean masonry without adding thereto the most stupendous of all,
-the memory of the great stones piled up in prehistoric ages at this
-ancient palace whose size impressed even that hardened sight-seer
-Pausanias. Tiryns proved to be a highly interesting place; in general
-appearance much like Mycenæ, but in detail sufficiently different to
-keep us exclaiming. It lies on what is little more than an isolated
-hillock beside the highroad, and there is nothing imposing about its
-height or length. It is a long, low rock, devoid of any building save
-for the solid retaining walls that may go back to the days of Herakles
-himself.
-
-Whoever built the fortress at Tiryns had seen fit to make the front door
-face the plain rather than the sea; so that it was necessary to leave
-the road and go around to the north side of the rock, where a gradual
-incline afforded an easy approach to a sort of ramp, or terrace,
-defended by walls of the most astonishing Cyclopean construction. It has
-been stated that these great and rudely squared blocks of native rock,
-taken from the quarries in the hills northward, were once bonded
-together with a rude clay mortar, which has since entirely disappeared.
-How such enormous blocks were quarried in those primitive days, or how
-they were handled, is a good deal of a mystery. But it is claimed that
-swelled wedges of wet wood were used to separate the stones from their
-native bed.
-
-As a ruin, Tiryns is rather difficult to reconstruct in the imagination
-from the visible remains. The inclined ramp and the gateway, remains of
-which are still standing, are interesting, but chiefly from the
-remarkable size of the stones employed in their construction. Within,
-the old palace is in a state of complete and comprehensive ruin. The
-lines of the former palace walls may, however, be seen on the rocky
-floor, with here and there a trace of an ancient column which has left
-its mark on the foundation rock. The outer and inner courts, megaron,
-men’s and women’s apartments, and even the remnants of a “bathroom” are
-to be made out, the last-named bearing testimony to the fact that even
-in the remote Mycenæan age the disposition of waste water was carefully
-looked to—perhaps more carefully than was the case with the later
-Greeks. The Tirynthian feature which eclipses everything else for
-interest, however, is the arrangement of covered galleries of stone on
-two sides of the palace, from which at intervals radiate side chambers
-supposed to have been used for storage. To-day they recall rather more
-the casements of our own old-fashioned forts. In these galleries the
-rude foreshadowings of the arch principle are even more clearly to be
-seen than in the underground conduit at Mycenæ which leads to the sunken
-reservoir. The sides of the corridor are vertical for only a short
-distance, and speedily begin to slope inward, meeting in an acute angle
-overhead. The side chambers are of a similar construction. Nowhere does
-it appear that the “Cyclopes,” if we may call them such, recognized the
-principle of the keystone, although they seem to have come very close to
-it by accident here and there, and notably so in the case of the little
-postern gate which is to be seen on the side of the citadel toward the
-modern highroad. As for the galleries, at the present day they are
-polished to a glassy smoothness within by the rubbing of sheltering
-flocks of sheep and goats. And they are interesting, not only because of
-the massive stones used in building them, but because the similarity of
-these corridors and storage chambers to the arrangements found near old
-Carthage and other Ph[oe]nician sites may well argue a common paternity
-of architecture, and thus give color to the tale that the ancient kings
-of Argos secured artisans of marvelous skill and strength from abroad.
-The immense size of the roughly hewn rocks easily enough begot the
-tradition that these alien builders were men of gigantic stature, called
-“Cyclopes” from the name of their king, Cyclops, and supposed to be a
-race of Thracian giants; quite distinct, of course, from the other
-mythological Cyclopes who served Hephaistos, or the Sicilian ones who
-made life a burden for Odysseus on his wanderings. It seems to be a
-plausible opinion now widely held that the foreign masons who erected
-the Cyclopean walls in the Argolid were not from Thrace, but from the
-southern shores of the Ægean—perhaps from Lycia. And it is interesting
-to know that there are examples of the same sort of stone work, bearing
-a similar name, to be found as far away as Peru.
-
-A somewhat lower hillock just west of the main acropolis—if it deserves
-that name—is shown as once being the servants’ quarters. And we
-descended, as is the common practice, from the main ruin to the road, by
-a rude stone stairway at what was formerly the back of the castle, to
-the narrow postern, the stones of which form an almost perfect, but
-doubtless quite accidental, archway; and thence to our carriage, which
-speedily whirled us away to Nauplia. The road thither lay around a
-placid bay, sweeping in a broad curve through a landscape which was
-happily marked by some very creditable trees. Nauplia herself made a
-pleasant picture to the approaching eye, lying on her well-protected
-harbor at the base of an imposing cliff, on the top of which the
-frowning battlements of an old Venetian fortress proclaimed the presence
-of the modern state prison of Greece. The evening sun brought out the
-whiteness of the city against the forbidding rock behind, while far away
-westward across the land-locked bay the evening light touched with a
-rosy glow the snowy summit of Cyllene, and brought out the rugged
-skyline of the less lofty Peloponnesian mountains. And it was these that
-lay before us as our carriage rattled out of a narrow street and upon
-the broad esplanade of the quay at the doors of our hotel.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER X. NAUPLIA AND
- EPIDAURUS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-We were awakened in the morning by an unaccustomed sound,—a subdued,
-rapid, rhythmic cadence coming up from the esplanade below, accompanied
-by the monotonous undertone of a voice saying something in time with the
-shuffle of marching feet, the whole punctuated now and then by a word of
-command and less frequently by the unmistakable clang of arms. The
-soldiers from the fortress were having their morning drill. The words of
-command sounded strangely natural, although presumably in Greek,
-doubtless because military men the world over fall into the habit of
-uttering “commands of execution” in a sort of unintelligible grunt. The
-counting of “fours” sounded natural, too, despite the more marked
-Hellenism of the numbers. So far from being a disturbance, the muffled
-tread of the troops was rather soporific, which is fortunate, because I
-have been in Nauplia on several occasions, and this early drill appears
-to be the regular thing under the windows of the Hôtel des Étrangers.
-
-The fine open space along the water front makes a tempting
-parade-ground, and at other hours an attractive place for general
-assemblage, especially at evening, when the people of Nauplia are to be
-seen lounging along the wharves or drinking their coffee in the shade
-under the white line of buildings. The quay curves for a long distance
-around the bay, and alongside it are moored many of those curious hollow
-schooners that do the coastwise carrying in Greece. Nauplia appears
-still to be something of a port, although infinitely smaller and less
-busy than either the Piræus or Patras. Her name, of course, is redolent
-of the sea. The beauty of her situation has often reminded visitors of
-Naples, but it is only a faint resemblance to the Italian city. In size
-she is little indeed. Scenically, however, her prospects are
-magnificent, with their inclusion of a panorama of distant and imposing
-peaks towering far away across the inner bay, so admirably sheltered
-from the outer seas by the massive promontory, on the inner shelf of
-which the city stands. The town is forced to be narrow because of the
-little space between the water and the great cliff rising precipitously
-behind. There is room for little more than three parallel streets, and
-in consequence Nauplia is forced to make up in length what she lacks in
-breadth, and strings along eastward in a dwindling line of buildings to
-the point where the marshy shore curves around toward Tiryns, or loses
-herself in the barren country that lies in the gray valleys that lead
-inland to Epidaurus.
-
-From the windows of the hotel the most conspicuous object in the middle
-distance was a picturesque islet in the midst of the bay, almost
-entirely covered by a yellow fort of diminutive size and Venetian
-appearance—the home of an interesting functionary, though a gruesome
-one; to wit, the national executioner. For Nauplia at the present day is
-above all else the Sing-Sing of Hellas,—the site of the national prison,
-where are confined the principal criminals of the kingdom, and more
-especially those who are under sentence of death. The medieval
-fortifications on the summit behind the town have been converted to the
-base uses of a jail, and are locally known as the Palamide. We did not
-make the ascent to the prison, although it cannot be a hard climb, but
-contented ourselves with purchasing the small wares that are vended by
-street dealers in the lower town,—strings of “conversation beads,” odd
-knives, and such like things, which you are assured were made by
-“brigands” confined in the prison above. Somehow a string of beads made
-by a Greek “brigand” seems a possession to be coveted.
-
-“M. de Nauplia,” if that is the proper way of referring to the headsman,
-is a criminal himself. He is generally, and probably always, one who has
-been convicted of murder, but who has accepted the post of executioner
-as the price of escaping the extreme penalty of the law. It is no small
-price to pay, for while it saves the neck of the victim it means virtual
-exile during the term of the service, and aversion of all good people
-forever. We were told that the executioner at the time was a man who had
-indulged in a perfect carnival of homicide—so much so that in almost any
-other country he would have been deemed violently and irreclaimably
-insane and would have escaped death by confinement in an asylum. But not
-so he. Instead he was sentenced to a richly deserved beheading by the
-guillotine, and the penalty was only commuted by his agreement to assume
-the unwelcome task of dispatching others of his kind—an office carrying
-with it virtual solitary imprisonment for a term variously stated as
-from five to eight years, and coupled with lasting odium. For all those
-years he must live on the executioner’s island, unattended save by the
-corporal’s guard of soldiers from the fort, which guard is changed every
-day or two, lest the men be contaminated or corrupted into conniving at
-the prisoner’s escape. Others told us that the term of his sanguinary
-employ was as long as twenty-five years, but this was far greater than
-the average story set as his limit. On liberation, it is said to be the
-ordinary practice for these unhappy men to go abroad and seek spots
-where their condition is unknown. On days when death sentences are to be
-executed the headsman is conveyed with solemn military pomp to the
-Palamide prison above the city, and there in the prison yard the
-guillotine is found set up and waiting for the hand that releases its
-death-dealing knife. Whether or not the executioner is paid a stated
-pittance in any event, or whether, as we were told by some, he was paid
-so much “per head,” we never found out. Meantime the executioner’s
-island undeniably proves one of the features of Nauplia, quaint to see,
-and shrouded with a sort of awesome mystery.
-
-The narrow streets of Nauplia furnished diversion for a short time. They
-proved to be fairly clean, and the morning hours revealed a picturesque
-array of barbaric colored blankets and rugs hung out of the upper
-balconies to air. In one street a dense throng about an open door drew
-attention to the morning session of the municipal court. The men roaming
-the streets were mainly in European dress, although here and there a
-peasant from the suburbs displayed his quaint capote and pomponed shoes.
-It was one of these native-garbed gentry who approached us with a grin
-and stated in excellent English, that sorted strangely with his Hellenic
-clothes, that he was once employed in an electric light plant in
-Cincinnati. Did he like it? Oh, yes! In fact, he was quite ready to go
-back there, where pay was better than in Nauplia. And with an expressive
-shrug and comprehensive gesture that took in the whole broad sweep of
-the ancient kingdom of the Atreidai, he added, “Argos is broke; no
-good!” One other such deserves mention, perhaps; one who broke in on a
-reverential reverie one day, as we were contemplating a Greek dance in a
-classic neighborhood, with some English that savored of the Bowery
-brand, informing us that he had been in America and had traveled all
-over that land of plenty in the peregrinations of Barnum’s circus,
-adding as a most convincing passport to our friendship, "I was wit' old
-man Barnum w'en he died." Greeks who speak English are plentiful in the
-Peloponnesus, and even those who make no other pretensions to knowledge
-of the tongue are proud of being able to say “all right” in response to
-labored efforts at pidgin Greek.
-
-[Illustration: WOMAN SPINNING ON THE ROAD TO EPIDAURUS]
-
-It did not take long to exhaust the interest of the city of Nauplia
-itself, including a survey of the massive walls that survive from the
-Middle Ages. And it was fortunate, too, because we had planned to spend
-the day at Epidaurus, which lies eighteen miles or so away, and was to
-be reached only by a long and arduous ride in a carriage—the same highly
-respectable old landau in which we had ridden the length of Agamemnon’s
-kingdom the day before. Owing to the grade and the considerable solidity
-of our party a third horse was in some miraculous way attached by ropes
-to the carriage, the lunch was loaded in the hood forward, and we
-rattled away through the narrow streets toward the open country east of
-the town—a country that we soon discovered to be made up of narrow
-valleys winding among gray and treeless hills, whose height increased
-steadily as the highway wound along. It was a good highway—the distances
-being marked in “stadia,” as the Greek classically terms his kilometres,
-and the stadium posts constantly reminding us that this was an “Odos
-Ethniké,” or national road. But we missed sadly the large trees that are
-to be seen in the close neighborhood of the city as we jogged out on the
-dusty road in the heat of the increasing April day.
-
-The grade, while not steep, was mainly upward through the long valleys,
-making the journey a matter of more than three hours under the most
-favorable of conditions; and the general sameness of the scenery made it
-a rather monotonous drive. Of human habitation there was almost none,
-for although here and there one might find a vineyard, the greater part
-of the adjacent land is little more than rocky pasture. It soon
-developed, however, that the modern Greek shepherd is not afraid to play
-his pipes at noonday through any fear of exciting the wrath or jealousy
-of Pan, as was once the case; for from the mountain-sides and from under
-the scanty shade of isolated olive trees we kept hearing the plaintive
-wailing of the pipes, faint and far away, where some tender of the
-flocks was beguiling the time in music. This distant piping is
-indescribable. The tone is hardly to be called shrill, for it is so only
-in the sense that its pitch is high like the ordinary human whistling;
-in quality it is a soft note, apparently following no particular tune
-but wavering up and down, and generally ending in a minor wail that soon
-grows pleasant to hear. Besides, it recalls the idyls of Theocritus, and
-the pastorals and bucolics take on a new meaning to anybody who has
-heard the music of the shepherd lads of Greece. Nothing would do but we
-must buy pipes and learn to play upon them; so a zealous inquiry was
-instituted among the wayfaring men we met, with a view to securing the
-same. It was not on this day, however, but on the next that we finally
-succeeded in buying what certainly looked like pipes, but which turned
-out to be delusions and snares so far as music was concerned. They were
-straight wooden tubes, in which holes had been burned out at regular
-intervals to form “stops” for varying the tone. No reed was inserted in
-them, and if they were to be played upon at all it must be by reason of
-a most accomplished “lip.” We derived considerable amusement from them,
-however, by attempting to reproduce on them the mellifluous whistling of
-the natives; but the nearest approach to awakening any sound at all
-which any of our party achieved was so lugubriously melancholy that he
-was solemnly enjoined and commanded never to try it again, on pain of
-being turned over to “M. de Nauplia” as the only fitting punishment.
-Later we found that the flute-like notes that we heard floating down
-over the vales from invisible shepherds came from a very different sort
-of wind instrument—a reed pipe of bamboo not unlike the American boy’s
-willow whistle, with six or seven stops bored out of the tube.
-
-The wayfarers were decidedly the most interesting sights on the
-Epidaurus road. Several stadia out of Nauplia a stalwart man came
-striding down a hill from his flocks and took the road to town. He was
-dressed in the peasant garb, and across his shoulders he bore a yoke,
-from either end of which depended large yellow sacks containing freshly
-made cheese, the moisture draining through the meshes of the cloth as he
-walked along to market. These cheeses we had met with in the little
-markets at Athens and found not unpleasant, once one grows accustomed to
-the goat’s milk flavor and the “freshness;” although it is probable that
-a taste for Greek cheese, like that for the resinated wine, is an
-acquired one.
-
-Groups of shepherds were encountered now and then, especially at the few
-points along the way where buildings and shade were to be found. They
-were all picturesque in their country dress, but more especially the
-women, who spin flax as they walk and who probably ply a trade as old as
-Hellenic civilization itself in about the same general way that their
-most remote ancestors plied it. These little knots of peasants readily
-enough posed for the camera, and were contented with a penny apiece for
-drink-money. Not the least curious feature of these peasant herdsmen was
-the type of crook carried—not the large, curved crook that the ordinary
-preconceived ideal pictures, but straight sticks with a queer little
-narrow quirk in the end, with which the shepherd catches the agile and
-elusive goat or lamb by the hind leg and thus holds it until he is able
-to seize the animal in some more suitable part. These herdsmen proved
-hospitable folk, ready enough with offers of milk fresh from the herd,
-which is esteemed a delicacy by them, whatever it might have seemed to
-our uneducated palates.
-
-[Illustration: EPIDAURIAN SHEPHERDS]
-
-Perhaps halfway out to Epidaurus one passes another remnant of the most
-remote time—a lofty fortification on a deserted hill. It is of polygonal
-masonry—that is, of angular stones fitted together without mortar,
-instead of being squared after the manner of the Cyclopes. Hard by,
-spanning a ravine which has been worn by centuries of winter torrents,
-there was a Cyclopean bridge, made of huge rocks so arranged as to form
-an enduring arch, and on this once ran no doubt the great highway from
-Epidaurus to the plain of Argos.
-
-It was long after the noontide hour when the gray theatre of Epidaurus,
-a mere splash of stone in the distant side of a green hill, came in
-sight, lying a mile or so away across a level field, in which lay
-scattered the remnants of what was once the most celebrated hospital in
-the world. For Epidaurus boasted herself to be the birthplace of
-Æsculapius,—or, as we are on Greek soil, Asklepios,—and held his memory
-in deep reverence forever after by erecting on the site a vast
-establishment such as to-day we might call a “sanitarium.” After the
-heat and dust of the ride it was pleasant to stretch out in the shade of
-the scanty local trees, on the fragrant grass of the rising ground near
-the theatre, and look back down the long valley, with its distant blue
-mountains framed in a vista of massive gray hills. The nearer ones were
-impressive in their height, but absolutely denuded of vegetation, like
-the hills around Attica; and it was these mountains that formed the sole
-scenery for the background of plays produced in the great theatre close
-by. The theatre, of course, is the great and central attraction at
-Epidaurus to-day, for it is in splendid preservation while all else is a
-confusing mass of flat ruins. No ancient theatre is better preserved, or
-can surpass this one for general grace of lines or perfection of
-acoustic properties. Many were doubtless larger, but among all the old
-Greek theatres Epidaurus best preserves to the modern eye the playhouse
-of the ancients, circular orchestra and all. The acoustics anybody may
-test easily enough. We disposed ourselves over the theatre in various
-positions, high and low, along the half-a-hundred tiers of seats, and
-listened to an oration dealing with the points of interest in the
-theatre’s construction delivered in a very ordinary tone, from the
-centre of the orchestra, but audible in the remotest tier.
-
-The circle of the orchestra is not paved, as had been the case with the
-theatres seen at Athens, but is a green lawn, in the centre of which a
-stone dot reveals the site of the ancient altar. It was stated that the
-circle is not actually as perfect as it looks, being shorter in one set
-of radii by something like two feet. But to all appearance it is
-absolutely round, and is easily the most beautiful type of the circular
-orchestra in existence to-day, if indeed it is not the only perfect one.
-The immense amphitheatre surrounding it was evidently largely a natural
-one, which a little artificial stonework easily made complete; and it is
-so perfect to-day that a very little labor would make it entirely
-possible to give a play there now before a vast audience. Some such plan
-was actually talked of a few years ago, but abandoned,—no doubt, because
-of the apparent difficulty of getting any very considerable company of
-auditors to the spot, or of housing them while there. It would be
-necessary, also, to rebuild the proskenion, the foundations of which are
-still to be seen behind the orchestra, and one may tremble to think of
-what might happen in the process should the advocates of the stage
-theory and their opponents fail to agree better than they have hitherto
-done.
-
-From the inspection of the theatre and the enjoyment of the view across
-the plain to the rugged hills our dragoman called us to lunch, which was
-spread in a little rustic pergola below. He had thoughtfully provided
-fresh mullets, caught that morning off the Nauplia quay, and had cooked
-them in the little house occupied by the local _custode_. Hunger,
-however, was far less a matter of concern than thirst. We had been
-warned not to drink of the waters of the sacred well of Asklepios in the
-field below, and as there was no spring vouched for with that certitude
-that had attended the waters of Castalia, we were thrown back, as usual,
-on the bottled product of the island of Andros—a water which is not only
-intrinsically pure and excellent, but well worth the price of admission
-from the quaint English on its label. In rendering their panegyric on
-the springs of Andros into the English tongue, the translators have
-declared that it “is the equal of its superior mineral waters of
-Europe.”
-
-The sacred well of the god, however, proved later in the day that it had
-not lost all its virtues even under the assaults of the modern germ
-theory; for while we were wandering through the maze of ruins in the
-strong heat of the early afternoon one of our company was decidedly
-inconvenienced by an ordinary "nose-bleed"—which prompt applications of
-the water, drawn up in an incongruous tin pail, instantly stopped. And
-thus did we add what is probably the latest cure, and the only one for
-some centuries, worked by the once celebrated institution patronized by
-the native divinity. It is related that the god was born on the hillside
-just east of the meadow, but this story is sadly in conflict with other
-traditions. It seems that Asklepios was not originally a divinity, but a
-mere human, as he seems to be in the Homeric poems. His deification came
-later, as not infrequently happened in ancient times, and with it came a
-network of legends ascribing a godlike paternity to him and assigning no
-less a sire than Apollo. Indeed, it is stated by some authorities that
-the worship of Asklepios did not originate in Epidaurus at all, but in
-Thessaly; and that the cult was a transplanted one in its chief site in
-the Peloponnesus, brought there by Thessalian adventurers.
-
-[Illustration: THEATRE AT EPIDAURUS]
-
-All over the meadow below the great theatre are scattered the remains of
-the ancient establishment. The ceremony of healing at Epidaurus seems to
-have been in large part a faith-cure arrangement, although not entirely
-so; for there is reason to believe that, as at Delphi, there was more or
-less natural common sense employed in the miracle-working, and that the
-priests of the healing art actually acquired not a little primitive
-skill in medicine. It was a skill, however, which was attended by more
-or less mummery and circumstance, useful for impressing the mind of the
-patient; but this is not even to-day entirely absent from the practice
-of medicine with its “placebos” and “therapeutic suggestion” elements.
-The custom of sending the patient to rest in a loggia with others, where
-he might expect a nocturnal visitation of the god himself, has been
-referred to in these pages before, and survives even to-day in the
-island of Tenos at the eve of the Annunciation. The tales of marvelous
-cures at Epidaurus were doubtless as common and as well authenticated as
-the similar modern stories at Lourdes and Ste. Anne de Beaupré.
-
-In addition to the actual apartments devoted to the sleeping patients,
-which were but a small part of the sanitarium’s equipment, there was the
-inevitable great temple of the god himself,—a large gymnasium suggestive
-of the faith the doctors placed in bodily exercise as a remedy, and a
-large building said to be the first example of a hospital ward, beside
-numerous incidental buildings devoted to lodgment. Satirical
-commentators have called attention to the presence of shrines to the
-honor of Aphrodite and Dionysus as bearing enduring witness to the part
-that devotion to those divinities seems to have been thought to bear in
-afflicting the human race. The presence of the magnificent theatre and
-the existence of a commodious stadium testify that life at Epidaurus was
-not without its diversions to relieve the tedium of the medical
-treatment. And in its day it must have been a large and beautiful
-agglomeration of buildings. To-day it is as much of a maze as the ruins
-at Delphi or at Olympia. The non-archæological visitor will probably
-find his greatest interest in the theatre and in the curious circular
-"tholos"—a remarkable building, the purpose of which is not clear, made
-of a number of concentric rings of stone which once bore colonnades. It
-stands in the midst of the great precinct, and in its ruined state it
-resembles nothing so much as the once celebrated “pigs-in-clover”
-puzzle. In the little museum on the knoll above, a very successful
-attempt has been made to give an idea of this beautiful temple by a
-partial restoration. Being indoors, it can give no idea either of the
-diameter or height of the original; but the inclusion of fragments of
-architrave and columns serve to convey an impression of the general
-beauty of the structure, as we had seen to be the case with similar
-fractional restorations at Delphi. The extensive ruins in the precinct
-itself do not lend themselves to non-technical description. They are
-almost entirely flat, and the ground plans serve to identify most of the
-buildings, without giving any very good idea of their appearance when
-complete. Pavements still remain intact in some of the rooms, and altar
-bases and exedral seats lie all about in apparent confusion.
-Nevertheless the discoveries have been plotted and identified with
-practical completeness, and it is easy enough with the aid of the plans
-to pass through the precinct and get a very good idea of the manifold
-buildings which once went to make up what must have been a populous and
-attractive resort for the sick. Whatever may be thought of the religious
-aspects of the worship of Asklepios, it is evident that the regimen
-prescribed by the cult at Epidaurus, with its regard for pure mountain
-air and healthful bodily exercise, not to mention welcome diversion and
-amusement for the mind, was furthered by ample facilities in the way of
-equipment of this world-famous hospital.
-
-When we were there the Greek School of Archæology was engaged in digging
-near the great temple of the god, the foundations of which have now been
-completely explored to a considerable depth, and it was interesting to
-see the primitive way in which the excavation was being carried on. Men
-with curiously shaped picks and shovels were loosening the earth and
-tossing it into baskets of wicker stuff, which in turn were borne on the
-heads of women to a distance and there dumped. It was slow work, and
-apparently nothing very exciting was discovered. Certainly nothing was
-unearthed while we were watching this laborious toil.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER XI. IN ARCADIA
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-With the benison of the landlord, who promised to send our luncheon over
-to the station “in a little boy,” we departed from Nauplia on a train
-toward noontime, headed for the interior of the Peloponnesus by way of
-Arcadia. The journey that we had mapped out for ourselves was somewhat
-off the beaten path, and it is not improbable that it always will be so,
-at least for those travelers who insist on railway lines and hotels as
-conditions precedent to an inland voyage, and who prefer to avoid the
-primitive towns and the small comforts of peasants’ houses. Indeed our
-own feelings verged on the apprehensive at the time, although when it
-was all over we wondered not a little at the fact. Our plan was to leave
-the line of the railway, which now entirely encircles the Peloponnesus,
-at a point about midway in the eastern side, and to strike boldly across
-the middle of the Peloponnesus to the western coast at Olympia, visiting
-on the way the towns of Megalopolis and Andhritsæna, and the temple at
-Bassæ. This meant a long day’s ride in a carriage and two days of
-horseback riding over mountain trails; and as none of us, including the
-two ladies, was accustomed to equestrian exercises, the apprehensions
-that attended our departure from the Nauplia station were perhaps not
-unnatural.
-
-It had been necessary to secure the services of a dragoman for the trip,
-as none of us spoke more than Greek enough to get eggs and such common
-necessaries of life, and we knew absolutely nothing of the country into
-the heart of which we were about to venture. The dragoman on such a trip
-takes entire charge of you. Your one duty is to provide the costs. He
-attends to everything else—wires ahead for carriages, secures horses,
-guides, and muleteers, provides all the food, hotel accommodation, tips,
-railway tickets, and even afternoon tea. This comprehensive service is
-to be secured at the stated sum of ten dollars a day per person, and in
-our case it included not only the above things, but beds and bedding and
-our own private and especial cook. To those accustomed to traveling in
-luxury, ten dollars a day does not seem a high traveling average. To
-those like ourselves accustomed to seeing the world on a daily
-expenditure of something like half that sum, it is likely to seem at
-first a trifle extravagant. However, let it be added with all becoming
-haste, it is the only way to see the interior of Greece with any comfort
-at all, and the comfort which it does enable is easily worth the cost
-that it entails.
-
-From the moment we left Nauplia we were devoid of any care whatever. We
-placed ourselves unreservedly in the keeping of an accomplished young
-Athenian bearing the name of Spyros Apostolis, who came to us well
-recommended by those we had known in the city, and who contracted to
-furnish us with every reasonable comfort and transportation as
-hereinbefore set forth, and also to supply all the mythology,
-archæology, geography, history, and so forth that we should happen to
-require. For Spyros, as we learned to call him, was versed not only in
-various languages, including a very excellent brand of English, but
-boasted not a little technical archæological lore and a command of
-ancient history that came in very aptly in traversing famous ground. It
-came to pass in a very few days that we regarded Spyros in the light of
-an old friend, and appealed to him as the supreme arbiter of every
-conceivable question, from that of proper wearing apparel to the name of
-a distant peak.
-
-It was in the comfortable knowledge that for the next few days we had
-absolutely no bargaining to do and that for the present Spyros, who was
-somewhere in the train, had first-class tickets for our transportation,
-that we settled back on the cushions and watched the receding landscape
-and the diminishing bulk of the Nauplia cliffs. The train religiously
-stopped at the station of Tiryns—think of a station provided for a
-deserted acropolis!—and then jogged comfortably along to Argos, where we
-were to change cars. It was here that we bought our shepherd pipes; and
-we were practicing assiduously on them with no result save that of
-convulsing the gathered populace on the platform, when an urchin of the
-village spied a puff of steam up the line and set all agog by the
-classic exclamation, “ἔρχεται,” equivalent to the New England lad’s
-"she’s comin'!"
-
-The comfort of being handed into that train by Spyros and seeing our
-baggage set in after us without a qualm over the proper fee for the
-_facchini_ can only be realized by those who have experienced it. And,
-by the way, the baggage was reduced to the minimum for the journey,
-consisting of a suit case apiece. Our party was composed of those who
-habitually “travel light,” even on the regular lines of traffic; but for
-the occasion we had curtailed even our usual amount of impedimenta by
-sending two of our grips around to the other end of our route by the
-northern rail. Nobody would care to essay this cross-country jaunt with
-needless luggage, where every extra tends to multiply the number of pack
-mules.
-
-The train, which was fresh from Athens and bound for the southern port
-of Kalamata, soon turned aside from the Ægean coast and began a
-laborious ascent along the sides of deep valleys, the line making
-immense horseshoes as it picked its way along, with frequent rocky cuts
-but never a tunnel. I do not recall that we passed through a single
-tunnel in all Greece. The views from the windows, which were frequently
-superb as the train panted slowly and painfully up the long grades,
-nevertheless were of the traditional rocky character—all rugged hills
-devoid of greenery, barren valleys where no water was, often suggesting
-nothing so much as the rocky heights of Colorado. It tended to make the
-contrast the sharper when the train, attaining the heights at last, shot
-through a pass which led us out of the barren rocks and into the heart
-of the broad plain of Arcady. It was the real Arcadia of the poets and
-painters, utterly different from the gray country which we had been
-sojourning in and had come to regard as typical of all Greece. It was
-the Arcadia of our dreams—a broad, peaceful, fertile plain, green and
-smiling, peopled with pastoral folk, tillers of the fields, shepherds,
-and doubtless poets, pipers, and nymphs. There is grandeur and beauty in
-the rugged hills and narrow valleys of the north, but it would be wrong
-to assume that Greece is simply that and nothing more. At least a
-portion of Arcadia is exactly what the poets sing. The hills retreated
-suddenly to the remote distance and left the railway running along a
-level plain dotted with farms. Water ran rejoicing through. Trees waved
-on the banks of the brooks. Far off to the south the rugged bulk of
-Taÿgetos marked from afar the site of Sparta, the long ridge of the
-mountain still covered with a field of gleaming snow.
-
-Arcadia boasts two of these large, oval plains, the one dominated by
-Tripolis and the other by Megalopolis. Into the first-mentioned the
-train trundled early in the afternoon and came to a halt amid a shouting
-crowd of carriage drivers clamoring for passengers to alight and make
-the drive down to Sparta. The road is said to be an excellent one, and
-that we had not planned to lengthen our journey to that point, and
-thence westward by the Langada Pass to the country which we later saw,
-has always been one of the regrets which mark our Hellenic memories.
-Sparta has made little appeal to the modern visitor through any
-surviving remains of her ancient greatness, and has fallen into exactly
-the state that Thucydides predicted for her. For he sagely remarked, in
-comparing the city with Athens, that future ages were certain to
-underestimate Sparta’s size and power because of the paucity of enduring
-monuments, whereas the buildings at Athens would be likely to inspire
-the beholder with the idea that she was greater than she really was.
-That is exactly true to-day, although the enterprising British school
-has lately undertaken the task of exploring the site of the ancient
-Lacedæmonian city and has already uncovered remains that are interesting
-archæologically, whatever may be true of their comparison with Athenian
-monuments for beauty. In any event, Sparta, with her stern discipline,
-rude ideals, and martial rather than intellectual virtues, can never
-hope to appeal to modern civilization as Athens has done, although her
-ultimate overwhelming of the Athenian state entitles her to historical
-interest. Sparta lies hard by the mountain Taÿgetos, and to this day
-they show you a ravine on the mountain-side where it is claimed the
-deformed and weakly Spartan children were cast, to remove them from
-among a race which prized bodily vigor above every other consideration.
-It is a pity that Sparta, which played so vast a part in early history,
-should have left so little to recall her material existence. If she was
-not elegant or cultured, she was strong; and her ultimate triumph went
-to prove that the land where wealth accumulates and men decay has a less
-sure grip on life than the ruder, sterner nations.
-
-So it was that we passed Sparta by on the other side and journeyed on
-from the smiling plain of Tripolis to the equally smiling one of
-Megalopolis, entering thoroughly into the spirit of Arcadia and vainly
-seeking the while to bring from those shepherd pipes melody fit to voice
-the joy of the occasion. It was apparent now that we had crossed the
-main watershed of Hellas, for the train was on a downward grade and the
-brakes shrieked and squealed shrilly as we ground into a tiny junction
-where stood the little branch-line train for Megalopolis. And in the
-cool of the afternoon we found ourselves in that misnamed town, in the
-very heart of Arcadia, the late afternoon light falling obliquely from
-the westering sun as it sank behind an imposing row of serrated
-mountains, far away.
-
-To one even remotely acquainted with Greek roots, the name Megalopolis
-must signify a large city. As a matter of fact, it once was so. It was
-erected deliberately with the intention of making a large city, founded
-by three neighboring states, as a make-weight against the increasing
-power of the Lacedæmonians; but, like most places built on mere fiat, it
-dwindled away, until to-day it is a village that might more
-appropriately be called Mikropolis—if, indeed, it is entitled to be
-called a “polis” of any sort. The railway station, as usual, lay far
-outside the village, and in the station yard the one carriage of the
-town was awaiting us. Into it we were thrust; Spyros mounted beside the
-driver, a swarthy native; and with a rattle that recalled the famous
-Deadwood coach we whirled out of the inclosure and off to the town. The
-village itself proved to be but a sorry hole, to put it in the mildest
-form. It was made up of a fringe of buildings around a vacant common,
-level as a floor and sparsely carpeted with grass and weeds. As we
-passed house after house without turning in, hope grew, along with
-thankfulness, that we had at least escaped spending the night in any
-hovel hitherto seen. Nevertheless we did eventually stop before a dingy
-abode, and were directed to alight and enter there. Under a dark stone
-archway and over a muddy floor of stone pavement we picked our gingerly
-way, emerging in a sort of inner court, which Spyros pointed out was a
-"direct survival of the hypæthral megaron of the ancient Mycenæan
-house"—a glorified ancestry indeed for a dirty area around which were
-grouped the apartments of the family pig, cow, and sundry other
-household appurtenances and attachés. It was an unpromising prelude for
-a night’s lodging, but it made surprise all the greater when we emerged,
-by means of a flight of rickety stairs, on a little balcony above, and
-beheld adjoining it the apartments destined for our use. They had been
-swept and garnished, and the floors had been scrubbed until they shone.
-The collapsible iron beds had been erected and the bedding spread upon
-them, while near by stood the dinner table already laid for the evening
-meal; and presiding over it all stood the cook, to whose energy all
-these preparations were due, smiling genially through a forest of
-mustache, and duly presented to us as “Stathi.”
-
-In the twilight we whetted our appetites for dinner by a brisk walk out
-of the village, perhaps half a mile away, to the site of the few and
-meagre ruins that Megalopolis has to show. Our progress thither was
-attended with pomp and pageantry furnished by the rabble of small boys
-and girls whose presence was at first undesirable enough, but who later
-proved useful as directing us to the lane that led to the ruins and as
-guards in stoning off sundry sheep dogs that disputed the way with us.
-The usual disbursement of leptá ensued, and we were left to inspect the
-remains of ancient greatness in peace. Those remains were few and
-grass-grown. They included little more than a theatre, once one of the
-greatest in Greece, with the structures behind the orchestra still
-largely visible, and a few foundations of buildings behind these, on the
-bank of a winding river. Aside from these the old Megalopolis is no
-more.
-
-That night we sat down to a dinner such as few hotels in Athens could
-have bettered. The candlesticks on the table were of polished silver,
-which bore the monogram of the ancestors of Spyros. Our tablecloth and
-napkins were embroidered. Our dishes were all of a pattern, and we
-afterwards discovered that every piece of our household equipment, from
-soup plates to the humblest “crockery” of the family supply, bore the
-same tasteful decoration. Many a time we have laughed at the incongruity
-between our surroundings and the culinary panorama that Stathi conjured
-up from his primitive kitchen outside and served with such elegance. It
-was a masterpiece of the chef’s art, six courses following each other in
-rapid succession, all produced in the narrow oven where a charcoal fire
-blazed in answer to the energetic fanning of a corn broom. Soup gave
-place to macaroni; macaroni to lamb chops and green peas; chickens
-followed, flanked by beans and new potatoes from the gardens of the
-neighborhood; German pancakes wound up the repast; and coffee was served
-in an adjoining coffee-house afterward—the whole accompanied by copious
-draughts of the water of Andros, which cheers without inebriating, and
-beakers of the red wine of Solon, which I suspect is capable of doing
-both. A very modern-looking oil lamp helped furnish heat as well as
-light, for we were high above the sea and the night was chilly. Even to
-this remote district the product of the Rockefeller industry has
-penetrated, and no sight is more common than the characteristic square
-oil cans, with a wooden bar across the centre for carrying, which the
-peasants use for water buckets when the original oil is exhausted. They
-are useful, of course—more so than the old-fashioned earthen amphorae.
-But they are not as picturesque.
-
-My companion, whom it will be convenient to call the Professor, and I
-adjourned to the coffee-house below for our after-dinner smoke, and
-demanded coffee in our best modern Greek, only to evoke the hearty
-response, “Sure,” from our host. It seemed he had lived in New York,
-where he maintained an oyster bar; and, like all who have ever tasted
-the joys of Bowery life, he could not be happy anywhere else, but
-yearned to hear the latest news from that land of his heart’s desire. We
-tarried long over our cups, and had to force payment on him. Thence we
-retired through the low-browed arch that led to our abode, barred and
-locked it with ponderous fastenings that might have graced the Lion Gate
-itself, and lay down to repose on our collapsible beds, which happily
-did not collapse until Spyros and Stathi prepared them for the next
-day’s ride. This they did while we breakfasted. The morning meal came
-into the bedrooms bodily on a table propelled by our faithful servitors,
-the food having been prepared outside; and as we ate, the chamber work
-progressed merrily at our table side, so that in short order we were
-ready for the road. The carriage for the journey stood without the main
-gate, manned by a dangerous-looking but actually affable native, and
-behind it lay a spring cart of two wheels, wherein were disposed our
-beds, cooking utensils, and other impedimenta. The word of command was
-given, and the caravan set out blithely for the western mountains, bowed
-out of town by the beaming face of the man who had kept an oyster bar.
-
-The road had an easy time of it for many a level mile. It ran through a
-fertile plain, watered by the sources of the famous Alpheios River,
-which we skirted for hours, the hills steadily converging upon us until
-at last they formed a narrow gorge through which the river forced its
-way, brawling over rocks, to the Elian plains beyond. Beside the way was
-an old and dismantled winepress, which we alighted long enough to visit.
-Disused as it was, it was easy to imagine the barefooted maidens of the
-neighborhood treading out the juices of the grapes in the upper loft,
-the liquid flowing down through the loose flooring into the vats
-beneath. It is the poetic way of preparing wine; but having seen one
-night of peasant life already, we were forced to admit that modern
-methods of extracting the juice seem rather to be preferred.
-
-Just ahead lay the gateway of Arcadia, guarded by a conspicuous conical
-hill set in the midst of the narrowing plain between two mountain chains
-and bearing aloft a red-roofed town named Karytæna. Time was too brief
-and the sun too hot to permit us to ascend thereto, but even from the
-highway below it proved an immensely attractive place, recalling the
-famous hill towns of Italy. Behind it lay the broadening plain of
-Megalopolis and before the narrow ravine of the Alpheios, walled in by
-two mighty hills. Karytæna seems like an inland Gibraltar, and must in
-the old days have been an almost impregnable defense of the Arcadian
-country on its western side, set as it is in the very centre of a
-constricted pass. But for some reason, possibly because the enemies of
-Greece came chiefly from the east, it seems not to have figured
-prominently as a fortress in history. Below the town the road wound down
-to the river’s edge and crossed the stream on a quaint six-arched
-bridge, against one pier of which some thankful persons had erected a
-shrine of Our Lady. And beyond the road began a steady ascent. We had
-left the plain for good, it appeared. Before us lay the deep and
-tortuous defile through which the river flows to the western seas, the
-roar of its rushing waters growing fainter and fainter below as the
-panting horses clambered upward with their burdens, until at last only a
-confused murmuring of the river was heard mingling with the rustle of
-the wind through the leaves of the wayside trees. The road was not
-provided with parapets save in a few unusually dangerous corners, and
-the thought of a plunge down that steep incline to the river so far
-below was not at all pleasant. Fortunately on only one occasion did we
-meet another wagon, and on that one occasion our party incontinently
-dismounted and watched the careful passage of the two with mingled
-feelings. It was accomplished safely and easily enough, but we felt much
-more comfortable to be on the ground and see the wheels graze the edge
-of the unprotected outside rim of the highway.
-
-[Illustration: AN OUTPOST OF ARCADY]
-
-Every now and then a cross ravine demanded an abrupt descent of the road
-from its airy height, and down we would go to the bottom of a narrow
-valley, the driver unconcernedly cracking his whip, the bells of our
-steeds jangling merrily, and our party hanging on and trying hard to
-enjoy the view in a nervous and apprehensive way, although increasingly
-mindful of the exposed right-hand edge of the shelf. It bothered Stathi,
-the cook, not at all. He was riding behind on the baggage cart which
-followed steadily after, and at the steepest of the descent he was
-swaying from side to side on the narrow seat, his cigarette hanging
-neglected from his lips—sound asleep.
-
-These occasional ravines appeared to be due to centuries of water
-action, and their banks, which were well covered with woods, were marked
-here and there by tiny threads of cascades which sang pleasantly down
-the cliffs from above, crossed the road, and disappeared into the wooded
-depths of the river valley below. Bædeker had mentioned a huge plane
-tree and a gushing spring of water as a desirable place to lunch, but we
-looked for them in vain. Instead we took our midday meal beside a stone
-khan lying deserted by the roadside, in which on the open hearth Stathi
-kindled a fire and produced another of his culinary miracles, which we
-ate in the open air by the road, under a plane tree that was anything
-but gigantic. We have never quite forgiven Bædeker that “gushing
-spring.” When one has lived for a month or more on bottled waters, the
-expectation of drinking at nature’s fount is not lightly to be regarded.
-
-[Illustration: THE GORGE OF THE ALPHEIOS]
-
-The remainder of the ride was a steady climb to Andhritsæna, varied by
-few descents, although this is hardly to be deemed a drawback. The
-knowledge that one has two thousand feet to climb before the goal is
-reached does not conduce to welcome of a sudden loss of all the height
-one has by an hour’s hard climb attained. The tedium of the hours of
-riding was easily broken by descending to walk, the better thus to enjoy
-the view which slowly opened out to the westward. We were in the midst
-of the mountains of the Peloponnesus now, and they billowed all around.
-It was a deserted country. Distant sheep bells and occasional pipes
-testified that there was life somewhere near, but the only person we met
-was a woman who came down from a hill to ask the driver to get a doctor
-for her sick son when he should reach Andhritsæna. At last, well toward
-evening, the drivers pointed to a narrow cut in the top of the hill
-which we were slowly ascending by long sweeping turns of road and
-announced the top of the pass. And the view that greeted us as we
-entered the defile was one not easy to forget. Through the narrow
-passage in the summit lay a new and different country, and in the midst
-of it, nestling against the mountain-side, lay Andhritsæna, red roofed
-and white walled, and punctuated here and there by pointed cypress
-trees. Below the town, the hills swept sharply away to the valleys
-beneath, filled with green trees, while above the rocks of the
-mountain-side rose steeply toward the evening sky. In the western
-distance we saw for the first time Erymanthus and his gigantic
-neighbors, the mountains that hem in the plain about Olympia, the taller
-ones snow-clad and capped with evening clouds. We straightened in our
-seats. Stathi came out of his doze. The whips cracked and we dashed into
-the town with the smartness of gait and poise that seem to be demanded
-by every arrival of coach and four from Greece to Seattle. And thus they
-deposited us in the main square of Andhritsæna, under a huge plane tree,
-whose branches swept over the entire village street, and whose trunk
-lost itself in the buildings at its side. The carriage labored away. The
-dragoman and his faithful attendant sought our lodging house to set it
-in order. And in the meantime we stretched our cramped limbs in a walk
-around the town, attended as usual by the entire idle population of
-youths and maidens, to see the village from end to end before the sun
-went down.
-
-I should, perhaps, add the remark that in my spelling of “Andhritsæna” I
-have done conscious violence to the word as it stands on the map—the
-added “h” representing a possibly needless attempt to give the local
-pronunciation of the name. It is accented on the second syllable.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER XII. ANDHRITSÆNA AND
- THE BASSÆ TEMPLE
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-We found the village of Andhritsæna fascinating in the extreme, from
-within as well as from without. It was obviously afflicted with a degree
-of poverty, and suffers, like most Peloponnesian towns, from a steady
-drain on its population by the emigration to America. Naturally it was
-squalid, as Megalopolis had been, but in a way that did not mar the
-natural beauty of its situation, and, if anything, increased its
-internal picturesqueness. This we had abundant opportunity to observe
-during our initial ramble through the place, starting from the gigantic
-plane tree which forms a sort of nucleus of the entire village, and
-which shelters with its spreading branches the chief centre of local
-activity,—the region immediately adjacent to the town pump. It was not
-exactly a pump, however. The term is merely conventional, and one must
-understand by it a stone fountain, fed by a spring, the water gushing
-out by means of two spouts, whither an almost continuous stream of
-townsfolk came with the inevitable tin oil-cans to obtain water for
-domestic uses.
-
-The main, and practically the only, street of the town led westward from
-the plane, winding along through the village in an amiable and casual
-way. It was lined close on either side by the houses, which were
-generally two stories in height, and provided with latticed balconies
-above to make up for the necessary lack of piazzas below. Close to the
-great central tree these balconies seemed almost like the arboreal
-habitation made dear to the childish heart by the immortal Swiss Family
-Robinson; and in these elevated stations the families of Andhritsæna
-were disporting themselves after the burden and heat of the day,
-gossiping affably to and fro across the street, or in some cases
-reading.
-
-[Illustration: ANDHRITSÆNA]
-
-We found it as impossible to disperse our body guard of boys and girls
-as had been the case the evening before at Megalopolis. Foreign visitors
-in Andhritsæna are few enough to be objects of universal but not
-unkindly curiosity to young and old; and the young, being unfettered by
-the insistent demands of coffee-drinking, promptly insisted on attending
-our pilgrimage _en masse_. It was cool, for the sun was low and the
-mountain air had begun to take on the chill of evening. We clambered up
-to a lofty knoll over the town and looked down over its slanting tiles
-to the wooded valley beneath, the evening smoke of the chimneys rising
-straight up in thin, curling wisps, while from the neighboring hills
-came the faint clatter of the herd bells and occasionally the soft note
-of some boy’s piping. Far away to the north we could see the snowy dome
-of Erymanthus, rising out of a tumbling mass of blue mountains, while
-between lay the opening and level plain of the Alpheios, widening from
-its narrows to form the broad meadows of Elis on the western coasts of
-the Peloponnesus. Here and there the house of some local magnate, more
-prosperous than the rest, boasted a small yard and garden, adorned with
-the sombre straightness of cypresses. Behind the town rose the rocky
-heights of the neighboring hills, long gorges running deep among them.
-Whichever way the eye turned, there was charm. The body guard of
-infantry retired to a respectful distance and stood watching us, finger
-bashfully to mouth in silent wonderment. Mothers with babies came out of
-near-by hovels to inspect us, and enjoyed us as much as we enjoyed the
-prospect that opened before.
-
-From the aspect of the houses of the town we had adjudged it prudent to
-allow Spyros and Stathi a decent interval for the preparation of our
-abode before descending to the main street again and seeking out the
-house. Apparently the exact location of it was known by the entire
-population by this time, for, as we descended, willing natives pointed
-the way by gesticulations, indicating a narrow and not entirely
-prepossessing alley leading down from the central thoroughfare by some
-rather slimy steps, to a sort of second street, and thence to another
-alley, if anything less prepossessing than the first, where a formidable
-wooden gateway gave entrance to a court. Here the merry villagers bade
-adieu and retired to their coffee again. Once within, the prospect
-brightened. It was, of course, the fore-court of a peasant’s house, for
-hotels are entirely lacking in Andhritsæna. It was paved with stone
-flagging, and above the courtyard rose a substantial veranda on which
-stood the host—a bearded man, gorgeous in native dress, the voluminous
-skirt of which was immaculate in its yards and yards of fustanella. From
-tasseled fez to pomponed shoes he was a fine type of peasant,
-contrasting with his wife, who wore unnoticeable clothes of European
-kind. She was a pleasant-faced little body, and evidently neat, which
-was more than all. And she ushered us into the house to the rooms where
-Spyros and the cook were busily engaged in making up the beds,
-discreetly powdering the mattresses, and setting things generally to
-rights. The embroidered bed linen which had given us such delight by its
-contrast with the surroundings at Megalopolis at once caught the eye of
-the peasant woman, and she promptly borrowed a pillow-case to learn the
-stitch with which it was adorned. As for the rooms, they were scrubbed
-to a whiteness.
-
-Just outside, overlooking the narrow by-way through which we had
-entered, was the inevitable balcony, whence the view off to the northern
-mountains was uninterrupted; and while supper was preparing we wrapped
-ourselves in sweaters and shawls and stood in mute admiration of the
-prospect—the deep valley below, the half-guessed plain beyond, and the
-rugged line of peaks silhouetted against the golden afterglow of the
-sunset. From this view our attention was distracted only by the sudden
-clamor of a church bell close at hand, which a priest was insistently
-ringing for vespers. The bell was hung, as so often happens, in a tree
-beside the church; and to prevent the unauthorized sounding of it by the
-neighborhood urchins the wise priest had caused the bell-rope to be
-shortened so that the end of it hung far up among the branches, and was
-only to be reached for the purposes of the church by a long iron poker,
-which the holy man had produced from somewhere within his sanctuary and
-which he was wielding vigorously to attract the attention of the devout.
-It may have been a sort of Greek angelus, designed to mark the hour of
-general sunset prayer; for nobody appeared in response to its summons,
-and after clanging away for what seemed to him a sufficient interval the
-priest unshipped the poker and retired with it to the inner recesses of
-the church, to be seen no more. The nipping and eager evening air
-likewise drove us to shelter, and the heat of the lamp and candles was
-welcome as lessening, though ever so slightly, the cold which the night
-had brought. It was further temporarily forgotten in the discussion of
-the smiling Stathi’s soups and chickens and flagons of Solon.
-
-[Illustration: AN ARBOREAL CAMPANILE. ANDHRITSÆNA]
-
-The professor and I stumbled out in the darkness of the yard after the
-evening meal in search of a coffee-house, for the better enjoyment of
-our postprandial cigarettes, but we got no farther than the outer court
-before deciding to return for a lantern. Andhritsæna turned out to be
-not only chilly, but intensely dark o' nights. Its serpentine by-ways
-were devoid of a single ray of light, and even the main street, when we
-had found it, was relieved from utter gloom only by the lamps which
-glimmered few and faint in wayside shops that had not yet felt the force
-of the early-closing movement. The few wayfarers that we met as we
-groped our way along by the ineffectual fire of a square lantern,
-wherein a diminutive candle furnished the illuminant, likewise carried
-similar lights, and looked terrible enough hooded in their capotes.
-Diogenes-like, we sought an honest man,—and speedily discovered him in
-the proprietor of a tiny “kaffeneion,” who welcomed us to his tables and
-set before us cups of thick coffee, fervently disclaiming the while his
-intention to accept remuneration therefor. Indeed this generosity bade
-fair to be its own reward, for it apparently became known in a
-surprisingly short time that the foreign visitors were taking
-refreshment in that particular inn, with the result that patronage
-became brisk. The patrons, however, apparently cared less for their
-coffee than for the chance to study the newcomers in their midst at
-close range, and after we had basked for a sufficient time in the
-affable curiosity of the assembled multitude we stumbled off again
-through the night to our abode, the lantern casting gigantic and awful
-shadows on the wayside walls the while.
-
-Now the chief reason for our visiting this quaint and out-of-the-way
-hamlet was its contiguity to the mountain on the flat top of which
-stands the ancient Bassæ temple. The correct designation, I believe, is
-really the “temple at Bassæ,” but to-day it stands isolated and alone,
-with no considerable habitation nearer than Andhritsæna, whatever was
-the case when it was erected. The evidence tended to show that Bassæ
-might be reached with about the same ease on foot as on horseback, or at
-least in about the same time; but as we were entirely without experience
-in riding, it was voted best that we begin our training by securing
-steeds for this minor side trip, in order to have some slight
-preparation for the twelve hours in the saddle promised us for the day
-following—a portentous promise that had cast a sort of indefinite shadow
-of apprehension over our inmost souls since leaving Nauplia. It was a
-wise choice, too, because it revealed to us among other things the
-difficulty of Greek mountain trails and the almost absolute
-sure-footedness of the mountain horse.
-
-We were in the saddle promptly at nine, and in Indian file we set out
-through the village street, filled with the tremors natural to those who
-find themselves for the first time in their lives seated on horseback.
-But these tremors were as nothing to what beset us almost immediately on
-leaving the town and striking into the narrow ravine that led up into
-the hills behind it. It developed that while the prevailing tendency of
-the road was upward, this did not by any means preclude several
-incidental dips, remarkable alike for their appalling steepness and
-terrifying rockiness, for which their comparative brevity only partially
-atoned. The sensation of looking down from the back of even a small
-horse into a gully as steep as a sharp pitch roof, down which the trail
-is nothing but the path of a dried-up torrent filled with boulders,
-loose stones, smooth ledges, sand, and gravel, is anything but
-reassuring. It was with silent misgivings and occasional squeals of
-alarm that our party encountered the first of these descents. We had not
-yet learned to trust our mounts, and we did not know that the
-well-trained mountain horse is a good deal more likely to stumble on a
-level road than on one of those perilous downward pitches. From the
-lofty perches on top of the clumsy Greek saddles piled high with rugs,
-it seemed a terrifying distance to the ground; and the thought of a
-header into the rocky depth along the side of which the path skirted or
-down into which it plunged was not lightly to be shaken off. It was much
-better going up grade, although even here we found ourselves smitten
-with pity for the little beasts that scrambled with so much agility up
-cruel steeps of rock, bearing such appreciable burdens of well-nourished
-Americans on their backs. Spyros did his best to reassure us. He was
-riding ahead and throwing what were intended as comforting remarks over
-his shoulder to Mrs. Professor, who rode next in line. And as he was not
-aware of the exact make-up of the party’s mounts, he finally volunteered
-the opinion that horses were a good deal safer than mules for such a
-trip, because mules stumbled so. Whereupon Mrs. Professor, who was
-riding on a particularly wayward and mountainous mule, emitted a shriek
-of alarm and descended with amazing alacrity to the ground, vowing that
-walking to Bassæ was amply good enough for her. Nevertheless the mule,
-although he did stumble a little now and then, managed to stay with us
-all the way to Olympia, and no mishap occurred.
-
-The saddles lend themselves to riding either astride or sidesaddle, and
-the ordinary man we met seemed to prefer the latter mode. The saddle
-frame is something the shape of a sawhorse, and after it is set on the
-back of the beast it is piled high with blankets, rugs, and the like,
-making a lofty but fairly comfortable seat. For the ladies the guides
-had devised little wooden swings suspended by rope to serve as stirrups
-for the repose of their soles. The arrangement was announced to be
-comfortable enough, although it was necessary for the riders to hold on
-fore and aft to the saddle with both hands, while a muleteer went ahead
-and led the beasts. In some of the steeper places the maintenance of a
-seat under these conditions required no little skill. As for the men,
-there were no special muleteers. We were supposed to know how to ride,
-and in a short time we had discovered how to guide the horses with the
-single rein provided, either by pulling it, or by pressing it across the
-horse’s neck. To stop the modern Greek horse you whistle. That is to
-say, you whistle if you can muster a whistle at all, which is sometimes
-difficult when a panic seizes you and your mouth becomes dry and
-intractable. In the main our progress was so moderate that no more skill
-was needed to ride or guide the steeds than would be required on a
-handcar. Only on rare occasions, when some of the beasts got off the
-track or fell behind, was any real acquaintance with Greek horsemanship
-required. This happened to all of us in turn before we got home again,
-and in each case the muleteers came to our aid in due season after we
-had completely lost all recollection of the proper procedure for
-stopping and were seeking to accomplish it by loud “whoas” instead of
-the soothing sibilant which is the modern Greek equivalent for that
-useful, and indeed necessary, word.
-
-We found it highly desirable now and then to alight and walk, for to the
-unaccustomed rider the strain of sitting in a cramped position on a
-horse for hours at a time is wearying and benumbing to the lower limbs.
-On the ride up to Bassæ, those who did no walking at all found it
-decidedly difficult to walk when they arrived. The one deterrent was the
-labor involved in dismounting and the prospective difficulty of getting
-aboard again. In this operation the muleteers assisted our clumsiness
-not a little, and we discovered that the way to attract their attention
-to a desire to alight was to say “ka-tò,” in a commanding tone—the same
-being equivalent to “down.”
-
-So much for our experiences as we wound along the sides of rocky ravines
-and gorges in the heart of the hills behind Andhritsæna. When we had
-grown accustomed to the manipulation of the horses and had learned that
-the beasts really would not fall down and dash us into the depths below,
-we began to enjoy the scenery. It was rugged, for the most part,
-although at the bottoms of the valleys there was frequently meadow land
-spangled with innumerable wildflowers and shrubbery, watered by an
-occasional brook. It was a lovely morning, still cool and yet cloudless.
-The birds twittered among the stunted trees. We passed from narrow vale
-to narrow vale, and at last, when no outlet was to be seen, we ceased to
-descend and began a steady climb out of the shady undergrowth along the
-side of a rocky mountain, where there was no wood at all save for
-scattered groves of pollard oaks—curious old trees, low and gnarled,
-covered with odd bunches, and bearing an occasional wreath of mistletoe.
-At the ends of their branches the trees put forth handfuls of small
-twigs, which we were told the inhabitants are accustomed to lop off for
-fagots. It is evident that the trees do not get half a chance to live
-and thrive. But they manage in some way to prolong their existence, and
-they give to the region at Bassæ and to the temple there a certain weird
-charm.
-
-[Illustration: THRESHING FLOOR AT BASSÆ]
-
-Off to the west as we climbed there appeared a shining streak of silver
-which the guides saw and pointed to, shouting “Thalassa! Thalassa!” (the
-sea). And, indeed, it was the first glimpse of the ocean west of Greece.
-Shortly beyond we attained the summit and began a gentle descent along a
-sort of tableland through a sparse grove of the stunted oaks, among
-which here and there appeared round flat floors of stone used for
-threshing. Many of these could be seen on the adjacent hills and in the
-valleys, and the number visible at one time proved to be something like
-a score. All at once, as we wound slowly down through the avenue of
-oaks, the temple itself burst unexpectedly into view, gray like the
-surrounding rocks, from which, indeed, it was built. To approach a
-shrine like this from above is not common in Greece, and this sudden
-apparition of the temple, which is admirably preserved, seems to have
-struck every visitor who has described it as exceedingly beautiful,
-particularly as one sees it framed in a foreground of these odd trees.
-We were high enough above the structure to look down into it, for it is
-of course devoid of any roof; and unlike most of the other temples, it
-was always so, for it was of the “hypæthral” type, and intended to be
-open to the sky. Nor was this the only unusual feature of the temple at
-Bassæ. It was peculiar among the older shrines in that it ran north and
-south instead of east and west, which was the regular custom among the
-roofed structures of the Greeks. Of course this difference in
-orientation has given rise to a great deal of discussion and speculation
-among those whose opinions are of weight in such matters. Probably the
-casual visitor in Greece is well aware of the custom of so fixing the
-axes of temples as to bring the eastern door directly in line with the
-rising sun on certain appropriate days, for the better illumination of
-the interior on those festivals. Although such expedients as the use of
-translucent marble roofs were resorted to, the lighting of the interior
-of roofed temples was always a matter of some little difficulty, and
-this arrangement of the doorways was necessary to bring out the image of
-the god in sufficiently strong light. From this system of orientation it
-has occasionally been possible to identify certain temples as dedicated
-to particular deities, by noting the days on which the rising sun would
-have come exactly opposite the axis of the shrine. No such consideration
-would apply with the same force to a hypæthral temple, whatever else
-might have figured in the general determination of the orientation. But
-even at Bassæ, where the length of the temple so obviously runs north
-and south, it is still true that one opening in it was eastward, and it
-is supposed that in the end of the temple space was an older shrine to
-Apollo, which, like other temples, faced the rising sun. This older
-precinct was not interfered with in erecting the greater building, and
-it is still plainly to be seen where the original sacred precinct was.
-
-The members of the single encircling row of columns are still intact,
-although in some cases slightly thrown out of alignment; and they still
-bear almost the entire entablature. The cella wall within is also
-practically intact, and inside it are still standing large sections of
-the unusual engaged half-columns which encircled the cella, standing
-against its sides. The great frieze in bas-relief, which once ran around
-the top, facing inward, is now in the British Museum, where it is justly
-regarded as one of the chief treasures of the Greek collection. It
-hardly needs the comment that such arrangement of the frieze was highly
-unusual, inside the building, instead of on the outer side of the cella,
-as was the case in the Parthenon. Ictinus, the architect of the
-Parthenon, also built the temple at Bassæ, which was dedicated by the
-Phigalians to “Apollo the Helper,” in gratification for relief from a
-plague. That fact has given rise to the conjecture that it was perhaps
-built at the same time that the plague ravaged Athens, during the early
-part of the Peloponnesian War. However that may be, it is evidently true
-that it belongs to the same golden age that gave us the Parthenon and
-the Propylæa at Athens. Unlike them, it does not glow with the varied
-hues of the weathered Pentelic marble, but is a soft gray, due to the
-native stone of which it was constructed. And this gray color,
-contrasting with the sombreness of the surrounding grove, gives much the
-same satisfactory effect as is to be seen at Ægina, where the temple is
-seen, like this, in a framework of trees.
-
-Needless to say, the outlook from this lofty site—something like four
-thousand feet above the sea—is grand. The ocean is visible to the south
-as well as to the west. The rolling mountains to the east form an
-imposing pageant, culminating in the lofty Taÿgetos range. Looming like
-a black mound in the centre of the middle distance to the southward is
-the imposing and isolated acropolis of Ithome, the stronghold of the
-ancient Messenians. As usual, the builders of the temple at Bassæ
-selected a most advantageous site for their shrine. It was while we were
-enjoying the view after lunch that a solitary German appeared from the
-direction of Ithome, having passed through the modern Phigalia. He had a
-boy for a guide, but aside from that he was roaming through this
-deserted section of Greece alone. He knew nothing of the language. He
-had no dragoman to make the rough places smooth. He had spent several
-sorry nights in peasants’ huts, where vermin most did congregate. But he
-was enjoying it all with the enthusiasm of the true Philhellene, and on
-the whole was making his way about surprisingly well. We sat and chatted
-for a long time in the shade of the temple, comparing it with the lonely
-grandeur of the temple at Segesta, in Sicily. And as the sun was sinking
-we took the homeward way again, but content to walk this time rather
-than harrow our souls by riding down the excessively steep declivity
-that led from the mountain to the valleys below.
-
-[Illustration: TEMPLE AT BASSÆ, FROM ABOVE]
-
-[Illustration: TEMPLE AT BASSÆ, FROM BELOW]
-
-At dinner that night in Andhritsæna an old man appeared with wares to
-sell—curiously wrought and barbaric blankets, saddlebags, and the like,
-apparently fresh and new, but really, he claimed, the dowry of his wife
-who had long been dead. He had no further use for the goods, but he did
-think he might find uses for the drachmæ they would bring. Needless to
-say, our saddlebags were the heavier the next day when our pack-mules
-were loaded for the journey over the hills to Olympia.
-
-One other thing deserves a word of comment before we leave Andhritsæna,
-and that is the cemetery. We had seen many funeral processions at
-Athens, carrying the uncoffined dead through the streets, but we had
-never paid much attention to the burial places, because they are still
-mainly to be found outside the city gates, and not in the line commonly
-taken by visitors. At Andhritsæna we came upon one, however, and for the
-first time noticed the curious little wooden boxes placed at the heads
-of the graves, resembling more than anything else the bird-houses that
-humane people put on trees at home. Inside of the boxes we found oil
-stains and occasionally the remains of broken lamps, placed there, we
-were told, as a "mnemeion"—doubtless meaning a memorial, which word is a
-direct descendant. The lamps appear to be kept lighted for a time after
-the death of the person thus honored, but none were lighted when we saw
-the cemetery of Andhritsæna, and practically all had fallen into
-neglect, as if the dead had been so long away that grief at their
-departure had been forgotten. A little chapel stood hard by, and on its
-wall a metal plate and a heavy iron spike did duty for a bell.
-
-Then the cold night settled down upon Andhritsæna, and we retired to the
-warmth of our narrow beds, ready for the summons which should call us
-forth to begin our fatiguing ride to the famous site of old Olympia.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER XIII. OVER THE HILLS
- TO OLYMPIA
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-At five o'clock the persistent thumping of Spyros on the bedroom doors
-announced the call of incense-breathing morn, though Ph[oe]bus had not
-yet by any means driven his horses above the rim of the horizon. The air
-outside was thick o' fog,—doubtless a low-lying cloud settling on the
-mountain,—and it was dark and cheerless work getting out of our narrow
-beds and dressing in the cold twilight. Nevertheless it was necessary,
-for the ride to Olympia is long, and Spyros had promised us a fatiguing
-day, with twelve hours in the saddle as a minimum. To this forecast the
-pessimistic Baedeker lent much plausibility by his reference to the road
-as being unspeakably bad; and besides we ourselves had on the previous
-day gathered much personal experience of the mountain trails of the
-region. Breakfast under these circumstances was a rather hasty meal,
-consumed in comparative silence.
-
-By the time the last of the rolls and jam had disappeared and the task
-of furling up the beds was well advanced, a clatter of hoofs in the
-village street drew one of the party to the door, whence word was
-speedily returned that the street outside was full of horses. And it
-was. There were ten steeds, including four for our party, two for Spyros
-and Stathi, one for a muleteer relief conveyance, and the rest for the
-baggage—the latter being small and seemingly quite inadequate burros or
-donkeys, who proved more notable for their patient indifference than for
-size or animation. While these were being laden, four other beasts drew
-near, bearing our solitary German of the day before and another of his
-countrymen who had materialized during the night, with their
-impedimenta. They were welcomed to the caravan, which, numbering
-fourteen beasts and almost as many humans, took the road out of town
-with commendable promptitude at sharp six o'clock. The cloud had lifted
-as we rounded the western edge of the valley and looked back at
-Andhritsæna, glimmering in the morning light. We were streaming off in
-Indian file along a very excellent road, like that on which we had
-ridden up from Megalopolis two days before, and which promised well for
-a speedy removal of the apprehensions awakened by Bædeker. But the road
-did not last long. Before we had fairly lost Andhritsæna in the hills
-behind, the leading guide turned sharply to the left, through a rocky
-defile in the hillside, and precipitated us down one of those rocky
-torrent beds, with the nature of which we had become only too familiar
-the day before. It was the less disturbing this time, however, because
-we had learned to trust implicitly to the careful feet of our horses,
-with no more than a firm grip on bridle and pommel and an occasional
-soft whistle, or murmured "ochs', ochs'," to the intelligent beasts as
-an outward and audible sign of inward and spiritual perturbation. It was
-steep but short, and we came out below upon the road again, to
-everybody’s unconcealed delight.
-
-The road, however, soon lost itself in a meadow. When it is ultimately
-finished, the journey will be much easier than we found it. In a few
-years I suppose it will be perfectly possible to ride to Olympia in a
-carriage, and the horseback problem will cease to deter visitors to
-Bassæ from continuing their journey westward. The way now lay along a
-pleasant and rolling meadow country, dotted with primitive farms, which
-glowed under the bright morning sun. We splashed through a narrow upland
-river and up another rocky ascent, beyond which another downward pitch
-carried us to a still lower meadow. Meantime the cold of morning gave
-place to a growing warmth, and the wraps became saddle blankets in short
-order. We rode and walked alternately, choosing the level stretches
-through the grass for pedestrianism and riding only when we came to
-sharp upward climbs, thus easing the fatigue that we should otherwise
-have found in continued riding. Always we could see the imposing peaks
-to the north, and the downward tendency of the trail soon brought out
-the altitude of the hills behind Andhritsæna. The immediate vicinity of
-our path was pastoral and agricultural, in the main, for the recurring
-ridges over which we scrambled served only as boundaries between
-well-watered vales in which small trees and bushes flourished, and where
-the occasional sharp whir of pressure from a primitive penstock called
-attention to the presence of a water mill. Aside from these isolated
-mills there was little sign of habitation, for the fields seemed mostly
-grown up to grass. In the far distance we could see the valley of the
-Alpheios, broadening out of its confining walls of rock to what seemed
-like a sandy reach in the plain far below, and we were told that at
-nightfall we should be ferried across it close to Olympia, provided we
-caught the boatmen before they left for home. It was this anxiety to be
-on time that led Spyros to urge us along, lest when we came out at the
-bank of the river we should find no response to the ferryman’s call of
-"Varka! Varka!"—the common mode of hailing boatmen in Greece. With this
-for a spur we wasted little time on the way, but proceeded steadily, now
-riding, now walking, up hill and down dale, through groves of low
-acacias or Judas trees, or along grassy meadows where a profusion of
-wild flowers added a touch of color to the green.
-
-The pleasant valley, however, proved not to be the road for very long.
-In an hour or so the guides branched off again into a range of hills
-that seemed as high as those we had left, and there entered a tortuous
-ravine worn by a mountain brook, along which the path wound higher and
-higher toward a distant house which the muleteers pointed out and
-pronounced to be a "ξενοδοχεῖον,"—the Professor had long ago learned to
-call it "Senator Sheehan,"—at which wayside inn the mistaken impression
-prevailed that we were speedily to lunch. It was not so to be, however.
-When we had achieved the height and rested under two leafy plane trees
-that we found there, Spyros repeated his tale about the ferrymen and
-their departure at sundown; and we must away at once, with no more
-refreshment than was to be drawn from some crackers and a bottle of
-Solon. And so we pressed on again, still climbing, though more
-gradually. The path was not so bad after all, despite the Bædeker, and
-in one place we voted it easily the finest spot we had found in all our
-Peloponnesian rambles. We were riding along at the time through a shady
-grove when we came suddenly upon a collection of mammoth planes, whose
-branches spread far and wide, and from the midst of the cleft side of
-one of them a spring bubbled forth joyously, flooding the road. It was
-here that the king on one of his journeys the year before had stopped to
-rest and partake of his noonday meal. It seemed to us, famished by six
-hours of hard riding, that the king’s example was one all good citizens
-should follow; but Spyros was inexorable, and reminded us that ferrymen
-might wait for the King of Greece, but not for any lesser personages
-whatsoever. We must not halt until we got to Gremka; for at Gremka we
-should find a good road, and beyond there it was four hours of travel,
-and we might judge exactly how much time we had for rest by the hour of
-our reaching the place. So we obediently proceeded, joined now by two
-more beasts so laden with the empty oil-cans common to the region that
-only their legs were visible. These furnished the comedy element in the
-day’s experiences, for the donkeys thus loaded proved to be contrary
-little creatures, always getting off the trail and careering down the
-mountain-side through the scrubby trees and bushes, their deck-loads of
-tin making a merry din as they crashed through the underbrush, while our
-guides roared with derisive laughter at the discomfiture of the harassed
-attendants. When not engaged in ridiculing the owners of those numerous
-and troublesome oil-cans, the muleteers sang antiphonally some music in
-a minor key which Spyros said was a wedding song wherein the bridegroom
-and the bride’s family interchange sentiments. This seems to be the
-regular diversion of muleteers, judging by the unanimity with which
-travelers in Greece relate the experience. Anon our muleteers would
-likewise find amusement by stealing around behind and administering an
-unexpected smack on the plump buttocks of the horses, with the
-inevitable result of starting the beast out of his meditative amble into
-something remotely resembling a canter, and eliciting an alarmed squeal
-from the rider—at which the muleteer, with the most innocent face in the
-world, would appear under the horse’s nose and grasp the bridle,
-assuring the frightened equestrian that the beast was "kalà"—or “all
-right.”
-
-All the steeds were small with the exception of the altitudinous mule
-ridden by one of the ladies, and they were not at all bothered by the
-low branches of the trees through which we wended our way. Not so,
-however, the riders. The thorny branches that just cleared the
-nonchalant horse’s head swept over the saddle with uncompromising vigor,
-and the effort to swing the beast away from one tree meant encountering
-similar difficulties on the other side of the narrow path. Through this
-arboreal Scylla and Charybdis it was extremely difficult navigation and
-the horses took no interest in our plight at all, so that long before we
-emerged from the last of the groves along the way we were a beraveled
-and bescratched company.
-
-Shortly after noon two villages appeared far ahead, and we were engaged
-in speculating as to which one was Gremka, when the guides suddenly
-turned again and shot straight up the hill toward a narrow defile in the
-mountain wall we had been skirting. It proved as narrow as a chimney and
-almost as steep, and for a few moments we scrambled sharply, our little
-horses struggling hard to get their burdens up the grade; but at last
-they gained the top, and we emerged from between two walls of towering
-rock into another and even fairer landscape. The plain of the Alpheios
-spread directly below, but we were not allowed to descend to it. Instead
-we actually began to climb, and for an hour or two more we rode along
-the side of the range of hills through the midst of which we had just
-penetrated. The path was pleasantly wooded, and the foliage was thick
-enough to afford a grateful shade above and a soft carpeting of dead
-leaves below. The air was heavy with the balsamic fragrance of the
-boughs, and the birds sang merrily although it was midday. Through the
-vistas that opened in this delightful grove we got recurring glimpses of
-the Erymanthus range, now separated from us only by the miles of open
-plain, and vastly impressive in their ruggedness.
-
-The sides of the range of hills along which our path wound were
-corrugated again and again by ravines, worn by the brooks, and our
-progress was a continual rising and falling in consequence. The footing
-was slippery, due to the minute particles of reddish gravel and sand, so
-that here even our mountain horses slipped and stumbled, and we were
-warned to dismount and pick our own way down, which we did, shouting
-gayly “Varka! Varka!” at the crossing of every absurd little three-inch
-brook, to the intense enjoyment of the muleteers. And thus by two in the
-afternoon we arrived at Gremka, a poor little hamlet almost at the edge
-of the great plain, and were told that we had made splendid time, so
-that we might have almost an hour of rest, while Stathi unlimbered the
-sumpter mules and spread luncheon under two pleasant plane trees beside
-a real spring.
-
-From Gremka on, we found the road again. It was almost absolutely level
-after we left the minor foothill on which Gremka sits, and for the
-remainder of our day we were to all intents and purposes in civilization
-again. Curiously enough, it was here that our little horses, that had
-been so admirably reliable in precipitous trails of loose rock and sand,
-began to stumble occasionally, as if careless now that the road was
-smooth and doubtless somewhat weary with the miles of climbing and
-descending. The guides and muleteers, refreshed with a little food and a
-vast amount of resinated wine, began to sing marriage music louder than
-ever, and the most imposing figure of all, a man who in every-day life
-was a butcher and who carried his huge cleaver thrust in his leathern
-belt, essayed to converse with us in modern Greek, but with indifferent
-success. The landscape, while no longer rugged, was pleasant and
-peaceful as the road wound about the valley through low hillocks and
-knolls crowned with little groves of pine, the broad lower reaches of
-the rivers testifying that we were nearing the sea. And at last, toward
-sunset, we swung in a long line down over the sands that skirt the
-rushing Alpheios and came to rest on the banks opposite Olympia, whose
-hotels we could easily see across the swelling flood.
-
-The Alpheios is not to be despised as a river in April. It is not
-especially wide, but it has what a good many Greek rivers do not,—water,
-and plenty of it, running a swift course between the low banks of the
-south and the steeper bluffs that confine it on the Olympia side. The
-ferry was waiting. It proved to be a sizable boat, of the general shape
-of a coastwise schooner, but devoid of masts, and mainly hollow, save
-for a little deck fore and aft. Three voluble and, as it proved,
-rapacious natives manned it, the motive power being poles. With these
-ferrymen Spyros and Stathi almost immediately became involved in a
-furious controversy, aided by our cohort of muleteers. It did not
-surprise us greatly, and knowing that whatever happened we should be
-financially scathless, we sat down on the bank and skipped pebbles in
-the water. It developed that the boatman had demanded thrice his fee,
-and that Spyros, who had no illusions about departed spirits, objected
-strenuously to being gouged in this way and was protesting vehemently
-and volubly, while Stathi, whose exterior was ordinarily so calm, was
-positively terrible to behold as he danced about the gesticulating knot
-of men. It finally became so serious that the Professor and I, looking
-as fierce as we could, ranged ourselves alongside, mentioning a wholly
-mythical intimacy with the head of the Hellenic police department in the
-hope of promoting a wholesome spirit of compromise, but really more
-anxious to calm the excited cook, who was clamoring for the tools of his
-trade that he might dispatch these thrice-qualified knaves of boatmen
-then and there. Eventually, as tending to induce a cessation of
-hostilities, we cast off the mooring—whereat the dispute suddenly ended
-and the beasts of burden went aboard. So also did the Professor, who was
-anxious to establish a strategic base on the opposite bank; and the rest
-of us sat and watched the craft pushed painfully out into the stream and
-well up against the current, until a point was reached whence the force
-of the river took her and bore her madly down to her berth on the
-Olympia bank. Here fresh difficulties arose,—not financial but
-mechanical. The heavily loaded little donkeys proved utterly unable to
-step over the gunwale and get ashore. It was an inspiring sight to
-watch, the Professor tugging manfully at the bridle and the remainder of
-the crew boosting with might and main; but it was of no avail, although
-they wrought mightily, until at the psychological moment and in the spot
-most fitted to receive it, a muleteer gave the needed impetus by a
-prodigious kick, which lifted the patient ass over the side and out on
-the bank. The rest was easy. We were ferried over in our turn and
-disappeared from the view of the boatmen, each side expressing its
-opinion of the other in terms which we gathered from the tones employed
-were the diametrical reverse of complimentary. It was twelve hours to a
-dot from the time of our departure from Andhritsæna when we strolled
-into our hotel—at which fact Spyros plumed himself not a little.
-
-[Illustration: HERÆUM. OLYMPIA]
-
-It had not been an unduly fatiguing day, after all. The frequent walking
-that we had done served to break up the tedium of long riding, which
-otherwise would have been productive of numb limbs and stiff joints. It
-is well to bear this in mind, for I have seen unaccustomed riders
-assisted from their saddles after too long jaunts utterly unable to
-stand, and of course much less to walk, until a long period of rest had
-restored the circulation in the idle members. Fortunately, too, we had
-been blessed with an incomparable day. Spyros confessed that he had
-secretly dreaded a rain, which would have made the path dangerous in
-spots where it was narrow and composed of clay. As it was, we arrived in
-Olympia in surprisingly good condition, and on schedule time, though by
-no means unready to welcome real beds again and the chance for unlimited
-warm water.
-
-Olympia, like Delphi, is a place of memories chiefly. The visible
-remains are numerous, but so flat that some little technical knowledge
-is needed to restore them in mind. There is no village at the modern
-Olympia at all,—nothing but five or six little inns and a railway
-station,—so that Delphi really has the advantage of Olympia in this
-regard. As a site connected with ancient Greek history and Greek
-religion, the two places are as similar in nature as they are in general
-ruin. The field in which the ancient structures stand lies just across
-the tiny tributary river Cladeus, spanned by a footbridge.
-
-Even from the opposite bank, the ruins present a most interesting
-picture, with its attractiveness greatly enhanced by the neighboring
-pines, which scatter themselves through the precinct itself and cover
-densely the little conical hill of Kronos close by, while the grasses of
-the plain grow luxuriantly among the fallen stones of the former temples
-and apartments of the athletes. The ruins are so numerous and so
-prostrate that the non-technical visitor is seriously embarrassed to
-describe them, as is the case with every site of the kind. All the
-ruins, practically, have been identified and explained, and naturally
-they all have to do with the housing or with the contests of the
-visiting athletes of ancient times, or with the worship of tutelary
-divinities. Almost the first extensive ruin that we found on passing the
-encircling precinct wall was the Prytaneum—a sort of ancient training
-table at which victorious contestants were maintained gratis—while
-beyond lay other equally extensive remnants of exercising places, such
-as the Palæstra for the wrestlers. But all these were dominated,
-evidently, by the two great temples, an ancient one of comparatively
-small size sacred to Hera, and a mammoth edifice dedicated to Zeus,
-which still gives evidence of its enormous extent, while the fallen
-column-drums reveal some idea of the other proportions. It was in its
-day the chief glory of the inclosure, and the statue of the god was even
-reckoned among the seven wonders of the world. Unfortunately this
-statue, like that of Athena at Athens, has been irretrievably lost. But
-there is enough of the great shrine standing in the midst of the ruins
-to inspire one with an idea of its greatness; and, in the museum above,
-the heroic figures from its two pediments have been restored and set up
-in such wise as to reproduce the external adornment of the temple with
-remarkable success. Gathered around this central building, the remainder
-of the ancient structures having to do with the peculiar uses of the
-spot present a bewildering array of broken stones and marbles. An
-obtrusive remnant of a Byzantine church is the one discordant feature.
-Aside from this the precinct recalls only the distant time when the
-regular games called all Greece to Olympia, while the “peace of God”
-prevailed throughout the kingdom. Just at the foot of Kronos a long
-terrace and flight of steps mark the position of a row of old
-treasuries, as at Delphi, while along the eastern side of the precinct
-are to be seen the remains of a portico once famous for its echoes,
-where sat the judges who distributed the prizes. There is also a most
-graceful arch remaining to mark the entrance to the ancient stadium, of
-which nothing else now remains. Of the later structures on the site, the
-“house of Nero” is the most interesting and extensive. The Olympic games
-were still celebrated, even after the Roman domination, and Nero himself
-entered the lists in his own reign. He caused a palace to be erected for
-him on that occasion—and of course he won a victory, for any other
-outcome would have been most impolite, not to say dangerous. Nero was
-more fortunately lodged than were the other ancient contestants, it
-appears, for there were no hostelries in old Olympia in which the
-visiting multitudes could be housed, and the athletes and spectators who
-came from all over the land were accustomed to bring their own tents and
-pitch them roundabout, many of them on the farther side of the Alpheios.
-
-[Illustration: ENTRANCE TO THE STADIUM. OLYMPIA]
-
-The many treasuries, to which reference has been made as running along
-the terrace wall at the very foot of the hill of Kronos, are spoken of
-by Pausanias. Enough of them is occasionally to be found to enable one
-to judge how they appeared—somewhat, no doubt, like the so-called
-“treasury of the Athenians” that one may see in a restored form at
-Delphi. In these tiny buildings were kept the smaller votive gifts of
-the various states and the apparatus for the games. Not far from this
-row of foundations and close by the terrace wall that leads along the
-hill down to the arch that marks the stadium entrance, are several bases
-on which stood bronze statues of Zeus, set up by the use of moneys
-derived from fines for fracturing the rules of the games. Various
-ancient athletes achieved a doubtful celebrity by having to erect these
-“Zanes,” as they were called, one of them being a memorial of the arrant
-coward Sarapion of Alexandria, who was so frightened at the prospect of
-entering the pankration for which he had set down his name that he fled
-the day before the contest.
-
-Within the precinct one may still see fragments of the pedestal which
-supported Phidias’s wonderful gold-and-ivory image of Zeus. The god
-himself is said to have been so enchanted with the sculptor’s work that
-he hurled a thunderbolt down, which struck near the statue; and the spot
-was marked with a vase of marble. Just how approval was spelled out of
-so equivocal a manifestation might seem rather difficult to see; but
-such at any rate was the fact. Of the other remaining bases, the most
-interesting is doubtless the tall triangular pedestal of the Niké of
-Pæonius, still to be seen _in situ_, though its graceful statue is in
-the museum.
-
-Just above the meadows on the farther bank, there runs a range of hills,
-through which we had but recently ridden. And it was there that the
-ancients found a convenient crag from which to hurl the unfortunate
-women who dared venture to look on at the games. The law provided that
-no woman’s eye should see those contests, and so far as is known only
-one woman caught breaking this law ever escaped the penalty of it. She
-was the mother of so many victorious athletes that an unwonted immunity
-was extended to her. Other women, whose disguise was penetrated, were
-made stern examples to frighten future venturesome maids and matrons out
-of seeking to view what was forbidden.
-
-The games at Olympia were celebrated during a period of about a thousand
-years, throughout which time they furnished the one recognized system of
-dates. They recurred at four-year intervals. Long before the appointed
-month of the games, which were always held in midsummer, duly accredited
-ambassadors were sent forth to all the cities and states of Hellas to
-announce the coming of the event and to proclaim the “peace of God,”
-which the law decreed should prevail during the days of the contest, and
-in which it was sacrilege not to join, whatever the exigency. On the
-appointed date the cities of all Greece sent the flower of their youth
-to Olympia, runners, wrestlers, discus throwers, chariot drivers,
-boxers, and the like, as well as their choicest horses, to contend for
-the coveted trophy. During the first thirteen Olympiads there was but
-one athletic event,—a running race. In later times the number was added
-to until the race had grown to a “pentathlon,” or contest of five kinds,
-and still later to include twenty-four different exercises. None but
-Greeks of pure blood could contest, at least until the Roman times, and
-nobles and plebeians vied in striving for the victor’s wreath, although
-the richer were at a decided advantage in the matter of the horse races.
-The prize offered, however, was of no intrinsic value at all, being
-nothing but a crown of wild olive, and it astonished and dismayed the
-invading Persians not a little to find that they were being led against
-a nation that would strive so earnestly and steadfastly for a prize that
-seemed so little. As a matter of fact it was not as slight a reward as
-it appeared to be, for in the incidental honors that it carried the
-world has seldom seen its equal. The man who proved his right to be
-crowned with this simple wreath was not only regarded as honored in
-himself, but honor was imputed to his family and to his city as well;
-and the city generally went wild with enthusiasm over him, some even
-going so far as to raze their walls in token that with so gallant sons
-they needed no bulwarks. Special privileges were conferred upon him at
-home and even abroad. In many cities the victor of an Olympic contest
-was entitled to maintenance at the public charge in the utmost honor,
-and the greatest poets of the day delighted to celebrate the victors in
-their stateliest odes. Thus, although games in honor of the gods were
-held at various other points in Greece, as for example at Delphi and at
-the isthmus of Corinth, none surpassed the Olympic as a national
-institution, sharing the highest honors with the oracle at Delphi as an
-object of universal reverence.
-
-Of course the origin of these great games is shrouded in mystery, which
-has, as usual, crystallized into legend. And as the pediment in one end
-of the temple of the Olympian Zeus, preserved in the museum near by,
-deals with this story, it may be in order to speak of it. Tradition
-relates that King [OE]nomaus had a splendid stud of race horses of which
-he was justly proud, and likewise was possessed of a surpassingly
-beautiful daughter whom men called Hippodameia, who was naturally sought
-in marriage by eligible young men from all around. The condition
-precedent set by [OE]nomaus to giving her hand was, however, a difficult
-one. The suitor must race his horses against those of [OE]nomaus,
-driving the team himself; and if he lost he was put to death. One
-version relates that [OE]nomaus, if he found himself being distanced,
-was wont to spear the luckless swains from behind. At any rate nobody
-had succeeded in winning Hippodameia when young Pelops came along and
-entered the contest. He had no doubt heard of the king’s unsportsmanlike
-javelin tactics, for he adopted some subterfuges of his own,—doing
-something or other to the chariot of his opponent, such as loosening a
-linchpin or bribing his charioteer to weaken it in some other part,—with
-the result that when the race came off [OE]nomaus was thrown out and
-killed, and Pelops won the race and Hippodameia—and of course lived
-happily ever after.
-
-The pedimental sculptures from the great temple reproduce the scene that
-preceded the race in figures of heroic size, with no less a personage
-than Zeus himself in the centre of the group, while [OE]nomaus and
-Pelops with their chariots and horses and their attendants range
-themselves on either side, and Hippodameia stands expectantly waiting.
-The restorations have been liberal, but on the whole successful; and
-besides giving a very good idea of the legend itself, they are highly
-interesting from a sculptural point of view as showing a distinctive
-style of carving in marble. The other pediment, preserved in about the
-same proportion, is less interesting from a legendary standpoint, but is
-full of animation and artistic interest. It represents the contest
-between the Centaurs and Lapiths, with Apollo just in the act of
-intervening to prevent the rape of the Lapith women. This episode had
-little appropriateness to the Olympic site, so far as I know, but the
-ease with which the Centaur lent himself to the limitations of
-pedimental sculpture might well explain the adoption of the incident
-here. The head of Apollo is of the interesting type with which one grows
-familiar in going through museums devoted to early work, the most
-notable thing being the curious treatment of hair and eyes.
-
-The precinct about the great temple was once filled with votive statues,
-and Pliny relates that he counted something like three thousand. Of
-these it appears that few remain sufficiently whole to add much
-interest. But out of all the great assemblage of sculptures there is one
-at least surviving that must forever assuage any grief at the loss of
-the rest. That, of course, is the inimitable Hermes of Praxiteles, which
-everybody knows through reproductions and photographs, but which in the
-original is so incomparably beautiful that no reproduction can hope to
-give an adequate idea of it, either in the expression of body and
-features, its poise and grace, or in the exquisite sheen of marble. They
-have wisely set it off by itself in a room which cannot be seen from the
-great main hall of the museum, and the observer is left to contemplate
-it undistracted. It seems generally to be agreed that it is the
-masterpiece of extant Greek sculpture. It is nearly perfect in its
-preservation, the upraised arm and small portions of the legs being
-about all that is missing. The latter have been supplied, not
-unsuccessfully, to join the admirable feet to the rest. No effort has
-been made, and happily so, to supply the missing arm. The infant
-Dionysus perched on the left arm is no great addition to the statue, and
-one might well wish it were not there; but even this slight drawback
-cannot interfere with the admiration one feels for so perfect a work.
-Hermes alone fully justifies the journey to Olympia, and once seen he
-will never be forgotten. The satin smoothness of the marble admirably
-simulates human (or god-like) flesh, doubtless because of the processes
-which the Greeks knew of rubbing it down with a preparation of wax. No
-trace of other external treatment survives, save a faint indication of
-gilding on the sandals. If the hair and eyes were ever painted, the
-paint has entirely disappeared in the centuries that the statue lay
-buried in the sands that the restless Alpheios and Cladeus washed into
-the sacred inclosure. For the rivers frequently left their narrow beds
-in former times and invaded the precincts of the gods, despite the
-efforts of man to wall them out. They have done irreparable damage to
-the buildings there, but since they at the same time preserved Hermes
-almost intact for modern eyes to enjoy, perhaps their other vandalisms
-may be pardoned.
-
-The museum also includes among its treasures a number of the metopes
-from the great temple of Zeus, representing the labors of Hercules. But
-probably next after the incomparable Hermes must be reckoned the Niké of
-Pæonius, standing on a high pedestal at one end of the great main hall,
-and seemingly sweeping triumphantly through space with her draperies
-flowing free—a wonderful lightness being suggested despite the weight of
-the material. This Niké has always seemed to me a fair rival of her more
-famous sister from Samothrace, suggesting the idea of victory even more
-forcibly than the statue on the staircase of the Louvre, which has an
-Amazonian quality suggestive of actual conflict rather than a past
-successful issue. The unfortunate circumstance about the Niké at Olympia
-is that her head is gone, and they have sought to suspend the recovered
-portion of it over the body by an iron rod. A wrist is in like manner
-appended to one of the arms, and the two give a jarring note, by
-recalling Ichabod Crane and Cap'n Cuttle in most incongruous
-surroundings. Nevertheless the Niké is wonderful, and would be more so
-if it were not for these lamentable attempts to restore what is not
-possible to be restored.
-
-Of all the many little collections in Greece, that in Olympia is
-doubtless the best, and it is fittingly housed in a building in the
-classic style, given by a patriotic Greek, M. Syngros. Aside from the
-artistic remnants, there are a number of relics bearing on the athletic
-aspect of Olympia—its chief side, of course. And among these are some
-ancient discs of metal and stone, and a huge rock which bears an
-inscription relating that a certain strong man of ancient times was able
-to lift it over his head and to toss it a stated distance. It seems
-incredible—but there were giants in the land in those days.
-
-The modern Olympic games, such as are held in Athens every now and then,
-are but feeble attempts to give a classic tone to a very ordinary
-athletic meet of international character. There is none of the
-significance attached to the modern events that attended the old, and
-the management leaves much to be desired. Former visitors are no longer
-maintained at the Prytaneum; but, on the contrary, are even denied
-passes to witness the struggles of their successors. The games fill
-Athens with a profitable throng and serve to advertise the country, but
-aside from this they have no excuse for being on Greek soil, and mar the
-land so far as concerns the enjoyment of true Philhellenes. Fortunately
-there is no possible chance of holding any such substitute games at
-Olympia herself. Her glory has departed forever, save as it survives in
-memory.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER XIV. THE ISLES OF
- GREECE: DELOS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-It was a gray morning—for Greece. The sky was overcast, the wind blew
-chill from the north, and anon the rain would set in and give us a few
-moments of downpour, only to cease again and permit a brief glimpse
-ahead across the Ægean, into which classic sea our little steamer was
-thrusting her blunt nose, rising and falling on the heavy swell. We had
-borne around Sunium in the early dawn, and our course was now in an
-easterly direction toward the once famous but now entirely deserted
-island of Delos, the centre of the Cyclades. Ahead, whenever the murk
-lifted, we could see several of the nearer and larger islands of the
-group,—that imposing row of submerged mountain peaks that reveal the
-continuation of the Attic peninsula under water as it streams away to
-the southeast from the promontory of Sunium. The seeming chaos of the
-Grecian archipelago is easily reducible to something like order by
-keeping this fact in mind. It is really composed of two parallel
-submerged mountain ranges, the prolongations of Attica and of Eub[oe]a
-respectively, the summits of which pierce the surface of the water again
-and again, forming the islands which every schoolboy recalls as having
-names that end in “os.” Just before us, in a row looming through the
-drifting rain, we saw Kythnos, Seriphos, and Siphnos, while beyond them,
-and belonging to the other ridge, the chart revealed Andros, Tenos,
-Naxos, Mykonos, and Paros, as yet impossible of actual sight. This
-galaxy of islands must have proved highly useful to the ancient
-mariners, no doubt, since by reason of their numbers and proximity to
-each other and to the mainland, as well as by reason of their
-distinctive shapes and contours, it was possible always to keep some
-sort of landmark in sight, as was highly desirable in days when sailors
-knew nothing of compasses and steered only by the stars. Lovers of
-Browning will recall the embarrassment that overtook the Rhodian bark
-that set sail with Balaustion for Athens, only to lose all reckoning and
-bring up in Syracuse. No ancient ship was at all sure of accurate
-navigation without frequent landfalls, and even the hardy mariners of
-Athens were accustomed, when en route to Sicily, to hug the rugged
-shores of the Peloponnesus all the way around to the opening of the
-Corinthian Gulf, and thence to proceed to Corfu before venturing to
-strike off westward across the Adriatic to the “heel” of Italy, where
-one could skirt the shore again until Sicily hove in sight near the
-dreaded haunts of Scylla. Of course other considerations, such as food
-and water, added to the desirability of keeping the land in sight most
-of the time on so long a voyage; but not the least important of the
-reasons was the necessity of keeping on the right road.
-
-We had set sail on a chartered ship, in a party numbering about forty,
-most of whom were bent on the serious consideration of things
-archæological, while the inconsiderable remainder were unblushingly in
-search of pleasure only slightly tinged by scientific enthusiasm. In no
-other way, indeed, could such a journey be made in anything like
-comfort. The Greek steamers, while numerous, are slow and small, and not
-to be recommended for cleanliness or convenience; while their stated
-routes include much that is of no especial interest to visitors, who are
-chiefly eager to view scenes made glorious by past celebrity, and are
-less concerned with the modern seaports devoted to a prosaic traffic in
-wine and fruits. To one fortunate enough to be able to number himself
-among those who go down to the sea in yachts, the Ægean furnishes a
-fruitful source of pleasure. To us, the only recourse was to the native
-lines of freight and passenger craft, or to join ourselves to a party of
-investigators who were taking an annual cruise among the famous ancient
-sites. We chose the latter, not merely because of the better opportunity
-to visit the islands we had long most wished to see, but because of the
-admirable opportunity to derive instruction as well as pleasure from the
-voyage. So behold us in our own ship, with our own supplies, our own
-sailing master and crew, sailing eastward over a gray sea, through the
-spring showers, toward the barren isle where Ph[oe]bus sprung.
-
-Delos is easy enough to find now, small as it is. It long ago ceased to
-be the floating island that legend describes. If we can permit ourselves
-a little indulgence in paganism, we may believe that this rocky islet
-was a chip, broken from the bed of the ocean by Poseidon, which was
-floating about at random until Zeus anchored it to afford a bed for
-Leto, that she might be comfortably couched at the birth of Apollo,
-despite the promise of Earth that the guilty Leto should have no place
-to lay her head. Thus the vow which the jealousy of Hera had procured
-was brought to naught, and in Delos was born the most celebrated of the
-sons of Zeus, together with his twin sister, Artemis.
-
-Delos is in fact a double island, divided by a narrow strait into
-Greater and Lesser Delos. And it was with the lesser portion that we had
-to do, as also did ancient history. For despite its insignificant size
-and remoteness, Delos the Less was once a chief seat of empire and a
-great and flourishing city, as well as the repository of vast wealth.
-Distant as it seems from Athens, the island is really quite central with
-reference to the rest of the archipelago, and from its low summit may be
-seen most of the Cyclades on a clear day. The narrow strait before
-referred to furnishes about all the harbor that is to be found at Delos
-to-day. Into this sheltered bit of water we steamed and dropped anchor,
-happy in the favoring wind that allowed us a landing where it is
-occasionally difficult to find water sufficiently smooth for the small
-boats; for here, as in all Greek waters, small boats furnish the only
-means of getting ashore. There was a shallow basin just before what was
-once the ancient city, and doubtless it was considered good harborage
-for the triremes and galleys of small draught; but for even a small
-steamer like ours it was quite insufficient in depth, and we came to
-rest perhaps a quarter of a mile from the landing, while the clouds
-broke and the afternoon sun came out warm and bright as we clambered
-down to the dories and pulled for the shore.
-
-There proved to be little or no habitation save for the French
-excavators and their men, who were completing a notable work in
-uncovering not only the ancient precincts of Apollo and of the
-headquarters of the Delian league, but the residence portion of the
-ancient city as well, which we later discovered to lie off to the east
-on the high ground. We landed on a sort of rocky mole erected along the
-edge of what was once the sacred harbor and picked our way along a
-narrow-gauge track used by the excavators, to the maze of ruins that lay
-beyond. It proved as bewildering a mass of fallen marbles as that at
-Olympia. The main part of the ruin is apparently a relic of the
-religious side of the place, dominated, of course, by the cult of
-Apollo. Centuries of reverence had contributed to the enrichment of the
-environs of the shrine. All about the visitor finds traces of porticoes
-and propylæa, the largest of these being erected by Philip V. of
-Macedon, as is testified to by an extant inscription. Little remains
-standing of any of the buildings, but the bits of capital and
-entablature that lie strewn about serve to give a faint idea of the
-nature of the adornment that attended the temples in their prime. It is
-not difficult to trace the course of the sacred way leading from the
-entrance around the sacred precinct to the eastern façade of the main
-temples, lined throughout most of its course by the bases of statues,
-altars, and remnants of the foundations of small rectangular buildings
-which are supposed to have been treasuries, as at Delphi and Olympia.
-Not far away from the main temple of the god is still to be seen the
-base of his colossal statue, an inscription reciting that the Naxians
-made it, and that they carved statue and base from the same stone.
-Whether this means that the figure and base were actually a single
-block, or only that the figure and base were made of the same specific
-material, has caused some little speculation. As for the statue itself,
-there are at least two large fragments on the ground not far away,
-easily identified by the modeling as parts of the huge back and breast
-of the colossus. One of his feet is preserved in the British Museum, and
-a hand is at the neighboring island of Mykonos. The rest is either
-buried in the earth near by, or has been carried off by vandals. That
-the earth has many treasures still to yield up is evident by the
-occasional accidental discoveries recently made on the site by the
-diggers. When we were there the construction of a trench for the
-diminutive car-track had unearthed a beautifully sculptured lion deep in
-the soil; and since that time I have heard that several other similar
-finds have been made. So it may be that the lime burners have not made
-away with the great Apollo entirely.
-
-There are three temples, presumably all devoted to the cult of Apollo,
-and one of them no doubt to the memory of his unfortunate mother, Leto,
-who bore him, according to tradition, on the shores of the sacred lake
-near by. Not far from the Apollo group are two other ruined shrines,
-supposed to have been sacred to Artemis. More interesting than either,
-however, to the layman is the famous “hall of the bulls,” which is the
-largest and best preserved of all the buildings, and which takes its
-name from the carved bullocks on its capitals. It is not saying much,
-however, to say that it is better preserved than the others. It is only
-so in the sense that its extent and general plan are easier to trace.
-Its altar, known as the “horned altar of Apollo,” from the rams’ heads
-with which it was adorned, was accounted by the ancients one of the
-seven wonders of the world. We were well content to leave the sacred
-precinct, and to wander along toward the north, past the Roman agora, in
-the general direction of the sacred lake. It proved to be a sorry pool,
-stagnant and unattractive compared with what it must have been when it
-was in its prime, with its banks adorned with curbing. Not far from its
-shores we were shown the remains of several ancient houses, also of the
-Roman period, in which the rooms were still divided by walls of a
-considerable height. These walls gave occasional evidence of having been
-adorned with stucco and frescoes, and the rooms revealed fragments of
-tessellated pavement, while under each house was a capacious cistern for
-the preservation of rain water. Of course these dwellings, while
-recalling Pompeii, were far less perfect in the way of artistic
-revelations, being so much older.
-
-These houses, interesting as they were, did not compare with those which
-we were later shown on the hill above the precinct. These we passed on
-our way up to the theatre, and to those of us who were unskilled in
-archæological science they proved to be the most absorbing of all the
-ruins on the little island. There are a good many of them, lining
-several old streets, as at Pompeii. Their walls are of sufficient
-altitude to give even an idea of the upper stories, and in one case, at
-least, we were able to mount, by a sadly ruined stone staircase, to what
-was once the upper landing. The general arrangement of the rooms was
-quite similar to that made familiar by the excavated houses at Pompeii,
-the great central court, or atrium, being adorned with a most remarkable
-mosaic representing Dionysos riding on a dragon of ferocious mien. It is
-kept covered, but a guard obligingly raised the heavy wooden door that
-shields it from the weather, and propped it up with a stick so that it
-resembled nothing so much as a huge piano lid. The coloring of the
-mosaic was lively in spite of its sombreness, and the eyes of the
-figures were admirably executed.
-
-All around the atrium were traces of a colonnade, pieces of the columns
-remaining intact. The walls were apparently decorated with bits of stone
-set deep in a coating of mortar, and once adorned with a colored wash of
-red, yellow, and blue. Mural paintings naturally were wanting, for these
-houses were not only older than those of the Neapolitan suburb, but they
-perished by a slow weathering process instead of by a sudden
-overwhelming such as overtook Pompeii. What traces of painting there are
-left on the Delian walls are indistinct and rather unsatisfactory, and
-recall the childish scrawls of our own day. But the houses themselves,
-with their occasional pavements and the one admirable mosaic, leave
-little to be desired. Particularly interesting was the revelation of the
-drainage system. The houses were not only carefully provided with deep
-cisterns for preserving rain water; they had also well-designed channels
-for carrying waste water away. Every house in these streets had its
-drain covered with flat stones running out to the main sewer of the
-street, while those in turn converged in a trunk sewer at the foot of
-the slope. It is evident enough that Delos was a dry sort of place, both
-by nature and by artifice, and that in the period of the city’s greatest
-celebrity it would be impossible for the historian to refer to the muddy
-condition existing at that period of the month just before the streets
-underwent their regular cleaning.
-
-We had passed well up toward the theatre on the slopes of the height
-called Kythnos before we cleared the ancient dwellings. The theatre
-itself proved to be roomy, but largely grass-grown and exceedingly steep
-to clamber over. The portion devoted to seats was chiefly notable for
-occupying considerably more than the traditional semicircle, and for
-having its ends built up with huge walls of masonry. Only the lower
-seats are preserved. The colonnaded proskenion, which may have supported
-a stage, is, however, highly unusual and interesting.
-
-Sundry venturesome spirits climbed to the summit of Kythnos, but it was
-no day for the view for which that eminence is celebrated. On a clearer
-day a great many of the Cyclades could be seen, no doubt, because of the
-central location of the island and the marvelous clarity of the Greek
-atmosphere, when it is clear at all. We were unfortunate enough to meet
-with a showery April day, which promised little in the way of distant
-prospects. Halfway down the side of Kythnos, however, was easily to be
-seen the grotto of Apollo. In fact, it is the most constantly visible
-feature of the island. It is a sort of artificial cave in the side of
-the hill toward the ruins, and here was the earliest of the temples to
-the god. Ancient hands added to what natural grotto there was by
-erecting a primitive portal for it. Two huge slabs of stone seem to have
-been allowed to drop toward one another until they met, forming a mutual
-support, so that the effect is that of a gable. Other slabs have been
-arranged to form a pitch roof over the spot, and a marble lintel and
-gate posts have also been added,—presumably much later than the rest. It
-is even probable that this venerable shrine was also the seat of an
-oracle, for certain of the internal arrangements of the grotto bear a
-resemblance to those known to have existed at Delphi; but if there was
-one in Delos, it never attained to the reputation that attended the
-later chief home of the far-darting god.
-
-[Illustration: DELOS, SHOWING GROTTO]
-
-[Illustration: GROTTO OF APOLLO. DELOS]
-
-The births of Apollo and Artemis appear to have been deemed quite enough
-for the celebrity of Delos; for in after years, when the Athenians felt
-called upon to “purify” the city, they enacted that no mortal in the
-future should be permitted to be born or to die on the island. In
-consequence, temporary habitations were erected across the narrow strait
-on the shores of Greater Delos for the use of those _in extremis_ or
-those about to be confined. Aside from this fact, the larger island has
-little or no interest to the visitor.
-
-There is, of course, a museum at Delos. Some day it will be a very
-interesting one indeed. At the time of our visit it was only just
-finished, and had not been provided with any floor but such as nature
-gave. In due season it will probably rank with any for its archæological
-value, although it will be infinitely less interesting than others to
-inexpert visitors, who generally prefer statues of fair preservation to
-small fragments and bits of inscription. Of the notable sculptures that
-must have abounded in Delos once, comparatively little remains;
-certainly nothing to compare with the charioteer and the Lysippus at
-Delphi, or with the Hermes and pedimental figures at Olympia. The great
-charm of Delos to the unskilled mind is to be found in its history and
-in its beautiful surroundings. As a birthplace of one of the major gods
-of high Olympus, the seat of the Delian league against the Persians, and
-the original treasury of the Athenian empire, Delos has history enough
-to satisfy an island many times her size. Traces still remain of the
-dancing place where the Delian maidens performed their wonderful
-evolutions during the annual pilgrimage, which was a feature during the
-Athenian supremacy; and the temples and treasuries, ruined as they are,
-forcibly recall the importance which once attached to the spot. The
-memory still survives of the so-called “Delian problem” of the doubling
-of the cube, a task that proved a poser for the ancient mathematicians
-when the oracle propounded, as the price of staying a plague, that the
-Delians should double the pedestal of Parian marble that stood in the
-great temple. But it is almost entirely a place of memories, deserted by
-all but the excavators and an occasional shepherd. To-day it is little
-more than the bare rock that it was when Poseidon split it from the bed
-of the sea. Apollo gave it an immortality, however, which does not wane
-although Apollo himself is dead. Athens and Corinth gave it a worldly
-celebrity, which proved but temporary so far as it depended on activity
-in the world of affairs. Delos, washed by the Ægean, has little to look
-forward to but to drowse the long tides idle, well content with her
-crowded hour of glorious life, and satisfied that her neighbors should
-have the age without a name.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER XV. SAMOS AND THE
- TEMPLE AT BRANCHIDÆ
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-The stiff north wind, which was known to be blowing outside, counseled
-delaying departure from Delos until after the evening meal, for our
-course to Samos lay through the trough of the sea. In the shelter of the
-narrow channel between Greater and Lesser Delos the water was calm
-enough to enable eating in comfort, and it was the commendable rule of
-the cruise to seek shelter for meals, owing to the lack of “racks” to
-prevent the contents of the tables from shifting when the vessel rolled.
-Hence it was well along in the evening before the anchor was weighed;
-and as the engines gave their first premonitory wheezes, word was passed
-from the bridge that all who did not love rough weather would better
-retire at once, as we were certain to “catch it” as soon as we rounded
-the capes of the neighboring Mykonos and squared away for Samos across a
-long stretch of open water. The warning served to bring home to us one
-of the marked peculiarities about cruising in the Ægean, namely, the
-succession of calm waters and tempestuous seas, which interlard
-themselves like the streaks of fat and lean in the bacon from the
-Irishman’s pig, which was fed to repletion one day and starved the next.
-This, of course, is due to the numerous islands, never many miles apart,
-which are forever affording shelter from the breezes and waves, only to
-open up again and subject the craft to a rolling and boisterous sea as
-it crosses the stretches of open channel between them. When the
-experiences due to these sudden transitions were not trying, they were
-likely to be amusing, we discovered, as was the case on one morning when
-the tables had been laid for breakfast rather imprudently just before
-rounding a windy promontory. The instant the ship felt the cross seas
-she began to roll heavily, and the entire array of breakfast dishes
-promptly left the unprotected table, only to crash heavily against the
-stateroom doors that lined the saloon, eliciting shrieks from those
-within; while the following roll of the vessel sent the débris careering
-across the floor to bring up with equal resonance against the doors on
-the other side, the stewards meantime being harassed beyond measure to
-recover their scudding cups and saucers.
-
-In the morning of our arrival off Samos we found ourselves moving along
-on an even keel, under the lee of that extensive island and close also
-to the shores of Asia Minor, the famous promontory of Mykale looming
-large and blue ahead. We coasted along the Samian shore, close enough to
-distinguish even from a distance the ruins of the once famous Heræum,
-which was among the objects of our visit. It was marked from afar by a
-single gleaming column, rising apparently from the beach. For the
-present we passed it by, the ship heading for the little white town
-farther ahead and just opposite the bay made by the great bulk of
-Mykale. It was historic ground, for it was at Mykale that the pursuing
-Greeks, under Leotychides and Xantippus, made the final quietus of the
-Persian army and navy in the year 479 B.C., just after Salamis, by the
-final defeat of Tigranes. Mykale, however, we viewed only from afar. The
-ship rounded the mole protecting the harbor of what was once the chief
-city of Samos, and came to anchor for the first time in Turkish waters.
-While the necessary official visits and examination of passports were
-being made, there was abundant opportunity to inspect the port from the
-deck. It lay at the base of a rugged mountain, and the buildings of the
-city lined the diminutive harbor on two sides, curving along a low quay.
-In general appearance the town recalled Canea, in Crete, by the
-whiteness of its houses and the pale greenness of its shutters and the
-occasional slender tower of a mosque. Technically Samos is a Turkish
-island. Practically it is so only in the sense that it pays an annual
-tribute to the Sultan and that its Greek governor is nominated by that
-monarch. It was sufficiently Turkish, in any event, to require passports
-and the official call of a tiny skiff flying the crescent flag and
-bearing a resplendent local officer crowned with a red fez. The
-formalities were all arranged by proxy ashore, and in due time the
-ship’s boat returned, bearing the freedom of the city and a limited
-supply of Samian cigarettes, which retailed at the modest sum of a franc
-and a half the hundred.
-
-Herodotus devotes a considerable space to the history of the Samians in
-the time of the Persian supremacy and especially to the deeds of the
-tyrant Polycrates, who seized the power of the island and proved a
-prosperous ruler. In fact the rampant successes of Polycrates alarmed
-his friend and ally, King Amasis of Egypt, who had the wholesome dread
-of the ancients for the “jealousy” of the gods; and in consequence
-Amasis sent a messenger up to Samos to tell Polycrates that he was too
-successful for his own good. Amasis was afraid, according to the
-messenger, that some evil would overtake the Samian ruler, and he
-advised Polycrates to cast away whatever thing he valued the most as a
-propitiation of the gods. The advice so impressed Polycrates that he
-recounted his possessions, selected a certain emerald seal-ring that he
-cherished exceedingly, took it aboard a fifty-oared galley and, when
-sufficiently far out at sea, hurled the treasured ring into the water.
-Whereat he returned content that he had appeased the presumably jealous
-gods. In less than a week a fisherman, who had taken an unusually
-beautiful fish in those waters, presented it as a great honor to
-Polycrates, and in dressing it for the table the servants found in its
-belly the ring that Polycrates had tried so hard to cast away! The event
-was held to be superhuman, and an account of it was promptly sent to
-Amasis in Egypt. He, however, judging from it that Polycrates was
-inevitably doomed by heaven, ended his alliance with Samos on the naïve
-plea that he should be sorry to have anything happen to a friend, and
-therefore proposed to make of Polycrates an enemy, that he need not
-grieve when misfortune overtook him! Misfortune did indeed overtake
-Polycrates, and Herodotus describes at some length how it occurred,
-ending his discourse with the remark that he feels justified in dealing
-at such length with the affairs of the Samians because they have
-accomplished "three works, the greatest that have been achieved by all
-the Greeks. The first is of a mountain, one hundred and fifty orgyiæ in
-height, in which is dug a tunnel beginning at the base and having an
-opening at either side of the mountain. The length of the tunnel is
-seven stadia, and the height and breadth are eight feet respectively.
-Through the whole length of the tunnel runs another excavation three
-feet wide and twenty cubits deep, through which cutting the water,
-conveyed by pipes, reaches the city, being drawn from a copious fount on
-the farther side of the mountain. The architect of this excavation was a
-Megarian, Eupalinus the son of Naustrophus. This, then, is one of the
-three great works. The second is a mound in the sea around the harbor,
-in depth about a hundred orgyiæ and in length about two stadia. The
-third work of theirs is a great temple, the largest we ever have seen,
-of which the architect was Rh[oe]cus, son of Phileos, a native Samian.
-On account of these things I have dwelt longer on the affairs of the
-Samians."[3]
-
------
-
-Footnote 3:
-
- Herodotus, Book III, section 60.
-
------
-
-It was, then, inside this mole, two stadia in length, that we were
-anchored. Doubtless the modern mole is still standing on the ancient
-foundation, but it would not be considered anything remarkable in the
-way of engineering to-day, whatever it may have been deemed in the
-childhood of the race. Something in the air of Samos must have bred a
-race of natural engineers, no doubt, for not only were these artificial
-wonders constructed there, but Pythagoras, the mathematical philosopher,
-was born in the island.
-
-From the city up to the remnants of the ancient aqueduct in the mountain
-is not a difficult climb, and the tunnel itself affords a great many
-points of interest. In an age when tunneling was not a common or
-well-understood art, it must indeed have seemed a great wonder that the
-Samians were able to pierce the bowels of this considerable rocky height
-to get a water supply that could not be cut off. The source of the
-flowage was a spring located in the valley on the side of the mountain
-away from the town, and it would have been perfectly possible to convey
-the water to the city without any tunnel at all, merely by following the
-valley around. For some reason this was deemed inexpedient—doubtless
-because of the evident chance an enemy would have for cutting off the
-supply. The obvious question is, what was gained by making the tunnel,
-since the spring itself was in the open and could have been stopped as
-readily as an open aqueduct? And the only answer that has been suggested
-is that the spring alone is so concealed and so difficult to find that,
-even with the clue given by Herodotus, it was next to impossible to
-locate it. And in order to conceal the source still further, the burial
-of the conduit in the heart of the mountain certainly contributed not a
-little. Nevertheless it is a fact that the farther end of the tunnel was
-discovered some years ago by tracing a line from the site of this
-spring, so that now the aqueduct has been relocated and is found to be
-substantially as described by Herodotus in the passage quoted.
-
-Most visitors, possessed of comparatively limited time like ourselves,
-are content with inspecting only the town end of the tunnel, which lies
-up in the side of the mountain. It is amply large enough to enter, but
-tapers are needed to give light to the feet as one walks carefully, and
-often sidewise, along the ledge that borders the deeper cutting below,
-in which once ran the actual water pipes. The depth of the latter, which
-Herodotus calls “twenty cubits,” is considerably greater at this end of
-the tunnel than at the other,—a fact which is apparently accounted for
-by the necessity of correcting errors of level, after the tunnel was
-finished, to give sufficient pitch to carry the water down. In those
-primitive days it is not surprising that such an error was made. There
-is evidence that the tunnel was dug by two parties working from opposite
-ends, as is the custom to-day. That they met in the centre of the
-mountain with such general accuracy speaks well for the engineering
-skill of the time, and that they allowed too little for the drop of the
-stream is not at all strange. The result of this is that, in the end
-commonly visited by travelers, there is need of caution lest the unwary
-slip from the narrow ledge at the side into the supplementary cut thirty
-feet below—a fall not to be despised, either because of its chance of
-injury or because of the difficulty of getting the victim out again. So
-much, as Herodotus would say, for the water-conduit of the Samians.
-
-From the tunnel down to the ancient Heræum, whither our ship had sailed
-to await us, proved to be a walk of something over two miles along a
-curving beach, across which occasional streams made their shallow way
-from inland to the sea. It was a pleasant walk, despite occasional stony
-stretches; for the rugged mountain chain inland presented constantly
-changing views on the one hand, while on the other, across the deep blue
-of the Ægean, rose the commanding heights of Asia Minor, stretching away
-from the neighboring Mykale to the distant, and still snow-crowned,
-peaks of the Latmian range. Under the morning sun the prospect was
-indescribably lovely, particularly across the sea to the bold coasts of
-Asia, the remote mountains being revealed in that delicate chiaroscuro
-which so often attends white peaks against the blue. Ahead was always
-the solitary column which is all that remains standing of the once vast
-temple of Hera, “the largest we ever have seen,” according to the
-ingenuous and truthful Herodotus.
-
-There is a reason for holding the spot in an especial manner sacred to
-Hera, for it is said by legend that she was born on the banks of one of
-the little streams whose waters we splashed through in crossing the
-beach to her shrine. The temple itself we found to lie far back from the
-water’s edge, its foundations so buried in the deposited earth that
-considerable excavation has been necessary to reveal them. The one
-remaining column is not complete, but is still fairly lofty. It bears no
-capital, and its drums are slightly jostled out of place, so that it has
-a rather unfinished look, to which its lack of fluting contributes; for,
-as even the amateur knows, the fluting of Greek columns was never put on
-until the whole pillar was set up, and every joint of it ground so fine
-as to be invisible. We walked up to the ruin through the inevitable
-cutting, in which lay the inevitable narrow-gauge track for the
-excavator’s cars, but there was no activity to be seen. The excavation
-had progressed so far as to leave little more to be done, or there was
-no more money, or something had intervened to put an end to the
-operations for the time. Not far away, however, along the beach, lay a
-few houses, which constituted the habitation of the diggers and of a few
-fishermen, whose seine boats were being warped up as we passed.
-
-The exploration of the great temple of Hera has revealed the not unusual
-fact that there had been two temples on the same spot at successive
-periods. They were not identical in location, but the later overlapped
-the earlier, traces of the latter being confined to its lowest
-foundation stones. Of the ruins of the later temple there was but
-slightly more visible, save for the one standing column and a multitude
-of drums, capitals, and bases lying about. The latter were of a type we
-had not previously seen. They were huge lozenges of marble ornamented
-with horizontal grooves and resembling nothing so much as great cable
-drums partially wound—the effect of a multitude of narrow grooves in a
-slightly concave trough around the column. They were of a noticeable
-whiteness, for the marble of which this temple was composed was not so
-rich in mineral substances as the Pentelic, and gave none of that golden
-brown effect so familiar in the Athenian temples.
-
-[Illustration: COLUMN BASES. SAMOS]
-
-[Illustration: CARVED COLUMN-BASE. BRANCHIDÆ]
-
-It was in this great Heræum, which in size rivaled the great temples at
-Ephesus and at Branchidæ, that the Samians deposited the brazen bowl
-filched from the Spartans, of which the ancients made so much. It
-appears that because of Cr[oe]sus having sought an alliance with
-Lacedæmonia, the inhabitants of that land desired to return the
-compliment by sending him a present. They caused a huge brass bowl to be
-made, adorned with many figures and capable of holding three hundred
-amphoræ. This they dispatched to Sardis. But as the ship bearing it was
-passing Samos on her way, the Samians came out in force, seized the
-ship, and carried the great bowl off to the temple, where it was
-consecrated to the uses of the goddess. That the Samians stole it thus
-was of course indignantly denied,—the islanders retorting that the bowl
-was sold them by the Spartans when they discovered that Cr[oe]sus had
-fallen before Cyrus and was no longer an ally to be desired. No trace of
-any such relic of course is to be seen there now. In fact there is very
-little to recall the former greatness of the place but the silent and
-lonely column and a very diminutive museum standing near the beach,
-which contains disappointingly little. It is, as a matter of fact, no
-more than a dark shed, similar in appearance to the rest of the houses
-of the hamlet.
-
-The steamer was waiting near by in the sheltered waters of the sound,
-and as we were desirous of visiting the temple at Branchidæ that same
-afternoon, we left Samos and continued our voyage. Under that
-wonderfully clear sky the beauty of both shores was indescribable. The
-Asian coast, toward which we now bore our way, was, however, the grander
-of the two, with its foreground of plains and meadows and its
-magnificent background of imposing mountains stretching far into the
-interior and losing themselves in the unimagined distances beyond. The
-sun-kissed ripples of the sea were of that incredible blue that one
-never ceases to marvel at in the Mediterranean, and it was the sudden
-change from this color to a well-defined area of muddy yellow in the
-waters through which we glided that called attention to the mouth of the
-Mæander on the shore. That proverbially crooked and winding stream
-discharges so large a bulk of soil in projecting itself into the sea
-that the surface is discolored for a considerable distance off shore;
-and through this our steamer took her way, always nearing the low-lying
-beach, until we descried a projecting headland, and rounded it into
-waters as calm as those of a pond. Here we dropped anchor and once again
-proceeded to the land, setting our feet for the first time on the shores
-of Asia.
-
-Samos was, of course, still to be seen to the northwest, like a dark
-blue cloud rising from a tossing sea. Before us, glowing in the
-afternoon sun, stretched a long expanse of open seashore meadow,
-undulating here and there, almost devoid of trees, but thickly covered
-with tracts of shrubs and bushes, through which we pushed our way until
-we came upon an isolated farmhouse and a path leading off over the moor.
-It was a mere cart-track through the green of the fields, leading toward
-a distant hillock, on which we could from afar make out the slowly
-waving arms of windmills and indications of a small town. None of the
-many rambles we took in the Greek islands surpassed this two-mile walk
-for pure pleasure. The air was balmy yet cool. The fields were spangled
-with flowers,—wild orchids, iris, gladioli, and many others. There were
-no gray hills, save so far in the distance that they had become purple
-and had lost their bareness. All around was a deserted yet pleasant and
-pastoral country—deserving, none the less, the general name of moor.
-
-What few people we met on the way were farmers and shepherds, leading
-pastoral lives in the little brush wigwams so common in Greek uplands in
-the summer months. They gave us the usual cheerful good-day, and looked
-after our invading host with wondering eyes as we streamed off over the
-rolling country in the general direction of Branchidæ.
-
-That ancient site appeared at last on a hillock overlooking the ocean. A
-small and mean hamlet had largely swallowed up the immediate environs of
-the famous temple that once stood there, contrasting strangely with the
-remaining columns that soon came into view over the roofs, as we drew
-near, attended by an increasing army of the youth. The name of the
-little modern village on the spot we never knew. Anciently this was the
-site of the temple of Apollo Didymeus, erected by the Branchidæ,—a clan
-of the neighborhood of ancient Miletus who claimed descent from
-Branchus. The temple of Apollo which had formerly stood upon the site
-was destroyed in some way in the sixth century before Christ, and the
-Branchidæ set out to erect a shrine that they boasted should rival the
-temple of Diana at Ephesus in size and in ornamentation. Nor was this an
-inappropriate desire, since Apollo and Diana—or Artemis, as we ought to
-call her—were twins, whence indeed the name “Didymeus” was applied to
-the temple on the spot. Unfortunately the great temple which the
-Branchidæ designed was never completed, simply because of the vastness
-of the plan. Before the work was done, Apollo had ceased to be so
-general an object of veneration, and what had been planned to be his
-most notable shrine fell into gradual ruin and decay.
-
-It has not been sufficient, however, to destroy the beauty of much that
-the Branchidæ accomplished during the centuries that the work was
-progressing, for it is stated that several hundred years were spent in
-adorning the site. The fact that one of the few columns still standing
-and still bearing its crowning capital is unfluted bears silent
-testimony to the fact that the temple never was completed. Of the
-finished columns it is impossible to overstate their grace and lightness
-or the elegance of the carving on their bases, which apparently were
-designed to be different one from another. The pillars that remain are
-of great height and remarkable slenderness. Nineteen drums were employed
-in building them. The bases, of which many are to be seen lying about,
-and some _in situ_, display the most delicate tracery and carving
-imaginable, some being adorned with round bands of relief, and others
-divided into facets, making the base dodecagonal instead of round, each
-panel bearing a different and highly ornate design. Close by we found
-the remains of a huge stone face, or mask, apparently designed as a
-portion of the adornment of the cornice and presumably one of the
-metopes of the temple.
-
-The mass of débris of the great structure has been heaped up for so long
-that a sort of conical hill rises in the midst of it; and on this has
-been built a tower from which one may look down on the ground plan so
-far as it remains. The major part of the ruin, however, is at its
-eastern end, the front, presumably, where the only standing columns are
-to be seen, rising gracefully from a terrace which has been carefully
-uncovered by the explorers. Enough remains to give an idea of the
-immense size projected for the building, and better still enough to give
-an idea of the elegance with which the ancients proposed to adorn it,
-that the Ephesians need not eclipse the Milesians in honoring the twin
-gods. Of the rows of statues that once lined the road from the sea to
-the shrine, one is to be seen in the British Museum—a curious sitting
-colossus of quaintly archaic workmanship, and somewhat suggestive, to my
-own mind, of an Egyptian influence in the squat modeling of the figure.
-
-As one might expect of a shrine sacred to Apollo, there seems to have
-been an oracle of some repute here; for Cr[oe]sus, who was credulous in
-the extreme where oracles were concerned, sent hither for advice on
-various occasions, and dedicated a treasure here that was similar to the
-great wealth he bestowed upon the shrine at Delphi. Furthermore one
-Neco, who had been engaged in digging a canal to connect the Nile with
-the Red Sea,—a prototype of the Suez,—dedicated the clothes he wore
-during that period to the god at the temple of the Branchidæ. Thus while
-the site never attained the fame among Grecians that was accorded the
-Delphian, it nevertheless seems to have inspired a great deal of
-reverence among the inhabitants of Asia Minor and even of Egypt, which
-may easily account for the elaborate care the Branchidæ proposed to
-bestow and did bestow upon it.
-
-Our inspection of the temple and the surrounding town was the source of
-immense interest upon the part of the infantile population, of which the
-number is enormous. The entire pit around the excavations was lined
-three deep with boys and girls, the oldest not over fifteen, who
-surveyed our party with open-mouthed amazement. They escorted us to the
-city gates, and a small detachment accompanied us on the way back over
-the moor to the landing, hauling a protesting bear-cub, whose mother had
-been shot the week before somewhere in the mountains of Latmos by some
-modern Nimrod, and whose wails indicated the presence of a capable pair
-of lungs in his small and furry body. He was taken aboard and became the
-ship’s pet forthwith, seemingly content with his lot and decidedly
-partial to sweetmeats.
-
-The walk back over that vast and silent meadow in the twilight was one
-never to be forgotten. There was something mystical in the deserted
-plain, in the clumps of bushes taking on strange shapes in the growing
-dusk, in the great orb of the moon rising over the serrated tops of the
-distant mountains of the interior—and last, but not least, in the
-roaring fire which the boatmen had kindled on the rocks to indicate the
-landing place as the dark drew on. We pushed off, three boatloads of
-tired but happy voyagers, leaving the fire leaping and crackling on the
-shore, illuminating with a red glare the rugged rocks, and casting
-gigantic and awful shadows on the sea.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER XVI. COS AND CNIDOS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-From the little harbor where we had found shelter for our landing to
-visit Branchidæ it proved but a few hours’ steaming to Cos, which was
-scheduled as our next stopping place. Like Samos, Cos lies close to the
-Asia Minor shore. The chief city, which bears the same name as the
-island, unchanged from ancient times, proved to be a formidable looking
-place by reason of its great walls and moles, recalling the Cretan
-cities much more forcibly than the Samos town had done; for the
-yellowish-white fortresses which flank the narrow inner harbor of Cos
-resemble both in color and architecture the outworks that were thrown up
-to protect the ports of Candia and Canea. Later in the day it was borne
-in upon us that these walls were by no means uncommon in the vicinity,
-and that they bore witness to the visits of the Crusaders; for the great
-walls and castle at Halicarnassus not far away were very similar to the
-forts of Cos, and with the best of reasons, since they were the work of
-the same hands,—of the so-called “Knights of Rhodes,” who once settled
-in these regions and built strongholds that for those times were
-impregnable enough. Our next day or two brought us often in contact with
-the relics of these stout old knights, who were variously known as of
-Rhodes, or of St. John, and, last of all, of Malta. As far as Cos was
-concerned, the knightly fortress was chiefly remarkable from the water,
-as we steamed past the frowning battlements of buff and dropped anchor
-in the open roadstead before the city; for, as is generally the case
-with these old towns, there is at Cos no actual harborage for a steamer
-of modern draught, whatever might have been the case anciently when
-ships were small.
-
-The morning sun revealed the city itself spreading out behind the
-fortress, in a great splash of dazzling white amidst the green of the
-island verdure, its domes and minarets interspersed with the tops of
-waving trees. Behind the city, the land rose gradually to the base of a
-long range of green hills stretching off to the southward and into the
-interior of the island. It was easily the most fertile and agreeable
-land we had yet encountered in our Ægean pilgrimage, and so lovely that
-we almost forgot that it was Turkish and that we had been warned not to
-separate far from one another on going ashore for fear of complications
-and loss of the road. However it was Turkish, this time, pure and
-unadulterated, and the examination of our papers and passports was no
-idle formality, but was performed with owl-like solemnity by a local
-dignitary black-mustachioed and red-fezzed. While this was proceeding
-the members of our party stood huddled behind a wicket gate barring
-egress from the landing stage and speculated on the probability of being
-haled to the dungeons, which might easily be imagined as damp and gloomy
-behind the neighboring yellow walls of stone.
-
-The Sultan’s representative being fully satisfied that we might safely
-be permitted to enter the island, the gate was thrown back, and in a
-quaking body we departed through a stone arcade in which our feet echoed
-and reëchoed valiantly, past rows of natives sipping coffee and smoking
-the nargileh in the shade, and thence through a stone archway into a
-spacious public square, paved with cobble-stones and dominated by the
-most gigantic and venerable plane tree imaginable. Its enormous trunk
-stood full in the centre of the square, rising from a sort of stone
-dais, in the sides of which were dripping stone fountains, deeply
-incrusted with the green mildew of age. Overhead, even to the uttermost
-parts of the square, the branches spread a curtain of fresh green
-leaves. They were marvelous branches—great, gnarled, twisted limbs, that
-were as large in themselves as the trunk of a very respectable tree, and
-shored up with a forest of poles. Actual measurement of the
-circumference of the trunk itself revealed it to be something over forty
-feet in girth, and it was not difficult to believe the legend that this
-impressive tree really did date back to the time of Hippocrates, the
-great physician of Cos, who was born in the island long before the dawn
-of the Christian era. In any event, the great plane of Cos is called to
-this day the “tree of Hippocrates,” whether it has any real connection
-with that eminent father of medicine or not.
-
-[Illustration: TREE OF HIPPOCRATES. COS]
-
-We left the shady square by a narrow and roughly paved street, little
-wider than an alley and lined with whitewashed houses, closely set. It
-wound aimlessly along through the thickly settled portion of the city,
-and at last opened out into the country-side, where the houses grew
-fewer and other splendid trees became more numerous, generally shading
-wayside fountains, beside which crouched veiled native women gossiping
-over their water-jars. A pair of baggy-trousered soldiers went with us
-on the road, partly as overseers, no doubt, but chiefly as guides and
-protectors—the latter office proving quite needless save for the
-occasional expert kicking of a barking cur from some wayside hovel. They
-proved to be a friendly pair, although of course conversation with them
-was impossible, and a lively exchange of cigarettes and tobacco was kept
-up as we walked briskly along out of the city and into the open country
-that lay toward the hills. Their chief curiosity was a kind of
-inextinguishable match, which proved exceedingly useful for smokers
-bothered by the lively morning breeze. They were flat matches, seemingly
-made of rude brown paper such as butchers at home used to employ for
-wrapping up raw meat. The edges were serrated, and when once the match
-was lighted it burned without apparent flame and with but little smoke
-until the entire fabric was consumed.
-
-The object of this walk, which proved to be of something like three or
-four miles into the suburbs of Cos, was to view the remnants of the
-famous health temple, sacred, of course, to Asklepios. We found it
-situated on an elevation looking down across a smiling plain to the sea,
-with the white walls and roofs of Cos a trifle to one side. It was not a
-prospect to be forgotten. It was a bright day, but with sufficient haze
-in the air to give to the other islands visible across the intervening
-water an amethystine quality, and to make the distant summits in Asia
-Minor faint and ethereal. The nearer green of the fields, the purple of
-the sea, and the delicate hues of the islands and far-away peaks, held
-us for a long time before turning to the curious ruin of the temple,
-which, as usual, was less a temple than a hospital.
-
-Little remains of it, save for the foundations. Three enormous terraces,
-faced with flights of steps of easy grade, led up to the main sanctuary
-of the god, comparatively little of which remains to be seen. Various
-smaller buildings, shrines for allied divinities, porticoes for the
-sick, apartments for the priests, treasuries and the like, are readily
-distinguishable, and serve to reveal what an extensive establishment the
-health temple was in its time. Restorations of it, on paper, reveal it
-as having been probably most impressive, both architecturally and by
-reason of its commanding position, which was not only admirable by
-nature but accentuated by the long approach over the three successive
-terraces to the many-columned main building above.
-
-Of the numerous smaller structures lying about the precinct, the most
-curious and interesting were the subterranean treasuries—if that is the
-proper name for them—which have been discovered at the foot of the
-slope. They apparently consist of vaults in the earth, each covered over
-with a massive stone slab. The slab is removable, but only at great
-pains. A circular hole pierces it through the centre, suitable for
-dropping money or other valuables into the receptacle beneath and for
-inserting the tackle with which to lift the rock when the treasury was
-to be opened. The vast weight of the stone and the time required for
-raising it would have been ample guarantee against unauthorized visits
-to the treasury. Other theories accounting for these underground
-chambers and their curious coverings have been advanced—the most
-fantastic one being the supposition that these were the chambers devoted
-to housing the sacred serpents of the god, the holes serving for their
-emergence and for the insertion of food! But while the cult of Asklepios
-certainly does appear to have made use of the sacred snakes as a part of
-its mummery, it seems hardly likely that these subterranean cavities
-were used for any such purpose.
-
-As for the practice of medicine in Cos, it is widely believed to have
-been of a sensible and even of an “ethical” sort, largely devoid of mere
-reliance on idle superstition or religious formalism for its curative
-effects, though unquestionably employing these, as was not only the case
-in ancient times, but as even persists to-day in some localities of the
-archipelago. The religious ceremonies, which generally took the form of
-sleeping in the sacred precincts in the hope of being divinely healed,
-appear to have been supplemented at Cos by the employment of means of
-healing that were rudely scientific. Hippocrates, the most celebrated of
-the Coan physicians, has left abundant proof that he was no mere
-charlatan, but a common-sense doctor, whose contributions to medical
-science have not by any means entirely passed out of esteem. Reference
-has been made hitherto to the custom of depositing in the temple
-anatomical specimens representing the parts healed, as votive offerings
-from grateful patients—a custom which persists in the modern Greek
-church, as everybody who examines the altar-screen of any such church
-will speedily discover.
-
-The extreme veneration of Asklepios at Cos is doubtless to be explained
-by the fact that Cos was an Epidaurian colony; for the Epidaurians
-claimed that the healing god was born in the hills overlooking their
-valley in the Peloponnesus. At any rate the health temple at Cos and the
-great sanitarium at Epidaurus shared the highest celebrity in ancient
-times as resorts for the sick; and in each case there are traces to show
-that they were sites devoted not only to the worship of a deity, but to
-the ministration unto the ailing by physical means, as far as such means
-were then understood.
-
-Cos, however, was far from basing her sole claim to ancient celebrity on
-her physicians and hospitals. Her embroideries rivaled the more famous
-Rhodian work, and she was an early home of culture and resort of noted
-students, not only of medicine, but of rhetoric, grammar, poetry,
-philosophy, and science. Ptolemy II, otherwise known as Ptolemy
-Philadelphus, is known to have studied here, and it is not at all
-improbable that the Sicilian poet, Theocritus, was a fellow student with
-him. For it is known that Theocritus was a student at Cos at some time,
-and he was later summoned to Ptolemy’s Egyptian court, where he wrote
-the epithalamium for the unholy marriage between Philadelphus and his
-sister. Not a little of the present knowledge of ancient Cos is due to
-the writings that Theocritus left as the result of his student days in
-the island.
-
-The curator of antiquities in charge of the excavations at the
-Asklepeion took us in charge on our return walk and led us through the
-city to his own home, where, although we were on Turkish soil, we had a
-taste of real Greek hospitality. Our party was numerous enough to appall
-any unsuspecting hostess, but we were ushered into the great upper room
-of the house, with no trace of dismay on the part of the wife and
-daughter. It was a huge room, scrupulously neat and clean, and the forty
-or so included in our number found chairs ranged in line about the
-apartment, where we sat at ease examining the fragments that the curator
-had to show from the mass of inscriptions recovered from the temple.
-Meantime, after the national custom, the eldest daughter served
-refreshment to each in turn, consisting of preserved quince, glasses of
-mastika, and huge tumblers of water. It was a stately ceremony, each
-helping himself gravely to the quince from the same dish, and sipping
-the cordial, while the mother bustled about supplying fresh spoons. And
-with a general exchange of cards and such good wishes as were to be
-expressed in limited traveler’s Greek, we departed to the landing and
-again embarked.
-
-We designed to push on to Cnidos at once, and to climb the heights of
-that ancient promontory of Asia Minor in the late afternoon. But
-inasmuch as Halicarnassus, the native city of Herodotus, lay directly on
-the way, we sailed into its capacious harbor and out again without
-stopping, for the sake of such glance at the site as might be had from
-the water. The bay on which the city lies—it is now called Boudrun—is
-wonderfully beautiful, running well into the mainland, while the city
-itself, with its great white castle of the Knights of St. John as the
-central feature, lies at the inmost end. Of the castle we were able to
-get a very good view, going close enough to arouse the violent
-excitement of a gesticulating Turkish official who came out in a tiny
-boat, bravely decked with the crescent flag, to show us where to anchor
-if we so desired. The site of the famous Mausoleum was pointed out from
-the deck, and most of us were confident that we saw it, although it was
-not easy to find. The remains of this incomparably magnificent tomb,
-designed for King Mausolus, are, as everybody knows, to be seen in the
-British Museum to-day.
-
-It was but a few miles farther to the promontory of Cnidos, and we
-dropped anchor there in mid-afternoon, in one of the double bays for
-which the ancient naval station was famous. The bays are still separated
-by a narrow isthmus—the same which the ancients tried in vain to sever.
-The story goes that the drilling of the rocks caused such a flying of
-fragments as to endanger the eyes of the workmen, and the oracle when
-questioned dissuaded them from continuing the work, saying “Zeus could
-have made the land an island if he had intended so to do.” Hence the two
-little harbors remain, one on either side of the neck of land that juts
-into the sea. They were used as anchorage for triremes and merchant
-ships respectively, when Cnidos was a power in the world. To-day the
-spot is absolutely deserted, and we found both the diminutive bays
-devoid of all trace of life, until at evening a passing fisherman came
-in and made all snug for the night.
-
-[Illustration: CNIDOS, SHOWING THE TWO HARBORS]
-
-Above the waters of the harbor towered the commanding rock of the
-Cnidian acropolis, something like twelve hundred feet in height—a bare
-and forbidding rock, indeed. Of the town and the temples that once
-clustered along its base nothing was to be seen. Man has long ago
-abandoned this spot and left it absolutely untenanted save by memories.
-It was in ancient times a favorite haunt of Aphrodite, and three temples
-did honor to that goddess on the knolls above the sea. Here also stood
-the marble Aphrodite carved by Praxiteles, and esteemed his masterpiece
-by many. It was carried off to Constantinople centuries ago, and
-perished miserably in a fire in that city in 1641.
-
-Our three boatloads landed with no little difficulty on the abrupt rocks
-of the shore, being somewhat put to it to avoid sundry submerged
-boulders lying just off the land. It was a sharp scramble from the
-water’s edge to the narrow and ascending shelf above, on which the
-temples had stood. The ruins of them lay buried in tall grasses and in
-huge clumps of daisies, the latter growing in the most remarkable
-profusion. With a single sweep of the knife I cut a prodigious armful of
-them, and the dining saloon that night was made a perfect bower by the
-wild flowers that the returning party brought back with them.
-
-It was one of the days when the non-archæological section of the party
-hastily left the remnants of ancient greatness below and set out
-precipitately for a climb, for the prospect of a view from the
-overshadowing cliff above was promising. It proved the most formidable
-ascent that we undertook in all our Ægean cruising. Anciently there was
-a gradual ascent by means of a zigzag causeway to the fortified heights
-above, but the majority of us disregarded it and struck off up the steep
-toward the summit. It is not a wise plan for any but hardened climbers,
-for the slope soon became so sharp that it made one giddy to look back
-down the mountain, and the footing was often difficult because of the
-shelving stone and fragments of loose rock. Small bushes were the only
-growth, and they were often eagerly seized upon to give the needful
-purchase to lift us onward and upward. The summit, however, amply
-rewarded our toil. It was easier going toward the top, for we found the
-old road and rose more gradually toward the point where the ancient
-walls began.
-
-From the pinnacle of the rock the sweep of the view was indescribably
-fine. The sun was sinking rapidly to the horizon, illuminating the
-islands and the sea. The wind had dropped, the haze had disappeared, and
-the shore line of Asia Minor stretched away, clear cut, in either
-direction. We were practically at the southwest corner of the peninsula.
-The rugged headlands retreated to the north and to the east from our
-feet, while inland piled the impressive interior mountains rearing their
-snow-capped heads against the blue evening dusk. Over the Ægean, dark
-blue and violet islands rose from a sea of molten gold. At our feet lay
-the twin harbors and our steamer, looking like a toy ship, the thin
-smoke of her funnel rising in a blue wisp into the silent evening air.
-The fishermen from the tiny smack that had sought a night’s berth there
-had kindled a gleaming fire on the beach. Along the sharp spine of the
-promontory we could see the ancient line of wall, rising and falling
-along the summit and flanked here and there by ruined towers—a
-stupendous engineering work of a nation long dead. It was all
-impressively silent, and deserted save for ourselves. The course of
-empire had indeed taken its westward way and left once powerful Cnidos a
-barren waste.
-
-But the darkness coming suddenly in these latitudes at this season
-warned us to descend in haste to the fire that was signaling us from the
-landing, and we slipped and slid down the old causeway to the boats.
-That night the moon was at the full, and we sat late on the after-deck
-enjoying the incomparable brilliancy of the light on sea and cliffs,
-shining as of old on a time-defying and rock-bound coast, but on a coast
-no longer teeming with life and harbors no longer alive with ships. And
-at midnight the wheezing of the engines and the jarring of the screw
-gave notice that we were slipping out of the harbor of Cnidos and out
-into the sea, to Rhodes.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER XVII. RHODES
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-It was our purpose to land on Rhodes the isle, not at Rhodes the town.
-To visit the famous northern city where once stood the Colossus would
-have been highly agreeable had opportunity presented itself; but as it
-was we planned to coast along the southeasterly side of Rhodes and make
-our landing at the little less celebrated and probably even more
-picturesque site of Lindos. So in the morning we woke to find our vessel
-rolling merrily in a cross sea just off the entrance to the little bay
-that serves Lindos for a harbor,—a sea that stripped our breakfast table
-of its few dishes and converted the floor of the saloon into a sea of
-broken crockery. The waters of the bay proved calm enough when we had
-slid past the imposing promontory on which stood the acropolis of
-ancient Lindos, and felt our way across the rapidly shoaling waters to a
-safe anchorage. The water was of a wonderful clarity as well as of
-remarkable blueness, the bottom being visible for many fathoms and
-seeming much more shoal than was the case in fact. We were able to go
-quite close to shore before anchoring, and found ourselves in good
-shelter from the wind that was then blowing, although well outside the
-tiny inner port which lay at the foot of a steep bluff. Towering above
-the whole town stood the precipitous and seemingly inaccessible
-acropolis, its steep sides running down to the sea, the rich redness of
-the rock contrasting on the one hand with the matchless blue of the
-Ægean, and on the other with the pure whiteness of the buildings of the
-town. The summit of the promontory was crowned with the ruin of a castle
-of the Knights of Rhodes, who had once made this a famous stronghold in
-the Middle Ages. In fact the residence of the knights had obliterated
-the more ancient remnants of the classic period, which included a temple
-of Athena; and the work of exhuming the Greek ruins from under the
-débris of the Crusaders’ fortress was only just beginning when we landed
-there.
-
-From the ship, the most conspicuous object on the heights was the ruined
-castle of St. John, the portal of which, giving the sole means of access
-to the plateau on top of the promontory, was plainly to be seen as we
-sailed in. It gave the impression of yellowish-brown sandstone from
-below, a color which it shared with the goodly battlements that frowned
-down from all sides of the citadel, even where the abruptness of the
-declivity for something like three hundred feet made battlements a
-seeming work of supererogation. Nestling under the shadow of the mighty
-rock on the landward side lay the modern village of Lindos itself,
-apparently freshly whitewashed and gleaming in the sun wherever the rock
-failed to shelter it from the morning warmth. It was one of those
-marvelously brilliant days that have made the Greek atmosphere so
-famous—cloudless and clear, with that clearness that reveals distant
-objects so distinctly, yet so softly withal. As for the nearer
-prospects, they were almost trying to the eyes, under the forenoon glare
-beating down on that immaculate array of close-set white houses and
-shops.
-
-Our boats set off shoreward across a placid sheet of water that varied
-from a deep indigo at the ship to the palest of greens as it surged
-among the fringes of slippery rock along the foot of the bluff. The
-landing stage was but a narrow shelf of pebbly beach, from which a rough
-paved way led steeply up to the town just above the sea. The contrast of
-the blue sky and the white purity of the town was dazzling in the
-extreme, and the glare accounted in a measure for the veiled women and
-sore-eyed children we met in the courtyards of the town. Our own eyes
-soon ached sufficiently to make us walk in single file along the shady
-side of the high-walled streets, looking chiefly at the shadow and only
-occasionally at the houses and shops as we wound along into the heart of
-the village. But even these occasional glimpses revealed the most
-fascinating of little details in the local architecture, curious Gothic
-and Moorish windows surviving from a bygone day and ornamented with the
-border of “rope” pattern worked in the stone. Almost everything had been
-covered with the dazzling whitewash, save here and there a relic of
-former days which was allowed to retain the natural color of the native
-rock.
-
-In most of the cases the actual dwellings were set well back from the
-streets, which were extremely narrow and crooked. Between the highway
-and the house was invariably a tiny courtyard, screened from the view of
-passers by a lofty wall, always of white. The yards were occasionally to
-be peered into, however, through a gate left temptingly ajar. These
-diminutive courts were floored with pebble work in black and white
-designs throughout their extent, save where the matron of the house had
-a flower bed under cultivation. These beds and boxes of flowers were a
-riot of color and filled the air with fragrance, while the green foliage
-furnished a lively contrast with the dead white of the walls behind.
-
-In the doorways of the dwellings within could be seen groups of bashful
-women, and shy children hiding in their mothers’ skirts, who looked
-furtively at us as we stopped hesitatingly before their gates. Growing
-bolder we finally ventured to set foot within the courtyards now and
-then, charmed with the sweetness of the tiny gardens; and at length we
-made bold to enter and to walk over the pleasant firmness of the pebbly
-pavements of white and black tracery to the doorways, where the women
-gave a timid but welcoming good-day and bade us come in. The absence of
-men was notable. We were later told that the male population of Lindos
-was temporarily away, being largely employed in the construction of the
-great dam at Assouan, on the Nile; and that in consequence the women had
-practically the sole charge in Lindos at the time, which may have
-accounted for the immaculateness of everything. We were likewise told
-that in the evening a certain hour was reserved for the sole use of the
-women, who might be free to wander at will through the streets, chiefly
-to get water for their households, without fear of molestation. Lindos
-for the time was an Adamless Eden, and as spick and span a town as it
-would be possible to find on earth.
-
-The houses into which we were welcomed proved to be as clean within as
-without. The lower story apparently consisted as a general thing of a
-single great room, with possibly a smaller apartment back of it for
-cooking. This large room was the living room and sleeping room as well.
-The floor was scrubbed until its boards shone. The walls were of the
-universal white. On one side of the room—and occasionally on both
-sides—was to be seen a sort of dais, or elevated platform, which
-apparently served for the family bed. The bedding, including blankets
-and rugs of barbaric splendor, was neatly piled on the platform or hung
-over the railing of it. And it was here, according to all appearance,
-that the entire household retired to rest in a body at night, in
-harmonious contiguity.
-
-What interested us most of all, however, was the decoration of the
-rooms. Nearly every one that we entered was adorned with numerous plates
-hung on the wall in great profusion, seldom more than two being of the
-same pattern, and including all sorts of designs, from the valuable
-Rhodian down to the common “willow” patterns of our own grandmothers’
-collections at home. This heterogeneous array of plates puzzled us not a
-little at first. It was so universal among the householders, and
-representative of so wide a field of the ceramic art, that some
-explanation of the presence of these plates seemed necessary. Later it
-developed that the Rhodian custom has long been to mark the birth of
-each child by the addition of a plate to the family collection, the
-fewer duplicates the better. The agglomeration of these dishes that we
-saw represented the family trees for generations. Despite the connection
-presumably existing between the plates and the family history, however,
-we found the women not reluctant to part with specimens for a price, and
-we carried away not a few. The comparatively rare instances in which we
-found any of the genuine and celebrated Rhodian ware, however, proved
-that its great value was well known by the native women. Their prices in
-such cases proved prohibitive, especially in view of the risk of
-breakage involved in getting the plates home from so distant an island.
-These plates, notable for the beauty of their design and for the
-distinguishing rose pattern in the centre, are often to be found in
-museum collections, and their great rarity and consequent value unfits
-them for other uses than those of the collector. The few that we found
-in Lindos were to be had for prices equivalent to about eighty dollars
-apiece in our money, which seemed exorbitant until we were later told
-that even one hundred dollars would have been reasonable enough for some
-of the finer specimens. Indeed, it is getting to be rather unusual to
-find one of these for sale at all.
-
-There are opportunities enough, as we discovered, to purchase the famous
-Rhodian embroidery; but we were cautioned to leave the bargaining to
-experts familiar with values, for the infrequent visitor is almost
-certain to be imposed upon in any such transaction. These embroideries,
-or at least the older ones, are very elaborate creations of colored
-wools on a background of unbleached linen, the colors being remarkably
-rich and fresh despite their age, an age that is eloquently testified to
-by the stains and worn places in the cloth. The subject of Rhodian
-embroidery is a most interesting one, but too intricate and technical to
-be gone into here. The study of the growth of certain well-defined
-groups of conventionalized figures might well furnish material for a
-considerable body of literature, if it has not already done so. We were
-informed that the wealth of Rhodian embroidery was due to the ancient
-custom—which may still exist among the Rhodian girls—to begin the
-preparation of the nuptial gear at a tender age, they plying their
-needles almost daily, until by the time they are marriageable they have
-accumulated a surprising amount of bizarre blankets, cloths, and bits of
-finery for their dower chests.
-
-The leisurely progress through the town required some time, occupied as
-we were by frequent visits to the odd little houses in the quest of
-curious wares to carry away. And by the time we had reached the centre
-of the town, the hot sun made us glad indeed to step under a spacious
-arch, washed underneath with a sky-blue tint which was restful to our
-tired eyes, and thence to go into the cool and aromatic quiet of a very
-old Greek church, where the glare of the sun on the white buildings
-could be forgotten. Most notable of all the curious things shown us by
-the attendant priest was the quaintly carved roof, which, after so much
-excessive light out of doors, it was decidedly difficult to see at all
-in the grateful gloom of the church.
-
-We delayed but a little while there, for the acropolis above was the
-ultimate goal of our visit to the spot. Thither we were conducted by the
-Danish gentleman who had charge of the investigations being prosecuted
-there. The way led out of the dense buildings of the town and along the
-base of the overhanging cliff to the side toward the open sea, always
-upward and above the flat roofs of the little town below, until we came
-to the foot of the stairway of stone leading up through a defile in the
-rock to the arched portal of the castle on the height. It was a long
-flight of steps, one side against the smooth face of the rock, the other
-unprotected. And at the foot of the impressive approach to the citadel
-was one of the most interesting of the discoveries made on the site. It
-was a gigantic sculpture in bas-relief hewn out of the face of the cliff
-itself and representing, in “life size,” so to speak, the stern of an
-ancient trireme. The relief was sufficiently high to give a flat space
-on what was intended to be the deck of the ship, supposably as a
-pedestal for some statue which has disappeared. The curved end of the
-trireme with its sustaining bolt, the seat of the helmsman, and a blade
-of one of the oars, were still intact, and as a large representation of
-a classic ship the sculpture is doubtless unique, To all intents and
-purposes it is as perfect to-day as when the artists first carved it.
-
-[Illustration:
-
- SCULPTURED TRIREME IN ROCK AT LINDOS
- _From a Sketch by the Author_
-]
-
-In the grateful shade of the rock we sat and listened to the description
-of the archæological work done on the spot by the Danes, which has not,
-at this writing, been officially published, and therefore seems not
-proper matter for inexpert discussion here. One interesting fact,
-however, which we were told, was that, by means of certain records
-deciphered from tablets found on the acropolis, it had been possible to
-fix definitely the date of the statue of the Laocoön as a work of the
-first century before Christ. This was established by the list of the
-names of the priests, and of the sculptors who worked for them, at
-periods which it proved possible to fix with a remarkable degree of
-exactness.
-
-[Illustration: ARCHED PORTAL OF ACROPOLIS. LINDOS]
-
-We ascended to the height above, where we were permitted to wander at
-will among the ruins. As from below, the chief features were those of
-the medieval period, which had so largely swallowed up the temple of
-Athena. Nevertheless the excavators had restored enough of the original
-site from its covering of débris to reveal the vestiges of the old
-temple and an imposing propylæa, with traces enough in fragmentary form
-to enable making drawings of the structures as they probably appeared to
-the ancient eye. For the rest the chief interest centred in the relics
-of the abode of the knights. Just at the head of the grand entrance
-stairway was the tower which defended the acropolis on its one
-accessible side. The arched portal is very nearly perfect still, and one
-passes under it, across a sort of moat, by means of an improvised bridge
-of planks, where once, no doubt, a drawbridge served to admit or to bar
-out at the will of the Grand Master of the ancient commandery. Beyond
-the entrance hall lay a succession of vaulted halls and chambers leading
-around to the open precincts of the acropolis, the most evidently
-well-preserved buildings being the chapel of St. John and the house once
-occupied by the Grand Master himself. All were of the brownish native
-rock, and were unmistakably medieval in their general style of
-architecture. On the open terraces above the entrance, little remained
-to be seen save the heaps of débris and the faint traces of the classic
-temples. But most impressive of all was the sheer drop of the rock on
-all sides around the acropolis and the views off to sea and inland over
-Rhodes. The precipices everywhere, save at the entrance alone, fell away
-perpendicularly to the sea, which murmured two or three hundred feet
-below. Nevertheless, despite the evident hopelessness of ever scaling
-the height, the painstaking knights had built a wall with battlements
-all about, less serviceable as protecting the inhabitants against
-assault than for preserving them from falling over to a certain and
-awful death themselves. The drop on the landward side was considerably
-less, but quite as steep and quite as impregnable to would-be scaling
-parties. Even a few munitions of war, in the shape of rounded stones
-about the size of old-fashioned cannon balls seen in our modern military
-parks, were to be found about the summit.
-
-The views from this elevated height were superb, not only off across the
-sea to the mountainous land of Asia Minor, but inland toward the rocky
-interior of Rhodes herself. The land just across the little depression
-in which the white town lay, rose to another though less commanding
-height, in the slopes of which the excavator said they had but recently
-unearthed some ancient rock tombs. Beyond, the country rolled in an
-undulating sea of green hills—a pleasant land as always, and doubtless
-as flowery as of old when she took her name from the rose (rhodos) and
-when the wild pomegranate flower gave Browning’s “Balaustion” her
-nickname. As a colony of the Athenian empire she stood loyal to the
-Attic city down to 412 B.C., in those troublous days of the
-Peloponnesian war, when the star of Athens waned and most of the
-Rhodians at last revolted. Those who still clung to Athens probably went
-away as Balaustion did, and returned, if at all, only after Athens had
-been laid waste to the sound of the flute. Under the Roman domination
-Rhodes enjoyed a return to high favor, and Tiberius selected the smiling
-isle as his place of banishment. For siding with Cæsar, Cassius punished
-the island by plundering it. For centuries after, it was overrun by the
-Arabs; and from them it was taken by the Byzantines, who turned it over
-to the Knights of St. John, who took the new name of the Knights of
-Rhodes, fortified the spot as we saw, and held it for a long time
-against all comers, down to 1522, when the Sultan Solyman II. reduced
-it. It is still Turkish territory, and of the finds made by the
-archæologists on the site of Lindos, the great bulk have been sent to
-Constantinople, including several hundred terra cotta figurines. The
-zealous Turks, the excavators complained, had taken away their books on
-landing, with the result that they had led a lonely life of it, their
-only diversion being their labors on the acropolis.
-
-We had no chance to inspect the interior of the island, which other
-visitors have described in glowing colors as most attractive in the
-profusion of its almost tropic verdure and its growths of cactus,
-oleander, myrtle, figs, and pomegranates. Like Cos, Rhodes was an
-ancient seat of culture, greatly favored by students, and the site of a
-celebrated university. Æschines founded here a famous school of oratory,
-and in later years the institution was honored by the patronage of no
-less a personage than the Roman Cicero. Of these, of course, we saw no
-trace.
-
-Neither had we any opportunity to visit the ancient capital, “Rhodes the
-town,” which boasts the ruins of a very similar castle of the knights.
-As for the famous Colossus, which nearly everybody remembers first of
-all in trying to recall what were the wonders of the world, it no longer
-exists. But in passing one may remark that the notion that this gigantic
-statue bestrode the harbor has been exploded, destroying one of the most
-cherished delusions of childhood which the picture in the back of
-Webster’s Unabridged contributed not least of all in producing, in the
-past two generations.
-
-There were three celebrated cities in Rhodes in its golden age—Lindos,
-Ialysos, and Kameiros—which, with Cos, Cnidos, and Halicarnassus, formed
-the ancient Dorian “hexapolis,” or six cities, four of which it had been
-our good fortune to visit within the past two days. The city of Rhodes
-was formed comparatively late by inhabitants from the three original
-cities of the island, and became a prosperous and influential port. The
-inhabitants were seafaring people and developed a high degree of skill
-in navigation, with an interesting corollary in their code of maritime
-law, from which a faint survival is found in the doctrine of “general
-average” in our own admiralty practice, sometimes referred to as the
-Rhodian law, and having to do with the participation of all shippers in
-such losses as may be occasioned by throwing a part of the cargo
-overboard to save the whole from loss. To visit Kameiros and the
-interior would have been interesting but impossible, and we found our
-consolation for the inability to visit other Rhodian sites in the
-loveliness of Lindos, with its acropolis above and its pure white walls
-below, its gardens, its courtyards, and its collections of plates. And
-we left it with regret—a regret which was shared no doubt by the lonely
-Danish explorer whom we left waving adieu to us from the shore as we
-pulled away across the shallow waters of the harbor to the steamer, and
-turned our faces once more toward the west and that Athens of which
-Balaustion dreamed.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER XVIII. THERA
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-No island that we visited in our Ægean cruise was more interesting than
-Thera proved to be, when we had steamed across the intervening ocean
-from Rhodes and into the immense basin that serves Thera—or modern
-Santorin—for a harbor. No more remarkable harbor could well be
-conceived.
-
-If Vesuvius could be imagined to sink into Naples bay until there were
-left protruding only about a thousand feet of the present altitude; if
-the ocean should be admitted to the interior of the volcano by two great
-channels or fissures in the sides—one at the point where the ubiquitous
-Mr. Cook has—or did have—his funicular railway, and the other in the
-general locality represented by the ill-starred Bosco Trecase; and if
-the present awesome crater, into which so many thousand visitors have
-peered, should thus be filled throughout its extent by the cooling
-waters, so as to form a great and placid bay within the mountain,—then
-we should have an almost exact reproduction of what happened at Thera
-something like four thousand years ago. Furthermore, if we may add to
-our Vesuvian hypothesis the supposition that there be built along the
-eastern lip of the crater a long white town, stretching for perhaps a
-mile along the sharp spine of the summit, we should have an equally
-exact reproduction of what exists at Thera to-day.
-
-Thera lies at the end of the chain of submerged peaks that reveal the
-continuation of the Attic peninsula under the waters of the Ægean. The
-same rocky range of mountains that disappears into the sea at Sunium
-rises again and again as it stretches off to the southeast to form the
-islands of Cythnos, Seriphos, Siphnos, and their fellows, and the series
-closes, apparently, in the volcanic island of Santorin, under which name
-the moderns know the island which the ancients called successively
-Kallista (most beautiful) and Thera. Considering her beauty as an island
-and her comparative nearness to the mainland of Greece or to Crete,
-Thera is surprisingly little known. Historically Thera had small
-celebrity compared with her neighbors; but in every other way it seemed
-to us that she surpassed them all. Legend appears to have left the
-island comparatively unhonored, and poetry has permitted her to remain
-unsung. No Byron has filled high his bowl with Theran wine. No burning
-poetess lived or sang in her single tortuous street. No god of Olympus
-claimed the isle for his birthright. But for beauty of every kind, from
-the pastoral to the sublimely awful, Thera has no fellow in the Ægean;
-and for extraordinary natural history and characteristics, it is
-doubtful if it has a fellow in the world. For it is a sunken volcano,
-with a bottomless harbor, where once was the centre of fiery activity,—a
-harbor, rimmed about with miles of encircling precipices, on the top of
-one of which lies the town of Thera, a thousand feet straight up above
-the sea, and reachable only by a steep and winding mule track which
-connects it with the diminutive landing stage below.
-
-[Illustration: Santorin]
-
-There appears to be a wide divergence of opinion as to the exact date
-when the original mountain was blown to pieces and sunk in the ocean,
-but it may be roughly stated to have occurred in the vicinity of the
-sixteenth century before Christ, although some authorities incline to
-believe the eruption to have come to pass at a still earlier period. As
-to the inhabitants before the time of that extraordinary upheaval,
-little is known save what may be gleaned from a multitude of pottery
-vases left behind by those early settlers, and bearing ornamentation of
-a rude sort that stamps them as belonging to the remote pre-Mycenæan
-age, the age that preceded the greatness of Agamemnon’s city and the
-sack of Troy. It seems entirely probable that the early Therans were
-from Ph[oe]nicia, and tradition says that they came over under the
-leadership of no less a personage than Cadmus himself. What we know for
-a certainty, however, is that at some prehistoric time the original
-volcano underwent a most remarkable change and subsided, with a blaze of
-glory that can hardly be imagined, into the waters of the Ægean, until
-only the upper rim and three central cones are now to be seen above the
-water’s edge. Through two enormous crevices torn in the northern and
-southern slopes the irresistible ocean poured into the vast central
-cavity, cooling to a large extent the fiery ardor of the mountain and
-leaving it as we found it, a circle of frowning cliffs, nearly a
-thousand feet in height and something like eighteen miles in periphery,
-inclosing a placid and practically bottomless harbor in what was once
-the volcano’s heart, the surface of the bay pierced by only three
-diminutive islands, once the cones of the volcano, and not entirely
-inert even to-day. In fact one of these central islands appeared as
-recently as 1866 during an eruption that showed the fires of Santorin
-not yet to be extinguished by any means—a fact that is further testified
-to by the heat of certain portions of the inclosed waters of the basin.
-
-[Illustration: LANDING-PLACE AT THERA]
-
-Into this curious harbor our little chartered ship glided in the early
-light of an April morning, which dimly revealed the walls of forbidding
-stone towering high above in cliffs of that black, scarred appearance
-peculiar to volcanic formation, marred by the ravages of the ancient
-fires, yet none the less relieved from utter sullenness here and there
-by strata of rich red stone or by patches of grayish white tufa.
-Nevertheless it was all sombre and forbidding, especially in the early
-twilight; for the sun had not yet risen above the horizon, much less
-penetrated into the cavernous depths of Thera’s harbor. High above,
-however, perched on what looked like a most precarious position along
-the summit of the cliff, ran the white line of the city, already
-catching the morning light on its domes and towers, but seeming rather a
-Lilliputian village than a habitation of men; while far away to the
-north, on another portion of the crater wall, a smaller city seemed
-rather a lining of frost or snow gathered on the crater’s lip.
-
-A few shallops made shift to anchor close to the foot of the precipice,
-where a narrow submarine shelf projects sufficiently to give a
-precarious holding ground for small craft; and near them were grouped a
-few white buildings showing duskily in the morning half-light and
-serving to indicate the landing stage. In the main, however, there is
-little anchorage in the entire bay, which is practically bottomless. No
-cable could fathom the depth of the basin a few rods off shore, and
-fortunately none is needed, since the shelter is perfect. The steamer
-held her own for hours by a mere occasional lazy turning of her screw.
-To the southward lay the broad channel through which our ship had
-entered, and to the north lay the narrow passage through which at
-nightfall we proposed to depart for Athens. Everywhere else was the
-encircling wall of strangely variegated rock, buttressed here and there
-by enormous crags of black lava, which sometimes seemed to strengthen it
-and sometimes threatened to fall crashing to the waters directly below.
-Indeed landslides are by no means uncommon in Thera, and several persons
-have been killed even at the landing place by masses of stone falling
-from above.
-
-As the light increased at the base of the cliff, it became possible to
-see the donkey track leading in a score or more of steep windings up the
-face of the rock from the landing to the city high above, arched here
-and there over old landslips or ravines, while near by were to be seen
-curious cave-dwellings, where caverns in the tufa had been walled up,
-provided with doors and windows, and inhabited.
-
-There was some little delay in landing, even after our small boats had
-set us ashore on the narrow quay, slippery with seaweed and covered with
-barnacles. We were herded in a rather impatient group behind a row of
-shore boats drawn up on the landing stage, and detained there until
-“pratique” had been obtained, which entitled us to proceed through the
-devious byways of the tiny village close by to the beginning of the
-ascent. The wharf was covered with barrels, heaps of wood, carboys
-covered with wicker, and all the paraphernalia to be expected of the
-port of a wine-exporting, water-importing community; for Thera has to
-send abroad for water, aside from what she is able to collect from the
-rains, and also relies largely on her neighbors for wood. There are
-almost no native trees and no springs at all; and one French writer
-apparently has been greatly disturbed by this embarrassing difficulty,
-saying, “One finds there neither wood nor water, so that it is necessary
-to go abroad for each—and yet to build ships one must have wood, and to
-go for water ships are necessary!”
-
-On emerging from the cluster of small buildings at the base of the cliff
-and entering upon the steep path which leads to the city above, we at
-once encountered the trains of asses that furnish the only means of
-communication between the village of Thera above and the ships
-below—asses patiently bearing broad deck-loads of fagots, or of boards,
-or of various containers useful for transporting liquids. It was easily
-possible to hire beasts to ride up the winding highway to Thera, but as
-the grade was not prohibitive and as the time required for a pedestrian
-to ascend was predicted to be from twenty minutes to half an hour, these
-were voted unnecessary, especially as it was still shady on the bay side
-of the cliff and would continue so for hours. So we set out, not too
-briskly, up the path. It proved to be utterly impracticable for anything
-on wheels, being not only steep but frequently provided with the broad
-steps so often to be seen in Greek and Italian hill towns, while it was
-paved throughout with blocks of basalt which continual traffic had
-rendered slippery in the extreme. The slipperiness, indeed, renders the
-ascent to Thera if anything easier than the coming down, for on the
-latter journey one must exercise constant care in placing the feet and
-proceed at a pace that is anything but brisk, despite the downward
-grade.
-
-[Illustration: THERA]
-
-The only care in going up was to avoid the little trains of donkeys with
-their projecting loads and their mischievous desire to crowd pedestrians
-to the parapet side of the road, a propensity which we speedily learned
-to avoid by giving the beasts as wide a berth as the constricted path
-would allow, choosing always the side next the cliff itself; for the
-sheer drop from the parapet soon became too appalling to contemplate as
-the way wound higher and higher, turn after turn, above the hamlet at
-the landing. The view speedily gained in magnificence, showing the bay
-in its full extent, with the two entrance channels far away and the
-detached portion of the opposite crater wall, now called Therasia, as if
-it were, as it appears to be, an entirely separate island of a small
-local archipelago, instead of one homogeneous but sunken mountain.
-Directly below lay the landing stage with its cluster of white
-warehouses, the scattered cave-dwellings, and the tiny ships moored
-close to the quay—small enough at close range, but from this height like
-the vessels in a toy-shop. So precipitous is the crater wall that one
-could almost fling a pebble over the parapet and strike the settlement
-at the foot of the path. The varying colors of the rock, when brought
-out by the growing sunlight, added a sombre liveliness to the view, the
-red tones of the cliff preponderating over the forbidding black of the
-lava, while here and there a long gash revealed the ravages of a
-considerable landslip.
-
-It was, indeed, a half-hour’s hard climb to Thera. But when the town did
-begin, it stole upon us ere we were aware, isolated and venturesome
-dwellings of the semi-cave type dropping down the face of the cliff to
-meet the highway winding painfully up, these in turn giving place to
-more pretentious dwellings with flat or domed roofs, all shining with
-immaculate whitewash and gleaming in the morning sun, in sharp contrast
-with the dark rocks on which they had their foundation. The scriptural
-architect who built his house upon the sand might well have regarded
-that selection as stable and secure compared with some of these Theran
-dwellings; for although they are founded upon a rock and are in some
-cases half sunk in it, there seems to be little guarantee that the rock
-itself may not some day split off and land them down among the ships.
-
-When the winding path finally attained the summit, it was found to
-debouch into a narrow public square, flanked by the inevitable museum of
-antiquities and a rather garish church; the latter painfully new, and,
-like all Greek houses of worship, making small pretense of outward and
-visible signs of inward and spiritual grace. It may be sacred to St.
-Irene, and very likely is, for the island takes its modern name from
-that saint and boasts innumerable shrines to her memory. We take credit
-to ourselves that, although Thera called loudly with manifold charms, we
-first sought the sanctuary; but to our shame we did not remain there
-long. A venerable priest, perspiring under a multitude of gorgeous
-vestments, was officiating in the presence of a very meagre
-congregation, composed of extremely young boys and a scant choir.
-Fortunately for our peace of mind, this particular church’s one
-foundation was on the side of the square away from the precipice, giving
-a sense of security not otherwise to be gained. But the mountain, even
-on its gentler side, is far from being gradual, and is only less steep
-than toward the inner basin. The “blessed mutter of the mass” in Greek
-is so unintelligible to foreign ears that it soon drove us forth into
-the air outside and then to the little museum next door, where were
-displayed the rather overwhelming antiquities of the place,—mainly vases
-that had been made and used long before the eruption which destroyed the
-island’s original form so many thousand years before. Many of these were
-graceful in form, and some are in quite perfect preservation despite
-their fragility and the enormous lapse of time, revealing still the rude
-efforts of the early artist’s brush in geometric patterns, lines,
-angles, and occasionally even primitive attempts to represent animal
-shapes. Doubtless these relics are no more ancient than those to be seen
-by the curious in the palace of Minos in Crete, and are paralleled in
-antiquity by pottery remnants in other pre-Mycenæan sites; but for some
-reason the lapse of ages since they were made and used comes home to one
-with more reality in Thera than elsewhere, I suppose because of the
-impressive story of the eruption at such a hazy distance before the dawn
-of recorded history. So overpowering did these silent witnesses of a
-bygone day prove, that we disposed of them with a celerity that would
-have shocked an archæologist, and betook ourselves straightway to the
-modern town without, which ran temptingly along the ridge of the summit
-northward, presenting, like Taormina, a single narrow street lined with
-the whitest of shops and dwellings, with here and there narrow byways of
-steps leading up or down, as the case might be, to outlying clusters of
-buildings. This main thoroughfare, hardly wider than a city sidewalk,
-follows the uneven line of the mountain top, winding about and dodging
-up and down, sometimes by inclined planes and sometimes by flights of
-steps, such as are common enough in side streets of Italian or Greek
-hill towns.
-
-From the higher points the city presented a sea of undulating white, the
-roofs divided almost evenly between the flat, parapeted style, designed
-to catch the falling rain, which is doubly precious in the island, and
-the dome, or half-barrel style, which bears witness to the local
-scarcity of timber, making necessary this self-supporting arch of
-cement. Thus over and over again is the lack of wood and water brought
-to mind. At a turn in the main street there disclosed itself a
-fascinating vista of white walls, inclosing neat courtyards,
-pebble-paved in black and white after the island manner, and framing in
-the distance a many-arched campanile in clear relief against the
-brilliant sky, the glare of the whiteness mitigated by the strong
-oblique shadows and the bronze green of the bells.
-
-[Illustration: A THERAN STREET]
-
-Two things prevented our tarrying in Thera indefinitely. One was the
-urgent need of returning to our steamer and pursuing our cruise through
-the Ægean; the other was the lack of suitable lodging. However, it is
-likely that the latter would have proved anything but an insuperable
-obstacle if tested by an irresistible force of intrepid determination,
-for lodging we could have found, despite the fact that Thera boasts no
-hotel. Wandering along the street and stopping now and then to inspect
-the curious wayside shops, or to gaze in wonder through gaps in the
-walls of dwellings at the incredible gulf yawning beyond and beneath, we
-came suddenly upon a coffee-house which completed our capture. The
-proprietor, as it developed, spoke Italian enough to give us common
-ground, ushered us out upon a balcony that looked toward the water, and
-produced a huge flagon of the wine of the country. Ah, the wine of the
-country! It was yellow. It was not sickish sweet, like the Samian that
-Byron praised so. It was warming to the midriff and made one charitable
-as one sipped. Overhead flapped a dingy awning in the lazy western
-breeze. Below wound the donkey path, with its trains of asses silently
-ascending and descending through the shimmering heat of the April
-morning. Far, far beneath, and indeed almost directly at our feet, lay
-the toy-ships and the steamer, close by the little hamlet of the landing
-stage, where tiny people, like ants, scurried busily, but at this
-distance made no sound. Across the sea of rising and falling roofs came
-the tinkle of an insistent church bell, calling the congregation of some
-church of St. Irene. Bliss like this is cheap at three drachmas, with a
-trifling addition of Greek coppers for good-will! It was on this narrow
-balcony overlooking the bay that we fell in love with Thera. Before we
-had been merely prepossessed.
-
-The Greek word for hotel sounds suspiciously like “Senator Sheehan” in
-the mouth of the native, as we had long ago learned; so we instituted
-inquiry as to that feature of the town, in the hope some day of
-returning thither for a more extended stay, with opportunity to explore
-the surrounding country. A distant and not unpromising edifice was
-pointed out, a coffee-house like our own, but provided with a large room
-where rather dubious beds were sometimes spread for the weary, according
-to our entertainer; and it may be that his shrug was the mere product of
-professional jealousy. Inexorable fate, however, decreed that we should
-not investigate, but content ourselves with rambling through the town
-from end to end, enjoying its quaint architecture, its white walls
-relieved only by touches of buff or the lightest of light blues, its
-incomparable situation on this rocky saddle, and its views, either into
-the chasm of the harbor or outward across the troubled expanse of the
-Ægean to other neighboring islands.
-
-At the north end of the city, where the houses ceased and gave place to
-the open ridge of the mountain, there stood an old mill, into the
-cavernous depths of which we were bidden enter by an aged crone. It
-revealed some very primitive machinery, the gearing being hewn out of
-huge slices of round logs in which rude cogs were cut. Just outside
-stood a sooty oven, for the miller not only ground the neighborhood
-corn, but converted it into bread. Beyond the mill there was nothing in
-the way of habitation, although on a distant bend of the crater there
-was visible a white patch of basalt that bore the appearance of a
-populous city with towers and battlements. Still farther to the north,
-at the cape next the channel out to sea, lies an inconsiderable town,
-similarly situated on the ridge, while along the bay to the south are
-occasional settlements and windmills. But Thera town is the only
-congested centre of population.
-
-In attempting to analyze the impression that Thera made on us, we have
-come to the conclusion that its chief charm, aside from its curious
-position, is its color; and that the difficulty of describing it is due
-in large part to the inability to paint in words the amazing contrasts
-of rock, city, and sky, not to mention the sea. One may depict, although
-feebly, the architectural charm, with the aid of his camera, or, if duly
-gifted, may chant the praise of Theran wine. With the aid of geological
-statistics one may tell just how the mountain would appear if we could
-draw off the ocean and expose its lower depths, leaving a circle of
-mountain inclosing a three-thousand foot cup, and jagged central cones.
-One might, by a superhuman effort, do justice to the importunity of the
-begging children of the town. But to give a true account of Thera
-demands the aid of the artist with his pigments, while best of all is a
-personal visit, involving little time and trouble to one visiting
-Greece—little trouble, that is to say, in comparison with the charms
-that Thera has to show. And it is safe to say that every such visitor
-will pick his way gingerly down over the slippery paving stones to the
-landing below with a poignant sense of regret at leaving this beauty
-spot of the Ægean, and sail out of the northern passage with a sigh,
-looking back at the lights of Thera, on the rocky height above the bay,
-mingling their blinking points with the steady stars of the warm
-Mediterranean night.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER XIX. NIOS; PAROS;
- A MIDNIGHT MASS
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-We spent Easter Sunday at Paros. It proved to be a mild and not
-especially remarkable day in the local church, which was old and quaint
-and possessed of many highly interesting features within and without, of
-which we must speak later on, for some of its portions date back to the
-pagan days. Its floor was littered with the aromatic leaves which had
-been dropped and trampled under foot the night before by the worshipers
-at the midnight mass; for it appeared that the chief observance of the
-feast in the Greek church was on the night before Easter, rather than on
-the day itself. Indeed we ourselves had been so fortunate, on the
-previous evening, as to attend this quaint nocturnal ceremony at the
-neighboring island of Ios, or Nios, as it is variously called.
-
-Our little ship, as is the usual custom among the Greeks, had a shrine
-in the end of its saloon, with an icon, and a lamp was perpetually
-burning before it. The Greek takes his religion seriously, and makes it
-a part of his life afloat and ashore, it would seem. On Good Friday, for
-example, our national flag was lowered to half-mast and kept there in
-token of mourning for the crucified Lord, until the church proclaimed
-His rising from the dead, when it once again mounted joyously to the
-peak. The men seemed religiously inclined, and it was in deference to a
-request of the united crew, preferred while we lay in the harbor of
-Santorin, that it was decided to run north from that island to Nios,
-which was not far away and which possessed one of the best harbors in
-the Ægean, in order that the native sailors and the captain might
-observe the churchly festival according to custom—a request that was the
-more readily granted because we were all rather anxious to see the
-Easter-eve ceremony at its climax. Those who had witnessed it in
-previous years vouched for it as highly interesting, and such proved to
-be the fact; for between the ceremony itself and the excitement of
-reaching the scene, this evening furnished one of the most enjoyable of
-all our island experiences.
-
-In reply to questions touching upon the remoteness of the church at Nios
-from the landing, the second officer, who spoke Italian, had assured us
-with a high disregard of the truth that it was “vicino! vicino!” It was
-pitch dark before we neared Nios, however, and as the moon was due to be
-late in rising that night we got no warning glimpse of the land, but
-were made aware of its approach only by a shapeless bulk in the dark
-which suddenly appeared on either hand, the entrance to the harbor being
-vaguely indicated by a single light, past which we felt our way at
-little more than a drifting pace until we were dimly conscious of hills
-all about, half-guessed rather than visible in the gloom. Then, faint
-and far away, we began to hear the clamor of the village bells, rung
-with that insistent clatter so familiar to those acquainted with
-southern European churches. That their notes sounded so distant gave us
-some idea at the outset that the mate’s “vicino” might prove to be a
-rather misleading promise, but very little was to be told by the sound,
-save that the churches from which the bells were pealing lay off
-somewhere to the right and apparently up a hill. Light there was none,
-not even a glimmer; and our three dories put off for the shore over an
-inky sea in becoming and decorous silence, toward the point where a
-gloom even more dense than the sky showed that there was land. The
-effect of it all was curious and had not a little of solemnity in it, as
-we groped our way to shore with careful oars and then felt about in the
-dark for the landing. The forward boat soon announced that some stone
-steps leading upward from the water had been found, and the rowers
-immediately raised a shout for lights, as one by one we were handed up
-the slimy stairs to the top of a broad stone quay, on which some white
-buildings could be dimly seen. A lantern did materialize mysteriously
-from some nook among the ghostly houses, and came bobbing down to the
-water’s edge, serving little purpose, however, save to make the rest of
-the darkness more obscure. By its diminished ray the party were
-assembled in a compact body, and received admonition to keep together
-and to follow as closely as possible the leader, who bore the light.
-
-These instructions, while simple enough to give, proved decidedly
-difficult to follow. The moon was far below the horizon, and the stars,
-while numerous and brilliant, gave little aid to strangers in a strange
-land, who could see no more than that they were on a deserted pier
-flanked by dim warehouses, and a long distance from the bells which were
-calling the devout to midnight prayer. The lantern set off along the
-flagstones of the deserted hamlet; and after it in single file clattered
-the rest of us, keeping up as best we could. We emerged in short order
-from the little group of huts by the wharf and came out into a vast and
-silent country, where all was darker than before, save where the leading
-lantern pursued its fantastic way upward over what turned out to be a
-roughly paved mule track leading into a hill. Like most mule tracks, it
-mounted by steps, rather than by inclines, and the progress of the long
-file of our party was slow and painful, necessitating frequent halts on
-the part of the guide with the lantern, while a warning word was
-constantly being passed back along the stumbling line of pedestrians as
-each in turn stubbed his toes over an unlooked-for rise in the grade.
-There was little danger of wandering off the path, for it was bordered
-by high banks. The one trouble was to keep one’s feet and not to stumble
-as we climbed in the dark, able scarcely to see one another and much
-less to see anything of the path. The bells ceased to ring as we
-proceeded, and even that dim clue to the distance of the town was lost.
-Decidedly it was weird, this stumbling walk up an unknown and
-unfrequented island path in the dead of night; for it was long past
-eleven of the clock, and the Easter mass, as we knew, should reach its
-most interesting point at about twelve. Knowing this we made such haste
-as we could and the little town of Nios stole upon us ere we were aware,
-its silent buildings of gray closing in upon the road and surrounding us
-without our realizing their presence, until a sudden turning of the way
-caused the lantern far ahead to disappear entirely from our view in the
-mazes of the town.
-
-It was as deserted as the little wharf had been. Moreover it was as
-crooked as it was dark. Here and there an open doorway gave out across
-the way a single bar of yellow light, but most of the habitations were
-as silent as the tomb, their owners and occupants being in church long
-before. On and on through a seeming labyrinth of little streets we
-wound, the long thread of the party serving as the sole clue to the way,
-as did Ariadne’s cord; for the lantern was never visible to the rear
-guard now, owing to the turns and twists of the highway. Twice we met
-belated church-goers coming down from side paths with their tiny
-lanterns, and the utter astonishment on their faces at beholding this
-unexpected inundation of foreigners at that unearthly hour of night was
-as amusing as it was natural. Once the thread of the party was broken at
-a corner, and for an anxious moment there was a council of war as to
-which street to take. It was a lucky guess, however, for a sudden turn
-brought the laggards out of the obscurity and into a lighted square
-before the doors of the church itself—a tiny church, white walled and
-low roofed, and filled apparently to its doors, while from its open
-portals trickled the monotonous chant of a male choir, the voices always
-returning to a well-marked and not unmelodious refrain.
-
-In some mysterious way, room was made for us in the stifling church,
-crowded as it was with men and women. Candles furnished the only light.
-On the right a choir of men and boys, led by the local schoolmaster,
-chanted their unending, haunting minor litany. An old and bespectacled
-priest peered down over the congregation from the door of the
-iconostasis. Worshipers came and went. The men seemed especially devout,
-taking up the icon before the entrance and kissing it passionately and
-repeatedly. On each of us as we entered was pressed a slender taper of
-yellow wax, perhaps a foot in length, and we stood crowded in the little
-auditorium holding these before us expectantly, and regarded with lively
-and good-humored curiosity by the good people within. Presently the
-priest came forward from the door of the altar-screen with his candle
-alight, which was the signal for an excited scramble by a dozen small
-boys nearest him to get their tapers lighted first—after which the fire
-ran from candle to candle until everybody bore his tiny torch; and
-following the old priest, we all trooped out into the square before the
-church, where the service continued.
-
-That was a sight not easily to be forgotten—the tiny square, in the
-centre of which stood the catafalque of Christ, while all around stood
-the throng of worshipers, each bearing his flaring taper, the whole
-place flooded with a yellow glow. The monotone of the service continued
-as before. The gentle night breeze sufficed now and then to put out an
-unsheltered candle here and there, but as often as this occurred the
-bystanders gave of their fire, and the illumination was renewed as often
-as interrupted.
-
-The quaint service culminated with the proclamation of the priest that
-Christ had risen,—"Christos anéste,"—at which magic words all restraint
-was thrown off and the worshipers abandoned themselves to transports of
-holy joy. A stalwart man seized the bell-rope that dangled outside the
-church and rang a lively toccata on the multiple bells above, while
-exuberant boys let fly explosive torpedoes at the walls of neighboring
-houses, making a merry din after the true Mediterranean fashion; for the
-religious festivals of all southern countries appear to be held fit
-occasions for demonstrations akin unto those with which we are wont to
-observe our own national birthday. We were soon aware that other
-churches of the vicinity had reached the “Christos anéste” at about the
-same hour, for distant bells and other firecrackers and torpedoes
-speedily announced the rising of the Lord.
-
-Doubtless a part of the Easter abandon is due to the reaction from the
-rigorous keeping of Lent among the Greeks, as well as to a devout
-sentiment that renews itself annually at this festival with a fervor
-that might well betoken the first novel discovery of eternal salvation
-as a divine truth. The Greek Lent is an austere season, in which the
-abstinence from food and wine is astonishingly thorough. Indeed, it has
-been reported by various travelers in Hellas in years past that they
-were seriously inconvenienced by the inability they met, especially in
-Holy Week, to procure sufficient food; for the peasantry were
-unanimously fasting, and unexpected wayfarers in the interior could find
-but little cheer. The native manages to exist on surprisingly little
-sustenance during the forty days. On the arrival of Easter it is not
-strange that he casts restraint to the winds and manifests a delight
-that is obviously unbounded. However, it need not be inferred from this
-that undue license prevails, for this apparently was not the case—not in
-Nios, at any rate. The service, after the interruption afforded by bells
-and cannonading, resumed its course, and was said to endure until three
-o'clock in the morning; a fact which might seem to indicate that the
-Easter pleasuring was capable of a decent restraint and postponement,
-although the Lord had officially risen and death was swallowed up in
-victory.
-
-Our own devotion was not equal to the task of staying through this long
-mass, as it was already well past the midnight hour, and we had made a
-long and strenuous day of it. So, with repeated exchanges of “Christos
-anéste” between ourselves and the villagers, we set out again through
-the narrow byways of the town, and down over the rough mule path to the
-ship, each of us bearing his flaring taper and shielding it as well as
-possible from the night wind; for the sailors were bent on getting some
-of that sacred flame aboard alive, and in consequence saw to it that
-extinguished candles were promptly relighted lest we lose altogether the
-precious fire. We made a long and ghostly procession of winking lights
-as we streamed down over the hillside and out to the boats—a fitting
-culmination to one of the most curious experiences which the Ægean
-vouchsafed us.
-
-We found the “red eggs” peculiar to the Greek Easter awaiting us when we
-came aboard—eggs, hard-boiled and colored with beet juice or some
-similar coloring matter, bowls of which were destined to become a
-familiar sight during the week or two that followed the Easter season.
-The Greeks maintain that this is a commemoration of a miracle which was
-once performed to convince a skeptical woman of the reality of the
-resurrection. She was walking home, it seems, with an apron full of eggs
-which she had bought, when she met a friend whose countenance expressed
-unusual rejoicing, and who ran to meet her, crying, “Have you heard the
-news?” “Surely not,” was the reply. “What is this news?” “Why, Christ
-the Lord is risen!” “Indeed,” responded the skeptic, "that I cannot
-believe; nor shall I believe it unless the eggs that I carry in my apron
-shall have turned red." And red they proved to be when she looked at
-them!
-
-Owing to the exhaustion due to the festivities of the night before, we
-found Easter Sunday at Paros a quiet day indeed. The streets of the
-little town proved to be practically deserted, for it was a day of
-homekeeping, and no doubt one of feasting. The occasional vicious snap
-of a firecracker was to be heard as we landed on the mole that serves
-the chief town of Paros for a wharf and started for a short Sunday
-morning ramble through the streets. From the landing stage the most
-conspicuous object in Paros was a large white church not far from the
-water, rejoicing in the name of the “Virgin of a Hundred Gates,” as we
-were told we should interpret the epithet “hekatonpyliani.” It proved to
-be a sort of triple church, possessing side chapels on the right and
-left of the main auditorium, and almost as large. In that at the right
-was to be seen a cruciform baptismal font, very venerable and only a
-little raised from the level of the floor, indicating the uses to which
-this apartment of the church was put. The presence of ancient marble
-columns incorporated into this early Christian edifice was likewise
-striking. In the main church the most noticeable thing was the
-employment of a stone altar-screen, or iconostasis, with three doors
-leading into the apse behind instead of the customary single one, an
-arrangement which has often been commented upon as resembling the
-proskenion of the ancient theatre. It was all deserted, and the air was
-heavy with old incense and with the balsamic perfume of the leaves and
-branches that had fallen to the floor and been trampled upon during the
-mass of the previous night. It was all very still, very damp and cool,
-and evidently very old, doubtless supplanting some previous pagan
-shrine.
-
-In the court before the church stood a sort of abandoned monastery, as
-at the pass of Daphne, only this one was spotless white, and with its
-walls served to shut in completely the area in front of the church
-itself. In a portion of the buildings of this inclosure is a small
-museum, chiefly notable for inscriptions, one of which refers to
-Archilochus, the writer of Iambic verse, who lived in Paros in the
-seventh century before the birth of Christ.
-
-[Illustration: OLD COLUMNS IN CHURCH. PAROS]
-
-The chief fame of Paros was, of course, for its marbles. The quarries
-whence these superb blocks came lay off to the northeast, we were aware;
-and had time only allowed, they might have been explored with profit.
-The Parian marble was the favorite one for statues, owing to its
-incomparable purity and translucence, and the facility with which it
-could be worked up to a high finish. It was quarried under ground, and
-thus derived its designation, “lychnites,” or “quarried-by-candlelight.”
-Those who have visited the subterranean chambers formed by the men who
-anciently took marble from the spot relate that the exploration of the
-quarries is fraught with considerable interest and with not a little
-danger, owing to the complex nature of the galleries and the varying
-levels.
-
-In wandering around the little modern town which occupies the site of
-the ancient city of Paros, and bears the name of Paroikia, we found not
-a little color to delight the eye, although the streets were generally
-rather muddy and squalid. On the southerly side of the harbor, where the
-basic rock of the island rises to a considerable height, there was
-anciently a small acropolis, which is still crowned with a rather
-massive tower built by the Franks out of bits of ancient marble
-structures. From the outside, the curious log-cabin effect caused by
-using marble columns for the walls, each drum laid with ends outward,
-was most apparent and striking. Within we found a tiny shrine, deserted
-as the great church had been, but still giving evidence of recent
-religious activity. Aside from the remnants of old temples, serving as
-the marble logs of this Frankish stronghold, there seemed to be little
-in Paros to recall the days when she was one of the richest of all the
-Athenian tributaries. A few prehistoric houses have been uncovered and
-several ancient tombs. But the most lasting of all the classic monuments
-are the quarries, now deserted, but still revealing the marks of the
-ancient chisels, whence came the raw material for most of the famous
-Greek sculptures preserved to us.
-
-To us, seated on the pebbly beach and idly listening to the lapping of
-the Ægean waves, as we sunned ourselves and awaited the time for
-embarking, there appeared a native, gorgeous in clothes of a
-suspiciously American cut. He drew near, smiling frankly, and with a
-comprehensive gesture which explicitly included the ladies in his query,
-said: “Where do you fellers come from?” He had served in the American
-navy, it appeared, and had voyaged as far as the Philippines. Other
-Parians ranged themselves at a respectful distance and gazed in
-open-mouthed admiration at their fellow townsman who understood how to
-talk with the foreigners, and who walked along with a lady on either
-side, whom he constantly addressed as “you fellers” to their unbounded
-amusement and delight. We convoyed him to a wayside inn near the quay,
-under two spindling plane trees, and plied him with coffee as a reward
-for his courtesy and interest; and later we left him standing with bared
-head watching our little ship steam away westward, toward the setting
-sun and that land to which he hoped one day to follow us once more.
-
-Our return to Athens from our island cruise was by way of the
-southeastern shore of the Peloponnesus, touching at Monemvasía, a rocky
-promontory near the most southern cape, and connected with the mainland
-by a very narrow isthmus, which it has even been necessary to bridge at
-one point; so that, strictly speaking, Monemvasía is an island, rather
-than a promontory or peninsula. It is a most striking rock, resembling
-Gibraltar in shape, though vastly smaller. In fact, like Gibraltar, it
-has the history of an important strategic point, though it is such no
-longer. Its summit is still crowned by a system of defenses built by the
-Franks, and the inclosure, which includes the entire top of the rock,
-also contains a ruined church. A narrow and not unpicturesque town
-straggles along the shore directly beneath the towering rock itself,
-much as the town of Gibraltar does, and in it may be seen other ruined
-churches, belonging to the Frankish period largely, and unused now. The
-entrance to this village is through a formidable stone gateway in the
-wall, which descends from the sheer side of the cliff above. A steep
-zig-zag path leads up from the town to the fort, which although deserted
-is kept locked, so that a key must be procured before ascending.
-
-Those who have seen the Norman defenses at the promontory of Cefalù, on
-the northern coast of Sicily, will recognize at once a striking
-similarity between that place and this Grecian one, not only from a
-topographical standpoint, but from the arrangement of the walls at the
-top and lower down at the gateway that bars the upward path. Cefalù,
-however, is in a more ruinous condition than this Frankish fortress
-to-day. In point of general situation and view from the summit the two
-are certainly very similar, with their broad outlook over sea and
-mainland. The sheer sides of the promontory made it a practically
-inaccessible citadel from nearly every direction, save that restricted
-portion up which the path ascends, and the defense of it against every
-foe but starvation was an easy matter. Even besiegers found it no easy
-thing to starve out the garrison, for it is on record that the stout old
-Crusader Villehardouin sat down before the gates of Monemvasía for three
-years before the inhabitants were forced to capitulate.
-
-The name of Monemvasía is derived from the fact that the isolated rock
-crowned with the fortress is connected with the mainland by a single
-narrow neck affording the only entrance. Hence the Greek μόνη ἔμβασις
-(moné emvasis) was combined in the modern pronunciation to form the not
-unmusical name of the place and has a perfectly natural explanation.
-Moreover the same name, further shortened, lives again in the name of
-“Malmsey” wine, which is made from grapes grown on rocky vineyards and
-allowed to wither before gathering, as was the custom in the old
-Monemvasía wine industry.
-
-Of course the village at the base of the cliff is wholly unimportant
-now. Malmsey wine is no longer the chief product of this one solitary
-spot, but comes from Santorin, Portugal, Madeira, and a dozen other
-places, while Monemvasía and the derivation of the word are largely
-forgotten. The town has sunk into a state of poverty, and as for the
-fort, it is capable neither by artifice nor by natural surroundings of
-defending anything of value, and hence is of no strategic importance. It
-has had its day and probably will never have another. It is, however,
-ruggedly beautiful, and the town, if degraded and half ruined, is still
-highly picturesque, though unfortunately seldom visited by Greek
-pilgrimages. It formed a fitting close for our island cruise, and indeed
-it is, as we discovered, really an island itself, the ribbon of isthmus
-connecting it with the Peloponnesus having been severed years ago, when
-Monemvasía was worthy to be counted a stronghold. The gap in the land is
-now spanned by a permanent bridge, so that practically Monemvasía is a
-promontory still, lofty and rugged, but not ungraceful; and its imposing
-bulk loomed large astern as we steamed back along the coast toward the
-Piræus and home.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- CHAPTER XX. CORFU
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-The city of Patras, from which port we are about to take leave of
-Greece, is probably the most incongruous city in the kingdom. To be sure
-it is second in importance to Piræus, and the latter city is quite as
-frankly commercial. But the proximity of the Piræus to Athens and the
-presence of the Acropolis, crowned with its ruined temples always in the
-field of view, conspire to take a little of the modern gloss off the
-major port, and thus prevent it from displaying an entire lack of
-harmony with those classic attributes which are the chief charm of
-Hellas. Patras has no such environment. It has no such history. It is a
-busy seaport town, a railroad centre, and it is about everything that
-the rest of Greece is not. It even has a trolley line, which no other
-Greek city at this writing has, although of course the years will bring
-that convenience to Athens, as they have already brought the third-rail
-inter-urban road to the sea.
-
-Patras appears to have been as uninteresting in antiquity as it is
-to-day, though doubtless from its advantageous position on the Gulf of
-Corinth it was always a more or less prosperous place. A very dubious
-tradition says that the Apostle Andrew was crucified here; and whether
-he was or not, St. Andrew has remained the patron saint of the town. In
-any event, Patras shares with Corinth the celebrity of being one of the
-earliest seats of Christianity in Greece, although it is a celebrity
-which Corinth so far overshadows that poor Patras is generally
-forgotten. It probably figures to most Hellenic travelers, as it has in
-our own case, as either an entrance or an exit, and nothing more. Still,
-after one has spent a fortnight or more in the wilds of the
-Peloponnesian mountains, an evening stroll through the brilliantly
-lighted streets of the city comes not amiss, and gives one the sense of
-civilization once more after a prolonged experience of the pastoral and
-archaic.
-
-It was stated early in this book that probably the ideal departure from
-Greece is by way of the Piræus, as by that route one leaves with the
-benediction of the Acropolis, which must be reckoned the crowning glory
-of it all. But since we have elected to enter by the eastern gate in
-voyaging through these pages, it is our lot to depart by the western,
-and to journey back to Italy by way of Corfu, the island of Nausicaa. It
-is not to be regretted, after all. One might look far for a lovelier
-view than that to be had from the harbor of Patras. The narrow strait
-that leads into the Corinthian Gulf affords a splendid panorama of
-mountain and hill on the farther side, as the northern coast sweeps away
-toward the east; while outside, toward the setting sun, one may see the
-huge blue shapes of “shady Zakynthos,” and “low-lying” Ithaca—which it
-has always struck me is not low-lying at all, but decidedly hilly.
-Through the straits and past these islands the steamers thread their
-way, turning northward into the Adriatic and heading for
-Corfu—generally, alas, by night.
-
-The redeeming feature of this arrangement is that, while it robs one of
-a most imposing view of receding Greece, it gives a compensatingly
-beautiful approach to Corfu on the following morning; and there is not a
-more charming island in the world. It lies close to the Albanian shore,
-and with reference to the voyage between Patras and Brindisi it is
-almost exactly half way. In Greek it still bears the name of Kerkyra, a
-survival of the ancient Corcyra, the name by which it was known in the
-days when Athens and Corinth fought over it. The ancients affected to
-believe it the island mentioned in the Odyssey as “Scheria,” the
-Phæacian land ruled over by King Alcinoös; and there is no very good
-reason why we also should not accept this story and call it the very
-land where the wily Odysseus was cast ashore, the more especially since
-his ship, converted into stone by the angry Poseidon, is still to be
-seen in the mouth of a tiny bay not far from the city! We may easily
-drive down to it and, if we choose, pick out the spot on shore where the
-hero was wakened from his dreams by the shouts of Nausicaa and the maids
-as they played at ball on the beach while the washing was drying.
-
-In the ancient days, when navigation was conducted in primitive fashion
-without the aid of the mariner’s compass, and when the only security lay
-in creeping from island to island and hugging the shore, Corcyra became
-a most important strategic point. In their conquest of the west, the
-Greeks were wont to sail northward as far as this island, skirting the
-mainland of Greece, and thence to strike off westward to the heel of
-Italy, where the land again afforded them guidance and supplies until
-they reached the straits of Messina. So that the route of Odysseus
-homeward from the haunts of Scylla and Charybdis and the isle Ortygia
-was by no means an unusual or roundabout one. This course of western
-navigation gave rise to continual bickering among the great powers of
-old as to the control of Corcyra, and Thucydides makes the contention
-over the island the real starting-point of the difficulties that
-culminated in the Peloponnesian war and in the overthrow of the Athenian
-empire.
-
-Modern Corfu has a very good outer harbor, suitable for large craft,
-although landing, as usual, is possible only by means of small boats.
-The declaration in Bædeker that the boatmen are insolent and rapacious
-appears no longer to be true. The matter of ferriage to shore seems to
-have been made the subject of wise regulation, and the charge for the
-short row is no longer extortionate. From the water the city presents a
-decidedly formidable appearance, being protected by some massive
-fortifications which were doubtless regarded as impregnable in their
-day, but which are unimportant now. They are of Venetian build, as are
-so many of the fortresses in Greek waters. Aside from the frowning
-ramparts of these ancient defenses, the town is a peaceful looking place
-in the extreme, with its tall white and gray houses, green-shuttered and
-trim. It is a town by no means devoid of picturesqueness, although it
-will take but a few moments’ inspection to convince the visitor that
-Corfu is by nature Italian rather than Greek, despite its incorporation
-in the domains of King George. Corfu has always been in closer touch
-with western Europe than with the East, and it is doubtless because she
-has enjoyed so intimate a connection with Italy that her external
-aspects are anything but Hellenic. Moreover the English were for some
-years the suzerains of the island, and have left their mark on it, for
-the island’s good, although it is many years since the British
-government honorably surrendered the land to Greece, in deference to the
-wish of the inhabitants.
-
-Despite the Venetian character of the fortresses, they remind one
-continually of Gibraltar, although of course infinitely less extensive.
-Particularly is this true of the "fortezza nuova," which it is well
-worth while to explore because of the fine view over the city and harbor
-to be had from its highest point. A custodian resides in a tiny cabin on
-the height and offers a perfectly needless telescope in the hope of
-fees, although it is doubtful that many ever care to supplement the eye
-by recourse to the glass. The prospect certainly is incomparably
-beautiful. Below lies the city with its narrow streets and lofty
-buildings, and before it the bay decked with white ships, contrasting
-with the almost incredible blue of the water, for the ocean is nowhere
-bluer than at Corfu. Across the straits not many miles away rises the
-bluff and mountainous mainland of Albania and Epirus, stretching off
-north and south into illimitable distances. Behind the town the country
-rolls away into most fertile swales and meadows, bounded on the far
-north by a high and apparently barren mountain. All the narrow southern
-end of the island is a veritable garden, well watered, well wooded,
-covered with grass and flowers, and rising here and there into low,
-tree-clad hills. Trim villas dot the landscape, and on a distant hill
-may be seen from afar the gleaming walls of the palace which belonged to
-the ill-fated Empress of Austria.
-
-From the fortress southward toward the bay where lies the “ship of
-Ulysses,” there runs a beautiful esplanade along the water front, lined
-with trees and flanked on the landward side by villas with most
-luxuriant gardens. Even though the British occupation came to an end as
-long ago as 1865, the roadways of the island bear the marks of the
-British thoroughness, and make riding in Corfu a pleasure. The houses
-along the way are largely of the summer-residence variety, the property
-of wealthy foreigners rather than of native Corfiotes; and their
-gardens, especially in the springtime, are a riot of roses, tumbling
-over the high walls, or clambering all over the houses themselves, and
-making the air heavy with their fragrance. The trees are no less
-beautiful, and the roads are well shaded by them. After a month or so of
-the comparatively treeless and often barren mainland of Greece, this
-exuberant Eden is a source of keen enjoyment with its wanton profligacy
-of bloom.
-
-[Illustration: “SHIP OF ULYSSES.” CORFU]
-
-It cannot be more than two miles, and perhaps it is rather less, over a
-smooth road and through a continuous succession of gardens, from the
-town of Corfu out to the little knoll which overlooks the bay and “ship
-of Ulysses,” and the view down on that most picturesque islet and across
-the placid waters of the narrow arm of the sea in which it lies,
-furnishes one of the most beautiful prospects in the island. The “ship”
-itself is a rather diminutive rock not far from shore, almost completely
-enshrouded in sombre, slender cypresses, which give it its supposed
-similarity to the Phæacian bark of the wily Ithacan. Nor is it a
-similarity that is entirely imaginary. Seen from a distance, the pointed
-trees grouped in a dark mass on this tiny isle do give the general
-effect of a vessel. Those who know the picture called the “Island of
-Death” will be struck at once with the similarity between the “ship” and
-the painter’s ideal of the abode of shades; and with the best of
-reasons, for it is said that this island was the model employed. Amidst
-the dusk of the crowded trees one may distinguish a monastery, tenanted
-we were told by a single monk, while on a neighboring island, closer to
-the shore and connected therewith by a sort of rocky causeway, there is
-another monastery occupied by some band of religious brothers. This
-island also is not without its charms, but the eye always returns to
-that mournful abandoned “ship,” which surpasses in its weird fascination
-any other thing that Corfu has to show.
-
-The Villa Achilleion, which lies off to the southward on a lofty hill,
-shares with the ship of Ulysses the attention of the average visitor,
-and worthily so, not only because of the great beauty of the villa
-itself, with its mural paintings of classic subjects and its wonderful
-gardens, but because of the exquisite view that is to be had over the
-island from the spot. The lively verdure, the vivid blueness of the sea,
-and the gloomy rocks of the Turkish shore, all combine to form a picture
-not soon to be forgotten. As for the Achilleion itself, it was built for
-the Empress of Austria, who was assassinated some years ago, and the
-estate has now, I believe, passed into private hands. The road to it is
-excellent, and occasional bits of the scenery along the way are highly
-picturesque, with now and then an isolated and many-arched campanile,
-adorned with its multiple bells in the Greek manner, obtruding itself
-unexpectedly from the trees.
-
-There are unquestionably many rides around the island that are quite as
-enjoyable as this, but the ordinary visitor is doubtless the one who
-stops over for a few hours only, during the stay of his steamer in the
-port, and therefore has little time for more than the sights described.
-Those who are able to make the island more than a brief way-station on
-the way to or from Greece express themselves as enchanted with it, and
-the number of attractive villas built by foreigners of means would seem
-to emphasize the statement. Corfu as an island is altogether lovely.
-
-The city itself has already been referred to as more Italian than Greek
-in appearance. Nevertheless it is really Greek, and its shops are
-certainly more like those of Athens than like those of Italy, while the
-ordinary signboards of the street are in the Greek characters. It is the
-height of the houses, the narrowness of the streets, the occasional
-archways, and the fact that almost everybody can speak Italian, that
-give the unmistakable Italian touch to Corfu after one has seen the
-broader highways and lower structures of Athens. But Greco-Italian as it
-is, one cannot get away from the fact that, after all, it reminds one
-quite as much of Gibraltar as of anything. The town does this, quite as
-much as the fortresses, with its narrow ways and its evident
-cosmopolitanism. The shops, although devoted largely to Greek
-merchandise, are a good deal like the Gibraltar bazaars, and make quite
-as irresistible an appeal to the pocket, with their gorgeous embroidered
-jackets, blue and gold vestments, and other barbaric but incredibly
-magnificent fripperies, fresh from the tailor’s hand, and not, as at
-Athens, generally the wares of second-hand dealers. To see peasant
-jackets and vests of red and blue, and heavily ornamented with gold
-tracery, go to Corfu. Nothing at Athens approaches the Corfiote display.
-
-There are some archæological remains at Corfu, but not of commanding
-prominence; and the average visitor, busied with the contemplation of
-the loveliness of the country and the quaintness of the town for a few
-brief hours, probably omits to hunt them up, as we ourselves did. The
-most obvious monuments of the past are those of the medieval period, the
-Venetian strongholds that served to protect Corfu when the island was an
-important bulwark against the Saracens. Of the days when the rival
-powers of classic Greece warred over the Corcyreans and their fertile
-island, little trace has survived. There is a very old tomb in the
-southerly suburb of Kastradès and the foundation of an ancient temple,
-but neither is to be compared for interest with the host of monuments of
-equal antiquity to be seen in Greece and even in Sicily. Corfu, like
-Italy, has suffered a loss of the evidences of her antiquity by being so
-constantly on the great highway to western Europe. She has never been
-left to one side, as Greece so long was. Her fertility prevented her
-degenerating into mere barren pasturage, as happened in Hellas proper,
-and her situation made her important all through the Middle Ages, just
-as it made her important during the expansion period of the Athenian
-empire. And as Rome, through active and continuous existence, has
-gradually eaten up her own ancient monuments before they achieved the
-value of great age, so Corfu has lost almost entirely all trace of what
-the ancient Corcyreans built; while Athens, through her long ages of
-unimportance, preserved much of her classic monumental glories
-unimpaired, and thanks to an awakened appreciation of them will cherish
-them for all time.
-
-The long years in which Greece lay fallow and deserted now appear not to
-have been in vain. Through that period of neglect her ancient sites and
-monuments lay buried and forgotten, but intact. Men were too busy
-exploring and expanding elsewhere to waste a thought on the dead past.
-Even the revival of learning, which exhumed the classic writings from
-the oblivion of monkish cells and made the literature of Greece live
-again, was insufficient to give back to the world the actual physical
-monuments of that classic time. It has remained for the present day,
-when the earth has been all but completely overrun and when men have
-found a dearth of new worlds to conquer, that we have had the time and
-the interest to turn back to Greece, sweep away the rubbish of ages, and
-give back to the light of day the palaces of Agamemnon, the strongholds
-of Tiryns, and the hoary old labyrinth of Minos. On the fringes of Magna
-Græcia, where the empire was in touch with the unceasing tides of
-western civilization, as in Sicily and at Corfu, the remnants of the
-older days fared but ill. It was in the mountain fastnesses of the
-Peloponnesus and in the gloomy glens of Delphi that so much of the
-ancient, and even of the prehistoric and preheroic days, survived as to
-give us moderns even a more definite knowledge of the times of the
-Achæans and Trojans than perhaps even Homer himself had.
-
-------------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- INDEX
-
- INDEX
-
-
- Acrocorinth, 169.
-
- Acropolis, of Athens, first views of, 46;
- description of, 76;
- approach to, 79;
- gates of, 79;
- view from, 79, 80.
-
- Acropolis Museum, 86, 91, 92.
-
- Ægina, 39, 80, 137-139.
-
- Agamemnon, 28, 167, 175, 180, 181.
-
- Agora, at Athens, 76, 106.
-
- Alcmæonidæ, 165.
-
- Alpheios, 223, 256-258.
-
- Andhritsæna, 227, 229-246.
-
- Aphrodite, of Praxiteles, 315.
-
- Apollo, 154, 243, 277, 278, 299.
-
- Apoxyomenos, of Lysippus, 166.
-
- Aqueduct, at Samos, 291-294.
-
- Arcadia, 211-228.
-
- Arch, development of, 181, 192.
-
- Areopagus, 107.
-
- Argive Heræum, 186.
-
- Argos, 187, 172-192.
-
- Ariadne, 31.
-
- Artemis, 279, 300.
-
- Asklepios, 3, 4, 97, 98, 203, 207, 308-311.
-
- Athena, birth of, 83, 86;
- strife of, with Poseidon, 83, 90;
- sacred image of, 90;
- Archaic representations of, 92;
- Pronoia, 164,168.
-
- Athens, approaches to, 46;
- modern city, 50-75;
- ancient traditions of, 51;
- growth and history, 51, 52;
- street venders, 55;
- street names, 57;
- stadium, 58;
- street car system, 58;
- climate of, 59, 60;
- street scenes, 61-68;
- newspapers, 63;
- Shoe Lane, 63, 64;
- shopping, 64;
- street of the coppersmiths, 66;
- giaourti, 68;
- modern architecture, 69;
- churches, 69, 70;
- icons, 69;
- soldiery, 70, 71;
- funerals, 73;
- conversation beads, 74;
- Acropolis, 76;
- destruction of, by Persians, 88.
-
- Atreus, treasury of, 183, 184.
-
-
- “Balaustion,” 273, 330.
-
- Bassæ, 235-245.
-
- Bee-hive tombs, 183, 184.
-
- Bema, 109.
-
- Beulé gate, 79.
-
- Branchidæ, 297-303.
-
- Burial customs, 73, 246.
-
-
- Candia, 26-29.
-
- Canea, 18-26.
-
- Caryatid portico, 91.
-
- Castalian spring, 167.
-
- Cephissus, 50.
-
- Ceramicus, 112-118.
-
- Charioteer, statue of, at Delphi, 166.
-
- Choragic monument of Lysicrates, 76, 104.
-
- Churches, Greek, 69, 70.
-
- Cnidos, 314-317.
-
- Cnossos, 29-36.
-
- Coffee, 66, 67.
-
- Coffee-houses, 53, 54.
-
- Corcyra (Kerkyra) 370.
-
- Corfu, 368-380.
-
- Corinth, 169, 170.
-
- Corinthian canal, 148, 149.
-
- Corinthian capitals, 105.
-
- Corinthian Gulf, 149, 150.
-
- Cos, 304-313.
-
- Crete, 18-36.
-
- Cr[oe]sus, 156;
- trial of oracles by, 160, 161;
- gifts to oracle at Delphi, 161-163.
-
- Cyclopean masonry, 175, 189.
-
- Cyclopes, 191.
-
-
- Dances, of peasants, 139-145.
-
- Daphne, pass of, 124;
- convent of, 125.
-
- Delos, 272-285;
- legend of, 275;
- dual nature, 276;
- excavations at, 277;
- ancient houses, 279-281.
-
- Delphi, 146-168;
- excavations at, 153-158;
- legend of, 154, 155;
- oracle at, 155-157, 159-165;
- gifts of Cr[oe]sus to oracle, 161-163;
- great temple at, 165;
- corruption of oracle, 157-165;
- statue of charioteer, 166.
-
- Demeter, 128, 130.
-
- Dipylon, 112.
-
- Drachma, fluctuation of, 71-73.
-
- Dragoman, 212.
-
- Dress, of peasants, 142, 171, 201.
-
-
- Easter eggs, 360.
-
- Eleusinian mysteries, 128.
-
- Eleusis, 124-132.
-
- Elgin marbles, 83, 86.
-
- Embroideries, 311, 325.
-
- Ephebus, bronze statue at Athens, 118, 119.
-
- Epidaurus, 198-210.
-
- Erechtheum, 88;
- sacred precinct of, 90.
-
- Erechtheus, 89.
-
-
- Giaourti, 68.
-
- Greece, traveling in, 1-17;
- entrances to, 37-49;
- landing in, 44.
-
- Greek churches, 69, 70.
-
- Greek language, 9-13.
-
- Greek people, character of, 14, 15, 53, 54.
-
- Gremka, 255.
-
-
- Hadrian, arch of, 48, 104.
-
- Halicarnassus, 313.
-
- Hera, 275, 294.
-
- Heræum, Argive, 186;
- at Olympia, 260;
- at Samos, 291-294.
-
- Hermes, of Praxiteles, 268, 269.
-
- Herodotus, 90, 160-163, 290, 291.
-
- Hippocrates, tree of, at Cos, 307.
-
- Hippodameia, 266.
-
- Hymettus, 39, 47.
-
-
- Icons, 69.
-
- Ictinus, 81, 243.
-
- Ios (Nios) 352-360.
-
- Islands, of the Ægean, 272-367;
- geographical arrangement, 273;
- communication with, 274.
-
-
- Karytæna, 224.
-
- King George, 74, 75.
-
- Knights of Rhodes, 305, 319.
-
-
- Labyrinth, of Minos, 31, 32.
-
- Lindos, 318.
-
- Lion Gate, at Mycenæ, 178, 179.
-
- Long walls, at Athens, 42.
-
- Loukoumi, 25.
-
- Lycabettus, 38.
-
- Lysippus, 166.
-
-
- Malmsey wine, 367.
-
- Marathon, 133.
-
- Mars Hill, 76, 88, 107.
-
- Mausoleum, 313.
-
- Megalokastron, 27.
-
- Megalopolis, 218-223.
-
- Menidi, dances at, 139-145.
-
- Midnight mass, 353-361.
-
- Minoan age, 28.
-
- Minos, 27-31;
- throne of, 33.
-
- Minotaur, 31, 32, 89, 112.
-
- Monemvasía, 365-367.
-
- Mycenæ, 169-186;
- accommodation at, 173;
- excavations at, 175;
- acropolis of, 177;
- Lion Gate, 178, 179;
- Cyclopean masonry, 175, 178, 179;
- inverted columns, 178;
- tombs at, 180;
- reservoir, 182;
- treasury of Atreus, 183.
-
- Mycenæan age, 28;
- stone pillars of, 33, 178.
-
- Mycenæan relics at Athens, 120-122.
-
- Mykale, 288.
-
-
- National Museum, at Athens, 118.
-
- Nauplia, 193-198.
-
- Nausicaa, 371.
-
- Navigation, in ancient times, 273, 371.
-
- Newspapers, 10, 63.
-
- Niké Apteros, temple of, 80;
- binding sandal, 81;
- of Pæonius, 263, 270.
-
-
- Odeon of Herodes Atticus, 96.
-
- Odysseus, 16, 17, 370.
-
- [OE]nomaus, legend of, 266.
-
- Olympia, overland route to, 247-258;
- site of, 259-271;
- temple of Zeus at, 260, 263.
-
- Olympian Zeus, temple of, at Athens, 48, 76, 104.
-
- Olympic games, 264-266;
- modern, 271.
-
- Orientation of temples, 242.
-
-
- Paganism, traces of, in Greek church, 3, 4.
-
- Painting, of statues, 91.
-
- Panathenaic festival, 89.
-
- Parian marble, 362.
-
- Parnassus, 145, 151.
-
- Paros, 351, 361-365.
-
- Parthenon, 3, 4;
- destruction by Morosini, 77, 85;
- description of, 82-88;
- pedimental sculptures of, 83;
- curious architectural devices, 84-86;
- restorations of, 86;
- frieze of, 87.
-
- Patras, 368.
-
- Paul, sermon to the Athenians, 107.
-
- Peasant dances, 139-145.
-
- Peasant dress, 142, 171, 201.
-
- Pedestal of Agrippa, 81.
-
- Pedimental sculptures, of Parthenon, 83;
- at Olympia, 267, 268.
-
- Pelops, 266.
-
- Pentelic marble, 134.
-
- Pentelicus, 38, 134.
-
- Pericles, 42.
-
- Persians, invasion by, 87, 88;
- at Delphi, 164.
-
- Phalerum, 45.
-
- Philopappos, monument of, 47.
-
- Piraeus, 39-46.
-
- Pnyx, 108.
-
- Political customs, 61.
-
- Polychrome decoration of temples, 92.
-
- Polycrates, 290.
-
- Poseidon, strife with Athena, 83, 90.
-
- Praxiteles, 268, 315.
-
- Propylæa, 79, 80, 81.
-
- Ptolemy II., 311.
-
- Pythagoras, 291.
-
-
- Religious anniversaries, 62, 353-361.
-
- Reservoir, at Mycenæ, 182.
-
- Resinated wine, 137.
-
- Rhodes, 318-333;
- Colossus of, 332.
-
- Rhodian plates, 323, 324.
-
- Routes to Greece, 15, 16.
-
-
- St. Elias, successor of ancient Helios, 5.
-
- Salamis, 39, 43, 132.
-
- Samos, 286-297.
-
- Santorin, 334-350.
-
- “Ship of Ulysses,” 375.
-
- Shoe Lane, at Athens, 63-65.
-
- Shopping in Athens, 63-65.
-
- Soldiery, 70, 71.
-
- Sparta, 216.
-
- Stage, use of, in Greek theatre, 100, 101.
-
- Stoa, 106.
-
- Stoics, 106.
-
- Suda Bay, 19, 25, 26.
-
- Sunium, 37, 134-138.
-
-
- Taÿgetos, 216.
-
- Temples, survival of, as Christian churches, 4.
-
- Theatre of Dionysus, 98;
- of Epidaurus, 204.
-
- Theatres, 99-103.
-
- Themistoclean wall, 113.
-
- Themistocles, 42, 113.
-
- Theocritus, 312.
-
- Thera, 334-350.
-
- Theseum, 110.
-
- Theseus, 31, 89, 111.
-
- Tiryns, 188-192.
-
- Tomb-sculpture, 114-118.
-
- Tombs, at Mycenæ, 183, 184.
-
- Tower of the Winds, 105.
-
- Treasury of Atreus, 183.
-
- Troy, 28, 36.
-
-
- Villa Achilleion, 376.
-
- “Virgin of a Hundred Gates,” 361.
-
- Votive offerings, 126.
-
-
- Xerxes, 87, 88.
-
-
- Zeus, legends of, in Crete, 30;
- temple in Athens, 48, 76, 104;
- temple at Olympia, 260;
- statue at Olympia, 263;
- see also, 275 _et seq._
-
-
-
-
- ~The Riverside Press~
-
- CAMBRIDGE · MASSACHUSETTS
-
- U · S · A
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber’s Note
-
-The table at the end of this note summarizes any corrections to the text
-that have been deemed to be printer’s errors.
-
-The spelling of Greek place-names may occasionally use the terminal
-‘-us’ interchangeably with the Greek ‘-os’, especially in the Index.
-Both are retained.
-
-The latinized Greek word ‘lepta’ is occasionally given with an accented
-‘a’, either ‘à’ or ‘á’. All have been retained as printed.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Greece and the Ægean Islands, by
-Philip Sanford Marden
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-<pre>
-
-Project Gutenberg's Greece and the Ægean Islands, by Philip Sanford Marden
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of
-the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-Title: Greece and the Ægean Islands
-
-Author: Philip Sanford Marden
-
-Release Date: October 1, 2015 [EBook #50106]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK GREECE AND THE ÆGEAN ISLANDS ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by KD Weeks, Shaun Pinder and the Online
-Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This
-file was produced from images generously made available
-by The Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div>Transcriber’s Note:</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Minor errors in punctuation and formatting have been silently
-corrected. Please see the transcriber’s <a href='#endnote'>note</a> at the end of this
-text for details regarding the handling of any textual issues
-encountered during its preparation.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Full-width images have been moved to paragraph breaks. The pagination used
-in the list of images is therefore approximate, but each is linked directly
-to the illustration.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Footnotes have been resequenced to be unique across the text, and
-were moved to the end of the text.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cover image has been fabricated and is placed in the public domain.</p>
-
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' title='I' id='Page_I'></span><span class='large'>GREECE</span></div>
- <div>AND</div>
- <div><span class='large'>THE ÆGEAN ISLANDS</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div id='i004' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_004.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>ACROPOLIS, SHOWING PROPYLÆA</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div>
- <h1 class='c003'>GREECE <br /> <span class='small'>AND THE</span> <br /> ÆGEAN ISLANDS</h1>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c001'>
- <div><span class='small'>BY</span></div>
- <div class='c001'><span class='large'>PHILIP SANFORD MARDEN</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id002'>
-<img src='images/title_page.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class="blackletter">London</span></div>
- <div class='c001'>ARCHIBALD CONSTABLE &amp; CO., <span class='sc'>Ltd.</span></div>
- <div class='c001'><span class='small'>BOSTON AND NEW YORK</span></div>
- <div class='c001'>HOUGHTON, MIFFLIN &amp; CO.</div>
- <div>1907</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div>COPYRIGHT 1907 BY PHILIP S. MARDEN</div>
- <div>ALL RIGHTS RESERVED</div>
- <div class='c004'><em>Published November 1907</em></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='v' id='Page_v'></span>
- <h2 class='c005'>PROLEGOMENA</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>What follows makes no pretense whatever of
-being a scientific work on Greece, from an
-archæological or other standpoint. That it is written
-at all is the resultant of several forces, chief among
-which are the consciousness that no book hitherto
-published, so far as I am aware, has covered quite the
-same ground, and the feeling, based on the experience
-of myself and others, that some such book ought
-to be available.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By way of explanation and apology, I am forced to
-admit, even to myself, that what I have written, especially
-in the opening chapters, is liable to the occasional
-charge that it has a guide-bookish sound, despite
-an honest and persistent effort to avoid the same.
-In the sincere desire to show how easy it really is to
-visit Hellas, and in the ardent hope of making a few
-of the rough places smooth for first visitors, I have
-doubtless been needlessly prolix and explicit at the
-outset, notably in dealing with a number of sordid details
-and directions. Moreover, to deal in so small a
-compass with so vast a subject as that of ancient and
-modern Athens is a task fraught with many difficulties.
-One certainly cannot in such a book as this ignore
-<span class='pageno' title='vi' id='Page_vi'></span>Athens utterly, despite the fact that so much has been
-published hitherto about the city and its monuments
-that no further description is at all necessary. My object
-is not to make Athens more familiar, but rather
-to describe other and more remote sites in Greece for
-the information, and I hope also for the pleasure, of
-past and future travelers. Athens, however, I could not
-ignore; and while such brief treatment as is possible
-here is necessarily superficial, it may help to awaken
-an additional interest in that city where none existed
-before.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Aside from the preliminary chapters and those dealing
-with Athens itself, I hope to have been more successful.
-I have, at any rate, been free in those other
-places from the depressing feeling that I was engaged
-on a work of supererogation, since this part of the
-subject is by no means hackneyed even through treatment
-by technical writers. Since the publication of
-most of the better known books on Greek travel, a
-great deal has been accomplished in the way of excavation,
-and much that is interesting has been laid
-bare, which has not been adequately described, even
-in the technical works. In dealing with these additions
-and in describing journeys to less familiar inland
-sites, as well as cruises to sundry of the classic
-islands of the Ægean, I hope this book will find its
-real excuse for being.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='vii' id='Page_vii'></span>In adopting a system for spelling the names of Greek
-cities, towns, and islands, I have been in something of
-a quandary, owing to the possibilities presented by the
-various customs of authors in this field, each one of
-which has something to recommend it and something,
-also, of disadvantage. If one spells Greek names in the
-more common Anglicized fashion, especially in writing
-for the average traveler, one certainly avoids the
-appearance of affectation, and also avoids misleading
-the reader by an unfamiliar form of an otherwise familiar
-word. Hence, after much debate and rather against
-my own personal preferences and usage in several
-instances, I have adhered in the main to the forms of
-name most familiar to American eyes and ears. In
-cases of obscure or little known sites, where it is occasionally
-more important to know the names as locally
-pronounced, I have followed the Greek forms. This,
-while doubtless not entirely logical, has seemed the
-best way out of a rather perplexing situation, bound
-to be unsatisfactory whichever way one attempts to
-solve the problem.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In mercy to non-Hellenic readers, I have likewise
-sought to exclude with a firm hand quotations from
-the Greek language, and as far as reasonably possible
-to avoid the use of Greek words or expressions when
-English would answer every purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If, in such places as have seemed to demand it, I
-<span class='pageno' title='viii' id='Page_viii'></span>have touched upon archæological matters, I hope not
-to have led any reader far from the truth, although one
-admittedly an amateur in such matters runs grave risk
-in committing himself to paper where even the doctors
-themselves so often disagree. I hope especially to have
-escaped advancing mere personal opinions on moot
-points, since dilettanti in such a case have little business
-to own any opinions, and none at all to exploit
-them to the untutored as if they had importance or
-weight. Rather I have only the desire to arouse
-others to a consciousness that it is as easy now to
-view and enjoy the visible remnants of the glory that
-was Greece, as it is to view those of the grandeur that
-was Rome.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the writing of these chapters an effort has been
-made to set forth in non-technical terms only what
-the writer himself has seen and observed among
-these haunts of remote antiquity, with the idea of
-confining the scope of this book to the needs of those
-who, like himself, possess a veneration for the old
-things, an amateur’s love for the classics, and a desire
-to see and know that world which was born, lived,
-and died before our own was even dreamed of as
-existing. If by what is written herein others are led
-to go and see for themselves, or are in any wise
-assisted in making their acquaintance with Greece,
-or, better still, are enabled the more readily to recall
-<span class='pageno' title='ix' id='Page_ix'></span>days spent in that most fascinating of all the bygone
-nations, then this book, however unworthily dealing
-with a great subject, will not have been written in
-vain.</p>
-
-<div class='c007'><span class='sc'>Philip Sanford Marden.</span></div>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='small'><span class='sc'>Lowell, Mass.</span>, August, 1907.</span></p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='xi' id='Page_xi'></span>
- <h2 class='c005'>TABLE OF CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table class='table0' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='8%' />
-<col width='83%' />
-<col width='7%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>I.</td>
- <td class='c009'>TRAVELING IN GREECE</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap01'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>II.</td>
- <td class='c009'>CRETE</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap02'>18</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>III.</td>
- <td class='c009'>THE ENTRANCE TO GREECE</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap03'>37</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>IV.</td>
- <td class='c009'>ATHENS; THE MODERN CITY</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap04'>50</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>V.</td>
- <td class='c009'>ANCIENT ATHENS: THE ACROPOLIS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap05'>76</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>VI.</td>
- <td class='c009'>ANCIENT ATHENS: THE OTHER MONUMENTS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap06'>96</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>VII.</td>
- <td class='c009'>EXCURSIONS IN ATTICA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap07'>123</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>VIII.</td>
- <td class='c009'>DELPHI</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap08'>146</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>IX.</td>
- <td class='c009'>MYCENÆ AND THE PLAIN OF ARGOS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap09'>169</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>X.</td>
- <td class='c009'>NAUPLIA AND EPIDAURUS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap10'>193</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XI.</td>
- <td class='c009'>IN ARCADIA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap11'>211</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XII.</td>
- <td class='c009'>ANDHRITSÆNA AND THE BASSÆ TEMPLE</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap12'>229</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XIII.</td>
- <td class='c009'>OVER THE HILLS TO OLYMPIA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap13'>247</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XIV.</td>
- <td class='c009'>THE ISLES OF GREECE: DELOS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap14'>272</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XV.</td>
- <td class='c009'>SAMOS AND THE TEMPLE AT BRANCHIDÆ</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap15'>286</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XVI.</td>
- <td class='c009'>COS AND CNIDOS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap16'>304</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XVII.</td>
- <td class='c009'>RHODES</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap17'>318</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XVIII.</td>
- <td class='c009'>THERA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap18'>334</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XIX.</td>
- <td class='c009'>NIOS; PAROS; A MIDNIGHT MASS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap19'>351</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'>XX.</td>
- <td class='c009'>CORFU</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#chap20'>368</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c008'></td>
- <td class='c009'>INDEX</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#index'>381</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='xiii' id='Page_xiii'></span>
- <h2 class='c005'>LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-<table class='table1' summary=''>
-<colgroup>
-<col width='78%' />
-<col width='21%' />
-</colgroup>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'></td>
- <td class='c010'><span class='small'>PAGE</span></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>ACROPOLIS, SHOWING PROPYLÆA</td>
- <td class='c011'><a href='#i004'><em>Frontispiece</em></a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>MAP</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i019'>1</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>LANDING-PLACE AT CANEA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i041'>20</a>—</td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>THRONE OF MINOS AT CNOSSOS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i057'>34</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>STORE-ROOMS IN MINOAN PALACE, CNOSSOS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i061'>36</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>OLD CHURCH IN TURKISH QUARTER, ATHENS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i087'>60</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>TEMPLE OF NIKÉ APTEROS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i109'>80</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>THE PARTHENON, WEST PEDIMENT</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i117'>86</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>TEMPLE OF OLYMPIAN ZEUS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i137'>104</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>THE AREOPAGUS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i143'>108</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>THE THESEUM</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i149'>112</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>TOMB AMPHORA, CERAMICUS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i155'>116</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>TOMB RELIEF, CERAMICUS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i159'>118</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>BRONZE EPHEBUS, NATIONAL MUSEUM, ATHENS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i163'>120</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>THE TEMPLE AT SUNIUM</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i179'>134</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>THE APPROACH TO ÆGINA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i185a'>138</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>THE TEMPLE AT ÆGINA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i185b'>138</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>PEASANT DANCERS AT MENIDI</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i191'>142</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>THE PLAIN BELOW DELPHI</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i201'>150</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>THE VALE OF DELPHI</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i209'>156</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>CHARIOTEER, DELPHI</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i221'>166</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>AGORA, MYCENÆ</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i237'>180</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>WOMAN SPINNING ON ROAD TO EPIDAURUS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i257'>198</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'><span class='pageno' title='xiv' id='Page_xiv'></span>EPIDAURIAN SHEPHERDS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i263'>202</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>THEATRE AT EPIDAURUS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i269'>206</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>AN OUTPOST OF ARCADY</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i289'>224</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>THE GORGE OF THE ALPHEIOS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i293'>226</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>ANDHRITSÆNA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i299'>230</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>AN ARBOREAL CAMPANILE. ANDHRITSÆNA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i305'>234</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>THRESHING FLOOR AT BASSÆ</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i313'>240</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>TEMPLE AT BASSÆ, FROM ABOVE</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i319a'>244</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>TEMPLE AT BASSÆ, FROM BELOW</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i319b'>244</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>HERÆUM. OLYMPIA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i335'>258</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>ENTRANCE TO THE STADIUM. OLYMPIA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i341'>262</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>DELOS, SHOWING GROTTO</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i363a'>282</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>GROTTO OF APOLLO, DELOS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i363b'>282</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>COLUMN BASES. SAMOS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i379a'>296</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>CARVED COLUMN-BASE. BRANCHIDÆ</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i379b'>296</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>TREE OF HIPPOCRATES. COS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i391'>306</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>CNIDOS, SHOWING THE TWO HARBORS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i401'>314</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>SCULPTURED TRIREME IN ROCK AT LINDOS. <br />(From a Sketch by the Author)</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i415'>327</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>ARCHED PORTAL OF ACROPOLIS. LINDOS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i417'>328</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>SANTORIN</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i426'>336</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>LANDING-PLACE AT THERA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i429'>338</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>THERA</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i435'>342</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>A THERAN STREET</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i441'>346</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>OLD COLUMNS IN CHURCH, PAROS</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i459'>362</a></td>
- </tr>
- <tr><td>&nbsp;</td></tr>
- <tr>
- <td class='c009'>“SHIP OF ULYSSES.” CORFU</td>
- <td class='c010'><a href='#i473'>374</a></td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div class='c001'><span class='pageno' title='xv' id='Page_xv'></span><span class='large'>GREECE</span></div>
- <div class='c001'><span class='large'>AND</span></div>
- <div class='c001'><span class='large'>THE ÆGEAN ISLANDS</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<div id='i019' class='figcenter id003'>
-<a href='images/i_019_fullsize.jpg'><img src='images/i_019.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' /></a>
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>SKETCH MAP<br />OF<br />GREECE<br />AND THE<br />ÆGEAN ISLANDS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='1' id='Page_1'></span>
- <h2 id='chap01' class='c005'>CHAPTER I. TRAVELING IN <br /> GREECE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_021.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The days in which a visit to Greece might
-be set down as something quite unusual and
-apart from the beaten track of European travel have
-passed away, and happily so. The announcement of
-one’s intention to visit Athens and its environs no
-longer affords occasion for astonishment, as it did
-when Greece was held to be almost the exclusive
-stamping-ground of the more strenuous archæologists.
-To be sure, those who have never experienced
-the delights of Hellenic travel are still given
-to wonderment at one’s expressed desire to revisit
-the classic land; but even this must pass away in its
-turn, since few voyage thither without awakening
-that desire.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is no longer an undertaking fraught with any
-difficulty—much less with any danger—to visit the
-main points of interest in the Hellenic kingdom;
-and, what is more to the purpose in the estimation
-<span class='pageno' title='2' id='Page_2'></span>of many, it is no longer an enterprise beset with discomfort,
-to any greater degree than is involved in
-a journey through Italy. The result of the growing
-consciousness of this fact has been a steadily increasing
-volume of travel to this richest of classic lands—richest
-not alone in its intangible memories, but richest
-also in its visible monuments of a remote past,
-presenting undying evidence of the genius of the
-Greeks for expressing the beautiful in terms of marble
-and stone. One may, of course, learn to appreciate
-the beautiful in Greek thought without leaving home,
-embodied as it is in the imposing literary remains to
-be met with in traversing the ordinary college course.
-But in order fully to know the beauty of the sculptures
-and architecture, such as culminated in the age
-of Pericles, one must visit Greece and see with his
-own eyes what the hand of Time has spared, often
-indeed in fragmentary form, but still occasionally
-touched with even a new loveliness through the mellowing
-processes of the ages.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To any thinking, reading man or woman of the
-present day, the memories, legends, and history of
-ancient Greece must present sufficient attraction. Few
-of us stop to realize how much of our modern thought
-and feeling was first given adequate expression by
-the inhabitants of ancient Athens, or how much of
-our own daily speech is directly traceable to their
-<span class='pageno' title='3' id='Page_3'></span>tongue. Modern politics may still learn much tact
-of Pericles, and oratorical excellence of Æschines,
-as modern philosophy has developed from Socrates,
-Plato, and Aristotle. Is it not even true that a large
-part of modern religious thought, the hope of glory
-at least, if not the means of grace, finds its strongest
-foreshadowing in the groping of the more enlightened
-Athenians for a hope of immortality and life beyond
-the grave? The transition of the crowning architectural
-glory of the Acropolis at Athens from a temple
-of the virgin (parthenos) Athena to a church of the
-Virgin Mary was, after all, not so violent, when it is
-remembered that the later paganism had softened
-from its old system of corrupt personal deities to an
-abstract embodiment of their chief attributes or qualities,
-such as wisdom, healing, love, and war. Down
-to this day the traces of the pagan, or let us say the
-classic period, are easy to discern, mingled with the
-modern Greek Christianity, often unconsciously, and
-of course entirely devoid of any content of paganism,
-but still unmistakably there. To this day festivals
-once sacred to Asklepios still survive, in effect, though
-observed on Christian holy days and under Christian
-nomenclature, with no thought of reverence for the
-Epidaurian god, but nevertheless preserving intact
-the ancient central idea, which impelled the worshiper
-to sleep in the sanctuary awaiting the healing
-<span class='pageno' title='4' id='Page_4'></span>visit of a vision. In every church in Greece to-day
-one may see scores of little metal arms, legs, eyes, and
-other bodily organs hung up as votive offerings on
-the iconastasis, or altar screen, just as small anatomical
-models were once laid by grateful patients on the
-shrine of Asklepios at Cos. It is most striking and
-impressive, this interweaving of relics of the old-time
-paganism with the modern Greek religion, showing
-as it does a well-marked line of descent from the
-ancient beliefs without violent disruption or transition.
-It has become a well-recognized fact that certain
-modern churches often directly replace the ancient
-temples of the spot in a sort of orderly system, even
-if it be hard occasionally to explain. The successors
-of the fanes of Athena are ordinarily churches of the
-Virgin Mary, as was the case when the Parthenon
-was used for Christian worship. In other sites the
-worship of Poseidon gave way to churches sacred to
-St. Nicholas. The old temples of Ares occasionally
-flowered again, and not inappropriately, as churches
-of the martial St. George. Dionysus lives once more
-in churches named “St. Dionysius,” though no longer
-possessing any suspicion of a Bacchic flavor. Most
-striking of all is the almost appalling number of hills
-and mountains in Greece named “St. Elias,” and
-often bearing monasteries or churches of that designation.
-There is hardly a site in all Greece from which
-<span class='pageno' title='5' id='Page_5'></span>it is not possible to see at least one “St. Elias,” and I
-have been told that this is nothing more nor less than
-the perpetuation of the ancient shrines of Helios (the
-sun) under a Christian name, which, in the modern
-Greek pronunciation, is of a sound almost exactly
-similar to the ancient one. The substitution, therefore,
-when Christianity came to its own, was not
-an unnatural, nor indeed an entirely inappropriate,
-one.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It all conspires to show that, while the modern
-Greek is sincerely and devoutly a Christian, his transition
-into his new faith from the religion of his remotest
-ancestors has been accompanied by a very considerable
-retention of old usages and old nomenclature,
-and by the persistence of ineradicable traces of the
-idealistic residuum that remained after the more gross
-portions of the ancient mythology had refined away
-and had left to the worshiper abstract godlike attributes,
-rather than the gods and goddesses his forefathers
-had created in man’s unworthy image. So,
-while nobody can call in question the Christianity of
-the modern Greek, his churches nevertheless often do
-mingle a quaint perfume of the ancient and classic
-days with the modern incense and odor of sanctity.
-To my own mind, this obvious direct descent of many
-a churchly custom or churchly name from the days of
-the mythical Olympian theocracy is one of the most
-<span class='pageno' title='6' id='Page_6'></span>impressively interesting things about modern Hellas
-and her people.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In a far less striking, but no less real way, we ourselves
-are of course the direct inheritors of the classic
-Greeks, legatees of their store of thought, literature,
-and culture, and followers on the path the Greeks
-first pioneered. They and not we have been the creators
-in civilization, with all its varied fields of activity
-from politics to art. Of our own mental race the
-Greeks were the progenitors, and it is enough to recognize
-this fact of intellectual descent and kinship
-in order to view the Athenian Acropolis and the Hill
-of Mars with much the same thrill that one to-day
-feels, let us say, in coming from Kansas or California
-to look upon Plymouth Rock, the old state house at
-Philadelphia, or the fields of Lexington and Concord.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All this by way of introduction to the thought that
-to visit Hellas is by no means a step aside, but rather
-one further step back along the highway traversed
-from east to west by the slow course of empire, and
-therefore a step natural and proper to be taken by
-every one who is interested in the history of civilized
-man, the better to understand the present by viewing
-it in the light of the past. The “philhellene,” as the
-Greeks call their friend of to-day, needs no apologist,
-and it is notable that the number of such philhellenes
-is growing annually.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='7' id='Page_7'></span>Time was, of course, when the visit to Greece meant
-so much labor, hardship, and expense that it was
-made by few. To-day it is no longer so. One may now
-visit the more interesting sites of the Greek peninsula
-and even certain of the islands with perfect ease,
-at no greater cost in money or effort than is entailed
-by any other Mediterranean journey, and with the
-added satisfaction that one sees not only inspiring
-scenery, but hills and vales peopled with a thousand
-ghostly memories running far back of the dawn of
-history and losing themselves in pagan legend, in
-the misty past when the fabled gods of high Olympus
-strove, intrigued, loved, and ruled.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The natural result of a growing appreciation of the
-attractions of Greece is an increase in travel thither,
-which in its turn has begotten increasing excellence
-of accommodation at those points where visitors most
-do congregate. Railroads have been extended, hotels
-have multiplied and improved, steamers are more
-frequent and more comfortable. One need no longer
-be deterred by any fear of hardship involved in such
-a journey. Athens to-day offers hostelries of every
-grade, as does Rome. The more famous towns likely
-to be visited can show very creditable inns for the
-wayfarer, which are comfortable enough, especially
-to one inured to the hill towns of Italy or Sicily.
-Railway coaches, while still much below the standard
-<span class='pageno' title='8' id='Page_8'></span>of the corridor cars of the more western nations, are
-comfortable enough for journeys of moderate length,
-and must inevitably improve from year to year as
-the hotels have done already. As for safety of person
-and property, that ceased to be a problem long ago.
-Brigandage has been unknown in the Peloponnesus
-for many a long year. Drunkenness is exceedingly
-rare, and begging is infinitely more uncommon than
-in most Italian provinces and cities. Time is certain
-to remove the objection of the comparative isolation
-of Greece still more than it has done at this writing,
-no doubt. It is still true that Greece is, to all intents
-and purposes, an island, despite its physical connection
-with the mainland of Europe. The northern
-mountains, with the wild and semi-barbaric inhabitants
-thereamong, serve to insulate the kingdom
-effectually on the mainland side, just as the ocean
-insulates it on every other hand, so that one is really
-more out of the world at Athens than in Palermo.
-All arrival and departure is by sea; and even when
-Athens shall be finally connected by rail with Constantinople
-and the north, the bulk of communication
-between Greece and the western world will still
-be chiefly maritime, and still subject, as now, to the
-delays and inconveniences that must always beset
-an island kingdom. Daily steamers, an ideal not yet
-attained, will be the one effective way to shorten the
-<span class='pageno' title='9' id='Page_9'></span>distance between Hellas and Europe proper—not to
-mention America.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It may be added that one need not be deterred
-from a tour in Greece by a lack of knowledge of the
-tongue, any more than one need allow an unfamiliarity
-with Italian to debar him from the pleasures
-of Italy. The essential and striking difference in the
-case is the distinctive form of the Greek letters, which
-naturally tends to confuse the unaccustomed visitor
-rather more than do Italian words, written in our
-own familiar alphabet. Still, even one quite unfamiliar
-with the Hellenic text may visit the country
-with comparatively little inconvenience from his ignorance,
-if content to follow the frequented routes, since
-in these days perfect English is spoken at all large
-hotels, and French at large and small alike. Indeed,
-the prevalence of French among all classes is likely
-to surprise one at first. The Greeks are excellent
-linguists, and many a man or woman of humble station
-will be found to possess a fair working knowledge
-of the Gallic tongue. It is entirely probable that
-in a few more years the effect of the present strong
-tendency toward emigration to America will reflect
-even more than it does now a general knowledge of
-English among the poorer people. I have frequently
-met with men in obscure inland towns who spoke
-English well, and once or twice discovered that they
-<span class='pageno' title='10' id='Page_10'></span>learned it in my own city, which has drawn heavily
-on the population of the Peloponnesus within recent
-years.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If the traveler is fortunate enough to have studied
-ancient Greek in his school and college days, and—what
-is more rare—retains enough of it to enable
-him to recognize a few of the once familiar words, he
-will naturally find a considerable advantage therein.
-It is often stated that Greek has changed less since
-Agamemnon’s time than English has altered since
-the days of Chaucer; and while this generalization
-may not be strictly true, it is very near the fact, so
-that it is still possible for any student well versed in
-the ancient Greek to read a modern Athenian newspaper
-with considerable ease. The pronunciation,
-however, is vastly different from the systems taught
-in England and in America, so that even a good
-classical student requires long practice to deliver his
-Greek trippingly on the tongue in such wise that the
-modern Athenian can understand it. Grammatically
-speaking, Greek is to-day vastly simpler than it was
-in the days of Plato. It has been shorn of many of
-those fine distinctions that were, and are, such terrors
-to the American schoolboy. But the appearance
-of the letters and words, with their breathings and
-accents, is quite unchanged, and many of the ancient
-words are perfectly good in modern Greek with their
-<span class='pageno' title='11' id='Page_11'></span>old meanings unimpaired. When one has mastered
-the modern pronunciation, even to a very moderate
-degree, one is sure to find that the once despised
-“dead language” is not a dead language at all, but
-one in daily use by a nation of people who may claim
-with truth that they speak a speech as old as Agamemnon
-and far more homogeneous in its descent
-than modern Italian as it comes from the Latin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It cannot be disguised, however, that it is very
-desirable at least to know the Greek alphabet, even
-if one does not speak or read the language, since
-this little knowledge will often serve to give one a
-clue to the names of streets or railroad stations.
-Aside from that, the few words the habitual traveler
-always picks up will serve as well in Greece as anywhere.
-One should know, of course, the colloquial
-forms of asking “how much?” and for saying “It
-is too dear.” These are the primal necessities of
-European travel, always and everywhere. With these
-alone as equipment, one may go almost anywhere
-on earth. In addition to these rudimentary essentials,
-the ever-versatile Bædeker supplies, I believe, phrases
-of a simple kind, devised for every possible contingency,
-remote or otherwise, which might beset the
-traveler—omitting, curiously enough, the highly useful
-expression for hot water, which the traveler will
-speedily discover is “zestò nerò.” Among the conveniences,
-<span class='pageno' title='12' id='Page_12'></span>though not essential, might be included a
-smattering of knowledge of the Greek numerals to
-be used in bargaining with merchants and cab-drivers.
-But since the Greek merchant, for reasons which
-will later appear, is never without his pad and pencil,
-and since the written figures are the same as our
-own, the custom is to conduct bargains with Europeans
-generally by written symbols. The inevitable
-haggling over prices in the small shops requires little
-more than the sign manual, plus a determination to
-seem indifferent at all hazards. The Greek merchant,
-like every other, regards the voyager from foreign
-parts as legitimate prey, and long experience has led
-him to expect his price to be questioned. Hence
-nothing would surprise a small dealer more than to
-be taken at his initial figure, and the process of arriving
-at some middle ground remotely resembling
-reasonableness is often a complicated but perfectly
-good-humored affair.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The cab-drivers present rather more difficulty.
-They seldom speak French and they carry no writing
-pads. The result is a frequent misunderstanding as
-to both price and destination, while in the settlement
-of all differences at the close of the “course” both
-cabby and his fare are evidently at a mutual linguistic
-disadvantage. The trouble over the destination
-is twofold, as a rule. Part of the time the cabman
-<span class='pageno' title='13' id='Page_13'></span>is “green” and not well acquainted with the city;
-and part of the time he is wholly unable to recognize,
-in the name pronounced to him, any suggestion
-of a street he may know perfectly well when
-pronounced with the proper accent. The element of
-accent is highly important in speaking Greek; for
-unless the stress is properly laid, a word will often
-elude entirely the comprehension of the native, although
-every syllable be otherwise correctly sounded.
-The names of the Greek streets are all in the genitive
-case, which makes the matter still worse. It is of
-small avail to say “Hermes Street” to a driver. He
-must have the Greek for “Street of Hermes” in order
-to get the idea clearly in mind. It is not safe to generalize,
-but I incline to rate the Greeks as rather slower
-than Italians at grasping a foreigner’s meaning, despite
-their cleverness and quickness at acquiring other
-languages themselves. However, this is getting considerably
-ahead of our narrative and in danger of
-losing sight of the main point, which is that Greece
-is easy enough to visit and enjoy, even if one is ignorant
-of the language. For those who feel safer to
-know a trifle of it, there is ample time on the steamer
-voyage toward the Grecian goal to acquire all that
-ordinary necessities demand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Let it be said, in passing from these general and
-preliminary remarks to a more detailed discussion of
-<span class='pageno' title='14' id='Page_14'></span>Hellenic travel, that the modern Greek has lost none
-of his ancient prototype’s reverence for the guest as
-a person having the highest claims upon him and
-none of the ancient regard for the sacred name of
-hospitality. Whatever may be said of the modern
-Greek character, it cannot be called in question as
-lacking in cordiality and kindness to the stranger.
-The most unselfish entertainer in the world is the
-Greek, who conceives the idea that he may be able to
-add to your happiness by his courtesy, and this is true
-in the country as well as in the city. The native met
-on the highway has always a salutation for you. If
-it is the season for harvesting grapes, you are welcome
-to taste and see that they are good. He will
-welcome you to his house and set before you the
-best it affords, the sweet “sumadha” or almond
-milk, the rich preserved quince, the glass of pungent
-“mastika,” or perhaps a bit of smoke-cured ham
-from the earthen jar which is kept for just such occasions
-as this. If he sets out to entertain, nothing is
-done by halves. The Greek bearing gifts need cause
-no fear to-day, unless it be a fear of superabundant
-hospitality such as admits of no repayment. He will
-drive a hard bargain with you in business, no doubt.
-Occasionally an unscrupulous native will commit a
-petty theft, as in any other country where only man
-is vile. But once appear to him in the guise of friendship
-<span class='pageno' title='15' id='Page_15'></span>and he will prove himself the most obliging
-creature in the world. He may not be as well aware
-of the general history of his remote ancestors as you
-are yourself, but what he does know about his vicinity
-he will relate to you with pride and explicitness.
-Curiously enough, the Greek in ordinary station is
-likely to think you wish to see modern rather than
-ancient things. He cannot understand why you go
-every evening to the Acropolis and muse on the steps
-of the Parthenon while you omit to visit the villas
-of Kephissià or Tatoïs. He would rather show you
-a tawdry pseudo-Byzantine church than a ruined
-temple. But the cordial spirit is there, and everybody
-who ever visited Greece has had occasion to know
-it and admire it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There remains necessary a word as to the choice
-of routes to Greece. As in the case of Venice, one
-may enter by either the front or the back door, so to
-speak; and probably, as in the case of Venice, more
-actually elect to enter by the rear. The two gateways
-of Hellas are the Piræus at the eastern front, and
-Patras at the back. Either may be selected as the
-point for beginning a land journey in the kingdom,
-and each has certain advantages. In any event the
-visitor should enter by one portal and leave by the
-other, and the direction may safely be left to be decided
-by the convenience and aims of each particular
-<span class='pageno' title='16' id='Page_16'></span>visitor’s case. Taking Naples as the natural starting-point
-of American travelers, two routes lie open.
-One is the railroad to Brindisi, traversing the mountainous
-Italian interior to the Adriatic coast, where
-on stated days very comfortable steamers ply between
-Brindisi and Patras, touching at Corfù. The
-other route is from Naples to the Piræus by sea on
-either French or Italian steamers, the latter lines
-being slower and enabling stops in Sicily and in
-Crete. To those fortunately possessed of ample time
-and willing to see something of Magna Graecia as
-well as of Greece proper, the slower route is decidedly
-to be recommended.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>For the purposes of this book let us choose to enter
-Greece by her imposing main portal of the Piræus,
-setting at naught several considerations which incline
-us to believe that, on the whole, the advantage
-lies rather with the contrary choice. Whatever else
-may be said in favor of either selection, it remains
-true that in any case one immediately encounters
-mythology and legend in the shape of the wily
-Ulysses, and is thus at once <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>en rapport</em></span> with Grecian
-things. The steamers from Naples must sail through
-the Strait of Messina, between Scylla and Charybdis,
-once the terror of those mariners who had the experiences
-of Homer’s wandering hero before their eyes;
-while not far below Charybdis and just off the Sicilian
-<span class='pageno' title='17' id='Page_17'></span>shore they still show the wondering traveler a
-number of small rocks, rising abruptly from the
-ocean, as the very stones that Polyphemus hurled
-in his blind rage after the fleeing Odysseus, but
-fortunately without doing him any harm. If, on the
-contrary, we sail from Brindisi to Patras, we must
-pass Corfù, which as all the world knows was the
-island on which Odysseus was cast from his ship and
-where, after he had refreshed himself with sleep, he
-was awakened by the laughter of Nausicaa and her
-maids as they played at ball after the washing was
-done. Whichever way we go, we soon find that we
-have run into a land older than those with which we
-have been familiar, whose legends greet us even at
-this distance over miles of tossing waves. Let those
-who are content to voyage with us through the pages
-that follow, be content to reserve Corfù for the homeward
-journey, and to assume that our prow is headed
-now toward Crete, through a tossing sea such as led
-the ancients to exclaim, “The Cretan sea is wide!”
-The shadowy mountains on the left are the lofty
-southern prongs of the Grecian peninsula. Ahead,
-and not yet visible above the horizon, is the sharp,
-razor-like edge of Crete, and the dawn should find
-us in harbor at Canea.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='18' id='Page_18'></span>
- <h2 id='chap02' class='c005'>CHAPTER II. CRETE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_038.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>The island of Crete, lying like a long, narrow
-bar across the mouth of the Ægean Sea, presents
-a mountainous and rugged appearance to one
-approaching from any side. Possessing an extreme
-length of about one hundred and sixty miles, it is
-nowhere more than thirty-five miles in width, and in
-places much less than that. A lofty backbone of
-mountain runs through it from end to end. In all its
-coast-line few decent harbors are to be found, and
-that of the thriving city of Canea, near the northwestern
-end of the island, is no exception. In ancient
-times the fortifications and moles that were built to
-protect the ports had in view the small sailing vessels
-of light draught which were then common, and today
-it is necessary for steamers of any size to anchor
-in the practically open roadsteads outside the harbor
-proper. Needless to say, landing in small boats from
-a vessel stationed at this considerable distance outside
-the breakwater is a matter largely dependent
-<span class='pageno' title='19' id='Page_19'></span>on the wind and weather, not only at Canea, with
-which we are at present concerned, but at Candia, of
-which we shall speak later. In a north wind, such as
-frequently blows for days together, a landing on the
-northern coast is often quite impossible, and steamers
-have been known to lie for days off the island
-waiting a chance to approach and discharge. This
-contretemps, however, is less to be feared at Canea
-because of the proximity of the excellent though
-isolated Suda Bay, which is landlocked and deep,
-affording quiet water in any weather, but presenting
-the drawback that it is about four miles from the city
-of Canea, devoid of docks and surrounded by flat
-marshes. Nevertheless, steamers finding the weather
-too rough off the port do proceed thither on occasion
-and transact their business there, though with some
-difficulty. The resort to Suda, however, is seldom
-made save in exceedingly rough weather, for the
-stout shore boats of the Cretans are capable of braving
-very considerable waves and landing passengers
-and freight before the city itself in a fairly stiff northwest
-gale, as our own experience in several Cretan
-landings has proven abundantly. It is not a trip to
-be recommended to the timorous, however, when the
-sea is high; for although it is probably not as dangerous
-as it looks, the row across the open water
-between steamer and harbor is certainly rather terrifying
-<span class='pageno' title='20' id='Page_20'></span>in appearance, as the boats rise and fall, now
-in sight of each other on the crest of the waves,
-now disappearing for what seem interminable intervals
-in the valleys of water between what look like
-mountains of wave tossing angrily on all sides. The
-boatmen are skillful and comparatively few seas are
-shipped, but even so it is a passage likely to be
-dampening to the ardor in more ways than one. On
-a calm day, when the wind is light or offshore, there
-is naturally no trouble, and the boatmen have never
-seemed to me rapacious or insolent, but quite ready
-to abide by the very reasonable tariff charge for the
-round trip. In bad weather, as is not unnatural, it often
-happens that the men request a gratuity over and
-above the established franc-and-a-half rate, on the
-plea that the trip has been "<span lang="it" xml:lang="it">molto cattivo</span>" and the
-labor consequently out of all proportion to the tariff
-charge—which is true. It is no light task for three
-or four stout natives to row a heavy boat containing
-eight people over such a sea as often is to be found
-running off Canea, fighting for every foot of advance,
-and easing off now and then to put the boat head up
-to an unusually menacing comber.</p>
-
-<div id='i041' class='figcenter id005'>
-<img src='images/i_041.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>LANDING-PLACE AT CANEA</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The landing at Canea, if the weather permits landing
-at all, is on a long curving stone quay, lined
-with picturesque buildings, including a mosque with
-its minaret, the latter testifying to the considerable
-<span class='pageno' title='21' id='Page_21'></span>residuum of Turkish and Mohammedan population
-that remains in this polyglot island, despite its present
-Greek rule under the oversight of the Christian
-powers of Europe. The houses along the quay are
-mostly a grayish white, with the light green shutters
-one learns to associate with similar towns everywhere
-in the Ægean. Behind the town at no very great
-distance may be seen rising lofty and forbidding
-mountains, snowcapped down to early May; but a
-brief ride out from the city to Suda Bay will serve to
-reveal some fertile and open valleys such as save
-Crete from being a barren and utterly uninviting
-land. The ordinary stop of an Italian steamer at this
-port is something like six or eight hours, which is
-amply sufficient to give a very good idea of Canea
-and its immediate neighborhood. The time is enough
-for a walk through the tortuous and narrow highways
-and byways of the city—walks in which one
-is attended by a crowd of small boys from the start,
-and indeed by large boys as well, all most persistently
-offering their most unnecessary guidance in
-the hope of receiving “backsheesh,” which truly Oriental
-word is to be heard at every turn, and affords
-one more enduring local monument to the former
-rule of the unspeakable Turk. These lads apparently
-speak a smattering of every known language, and
-are as quick and alert as the New York or Naples
-<span class='pageno' title='22' id='Page_22'></span>gamin. Incidentally, I wonder if every other visitor
-to Canea is afflicted with "Mustapha"? On our last
-landing there we were told, as we went over the side
-of the steamer to brave the tempestuous journey
-ashore in the boat which bobbed below, to be sure
-to look for “Mustapha.” The captain always recommended
-Mustapha, he said, and no Americano that
-ever enlisted the services of Mustapha as guide, philosopher,
-and friend for four Canean hours had ever
-regretted it. So we began diligent inquiry of the
-boatman if he knew this Mustapha. Yes, he did—and
-who better? Was he not Mustapha himself, in
-his own proper person? Inwardly congratulating
-ourselves at finding the indispensable with such remarkable
-promptitude, we soon gained the harbor,
-and the subsequent landing at the quay was assisted
-in by at least forty hardy Caneans, including one
-bullet-headed Nubian, seven shades darker than
-a particularly black ace of clubs, who exhibited a
-mouthful of ivory and proclaimed himself, unsolicited,
-as the true and only Mustapha,—a declaration
-that caused an instant and spontaneous howl of derision
-from sundry other bystanders, who promptly
-filed their claims to that Oriental name and all the
-excellences that it implied. Apparently Mustapha’s
-other name was Legion. Search for him was abandoned
-on the spot, and I would advise any subsequent
-<span class='pageno' title='23' id='Page_23'></span>traveler to do the same. Search is quite
-unnecessary. Wherever two or three Caneans are
-gathered together, there is Mustapha in the midst of
-them,—and perhaps two or three of him.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is by no means easy to get rid of the Canean
-urchins who follow you away from the landing-place
-and into the quaint and narrow streets of the town.
-By deploying your landing party, which is generally
-sufficiently numerous for the purpose, in blocks of
-three or four, the convoy of youth may be split into
-detachments and destroyed in detail. It may be an
-inexpensive and rather entertaining luxury to permit
-the brightest lad of the lot to go along, although,
-as has been intimated, guidance is about the last
-thing needed in Canea. The streets are very narrow,
-very crooked, and not over clean, and are lined with
-houses having those projecting basketwork windows
-overhead, such as are common enough in every
-Turkish or semi-Turkish city. Many of the women
-go heavily veiled, sometimes showing the upper face
-and sometimes not even that, giving an additional
-Oriental touch to the street scenes. This veiling is in
-part a survival of Turkish usages, and in part is due
-to the dust and glare. It is a practice to be met with
-in many other Ægean islands as well as in Crete.
-It is this perpetual recurrence of Mohammedan
-touches that prevents Canea from seeming typically
-<span class='pageno' title='24' id='Page_24'></span>Greek, despite its nominal allegiance. To all outward
-seeming it is Turkish still, and mosques and minarets
-rise above its roofs in more than one spot as
-one surveys it from the harbor or from the hills. The
-streets with their narrow alleys and overshadowing
-archways are tempting indeed to the camera, and it
-may as well be said once and for all that it is a grave
-mistake to visit Greece and the adjacent lands without
-that harmless instrument of retrospective pleasure.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As for sights, Canea must be confessed to offer
-none that are of the traditional kind, “double-starred
-in Bædeker.” There is no museum there, and no
-ruins. The hills are too far away to permit an ascent
-for a view. The palace of the Greek royal commissioner,
-Prince George, offers slight attraction to the
-visitor compared with the scenes of the streets and
-squares in the town itself, the coffee-houses, and
-above all the curious shops. Canea is no mean place
-for the curio hunter with an eye to handsome, though
-barbaric, blankets, saddle-bags, and the like. The
-bizarre effect of the scene is increased by the manifold
-racial characteristics of face, figure, and dress
-that one may observe there; men and women
-quaintly garbed in the peasant dress of half a dozen
-different nations. In a corner, sheltered from the heat
-or from the wind, as the case may be, sit knots of
-weazen old men, cloaks wrapped about their shoulders,
-<span class='pageno' title='25' id='Page_25'></span>either drinking their muddy coffee or plying
-some trifling trade while they gossip,—doubtless
-about the changed times. From a neighboring coffeehouse
-there will be heard to trickle a wild and barbaric
-melody tortured out of a long-suffering fiddle
-that cannot, by any stretch of euphemism, be called
-a violin; or men may be seen dancing in a sedate
-and solemn circle, arms spread on each other’s shoulders
-in the Greek fashion, to the minor cadences of
-the plaintive “bouzouki,” or Greek guitar. There are
-shops of every kind, retailing chiefly queer woolen
-bags, or shoes of soft, white skins, or sweetmeats of
-the Greek and Turkish fashion. Here it is possible
-for the first time to become acquainted with the celebrated
-“loukoumi” of Syra, a soft paste made of
-gums, rosewater, and flavoring extracts, with an addition
-of chopped nuts, each block of the candy rolled
-in soft sugar. It is much esteemed by the Greeks,
-who are notorious lovers of sweetmeats, and it is
-imitated and grossly libeled in America under the
-alias of “Turkish Delight.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From Canea a very good road leads out over a
-gently rolling country to Suda Bay. Little is to be
-seen there, however, save a very lovely prospect of
-hill and vale, and a few warships of various nations
-lying at anchor, representing the four or five jealous
-powers who maintain a constant watch over the
-<span class='pageno' title='26' id='Page_26'></span>destinies of this troublous isle. The cosmopolitan
-character of these naval visitants is abundantly testified
-to by the signs that one may see along the highroad
-near Suda, ringing all possible linguistic changes
-on legends that indicate facilities for the entertainment
-of Jack ashore, and capable of being summed
-up in the single phrase, “Army and Navy Bar.” The
-Greeks were ever a hospitable race.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The road to Suda, however, is far from being lined
-by nothing more lovely than these decrepit wine
-shops for the audacious tar. The three or four miles
-of its length lie through fertile fields devoted to olive
-orchards and to the cultivation of grain, and one
-would look far for a more picturesque sight than
-the Cretan farmer driving his jocund team afield—a
-team of large oxen attached to a primitive plow—or
-wielding his cumbersome hoe in turning up the
-sod under his own vine and olive trees. It is a pleasing
-and pastoral spectacle. The ride out to Suda is
-easily made while the steamer waits, in a very comfortable
-carriage procurable in the public square for
-a moderate sum. It may be as well to remark, however,
-that carriages in Greece are not, as a rule,
-anywhere nearly as cheap as in Italy.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is a long jump from Canea to Candia, the second
-city of the island, situated many miles farther to
-the east along this northern shore. But it easily surpasses
-<span class='pageno' title='27' id='Page_27'></span>Canea in classic interest, being the site of the
-traditional ruler of Crete in the most ancient times,—King
-Minos,—of whom we shall have much to
-say. Candia, as we shall call it, although its local
-name is Megalokastron, is not touched by any of
-the steamers en route from the west to Athens, but
-must be visited in connection with a cruise among
-the islands of the Ægean. From the sea it resembles
-Canea in nature as well as in name. It shows the
-same harbor fortifications of Venetian build, and
-bears the same lion of St. Mark. It possesses the
-same lack of harborage for vessels other than small
-sailing craft. Its water front is lined with white houses
-with green blinds, and slender white minarets stand
-loftily above the roofs. Its streets and squares are
-much like Canea’s, too, although they are rather
-broader and more modern in appearance; while the
-crowds of people in the streets present a similar array
-of racial types to that already referred to in describing
-the former city. More handsome men are to be
-seen, splendid specimens of humanity clad in the
-blue baggy trousers and jackets of Turkish cut, and
-wearing the fez. Candia is well walled by a very
-thick and lofty fortification erected in Venetian times,
-and lies at the opening of a broad valley stretching
-across the island to the south, and by its topography
-and central situation was the natural theatre of activity
-<span class='pageno' title='28' id='Page_28'></span>in the distant period with which we are about
-to make our first acquaintance. Even without leaving
-the city one may get some idea of the vast antiquity
-of some of its relics by a visit to the museum located
-in an old Venetian palace in the heart of the town,
-where are to be seen the finds of various excavators
-who have labored in the island. Most of these belong
-to a very remote past, antedating vastly the Mycenæan
-period, which used to seem so old, with its traditions
-of Agamemnon and the sack of Troy. Here
-we encounter relics of monarchs who lived before
-Troy was made famous, and the English excavator,
-Evans, who has exhumed the palace of Minos not
-far outside the city gates, has classified the articles
-displayed as of the “Minoan” period. It would be
-idle in this place to attempt any detailed explanation
-of the subdivisions of “early,” “middle,” and “late
-Minoan” which have been appended to the manifold
-relics to be seen in the museum collection, or to give
-any detailed description of them. It must suffice to
-say that the period represented is so early that any
-attempt to affix dates must be conjectural, and that
-we may safely take it in general terms as a period so
-far preceding the dawn of recorded history that it
-was largely legendary even in the time of the classic
-Greeks, who already regarded Minos himself as a
-demi-god and sort of immortal judge in the realm
-<span class='pageno' title='29' id='Page_29'></span>of the shades. The museum, with its hundreds of
-quaint old vases, rudely ornamented in geometric
-patterns, its fantastic and faded mural paintings, its
-sarcophagi, its implements of toil, and all the manifold
-testimony to a civilization so remote that it is
-overwhelming to the mind, will serve to hold the
-visitor long. Nor is it to be forgotten that among
-these relics from Cnossos, Phæstos, and Gortyn, are
-many contributed by the industry and energy of the
-American investigator, Mrs. Hawes (<span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>née</em></span> Boyd), whose
-work in Crete has been of great value and archæological
-interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Having whetted one’s appetite for the remotely
-antique by browsing through this collection of treasures,
-one is ready enough to make the journey out
-to Cnossos, the site of the ancient palace, only four
-miles away. There is a good road, and it is possible
-to walk if desired, although it is about as hot and
-uninteresting a walk as can well be imagined. It is
-easier and better to ride, although the Cretan drivers
-in general, and the Candian ones in particular, enjoy
-the reputation of being about the most rapacious in
-the civilized world. On the way out to the palace at
-Cnossos, the road winds through a rolling country,
-and crosses repeatedly an old paved Turkish road,
-which must have been much less agreeable than
-the present one to traverse. On the right, far away to
-<span class='pageno' title='30' id='Page_30'></span>the southwest, rises the peak which is supposed to be
-the birthplace of Zeus, the slopes of Mt. Ida. Crete
-is the land most sacred to Zeus of all the lands of the
-ancient world. Here his mother bore him, having fled
-thither to escape the wrath of her husband, the god
-Cronos, who had formed the unbecoming habit of
-swallowing his progeny as soon as they were born.
-Having been duly delivered of the child Zeus, his
-mother, Rhæa, wrapped up a stone in some cloth
-and presented it to Cronos, who swallowed it, persuaded
-that he had once more ridded the world of
-the son it was predicted should oust him from his
-godlike dignities and power. But Rhæa concealed
-the real Zeus in a cave on Ida, and when he came to
-maturity he made war on Cronos and deprived him
-of his dominion. Hence Zeus, whose worship in Crete
-soon spread to other islands and mainland, was held
-in highest esteem in the isle of his birth, and his cult
-had for its symbol the double-headed axe, which we
-find on so many of the relics of the Candia museum
-and on the walls of the ancient palaces, like that we
-are on the way to visit at Cnossos.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is necessary to remark that there were two characters
-named Minos in the ancient mythology. The
-original of the name was the child of Zeus and
-Europa, and he ruled over Crete, where Saturn is
-supposed to have governed before him, proving a
-<span class='pageno' title='31' id='Page_31'></span>wise law-giver for the people. The other Minos was
-a grandson of the first, child of Lycastos and Ida.
-This Minos later grew up and married Pasiphaë,
-whose unnatural passion begot the Minotaur, or savage
-bull with the body of a man and an appetite for
-human flesh. To house this monster Minos was compelled
-to build the celebrated labyrinth, and he fed
-the bull with condemned criminals, who were sent
-into the mazes of the labyrinth never to return. Still
-later, taking offense at the Athenians because in
-their Panathenaic games they had killed his own
-son, Minos sent an expedition against them, defeated
-them, and thereafter levied an annual tribute of seven
-boys and seven girls upon the inhabitants, who were
-taken to Crete and fed to the Minotaur. This cruel
-exaction continued until Theseus came to Crete and,
-with the aid of the thread furnished him by Ariadne,
-tracked his way into the labyrinth, slaughtered the
-monster and returned alive to the light of day. Of
-course such a network of myths, if it does nothing
-else, argues the great antiquity of the Minoan period,
-to which the ruins around Candia are supposed to
-belong, and they naturally lead us to an inquiry
-whether any labyrinth was ever found or supposed
-to be found in the vicinity. I believe there actually
-is an extensive artificial cave in the mountains south
-of Cnossos, doubtless an ancient subterranean quarry,
-<span class='pageno' title='32' id='Page_32'></span>which is called “the labyrinth” to-day, though it
-doubtless never sheltered the Minotaur. It is sufficiently
-large to have served once as the abode of
-several hundred persons during times of revolution,
-they living there in comparative comfort save for the
-lack of light; and it is interesting to know that they
-employed Ariadne’s device of the thread to keep
-them in touch with the passage out of their self-imposed
-prison when the political atmosphere cleared
-and it was safe to venture forth into the light of day.
-It seems rather more probable that the myth or legend
-of the labyrinth of Minos had its origin in the labyrinthine
-character of the king’s own palace, as it is
-now shown to have been a perfect maze of corridors
-and rooms, through which it is possible to wander
-at will, since the excavators have laid them open
-after the lapse of many centuries. A glance at the
-plans of the Cnossos palace in the guide-books, or a
-survey of them from the top of Mr. Evans’s rather
-garish and incongruous but highly useful tower on
-the spot, will serve to show a network of passageways
-and apartments that might easily have given
-rise to the tale of the impenetrable man-trap which
-Theseus alone had the wit to evade.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The ruins lie at the east of the high road, in a deep
-valley. Their excavation has been very complete and
-satisfactory, and while some restorations have been
-<span class='pageno' title='33' id='Page_33'></span>attempted here and there, chiefly because of absolute
-necessity to preserve portions of the structure, they
-are not such restorations as to jar on one, but exhibit
-a fidelity to tradition that saves them from the common
-fate of such efforts. Little or no retouching was
-necessary in the case of the stupendous flights of
-steps that were found leading up to the door of this
-prehistoric royal residence, and which are the first of
-the many sights the visitor of to-day may see. It is
-in the so-called “throne room of Minos” that the
-restoring hand is first met. Here it has been found
-necessary to provide a roof, that damage by weather
-be avoided; and to-day the throne room is a dusky
-spot, rather below the general level of the place. Its
-chief treasure is the throne itself, a stone chair, carved
-in rather rudimentary ornamentation, and about the
-size of an ordinary chair. The roof is supported by
-the curious, top-heavy-looking stone pillars, that are
-known to have prevailed not only in the Minoan but
-in the Mycenæan period; monoliths noticeably larger
-at the top than at the bottom, reversing the usual
-form of stone pillar with which later ages have made
-us more familiar. This quite illogical inversion of
-what we now regard as the proper form has been
-accounted for in theory, by assuming that it was the
-natural successor of the sharpened wooden stake.
-When the ancients adopted stone supports for their
-<span class='pageno' title='34' id='Page_34'></span>roofs, they simply took over the forms they had been
-familiar with in the former use of wood, and the result
-was a stone pillar that copied the earlier wooden one
-in shape. Time, of course, served to show that the
-natural way of building demanded the reversal of this
-custom; but in the Mycenæan age it had not been
-discovered, for there are evidences that similar pillars
-existed in buildings of that period, and the representation
-of a pillar that stands between the two lions
-on Mycenæ’s famous gate has this inverted form.</p>
-
-<div id='i057' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/i_057.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THRONE OF MINOS AT CNOSSOS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Many hours may be spent in detailed examination
-of this colossal ruin, testifying to what must have
-been in its day an enormous and impressive palace.
-One cannot go far in traversing it without noticing
-the traces still evident enough of the fire that obviously
-destroyed it many hundred, if not several
-thousand, years before Christ. Along the western side
-have been discovered long corridors, from which
-scores of long and narrow rooms were to be entered.
-These, in the published plans, serve to give to the
-ruin a large share of its labyrinthine character. It
-seems to be agreed now that these were the store-rooms
-of the palace, and in them may still be seen
-the huge earthen jars which once served to contain
-the palace supplies. Long rows of them stand in
-the ancient hallways and in the narrow cells that
-lead off them, each jar large enough to hold a fair-sized
-<span class='pageno' title='35' id='Page_35'></span>man, and in number sufficient to have accommodated
-Ali Baba and the immortal forty thieves.
-In the centre of the palace little remains; but in the
-southeastern corner, where the land begins to slope
-abruptly to the valley below, there are to be seen
-several stories of the ancient building. Here one
-comes upon the rooms marked with the so-called
-“distaff” pattern, supposed to indicate that they were
-the women’s quarters. The restorer has been busy
-here, but not offensively so. Much of the ancient
-wall is intact, and in one place is a bath-room with
-a very diminutive bath-tub still in place. Along the
-eastern side is also shown the oil press, where olives
-were once made to yield their coveted juices, and
-from the press proper a stone gutter conducted the
-fluid down to the point where jars were placed to
-receive it. This discovery of oil presses in ancient
-buildings, by the way, has served in more than one
-case to arouse speculation as to the antiquity of oil
-lamps, such as were once supposed to belong only to
-a much later epoch. Whether in the Minoan days
-they had such lamps or not, it is known that they had
-at least an oil press and a good one. In the side of
-the hill below the main palace of Minos has been unearthed
-a smaller structure, which they now call the
-“villa,” and in which several terraces have been uncovered
-rather similar to the larger building above.
-<span class='pageno' title='36' id='Page_36'></span>Here is another throne room, cunningly contrived to
-be lighted by a long shaft of light from above falling
-on the seat of justice itself, while the rest of the room
-is in obscurity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It may be that it requires a stretch of the imagination
-to compare the palace of Cnossos with Troy,
-but nevertheless there are one or two features that
-seem not unlike the discoveries made by Dr. Schliemann
-on that famous site. Notably so, it seems to
-me, are the traces of the final fire, which are to be seen
-at Cnossos as at Troy, and the huge jars, which maybe
-compared with the receptacles the Trojan excavators
-unearthed, and found still to contain dried peas and
-other things that the Trojans left behind when they
-fled from their sacked and burning city. Few are
-privileged to visit the site of Priam’s city, which is
-hard indeed to reach; but it is easy enough to make
-the excursion to Candia and visit the palace of old
-King Minos, which is amply worth the trouble, besides
-giving a glimpse of a civilization that is possibly
-vastly older than even that of Troy and Mycenæ.
-For those who reverence the great antiquities, Candia
-and its pre-classic suburb are distinctly worth visiting,
-and are unique among the sights of the ancient
-Hellenic and pre-Hellenic world.</p>
-<div id='i061' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/i_061.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>STORE-ROOMS IN MINOAN PALACE, CNOSSOS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='37' id='Page_37'></span>
- <h2 id='chap03' class='c005'>CHAPTER III. THE ENTRANCE <br /> TO GREECE</h2>
-</div>
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_063.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>Leaving Crete behind, the steamer turns her
-prow northward into the Ægean toward Greece
-proper, and in the early morning, if all goes smoothly,
-will be found well inside the promontory of Sunium,
-approaching the Piræus. One ought most infallibly
-to be early on deck, for the rugged, rocky shores of
-the Peloponnesus are close at hand on the left, indented
-here and there by deep inlets or gulfs, and
-looking as most travelers seem to think “Greece
-ought to look.” If it is clear, a few islands may be
-seen on the right, though none of the celebrated ones
-are near enough to be seen with any satisfaction.
-Sunium itself is so far away to the eastward that it
-is impossible at this distance to obtain any idea of
-the ancient ruin that still crowns its summit.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Although to enter Greece by way of the Piræus is
-actually to enter the front door of the kingdom, nevertheless,
-as has been hinted heretofore, one may vote
-<span class='pageno' title='38' id='Page_38'></span>on the whole that it is better to make this the point
-of departure instead of that of initiation. Leaving
-Greece as most of us do with a poignant sense of
-regret, it is not unfitting that we depart with the benediction
-of the old Acropolis of Athens, crowned with
-its famous ruins, which are to be seen even when far
-at sea, glowing in the afternoon sun, and furnishing
-an ideal last view of this land of golden memories.
-Simply because it makes such an ideal last view,
-leaving the crowning “glory that was Greece” last
-in the mind’s eye, one may well regard this point as
-the best one for leaving, whatever may be said for
-it as a place of beginning an acquaintance with
-Hellas. It must be confessed that to one approaching
-for the first time, save in the clearest weather,
-the view of the Acropolis from the sea is likely to
-be somewhat disappointing, because the locating of
-it in the landscape is not an easy matter. Under a
-cloudy sky—and there are occasionally such skies
-even in sunny Greece—it is not at all easy to pick
-out the Acropolis, lying low in the foreground and
-flanked by such superior heights as Lycabettus and
-Pentelicus. Hence it is that the voyager, returning
-home from a stay in Athens, enjoys the seaward view
-of the receding site far more than the approaching
-newcomer; and it must be added that, however one
-may reverence the Acropolis from his reading, it can
-<span class='pageno' title='39' id='Page_39'></span>never mean so much to him as it will after a few days
-of personal acquaintance, when he has learned to
-know its every stone. What slight disappointment
-one may feel on first beholding the ancient rock of
-Athena from the ocean, is, after all, only momentary
-and due solely to the distance. It is certain to be removed
-later when closer acquaintance shows it to be
-the stupendous rock it really is, standing alone, and
-seen to better advantage than when the hills that wall
-the Attic plain overshadow it in the perspective.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As the steamer approaches, the loftier heights of
-Hymettus, Pentelicus, Parnes, Ægina, and Salamis
-intrude themselves and will not be denied, framing
-between them the valley in which Athens lies, obscured
-for the time being by the tall chimneys and
-the forest of masts that herald the presence of the
-Piræus in the immediate foreground. That city is as
-of yore the seaport of Athens, and is a thriving city
-in itself, although from its proximity to the famous
-capital it loses individual prestige, and seems rather
-like a dependence of the main city than a separate
-and important town, rivaling Athens herself in size,
-if not in history.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Perhaps the most trying experience to the newcomer
-is this landing at the Piræus and the labor
-involved in getting ashore and up to Athens; but,
-after all, it is trying only in the sense that it is a matter
-<span class='pageno' title='40' id='Page_40'></span>for much bargaining, in which the unfamiliar visitor
-is at an obvious disadvantage. As in all Greek
-ports, the landing is to be accomplished only by small
-boats, which are manned by watermen having no
-connection at all with the steamship companies. It
-would seem to be the reasonable duty of a steamer
-line to provide facilities for setting its passengers
-ashore, and in time this may be done; but it is an
-unfortunate fact that it is not done now, and the passenger
-is left to bargain for himself with the crowd of
-small craft that surrounds the vessel as she is slowly
-and painfully berthed. The harbor itself is seen to
-be a very excellent and sheltered one, protected by
-two long breakwaters, which admit of hardly more
-than a single large vessel at a time between their
-narrow jaws. Within, it opens out into a broad expanse
-of smooth water, lined throughout its periphery
-by a low stone quay. While the steamer is being
-warped to her position, always with the stern toward
-the shore, a fleet of small boats, most of them flying
-the flags of hotels in Athens or of the several tourist
-agencies, eagerly swarm around and await the lowering
-of the landing stairs, meantime gesticulating violently
-to attract the attention of passengers on deck.
-Little that is definite, however, can be done until the
-gangway is lowered and the boatmen’s representatives
-have swarmed on the deck itself. There is time
-<span class='pageno' title='41' id='Page_41'></span>and to spare, so that the voyager has no occasion to
-hurry, but may possess his soul in patience and seek
-to make the most advantageous terms possible with
-the lowest bidder. The boatmen, be well assured, know
-English enough to negotiate the bargain.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Despite the apparent competition, which ought by
-all the laws of economics to be the life of trade, it
-will doubtless be found quite impossible to make
-any arrangement for landing and getting up to the
-city for a sum much under twelve francs. That is the
-published tariff of the hotels which send out boats,
-and if one is certain of his stopping-place in Athens
-he will doubtless do well to close immediately with
-the boatman displaying the insignia of that particular
-hostelry. But it is entirely probable that any
-regular habitué would say that the hotel tariff is
-grossly out of proportion to the actual cost, since the
-boatman’s fee should be not more than a franc and
-the ride to Athens not more than six. As for the
-tourist agencies, they may be depended upon to ask
-more than the hotel runners do, and the only limit
-is the visitor’s credulity and ignorance of the place.
-Whatever bargain is made, the incoming passenger
-will, if wise, see to it that it is understood to cover
-everything, including the supposititious “landing
-tax” that is so often foisted upon the customer after
-landing in Athens as an “extra.” These are doubtless
-<span class='pageno' title='42' id='Page_42'></span>sordid details, but necessary ones, and matters which
-it may prove profitable to understand before venturing
-in. Having dismissed them as such, we may turn with
-more enjoyment to the prospect now presenting itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Piræus, as all the world knows, is the port of Athens
-now as in classic times. Topographically it has three
-good harbors, the Piræus proper, Zea, and Munychia—the
-latter name also applying to the rocky promontory
-which juts out and separates the harbor from the
-Saronic Gulf. It was on the Munychia peninsula that
-Themistocles in 493 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> erected a town, and it was
-Themistocles, also, who conceived and carried out
-the scheme for the celebrated “long walls” which ran
-from the port up to Athens, and made the city practically
-impregnable by making it quite independent
-of the rest of Attica, so long as the Athenian supremacy
-by sea remained unquestioned. Thus it came to
-pass that, during the Peloponnesian War, when all the
-rest of the Attic plain had fallen into the hands of
-the Lacedæmonians, Athens herself remained practically
-undisturbed, thanks not only to the long walls
-and ships, but also to the fortifications of Cimon
-and Pericles. The Athenian navy, however, was
-finally overwhelmed in the battle of Ægospotamoi in
-404 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, and the port fell a prey to the enemy, who
-demolished the long walls, to the music of the flute.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Ten years later, when Athens had somewhat recovered
-<span class='pageno' title='43' id='Page_43'></span>from the first defeat, Conon rebuilt the walls,
-and Athens, with Piræus, for a space enjoyed a return
-of her ancient greatness and prosperity. The
-Roman under Sulla came in 86 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, and practically
-put an end to the famous capital, which became an
-inconsiderable village, and so remained down to the
-Grecian risorgimento. The present city of Piræus, and
-the city of Athens also, practically date from 1836,
-though the old names had been revived the year previous.
-Up to that time the spot had for years passed
-under the unclassic name of Porto Leone.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Inasmuch as the fame of Athens and her empire
-rested on the navy as its foundation, and inasmuch
-as the navy made its home in the waters of the Piræus
-and Munychia, the locality has its glorious memories
-to share with the still more glorious traditions
-of the neighboring Salamis, where the Persians of
-Xerxes were put to such utter rout. It was from this
-harbor that the splendid, but ill-fated, Sicilian expedition
-set out, with flags flying, pæans sounding, and
-libations pouring. And it was to the Piræus that a
-lone survivor of that sorry campaign returned to relate
-the incredible news to the village barber.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The harbor of the Piræus is generally full of shipping
-of all sorts, including steamers of every size
-and nationality, as well as high-sided schooners that
-recall the Homeric epithet of the “hollow ships.”
-<span class='pageno' title='44' id='Page_44'></span>Some are en route to or from Constantinople, Alexandria,
-Naples, the ports of the Adriatic, the Orient,—everywhere.
-The Greek coastwise vessels often bear
-their names printed in large white letters amidships,
-familiar names looking decidedly odd in the
-Greek characters. All are busily loading or discharging,
-for the Piræus is, as ever, a busy port. Under
-the sterns of several such ships the shore boat passes,
-its occupants ducking repeatedly under the sagging
-stern cables, until in a brief time all are set ashore
-at the custom-house. That institution, however, need
-give the visitor little apprehension. The examination
-of reasonable luggage is seldom or never oppressive
-or fraught with inconvenience, doubtless because the
-visitor is duly recognized by the government as a
-being whose presence is bound to be of profit, and
-who should not, therefore, be wantonly discouraged
-at the very threshold of the kingdom. Little is insisted
-on save a declaration that the baggage contains
-no tobacco or cigarettes. The porters as a rule
-are more tolerant of copper tips than the present
-rapidly spoiling race of Italian <span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><em>facchini</em></span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The sensible way to proceed to Athens is by carriage,
-taking the Phalerum road. The electric tram,
-which is a very commodious third-rail system resembling
-the subway trains of Boston or New York, is
-all very well if one is free from impedimenta. But for
-<span class='pageno' title='45' id='Page_45'></span>the ordinary voyager, with several valises or trunks,
-the carriage is not only best but probably the most
-economical in the end. The carriages are comfortable,
-and capable of carrying four persons with reasonable
-baggage.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Little of interest will be found in driving out of the
-Piræus, which is a frankly commercial place, devoid
-of architectural or enduring classical recommendations.
-The long walls that once connected the port
-with Athens have disappeared almost beyond recall,
-although the sites are known. Nor is the beach of New
-Phalerum (pronounced Fál-eron) much more attractive
-than the Piræus itself. It reminds one strongly
-of suburban beach places at home, lined as it is with
-cheap cottages, coffee-houses, restaurants, bicycle
-shops, and here and there a more pretentious residence,
-while at least one big and garish hotel is to
-be seen. The sea, varying from a light green to a
-deep Mediterranean blue, laps gently along the side
-of the highway toward the open ocean, while ahead,
-up the straight boulevard, appears the Acropolis of
-Athens, now seen for the first time in its proper light
-as one of the most magnificent ruins of the earth.
-The road thither is good but uncomfortably new.
-When its long lines of pepper trees, now in their
-infancy, shall have attained their growth, it will be a
-highway lined with shade and affording a prospect
-<span class='pageno' title='46' id='Page_46'></span>of much beauty. In its present state, however, which
-is destined to endure for some years to come, it is a
-long, straight, and rather dreary boulevard, relieved
-only by the glorious prospect of the crowning ruin of
-Athens something like four miles away, but towering
-alone and grand, and no longer dwarfed by the
-surrounding gray hills. Still this route seems to me
-infinitely better, even to-day, than the older road
-from Piræus, which approaches Athens from the western
-side without going near the sea, but which is
-not without its charms, nevertheless, and certainly
-does give the one who takes it a splendid view of
-the imposing western front of the Acropolis and its
-array of temples, across a plain green with waving
-grasses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Approaching the city from the Phalerum side
-serves to give a very striking impression of the inaccessibility
-of the Acropolis, showing its precipitous
-southern face, crowned by the ruined Parthenon,
-whose ancient pillars, weathered to a golden brown,
-stand gleaming in the sun against the deep and brilliant
-blue of the Greek sky. Those who have pictured
-the temple as glistening white will be vastly surprised,
-no doubt, on seeing its actual color; for the iron and
-other metals present in the Pentelic marble, of which
-it was built, have removed almost entirely the white
-or creamy tints, and have given in their place a rich
-<span class='pageno' title='47' id='Page_47'></span>mottled appearance, due to the ripe old age of this
-shrine.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Aside from the ever present prospect of the Acropolis
-and its promise of interest in store, the road to
-Athens is devoid of much to attract attention. The
-long, gray ridge of Hymettus, which runs along just
-east of the road, of course is a famous mountain by
-reason of its well-known brand of honey, if for no
-other reason. Halfway up the gradual incline to the
-city there is a small and rather unattractive church,
-said to be a votive offering made by the king in thankfulness
-at escaping the bullets of two would-be assassins
-at this point. On the left, and still far ahead, rises
-the hill, crowned by the ruined but still conspicuous
-monument of Philopappus. Situated on a commanding
-eminence south of the Acropolis, this monument
-is a dominant feature of almost every view of Athens;
-but it is entirely out of proportion to the importance
-of the man whose vague memory it recalls.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Passing the eastern and most lofty end of the Acropolis,
-the carriage at last turns into the outskirts of
-the city proper and traverses a broad and pleasant
-avenue, its wide sidewalks shaded by graceful and
-luxuriant pepper trees, while the prosperous looking
-houses give an attractive first impression of residential
-Athens. The modern is curiously intermingled
-with the ancient; for on the right, in the fields which
-<span class='pageno' title='48' id='Page_48'></span>border the highway, are to be seen the few remaining
-colossal columns of the rather florid temple of Olympian
-Zeus and the fragmentary arch of Hadrian, the
-Roman emperor in whose reign that temple was at
-last completed. It is peculiarly fitting to enter Athens
-between these ruins on the one hand and the Acropolis
-on the other, for they are so characteristic of
-the great chief attraction of the place,—its immortal
-past.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The city proper now opens out before, and as the
-carriage enters the great principal square of Athens,
-the “Syntagma,” or Place de la Constitution, handsome
-streets may be seen radiating from it in all
-directions, giving a general impression of cleanly
-whiteness, while the square itself, spreading a wide
-open space before the huge and rather barnlike royal
-palace, is filled with humanity passing to and fro, or
-seated at small tables in the open air, partaking of
-the coffee so dear to the heart of the Greek; and
-carriages dash here and there, warning pedestrians
-only by the driver’s repeated growl of “empros, empros!”
-(εμπρός), which is exactly equivalent to the golf-player’s
-“fore!” And here in the crowded square we
-may leave the traveler for the present, doubtless not
-far from his hotel,—for hotels are all about,—with
-only the parting word of advice that he shall early
-seek repose, in the certitude that there will be some
-<span class='pageno' title='49' id='Page_49'></span>little noise. For the Athenians are almost as noisy
-and nocturnal creatures as the Palermitans or Neapolitans,
-and the nights will be filled with music and
-many other sounds of revelry. To be sure, there are
-no paved streets and no clanging trolley cars; but
-the passing throngs will make up for any lack in
-that regard, even until a late hour of the night.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='50' id='Page_50'></span>
- <h2 id='chap04' class='c005'>CHAPTER IV. ATHENS; THE <br /> MODERN CITY</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_076.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>Athens lies in a long and narrow plain between
-two rocky mountain ridges that run down
-from the north. The plain to-day is neither interesting
-nor particularly fertile, although it is still tilled with
-some success. Once when it was better watered by
-the Cephissus and Ilissus rivers, whose courses are
-still visible though in the main dry and rocky, it was
-doubtless better able to support the local population;
-but to-day it is rather a bare and unattractive intervale
-between mountains quite as bare—gray, rocky
-heights, covered with little vegetation save the sparse
-gorse and thyme. At that point in the plain where a
-lofty, isolated, and nearly oblong rock, with precipitous
-sides, invited the foundation of a citadel, Athens
-sprang into being. And there she stands to-day, having
-pivoted around the hoary Acropolis crag for
-centuries, first south, then west, then north, until
-the latter has become the final abiding place of the
-<span class='pageno' title='51' id='Page_51'></span>modern town, while the older sites to the southward
-and westward lie almost deserted save for the activities
-of the archæologists and students, who have
-found them rich and interesting ground for exploration.
-Always, however, the Acropolis was the fulcrum
-or focus, and it was on this unique rock that Poseidon
-and Athena waged their immortal contest for the
-possession of the Attic plain. Tradition says that
-Poseidon smote with his trident and a salt spring
-gushed forth from the cleft rock, thus proving his
-power; but that the judgment of the gods was in
-favor of Athena, who made to spring up from the
-ground an olive tree. Wherefore the land was allotted
-to her, and from her the city took its name. Under
-the northern side of the towering rock and around to
-the east of it runs the thriving city of to-day, thence
-spreading off for perhaps two miles to the northward
-along the plain, first closely congested, then widening
-into more open modernized streets, and finally dwindling
-into scattered suburbs out in the countryside.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The growth of Athens has left its marks of progress
-in well-defined strata. The narrow, squalid,
-slummy streets of the quarter nearest the Acropolis
-belong to the older or Turkish period of the city’s
-renascent life. Beyond these one meets newer and
-broader highways, lined in many cases with neat modern
-shops, called into life by the city’s remarkable
-<span class='pageno' title='52' id='Page_52'></span>growth of the past two decades, which have raised
-Athens from the rank of a dirty village to a clean and
-attractive metropolis—in the better sense of that
-much abused word. Still farther away are seen the
-natural products of the overflow of a thriving modern
-town—suburbs clustering around isolated mills or
-wine-presses. The present population is not far from
-a hundred thousand persons, so that Athens to-day
-is not an inconsiderable place. The population is
-chiefly the native Greek, modified no doubt by long
-submission to Turkish rule and mingled with a good
-deal of Turkish blood, but still preserving the language,
-names, and traditions that bespeak a glorious
-past. Despite the persistence of such names as Aristeides,
-Miltiades, Themistocles, Socrates, and the like
-among the modern Athenians, it would no doubt
-be rashly unreasonable to expect to find in a population
-that was to all intents and purposes so long
-enslaved by Turkey very much that savors of the
-traditional Greek character as it stood in the days of
-Pericles. But there have not been wanting eminent
-scholars, who have insisted that our exalted ideas
-of the ancient Greeks are really derived from a comparatively
-few exceptional and shining examples,
-and that the ancient population may have resembled
-the present citizens more than we are prone to think,
-in traits and general ability.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='53' id='Page_53'></span>On his native heath the modern Greek openly
-charges his own race with a lack of industry and love
-of idling too much in the coffee-houses, although it
-is an indictment which has never struck me as just,
-and one which, if coming from a foreigner, would
-doubtless be resented. It is true that the coffeehouses
-are seldom deserted, and the possession of an
-extra drachma or two is generally enough to tempt
-one to abandon his employ for the seclusion that the
-<em>kaffeneion</em> grants, there to sip slowly until the cups
-of syrupy coffee which the money will buy are gone.
-Nevertheless, one should be slow to say that the race
-is indolent by nature, especially in view of its climatic
-surroundings; for there are too many thousand
-thrifty and hard-working Hellenes in Greece and in
-America as well to refute any such accusation. The
-one vast trouble, no doubt, is the lack of any spur to
-industrial ambition at home, or of any very attractive
-or remunerative employment compared with the opportunities
-offered by the cities of the newer world.
-The strong set of the tide of emigration to American
-shores has tended largely to depopulate Greece; but
-it is not unlikely that the return of the natives, which
-is by no means uncommon, will in time work large
-benefit to Hellas herself, and the attraction of her sons
-to foreign lands thus prove a blessing rather than, as
-was once supposed, a curse.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='54' id='Page_54'></span>This, however, is rather aside from any consideration
-of the modern city of Athens. Let it be said at the
-outset that one may go freely anywhere in the city
-and be quite unmolested either by malicious or mendicant
-persons. It is not improbable, of course, that
-the increasing inundation of Athens by foreign visitors
-will tend somewhat to increase the tendency to
-begging, as it has elsewhere; but it is due the Greek
-race to say that it is infinitely less lazy and infinitely
-less inclined to proletarianism, or to seeking to live
-without work, than the Italian. Small children, as in
-all countries, will be found occasionally begging a
-penny, especially if they have gone out of their way
-to render a fancied service, by ostentatiously opening
-a gate that already stood ajar. But there are few of
-the lame, halt, and blind, such as infest Naples and
-many smaller Mediterranean cities, seeking to extort
-money from sheer pity of unsightliness. Here and
-there in Athens one may indeed see a cripple patiently
-awaiting alms, but generally in a quiet and unobtrusive
-way. Neither is the visitor bothered by the importunities
-of carriage drivers, although the carriages
-are numerous enough and anxious for fares—a contrast
-that is welcome indeed to one newly come from
-Italy and fresh from the tireless pursuit of warring
-Neapolitan cabbies. The offset to this welcome peace
-is the fact that carriage fares in Athens are undoubtedly
-<span class='pageno' title='55' id='Page_55'></span>high compared with the astonishingly low charges
-produced in Naples by active and incessant competition
-of the vetturini. The sole dangers of Athenian
-streets are those incident to the fast driving of
-carriages over the unpaved roadways; for the pedestrian
-has his own way to make and his own safety to
-guard, as is largely true in Paris, and it is incumbent
-on him to stop, look, and listen before venturing into
-the highway.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The street venders of laces, sponges, flowers, and
-postal cards are perhaps the nearest to an importunate
-class, though they generally await invitation to the
-attack, and their efforts are invariably good-humored.
-The region of the “Syntagma” square is generally
-full of them, lining the curb and laden with their
-wares. Men will be seen with long strips of fascinating
-island lace over their shoulders, baskets on baskets
-of flowers, heaps of curiously shaped, marvelously
-attractive sponges, fresh and white from the near-by
-ocean, or packets of well-executed postal cards picturing
-the city’s classic remains, all offered for sale to
-whomsoever will exhibit the faintest trace of interest.
-Needless to say, the initial prices asked are inevitably
-excessive and yield to treatment with surprising
-revelations of latitude.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Athens is a clean city. Its streets, while unpaved,
-are still fairly hard. Its buildings are in the main of
-<span class='pageno' title='56' id='Page_56'></span>stone, covered with a stucco finish and given a white
-color, or a tint of buff or light blue. The prevailing
-tone is white, and in the glare of the brilliant sun it is
-often rather trying to the eyes. To relieve the whiteness
-there is always the feathery green of the pepper
-trees, and the contrast of the clambering vines and
-flowers that in their season go far to make the city so
-attractive. Most notable of all the contrasts in color is
-unquestionably the rich purple of the bougainvillea
-blooms splashed in great masses against the immaculate
-walls and porticoes of the more pretentious
-houses. The gardens are numerous and run riot with
-roses, iris, and hundreds of other fragrant and lovely
-blossoms. The sidewalks are broad and smooth. It is
-an easy town in which to stroll about, for the distances
-are not great and the street scenes are interesting
-and frequently unusual to a high degree, while vistas
-are constantly opening to give momentary views of
-the towering Acropolis. It is not a hilly city, but rather
-built on rolling ground, the prevailing slope of which
-is toward the west, gently down from the pointed Lycabettus
-to the ancient course of the Cephissus, along
-which once spread the famous grove of Academe.
-The lack of a sufficient water supply is unfortunate,
-for one misses the gushing of fountains which makes
-Rome so delightful, and the restricted volume available
-for domestic uses is sometimes far from pleasant.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='57' id='Page_57'></span>The Athenians had a prodigious mine to draw
-upon for the naming of their streets, in the magnificent
-stretch of their history and in the fabulous wealth
-of mythology. And it is a fact worth remarking that
-the mythological gods and heroes appear to have
-decidedly the better of the famous mortals in the
-selection of street names to do them honor. For example,
-Pericles, the greatest Athenian in many ways,
-is recalled by the name of a decidedly poor thoroughfare—hardly
-more than an alley; while Pheidias,
-Pindar, Homer, Solon, and a score of others fare but
-little better. On the contrary, the great gods of high
-Olympus, Hermes, Athena, Æolus, and others, give
-their names to the finest, broadest, most magnificent
-streets of this city that likes to call herself a little
-Paris. The result of it all is a curious mental state,
-for by the time one gets out of Athens and into the
-highlands of Delphi or of the Peloponnesus, where
-every peak and vale is the scene of some godlike
-encounter or amour, one is more than half ready to
-accept those ancient deities as actually having lived
-and done the things that legend ascribes to them.
-They become fully as real to the mind as William
-Tell or Pocahontas. The same illusion is helped on
-by the classic names affected for the engines of the
-Piræus-Athens-Peloponnesus Railroad, and by the
-time one has ridden for a day behind the “Hermes”
-<span class='pageno' title='58' id='Page_58'></span>or the “Hephaistos,” one is quite ready to expect to
-see Proteus rising from the sea, or hear old Triton
-blow his wreathed horn.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is at first a trifle perplexing to one not versed in
-the Greek language to find the streets all labeled in
-the genitive case, such as ὁδὸς Ἑρμοῦ (othòs Ermoù),
-“street of Hermes.” This soon becomes a matter of
-course, however. The main shopping district is confined
-to the greater highways of Hermes, Æolus, and
-Athena, and to Stadium Street—the latter so called
-because its length is about one kilometre, which is
-the modern “stadion,” instead of the lesser classic
-length of approximately six hundred feet. The name
-therefore has no reference to the magnificent athletic
-field of the city, in which the so-called modern
-“Olympic” games are occasionally held, and which
-in itself is a fine sight to see, as it lies in its natural
-amphitheatre east of the city, and brilliant in its
-newly built surfaces of purest marble. Stadium
-Street is perhaps the most modern and up-to-date
-street in Athens, lined with handsome stores, hotels,
-and cafés, thronged day and night, and perhaps even
-more gay and Parisian-looking by night, with its
-many lights and teeming life.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Athens at this writing has no system of trolley
-cars, but sticks obstinately to an old-fashioned and
-quite inadequate horse-railway, the several lines radiating
-<span class='pageno' title='59' id='Page_59'></span>from the Omonoia Square—pronounced much
-like "Ammonia"—which, being interpreted, means
-the same as Place de la Concorde. To master the
-intricacies of this tramway system requires a considerable
-acquaintance with Athens, but it is vastly less
-involved a problem than the omnibuses of London
-and Paris, and naturally so because of the smaller
-size of the town. Odd little carriages plying between
-stated points eke out the local transportation service,
-while the third-rail, semi-underground line to
-the Piræus and the antiquated steam tram to New
-Phalerum give a suburban service that is not to be
-despised. In a very few years no doubt the trolley
-will invade Athens, for it already has a foothold in
-Greece at the thriving port of Patras; and when it
-does, one may whirl incongruously about the classic
-regions of the Acropolis as one now whirls about the
-Forum at Rome.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The admirable Bædeker warns visitors to Hellas
-against assuming too hastily that Greece is a tropical
-land, merely because it is a southern Mediterranean
-country, and our own experiences have proved that
-even in April Athens can be as cold as in mid-winter,
-with snow capping Hymettus itself. But for the
-greater part of the year Athens is warm, and as in
-most southern cities business is practically at a standstill
-between the noon hour and two o'clock in the
-<span class='pageno' title='60' id='Page_60'></span>afternoon. In the summer months, which in Athens
-means the interval between May and late fall, this
-cessation is a practical necessity, owing to the heat
-and the glare of the noontide sun on the white streets
-and buildings. But the comparative compactness of
-the city makes it entirely possible to walk almost
-anywhere, even on a warm day, for the coolness of
-shade as compared with the heat of the sun is always
-noticeable. Thus the visitor who has plenty of time
-for his stay in the city is practically independent of
-cars and carriages. For those who find time pressing
-and who must cover the sites, or, as Bædeker sometimes
-says, “overtake” the points of interest in short
-order, the ingenious device once employed by a
-friend similarly situated may not come amiss. Having
-limited facilities of speech in the native tongue,
-and being practically without other means of communication
-with the cabman, this resourceful traveler
-supplied himself with a full set of picture post-cards
-dealing with the more celebrated features of Athens,
-and by dint of showing these one after another to
-his Jehu, he managed to “do” Athens in half a day—if
-one could call it that. He was not the only one
-to see the ancient capital in such short order, but it
-remains true that any such cavalier disposition of so
-famous a place is unfortunate and wholly inadequate.
-Athens is no place for the hasty “tripper,” for not
-<span class='pageno' title='61' id='Page_61'></span>only are the ancient monuments worthy of long and
-thoughtful contemplation, but the modern city itself
-is abundantly worthy of intimate acquaintance.</p>
-
-<div id='i087' class='figcenter id007'>
-<img src='images/i_087.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>OLD CHURCH IN TURKISH QUARTER, ATHENS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It has been spoken of as a noisy city, and it is
-especially so after nightfall, when the streets are
-thronged with people until a late hour and the coffee-houses
-and open-air restaurants are in full swing.
-Long after the ordinary person has gone to bed,
-passing Athenians will be heard shouting or singing
-in merry bands of from three to a dozen, especially if
-it be election time. The Athenian takes his politics
-as he takes his coffee—in deliberate sips, making a
-little go a long way. The general election period
-usually extends over something like two weeks, during
-which time the blank walls of the city blossom
-with the portraits of candidates and the night is made
-vocal with the rallying cries of the free-born. “Rallying”
-carriages are employed much as our own
-practical politicians employ them, to convey the decrepit
-or the reluctant able-bodied voters to the polls,
-with the difference that the Athenian rallying conveyance
-is generally decorated with partisan banners
-and not infrequently bears on its box, beside the
-driver, a musical outfit consisting of a drum and
-penny whistle, with which imposing panoply the
-proud voter progresses grandly through the streets
-to the ballot box, attended by a shouting throng.
-<span class='pageno' title='62' id='Page_62'></span>Torchlight processions, which make up in noise for
-their lack of numbers, are common every night during
-the election. The Athenian, when he does make
-up his mind to shout for any aspirant, shouts with his
-whole being, and with a vigor that recalls the days of
-Stentor. Noisy enough at all times, Athens is more
-so than ever in days of political excitement or on
-high festivals—notably on the night before Easter,
-when the joy over the resurrection of the Lord is
-manifested in a whole-hearted outpouring of the
-spirit, finding vent in explosives, rockets, and other
-pyrotechnics. Religious anniversaries, such as the
-birthday of a saint, or the Nativity, or the final triumph
-of Jesus, are treated by the Greek with the
-same pomp and circumstance that we accord to the
-Fourth of July; and, indeed, the same is true of all
-Mediterranean countries. I have never experienced a
-night before Easter in Athens, but I have been told
-that this, one of the most sacred of the festivals of the
-Orthodox Church, is the one occasion when it is at all
-dangerous or disagreeable to be abroad in the streets
-of the capital, and it is so only because of the exuberant
-and genuine joy that the native feels in the
-thought of his salvation, the idea of which seems annually
-to be a perfectly new and hitherto unexpected
-one.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>By day the chief tumult is from the ordinary press
-<span class='pageno' title='63' id='Page_63'></span>of traffic, with the unintelligible street-cries of itinerant
-peddlers offering fish, eggs, and divers vegetables,
-not to mention fire-wood. Nor should one omit
-the newsboys, for the Athenian has abandoned not a
-whit of his traditional eagerness to see or to hear
-some new thing, and has settled upon the daily paper
-as the best vehicle for purveying to that taste. Athens
-boasts perhaps half a dozen journals, fairly good
-though somewhat given to exaggeration, and it is a
-poor citizen indeed who does not read two or three
-of them as he drinks his coffee. Early morn and late
-evening are filled with the cries of the paper boys
-ringing clear and distinct over the general hubbub,
-and of all the street sounds their calls are by far the
-easiest to understand.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Most fascinating of all to the foreign visitor must
-always be the narrower and less ornate streets of the
-old quarter, leading off Hermes and Æolus streets,
-and paramount in attractiveness the little narrow
-lane of the red shoes, which is a perfect bazaar. It is
-a mere alley, lined from end to end with small open
-booths, or shops, and devoted almost exclusively to
-the sale of shoes, mostly of red leather and provided
-with red pompons, though soft, white leather boots
-are also to be had, and to the dealing in embroidered
-bags, coats, pouches, belts, and the like. The stock in
-trade of each is very similar to that of every neighbor,
-<span class='pageno' title='64' id='Page_64'></span>and the effect of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>tout ensemble</em></span> is highly curious
-and striking. To venture there once is to insure frequent
-visits, and one is absolutely certain sooner or
-later to buy. The wares seem rather Turkish than
-Greek in character. Of course, patience and tact are
-needful to enable one to avoid outrageous extortion.
-Nothing would surprise a shoe-lane dealer more, in
-all probability, than to find a foreigner willing and
-ready to accept his initial price as final. Chaffering is
-the order of the day, and after a sufficient amount of
-advancing and retreating, the intending purchaser is
-sure to succumb and return laden with souvenirs,
-from the inexpensive little embroidered bags to the
-coats heavy with gold lace, which are the festal gear
-of the peasant girls. The latter garments are mostly
-second-hand, and generally show the blemishes due
-to actual use. They are sleeveless over-garments
-made of heavy felt but gay with red and green cloth,
-on which, as a border, gold braid and tracery have
-been lavished without stint until they are splendid
-to see. Needless to say, they are the most expensive
-things in shoe lane. The process of bargaining
-between one who speaks no English and one who
-speaks no Greek is naturally largely a matter of
-dumb show, although the ever-ready pad and pencil
-figure in it. Madame looks inquiringly up from a
-handsome Greek coat, and is told by the pad that the
-<span class='pageno' title='65' id='Page_65'></span>price is 50 drachmas. Her face falls; she says as
-plainly as words could say it that she is very sorry,
-but it is out of the question. She turns and approaches
-the door. “Madame! madame!” She turns back,
-and the pad, bearing the legend 45, is shoved toward
-her. Again the retreat, and once more the summons
-to return and see a new and still lower price. Eventually
-the blank paper is passed to “madame,” and
-she writes thereon a price of her own—inevitably too
-low. Finally, however, the product of the extremes
-produces the Aristotelian golden mean, and the title
-passes. Indeed, it sometimes happens that the merchant
-will inform you of an outrageous price and
-add with shameless haste, “What will you give?”
-Experience will soon teach the purchaser that the
-easiest way to secure reasonable prices is to make a
-lump sum for several articles at a single sale.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Shoe lane, for all its narrowness and business, is far
-from squalid, and is remarkably clean and sweet. In
-this it differs from the market district farther along,
-where vegetables, lambs, pigs, chickens, and other
-viands are offered for sale. The sight is interesting,
-but its olfactory appeal is stronger than the ocular.
-One need not venture there, however, to see the
-wayside cook at his work of roasting a whole sheep
-on the curb. Even the business streets up-town often
-show this spectacle. The stove is a mere sheet-iron
-<span class='pageno' title='66' id='Page_66'></span>chest without a cover, and containing a slow fire of
-charcoal. Over this on an iron spit, which is thrust
-through the lamb from end to end, the roast is
-slowly turning, legs, ribs, head, eyes, and all, the
-motive power being a little boy. From this primitive
-establishment cooked meat may be bought, as in the
-days of Socrates, either to be taken home, or to be
-eaten in some corner by the Athenian quick-lunch
-devotee. Farther along in the old quarter, not far
-from the Monastiri Station of the Piræus Line, is the
-street of the coppersmiths, heralded from afar by
-the noise of its hammers. By all the rules of appropriateness
-this should be the street of Hephaistos. In
-the gathering dusk, especially, this is an interesting
-place to wander through, for the forge fires in the
-dark little shops gleam brightly in the increasing
-darkness, while the busy hammers ply far into the
-evening. It is the tinkers’ chorus and the armorer’s
-song rolled into one. Here one buys the coffee-mills
-and the coffee-pots used in concocting the Turkish
-coffee peculiar to the East, and any visitor who learns
-to like coffee thus made will do well to secure both
-utensils, since the process is simple and the drink can
-easily be made at home. The coffee-pots themselves
-are little brass or copper dippers, of varying sizes;
-and the mills are cylinders of brass with arrangements
-for pulverizing the coffee beans to a fine powder.
-<span class='pageno' title='67' id='Page_67'></span>This powder, in the proportion of about a teaspoonful
-to a cup, is put into the dipper with an equal quantity
-of sugar. Boiling water is added, and the mixture set
-on the fire until it “boils up.” This is repeated three
-times before pouring off into cups, the coffee being
-vigorously stirred or beaten to a froth between the
-several boilings. At the end it is a thick and syrup-like
-liquid, astonishingly devoid of the insomnia-producing
-qualities commonly attributed to coffee by
-the makers of American “substitutes.” In any event
-the long-handled copper pots and the mills for grinding
-are quaint and interesting to possess. At the
-coffee-houses the practice is generally to bring the
-coffee on in its little individual pot, to be poured out
-by the patron himself. It is always accompanied by
-a huge glass of rather dubious drinking water and
-often by a bit of loukoumi, which the Greek esteems
-as furnishing a thirst, or by a handful of salty pistachio
-nuts, equally efficacious for the same purpose.
-The consumption of coffee by the Greek nation is
-stupendous. Possibly it is harmful, too. But in any
-event it cheers without inebriating, and a drunken
-Greek is a rare sight indeed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Walking homeward in the dusk of evening after a
-sunset on the Acropolis, one is sure to pass many out-of-door
-stoves set close to the entrances of humbler
-houses and stuffed with light wood which is blazing
-<span class='pageno' title='68' id='Page_68'></span>cheerily in preparation of the evening meal, the glow
-and the aromatic wood-smoke adding to the charm
-of the scene. Small shops, in the windows of which
-stand fresh-made bowls of giaourti (ya-oór-ti), are also
-to be seen, calling attention to that favorite Athenian
-delicacy, very popular as a dessert and not unlikely
-to please the palate of those not to the manner born.
-The giaourti is a sort of “junket,” or thick curd of
-goat’s milk, possessing a sour or acid taste. It is best
-eaten with an equal quantity of sugar, which renders
-the taste far from disagreeable. As for the other
-common foods of the natives, doubtless the lamb
-comes nearest to being the chief national dish, while
-chickens and eggs are every-day features of many a
-table. Unless one is far from the congested haunts
-of men, the food problem is not a serious one. That
-a visitor would find it rather hard to live long on the
-ordinary native cookery, however, is no doubt true;
-but fortunately there is little need to make the experiment.
-One other native dish deserves mention, in
-passing, and that is the “pilaffi,” or “pilaff,” which
-is rice covered with a rich meat gravy, and which
-almost any foreigner will appreciate as a palatable
-article of food.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of the ruins and museums of Athens, it is necessary
-to speak in detail in another chapter. Of the modern
-city and its many oddities, it is enough to deal here.
-<span class='pageno' title='69' id='Page_69'></span>Rambles through the town in any direction are sure to
-prove delightful, not only in the older quarter which
-we have been considering, but through the more pretentious
-modern streets as well, with their excellent
-shops, their pseudo-classic architecture, and their
-constant glimpses of gardens or of distant ruined
-temples. Occasionally the classic style of building rises
-to something really fine, as in the case of the university
-buildings, the polytechnic school, or the national
-museum itself. The local churches are by no means
-beautiful, however. Indeed the ordinary Greek church
-makes no pretension to outward attractiveness, such
-as the cathedrals and minor churches of the Roman
-faith possess. Perhaps the most striking of the
-Athenian houses of worship is the little brown structure
-which has been allowed to remain in the midst
-of Hermes Street, recalling the situation of St. Clement
-Danes, or St. Mary le Strand in London. It is a squat
-Byzantine edifice, not beautiful, but evidently old,
-and a familiar sight of the city. Within, the Greek
-churches are quite different in arrangement from the
-Roman. At the entrance to the altar space there is
-always a high screen, pierced by a door leading to
-the altar itself, and used only by the officiating priest.
-The altar screen, or “iconastasis,” is richly adorned
-as a rule with embossed work, and the “icons,” or
-holy pictures, are generally painted faces set in raised
-<span class='pageno' title='70' id='Page_70'></span>silver-gilt frames, which supply the figure and robes
-of the saints, only the facial features being in pigment.
-Images are not allowed in the Orthodox worship, but
-the relief employed to embellish the faces in the icons
-goes far to simulate imagery.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The residential architecture of the city finds its
-best exemplification in the splendid marble mansions
-of the princes of the royal house, which are really
-fine, and which are surrounded by attractive grounds
-and gardens. The palace of the king is far less attractive,
-being a huge and barn-like structure in the
-centre of the city, relieved from utter barrenness only
-by a very good classic portico. But nothing could
-be lovelier than the deep dells of the palace gardens,
-which form a magnificent park well deserving
-the classic name of a παράδεισος, with its jungle of
-flowers, shrubs, and magnificent trees—the latter a
-welcome sight in treeless Attica.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One cannot pass from the subject of modern Athens
-without mentioning the soldiery, for the soldiers are
-everywhere, in all degrees of rank and magnificence
-of dress, from the humble private to the glittering
-and altogether gorgeous generalissimo. The uniforms
-are of a variety that would put to blush the
-variegated equipment of the famous Ancient and
-Honorable Artillery Company of Boston. These
-manifold uniforms have their proper signification,
-<span class='pageno' title='71' id='Page_71'></span>however, and they are undeniably handsome. If the
-Greek soldiers could only fight as well as they look,
-what could restrain the modern Athenian empire?
-The army clothes are admirably designed with an eye
-to fit and color, and the men carry themselves with
-admirable military hauteur. Most picturesque of all
-are the king’s body-guard, with their magnificent
-physique and national dress. They are big, erect fellows,
-clad in the short fustanella skirts of the ancient
-régime, the tight-fitting leggings, the pomponed
-shoes, the dark over-jacket, and the fez. These are the
-only troops that wear the old-time garb of the Greek.
-But the dress is a familiar sight in the outside country
-districts, often worn by well-to-do peasants, and still
-regarded as the national dress despite the general
-prevalence of ordinary European clothes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It remains to speak briefly of the national money,
-for that is a subject the visitor cannot avoid. The
-drachma, which corresponds to the franc, is a peculiar
-thing. If one means the metal drachma, of silver, it
-is simple enough. It circulates at par with the franc.
-But the paper drachma varies in value from day to
-day at the behest of private speculation, and is almost
-never at par. I have experienced variations of it from
-a value of fourteen cents to eighteen. In small transactions,
-when the paper drachma is high, the difference
-is negligible. When it is low in value, or in
-<span class='pageno' title='72' id='Page_72'></span>large amounts, it is highly appreciable. The fluctuation
-of this money is the reason for the pads and
-pencils in the shops, for it is only by constant multiplication
-or division that the merchant is able to
-translate prices from francs into drachmas or <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>vice
-versa</em></span>, as occasion requires. Naturally when the
-drachma is worth only fourteen cents, the unsuspecting
-visitor is liable to pay more than he should, if
-assuming that a franc and a drachma are synonymous
-terms. In such a case a paper bill requires a
-considerable addition of copper lepta to make it
-equal the metal drachma or the French franc. The
-difference in value from day to day may be learned
-from the newspapers. Most bargains are made in
-francs, and the French money, both gold and silver,
-is freely used. Nevertheless, the local paper money is
-very useful, and it merely requires a little care in the
-use. Particularly is it desirable to know the status of
-the drachma in securing cash on a letter of credit or
-on a traveler’s cheque, in order that one may obtain
-the proper amount and not content himself with an
-inferior sum in paper; for although the principal
-banks may be relied upon as a rule to be honest,
-individual clerks may not be proof against the temptation
-to impose upon the ignorant and pocket the
-difference. I would advise the use of the Ionian Bank
-as far as possible, rather than the tourist agencies, for
-<span class='pageno' title='73' id='Page_73'></span>the latter often extort money quite without warrant,
-on the plea of needful stamps or fees for “accommodation,”
-that the bank does not require. Little trouble
-will be found to exist in the way of false coin—far
-less than in Italy. The one difficulty is to follow the
-paper drachma up and down, and not be mulcted to
-a greater or less extent in the exchange of silver for
-paper. The copper coins, which are either the five or
-ten lepta pieces, occasion no trouble, being like the
-Italian centesimi or English pence and ha' pennies.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One not uncommon sight to be met with in Athenian
-streets is the funeral procession—a sight which
-is liable at first to give the unaccustomed witness
-a serious shock, because of the custom of carrying the
-dead uncoffined through the city. The coffin and its
-cover are borne at the head of the procession, as
-a rule, while the body of the deceased, in an open
-hearse, rides joltingly along in the middle of the cortège.
-To those not used to this method of honoring
-the dead, the exposure of the face to the sight of
-every passer-by must seem incongruous and revolting.
-But it is the custom of the place, and the passing
-of a funeral causes no apparent concern to those who
-calmly view the passing corpse from the chairs where
-they sip their coffee, or idly finger their strings of
-beads. The beads which are to be seen in the hand
-of nearly every native have no religious significance,
-<span class='pageno' title='74' id='Page_74'></span>as might be thought at first sight, but are simply one
-of the innocuous things that the Hellene finds for idle
-hands to do. They are large beads, of various colors,
-though the strings are generally uniform in themselves,
-and their sole function is to furnish something
-to toy with while talking, or while doing nothing in
-particular. There is a sufficiency of loose string to
-give some play to the beads, and they become a
-familiar sight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Royalty in Greece is decidedly democratic in its
-attitude. King George and his sons are frequently
-to be seen riding about town, much like ordinary
-citizens. Quite characteristic was an encounter of recent
-date, in which an American gentleman accosted
-one whom he found walking in the palace gardens
-with the inquiry as to what hour would be the best
-for seeing the royal children. The question elicited
-mutual interest and the two conversed for some time,
-the American asking with much curiosity for particulars
-of the household, with which his interlocutor
-professed to be acquainted. “What of the queen?”
-he inquired. "She’s exceedingly well beloved," was
-the reply. “She is a woman of high character and
-fills her high station admirably.” “And the king?”
-"Oh, the king! I regret to say that he is no good.
-He has done nothing for the country. He tries to
-give no offense—but as a king the less said of him
-<span class='pageno' title='75' id='Page_75'></span>the better!" Needless to say, this oracle was the
-king himself. Nobody else would have passed so
-harsh a judgment. King George I has been reigning
-since 1863, when the present government, with the
-sponsorship of the Christian powers, was inaugurated.
-He came from Denmark, being a son of the late King
-Christian, who furnished so many thrones of Europe
-with acceptable rulers and queens from his numerous
-and excellent family, so that the king is not himself a
-Greek at all. The years of successful rule have proved
-him highly acceptable to the Athenians and their
-countrymen, who have seen their land regain a large
-measure of its prosperity and their chief city grow to
-considerable proportions under the new order. The
-kingly office is hereditary, the crown prince reaching
-his majority at eighteen years.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Prince Constantine, the heir to the throne, lives on
-the street behind the palace gardens, and has a family
-of handsome children. Prince George is commissioner
-in charge of Crete. The royal family has
-embraced the faith of the Greek Orthodox Church.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='76' id='Page_76'></span>
- <h2 id='chap05' class='c005'>CHAPTER V. ANCIENT ATHENS: <br /> THE ACROPOLIS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_104.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>The visible remains of the ancient city of Athens,
-as distinguished from the city of to-day, lie
-mainly to the south and west of the Acropolis, where
-are to be seen many distinct traces of the classic
-town, close around the base of the great rock and the
-Hill of Mars. How far the ancient city had extended
-around to the eastward can only be conjectured by
-the layman, for there exist almost no remains in that
-direction save the choragic monument of Lysicrates
-and the ruins of the temple of Olympian Zeus; while
-on the northern side of the Acropolis, although it is
-known that there once lay the agora, or market place,
-little is left but some porticoes of a late, if not of
-Roman, date. Not being bent on exact archæology,
-however, it is not for us here to speculate much over
-the probable sites of the ancient metes and bounds,
-the location of the fountain of nine spouts called
-“Enneacrunus,” nor the famous spring of Callirrhoë,
-<span class='pageno' title='77' id='Page_77'></span>which furnish fertile ground for dissent among those
-skilled in the art. What must now concern us most
-is the mass of visible ruins, which provide the chief
-charm of the city to every visitor, and most of all to
-those possessed of the desirable historic or classical
-“background” to make the ruins the more interesting.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Despite her many inglorious vicissitudes, Athens
-has been so fortunate as to retain many of her ancient
-structures in such shape that even to-day a very good
-idea is to be had of their magnificence in the golden
-age of Hellenic empire. The Greek habit of building
-temples and fanes in high places, apart from the
-dwellings of men, has contributed very naturally to
-the preservation of much that might otherwise have
-been lost. The chief attractions of the classic city
-were set on high, and the degenerate modern town
-that succeeded the ancient capital did not entirely
-swallow them up, as was so largely the case at Rome.
-To be sure, the Turks did invade the sacred precincts
-of the Acropolis with their mosques and their munitions
-of war, and the latter ruined the Parthenon
-beyond hope of restoration when Morosini’s lamentable
-advisers caused the Venetian bomb to be fired
-at that noble edifice. Local vandalism and the greed
-of lime burners have doubtless destroyed much. But
-the whole course of these depredations has failed to
-<span class='pageno' title='78' id='Page_78'></span>remove the crowning treasures of Athens, and the
-Acropolis temples are still the inspiration and the
-despair of architects. In passing, then, to a more detailed
-and perhaps superfluous consideration of the
-monuments surviving from the ancient city, it may
-be remarked that the visitor will find more of the
-classic remains to reward and delight him than is
-the case at Rome, rich as that eternal city is.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Acropolis is naturally the great focus of interest,
-not only for what remains <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>in situ</em></span> on its top, but
-because of many remnants of buildings that cluster
-about its base. The rock itself, if it were stripped of
-every building and devoid of every memory, would
-still be commanding and imposing, alone by sheer
-force of its height and steepness. As it is, with its
-beetling sides made the more precipitous by the artifices
-of Cimon and ancient engineers, whose walls
-reveal the use of marble column drums built into the
-fortifications themselves, it is doubly impressive for
-mere inaccessibility. Something like a hundred feet
-below its top it ceases to be so sheer, and spreads out
-into a more gradual slope, on the southern expanses
-of which were built the city’s theatres and a precinct
-sacred to Asklepios. Only on the west, however,
-was the crag at all approachable, and on that side
-to-day is the only practicable entrance to the sacred
-precincts.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='79' id='Page_79'></span>A more magnificent approach it would be hard to
-conceive. One must exempt from praise the so-called
-“Beulé” gate at the very entrance, at the foot of the
-grand staircase, for it is a mere late patchwork of
-marble from other ancient monuments, and is in every
-way unworthy of comparison with the majestic Propylæa
-at the top. It takes its name from the French
-explorer who unearthed it. As for its claim to interest,
-it must found that, if at all, on the identification of the
-stones which now compose it with the more ancient
-monument of some choragic victor. Looking up the
-steep incline to the Propylæa, or fore gate of the
-Acropolis, the Parthenon is completely hid. Nothing
-is visible from this point but the walls and columns
-of the magnificent gateway itself, designed to be a
-worthy prelude to the architectural glory of the main
-temple of the goddess. The architect certainly succeeded
-admirably in achieving the desired result.
-He did not at all dwarf or belittle his chief creation
-above, yet he gave it a most admirable setting. Even
-to-day, with so much of the colonnade of the Propylæa
-in ruins, it is a splendid and satisfying approach,
-not only when seen from a distance, but at
-close range. Not alone is it beautiful in and of itself,
-but it commands from its platform a grand view of
-the Attic plain below, of the bay of Salamis gleaming
-in the sun beyond, of the long cape running down to
-<span class='pageno' title='80' id='Page_80'></span>Sunium, and of the distant mountains of the Argolid,
-rolling like billows in the southwest far across the
-gulf and beyond Ægina. To pause for a moment on
-gaining this threshold of the Acropolis and gaze upon
-this imposing panorama of plain, mountain, and sea,
-is an admirable introduction to Greece.</p>
-
-<div id='i109' class='figcenter id008'>
-<img src='images/i_109.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>TEMPLE OF NIKÉ APTEROS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>On either side of the stairway by which one climbs
-to the Propylæa are buttresses of rock, on one of
-which stands an object worthy of long contemplation.
-At the right, on a platform leveled from the solid
-rock, stands the tiny temple of Niké Apteros (the
-Wingless Victory), “restored” it is true, but nevertheless
-one of the most perfect little buildings imaginable.
-At one time entirely removed to make room for a
-Turkish watch-tower, it has been re-created by careful
-hands out of its original marbles; and it stands
-to-day, as it stood of old, on its narrow parapet beside
-the grand stairway of Athena. The process of rebuilding
-has not, indeed, been able to give the unbroken
-lines of the old temple. The stones are chipped at
-the corners here and there, and there are places
-where entirely new blocks have been required. But
-in the main everything, even to the delicately carved
-frieze around its top, is in place; and for once at least
-the oft-berated “restorer” of ancient buildings has
-triumphed and has silenced all his critics. The remnants
-of the incomparable carved balustrade, which
-<span class='pageno' title='81' id='Page_81'></span>once served as a railing for the parapet, are to be
-seen in the small museum of the Acropolis, revealing
-the extreme grace which the Greek sculptors had
-achieved in the modeling of exquisite figures in high
-relief. The slab, particularly, which has come to be
-known as “Niké binding her sandal” seems to be
-the favorite of all, though the others, even in their
-headless and armless state, are scarcely less lovely.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As for the isolated pedestal on the other side of
-the stairway, known as the “pedestal of Agrippa,” it
-is not only devoid of any statue to give it continued
-excuse for being, but it is in such a state of decrepitude
-as to cause the uncomfortable thought that it is
-about to fall, and seems an object rather for removal
-than for perpetuation, although it serves to balance
-the effect produced by the Niké bastion.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Standing on the Niké platform, the visitor finds the
-noble columns of the Propylæa towering above him
-close at hand. These Doric pillars give one for the
-first time an adequate idea of the perfection to which
-the column was carried by Ictinus and the builders
-and architects of his time; for although each pillar is
-built up drum upon drum, it is still true in many cases
-that the joints between them are almost invisible, so
-perfect are they, despite the lapse of ages and the
-ravages of war, not to mention the frequent earthquake
-shocks to which the whole region has been
-<span class='pageno' title='82' id='Page_82'></span>subjected. Age has been kind also to the Pentelic
-marble, softening its original whiteness to a golden
-brown without destroying its exquisite satin texture.
-Nothing more charming can well be imagined than
-the contrast of the blue Athenian sky with these stately
-old columns, as one looks outward or inward through
-their majestic rows.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The rock rises sharply as one passes within the precinct
-of the Acropolis, and the surface of it appears
-to have been grooved to give a more secure footing
-to pedestrians. Stony as is the place, it still affords
-soil enough to support a growth of grasses and struggling
-bits of greenery to cradle the many fallen drums.
-But one has eyes only for the Parthenon, the western
-front of which now appears for the first time in its
-full effect. From its western end, the havoc wrought
-in its midst being concealed, the Parthenon appears
-almost perfect. The pedimental sculptures, it is true,
-are gone save for a fragment or two, having been
-carried off to England. But the massive Doric columns
-still stand in an unbroken double row before
-one; the walls of the cella appear to be intact; the
-pediment rises almost unbroken above; frieze, triglyphs,
-and metopes remain in sufficient degree to
-give an idea of the ancient magnificence of the shrine—and
-all conspire to compel instant and unstinted
-admiration. Speculation as to the ethics of the removal
-<span class='pageno' title='83' id='Page_83'></span>of the Parthenon sculptures by Lord Elgin
-has become an academic matter, and therefore one
-quite beyond our present purpose. Doubtless to-day
-no such removal would be countenanced for a moment.
-It is no longer possible to say, as former critics
-have said, that the local regard for the treasures of
-the place is so slight as to endanger their safety. The
-present custodianship of the priceless relics of antiquity
-in Athens is admirably careful and satisfactory.
-If, therefore, Greece had only come into her
-own a century or so earlier than she did, the famous
-sculptures of the miraculous birth of Athena, springing
-full grown from the head of Zeus, and the colossal
-representation of the strife between Athena and Poseidon
-for possession of the Attic land, might still adorn
-as of yore the eastern and western gables of the great
-temple; or if not that, might still be seen in the very
-excellent museum at the other end of the city. It is
-enough for us to know, however, that they are not in
-Athens but in London, and that there is no probability
-they will ever return to Greek soil; and to know,
-also, that had they not been removed as they were,
-they might never have been preserved at all. That
-is the one comfortable state of mind in which to view
-the vacant pediments of the Parthenon. To work up
-a Byronic frenzy over what cannot be helped, and
-may, after all, be for the best, is of no benefit.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='84' id='Page_84'></span>Writers on Athens have often called attention to
-the curved stylobate of the Parthenon—a feature
-which is by no means confined to this temple, but
-which is to be noticed in almost every considerable
-ruin of the sort. The base of the building curves sufficiently
-to make the device visible, rising from either
-end to the centre of the sides; and the curious may
-easily prove it by placing a hat at one extremity and
-trying to see it from the other, sighting along the
-line of the basic stones. The curve was necessary to
-cure an optical defect, for a straight or level base
-would have produced the illusion of a decided sagging
-Similarly it has long been recognized that the
-columns must swell at the middle drums, lest they
-appear to the eye to be concaved. In fact, as Professor
-Gardner has pointed out, there is actually hardly a
-really straight line in the Parthenon—yet the effect
-is of absolute straightness everywhere.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Obviously this curvature of the base, slight though
-it was, imposed some engineering problems of no inconsiderable
-nature when it came to setting the column
-drums; for the columns must stand erect, and
-the bottom sections must be so devised as to meet
-the configuration of the convex stylobate. The corner
-columns, being set on a base that curved in both
-directions, must have been more difficult still to deal
-with. But the problem was solved successfully, and
-<span class='pageno' title='85' id='Page_85'></span>the result of this cunningly contrived structure was a
-temple that comes as near architectural perfection as
-earthly artisans are ever likely to attain. The columns
-were set up in an unfluted state, the fluting being
-added after the pillar was complete. Each drum is said
-to have been rotated upon its lower fellow until the
-joint became so exact as to be to all intents and purposes
-indistinguishable. In the centre of the fallen
-drums will be seen always a square hole, used to
-contain a peg of wood designed to hold the finished
-sections immovable, and in many cases this wooden
-plug has been found intact. All along the sides of the
-Parthenon, lying on the ground as they fell, are to
-be seen the fallen drums that once composed the columns
-of the sides, but which were blown out of position
-by the bomb from the Venetian fleet of Admiral
-Morosini. They lie like fallen heaps of dominoes or
-children’s building blocks, and the entire centre of
-the temple is a gaping void. Here and there an
-attempt has been made to reconstruct the fallen columns
-from the original portions, but the result is by
-no means reassuring and seems not to justify the
-further prosecution of the task. Better a ruined Parthenon
-than an obvious patchwork. The few restored
-columns are quite devoid of that homogeneity that
-marks the extant originals, and their joints are painfully
-felt, being chipped and uneven, where the old
-<span class='pageno' title='86' id='Page_86'></span>are all but imperceptible; so that the whole effect is
-of insecurity and lack of perfection entirely out of
-harmony with the Parthenon itself. Opinions, however,
-differ. Some still do advocate the rebuilding of
-the temple rather than leave the drums, seemingly so
-perfect still, lying as they now are amid the grasses
-of the Acropolis. It is one of those questions of taste
-on which debate is traditionally idle and purposeless.</p>
-
-<div id='i117' class='figcenter id008'>
-<img src='images/i_117.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE PARTHENON, WEST PEDIMENT</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>For those who must demand restorations other than
-those constructed by the mind’s eye, there are models
-and drawings enough extant, and some are to be seen
-in the Acropolis Museum. Most interesting of the
-attempts are doubtless the speculations as to the
-pedimental sculptures, the remains of which are in
-the British Museum, but which are so fragmentary
-and so ill placed in their new home that much of the
-original grouping is matter for conjecture. With the
-aid of drawings made by a visitor long years ago,
-before Lord Elgin had thought of tearing them down,
-the two great pediments have been ingeniously reconstructed
-in miniature, showing a multitude of figures
-attending on the birth of the city’s tutelary goddess,
-as she sprang full armed from the head of Zeus assisted
-by the blow of Hephaistos’s hammer, or the
-concourse of deities that umpired the contest between
-Athena and Poseidon for the land. The Acropolis
-Museum has only casts of the Elgin marbles, but
-<span class='pageno' title='87' id='Page_87'></span>there is still to be seen a good proportion of the original
-frieze. It would be out of place in any such work
-as this to be drawn into anything like a detailed account
-of these famous sculptures, the subjects of a
-vast volume of available literature already and sources
-of a considerable volume also of controversial writing
-involving conflicts of the highest authority. It
-must therefore suffice to refer the reader interested in
-the detailed story of the Parthenon, its external adornment,
-its huge gold-and-ivory statue within, and the
-great Panathenaic festival which its frieze portrayed,
-to any one of those learned authors who have written
-of all these things so copiously and clearly—doubtless
-none more so than Dr. Ernest Gardner in his
-admirably lucid and readable “Ancient Athens,” or in
-his “Handbook of Greek Sculpture,” without which
-no one should visit the museum in that city.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One must remember that the Parthenon and the
-other features of the Acropolis are monuments of
-the age of Pericles, and not of an earlier day. The
-Persians who invaded Greece in 480 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> succeeded
-in obtaining possession of Athens and of the whole
-Attic plain, the inhabitants fleeing to the island of
-Salamis. The hordes of barbarians brought in by
-Xerxes were opposed by a very few of the citizens,
-some of whom erected a stockade around the Acropolis,
-thinking that thereby they satisfied the oracle
-<span class='pageno' title='88' id='Page_88'></span>which had promised the city salvation through the
-impregnability of its “Wooden Walls.” The Persians
-massed their forces on Mars Hill, just west of the
-larger rock, and a hot fight took place, the invaders
-attempting to fire the stockade by means of arrows
-carrying burning tow, while the besieged made use
-of round stones with considerable effect. Eventually
-the enemy discovered an unsuspected means of access
-to the citadel and took it by storm, after which
-they burned its temples and left it a sorry ruin. The
-rest of the Athenians with the allied navy at Salamis
-repulsed the Persian fleet, and Xerxes, disgusted,
-withdrew,—despite the fact that it would seem to
-have been quite possible for him to pursue his successes
-on land. It left Athens a waste, but on that
-waste grew up a city that for architectural beauty has
-never, in all probability, been surpassed. The reaction
-from the horrors of war gave us the Parthenon,
-the Propylæa, and the Erechtheum, all dating, perhaps,
-from the fifth century before Christ.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Erechtheum, while properly entitled to the
-epithet “elegant” as a building, seems decidedly less
-a favorite than the Parthenon. It is extremely beautiful,
-no doubt, in a delicate and elaborate way, and
-its ornamentation is certainly of a high order. Unlike
-the Parthenon, it is not surrounded by a colonnade,
-but possesses pillars only in its several porticoes. The
-<span class='pageno' title='89' id='Page_89'></span>columns are not Doric, but Ionic. As for its general
-plan, it is so complicated and devoted to so many
-obscure purposes that the lay visitor doubtless will
-find it an extremely difficult place to understand.
-There appear to have been at least three precincts
-involved in it, and the name it bears is the ancient
-one, given it because in part it was a temple of
-Erechtheus. That deity was of the demi-god type.
-He was an ancient Attic hero, who had received apotheosis
-and become highly esteemed, doubtless because
-in part he had instituted the worship of Athena
-in the city and had devised the celebrated Panathenaic
-festival. Tradition says that he was brought up by
-Athena herself, and that she intrusted him as a babe,
-secreted in a chest, to the daughters of Cecrops to
-guard. They were enjoined not to open the chest,
-but being overcome with curiosity they disobeyed,
-and discovered the babe entwined with serpents—whereat,
-terrified beyond measure, they rushed to the
-steeper part of the Acropolis and threw themselves
-down from the rock. Therein they were not alone, for
-it is also related that the father of Theseus had also
-thrown himself down from this eminence in despair,
-because he beheld his son’s ship returning from Crete
-with black sails, imagining therefrom that the Minotaur
-had triumphed over his heroic son, when the
-reverse was the fact.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='90' id='Page_90'></span>The complicated character of the Erechtheum is
-further emphasized by the fact that a portion of it was
-supposed to shelter the gash made by Poseidon with
-his trident when he was contending with Athena for
-the land, as well as the olive tree that Athena caused
-to grow out of the rock. The two relics were naturally
-held in veneration, and it was the story that in
-the cleft made by the trident there was a salt spring,
-or “sea” as Herodotus calls it, which gave forth to
-the ear a murmuring like that of the ocean. The cleft
-is still there. The olive tree, unfortunately, has disappeared.
-It was there when the Persian horde came to
-Athens, however, if we may believe Herodotus; and
-tradition says that after the invaders had burned the
-Acropolis over, the tree-stump immediately put forth
-a shoot which was in length a cubit, as a sign that
-the deity had not abandoned the city. It had been
-the custom of the place to deposit a cake of honey
-at stated intervals in the temple door for the food of
-the sacred serpents; and when, on the arrival of the
-Persians, this cake remained untouched, the inhabitants
-were convinced that even the god had left the
-Acropolis and that naught remained but ruin. The renewed
-and miraculous life of the olive tree dispelled
-this error. The Erechtheum in part overlaps the
-oldest precinct sacred to Athena, where stood an
-earlier temple supposed to have contained the sacred
-<span class='pageno' title='91' id='Page_91'></span>image of the goddess, made of wood, which came
-down from heaven. For exact and detailed descriptions
-of the Erechtheum and its uses, the reader must
-once again turn to the archæologists. As for its external
-features, the most famous of all is unquestionably
-the caryatid portico, in which the roof is
-borne up by a row of graceful, but undeniably sturdy,
-marble maidens. The use of the caryatid, always unnatural,
-is here rather successful on the whole, for the
-beholder derives no sensation that the maidens are
-restive under the weight imposed on them. They are
-entirely free from any indictment of grotesqueness.
-Nevertheless, it is questionable whether the portico is
-altogether pleasing. One of the figures is, as is well
-known, a reproduction of the one Lord Elgin carried
-away to the British Museum, but the remainder of
-the six are the original members.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Acropolis Museum serves to house a great
-many interesting fragments found on the spot, including
-a host of archaic representations of Athena,
-still bearing ample traces of the paint which the
-Greeks used so lavishly on their marble statues.
-This use of pigment might seem to have been a
-very doubtful exhibition of taste, as judged by modern
-standards, not only in its application to statues,
-but in the decoration of marble temples as well. It is
-hard for us to-day, accustomed to pure white marble
-<span class='pageno' title='92' id='Page_92'></span>sculpture, to imagine any added beauty from painting
-the hair, eyes, and garments of a statue; or to
-conceive how the polychromy so commonly made
-use of in bedecking such masterpieces as the Parthenon
-could have been anything but a blemish.
-Nevertheless, the fact that the Greeks did it, and that
-they were in all else so consummately tasteful, makes
-it entirely probable that their finished statues and
-edifices thus adorned were perfectly congruous—especially
-under that brilliant sky and surrounded
-by so many brilliant costumes. From the surviving
-multitude of statues of Athena, it is evident that the
-Greeks conceived her as a woman of majestic mien,
-rather almond-eyed, and possessed of abundant braids
-of the ruddy hair later vouchsafed to Queen Elizabeth.
-The more rudimentary figure of the “Typhon,”
-also preserved in this museum, which was doubtless
-a pedimental sculpture from some earlier acropolitan
-temple, bears abundant traces of paint on its body
-and on the beards of its triple head. It is too grotesque
-to furnish much of an idea of the use of paint
-on such statues as the great masters later produced.
-The remnants of the Parthenon frieze give little or
-no trace of any of the blue background, such as was
-commonly laid on to bring out the figures carved
-on such ornaments, nor are there any traces remaining
-of polychrome decoration on the Parthenon itself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='93' id='Page_93'></span>The Acropolis, of course, has not escaped the
-common fate of all similar celebrated places—that of
-being “done” now and then by parties of tourists in
-absurdly hasty fashion, that to the lover of the spot
-seems little less than sacrilege. It is no infrequent
-sight to see a body of men and women numbering
-from a dozen to over a hundred, in the keeping of
-a voluble courier, scampering up the steps of the
-Propylæa, over the summit, through the two temples,
-in and out of the museum, and down again, amply
-satisfied with having spent a half hour or even less
-among those immortal ruins, and prepared to tell
-about it for the rest of their days. It is a pity, as it
-always is, to see a wonder of the world so cavalierly
-treated. Still, one hesitates to say that rather than do
-this, one should never visit the Acropolis of Athens.
-It is better to have looked for a moment than never
-to have looked at all. The Acropolis is no place to
-hurry through. Rather is it a spot to visit again and
-again, chiefly toward sunset, not merely to wander
-through the ruins, or to rest on the steps of the Parthenon
-musing over the remote past to which this
-place belongs, but also to see the sun sink to the
-west as Plato and Socrates must often have seen it
-sink from this very place, behind the rugged sky-line
-of the Argolid, which never changes, lengthening the
-purple shadows of the hills on the peaceful plain and
-<span class='pageno' title='94' id='Page_94'></span>touching the golden-brown of the temples with that
-afterglow which, once seen, can never be forgotten.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The gates of the Acropolis are closed at sunset
-by the guards, and lingering visitors are insistently
-herded into groups and driven downward to the gate
-like sheep by the little band of blue-coated custodians.
-Still, they are not hard-hearted, and if a belated
-visitor finds the outer gates locked a trifle before
-sunset, as often happens with the idea of preventing
-needless ascent, a plea for “pende lepta” (five minutes)
-is likely to be honored even without a petty
-bribe. But at last every one must go, and the holy
-hill of Athena is left untenanted for one more of its
-endless round of nights. A visit to the Acropolis by
-moonlight is traditionally worth while, and the needful
-permission is not difficult to obtain once the municipal
-office dealing with such things is located. The
-Parthenon on a clear, moonlit night must be indescribably
-lovely, even in its lamentable ruin.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Other sights of Athens, ancient and modern, are
-interesting, and many are magnificent. But the Acropolis
-is unquestionably the best that Athens has to
-show, and the Parthenon is incomparably the best
-of the Acropolis. It is the first and the last spot to
-seek in visiting Athena’s famous city, and the last
-glimpse the departing voyager—very likely with a
-not unmanly tear—catches from his ship as it sails
-<span class='pageno' title='95' id='Page_95'></span>out into the blue Ægean is of this hoary temple
-reposing in calm and serene indifference to mankind
-on its rocky height. It has seen the worship
-of Athena Parthenos give way to the reverence of
-another Virgin—a holier ideal of Wisdom set up in
-its own precincts, and worshiped there on the very
-spot where once the youth of Athens did honor to
-the pagan goddess. Gods and religions have risen
-and departed, despots have come and gone; but the
-Parthenon has stood unchanging, the unrivaled embodiment
-of architectural beauty to-day, as it was
-when Ictinus, Mnesicles, Pheidias, and those who
-were with them created it out of their combined
-and colossal genius, under the wise ordainment of
-Pericles.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='96' id='Page_96'></span>
- <h2 id='chap06' class='c005'>CHAPTER VI. ANCIENT ATHENS: <br /> THE OTHER MONUMENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_128.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>There are two favorite ways whereby those
-leaving the Acropolis are wont to descend to
-the modern city. One lies around to the right as you
-leave the gates, passing between the Acropolis and
-Mars Hill to the north side of the former, where
-steps will be found leading down to the old quarter and
-thence past Shoe Lane to Hermes Street and home.
-The other passes to the south of the Acropolis along
-its southerly slopes, finally emerging through an iron
-gate at the eastern end, whence a street leads directly
-homeward, rather cleaner and sweeter than the other
-route but hardly as picturesque. Since, however, this
-way leads to some of the other notable remains of
-classic Athens, for the present let us take it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Immediately on leaving the avenue in front of
-the gates of the Acropolis, one finds a path leading
-eastward directly behind and above the Odeon of
-Herodes Atticus, which is made conspicuous in the
-<span class='pageno' title='97' id='Page_97'></span>landscape by the lofty stone arches remaining at its
-front. These arches are blackened and bear every
-ear-mark of the later Roman epoch. Moreover they
-strike the beholder as rather unstable, as if some day
-they might fall unless removed. But their loss would
-be a pity, nevertheless, for they certainly present a
-striking and agreeable feature to the sight despite
-their lack of harmony with the received ideas of pure
-Greek architecture. It hardly repays one to descend
-to the pit of this commodious theatre, or rather concert
-hall, since one gets a very accurate idea of it
-from above looking down into its orchestra over the
-tiers of grass-grown seats. For more detailed inspection
-of ancient theatrical structures, the Dionysiac
-theatre farther along our path is decidedly more
-worth while, besides being much more ancient and
-more interesting by association.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the way thereto are passed several remnants of
-a long “stoa,” or portico, called that of Eumenes,
-curiously intermingled with brick relics of the Turkish
-times, and the non-archæological visitor will hardly
-care to concern himself long with either. But he will
-doubtless be interested to turn aside from the path
-and clamber up to the base of the steeper rock to
-inspect the damp and dripping cave where once
-was an important shrine of Asklepios, with the usual
-“sacred spring” still flowing, and still surrounded
-<span class='pageno' title='98' id='Page_98'></span>with remains of the customary porticoes, in which the
-faithful in need of healing once reposed themselves
-by night, awaiting the cure which the vision of the
-god might be hoped to bestow. The cave is now a
-Catholic shrine, with a picture of its particular saint
-and an oil lamp burning before it. It is dank and dismal,
-and for one to remain there long would doubtless
-necessitate the services of Asklepios himself, or
-of some skillful modern disciple of his healing art—of
-which, by the way, Athens can boast not a few.
-The Greek seems to take naturally to the practice
-of medicine, and some of the physicians, even in
-remote country districts, are said to possess unusual
-talent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Not far below the shrine lies the theatre of Dionysus,
-scooped out of the hillside as are most Greek
-theatres, with a paved, semi-circular “orchestra,” or
-dancing place, at its foot. Much of the original seating
-capacity is concealed by the overgrowth of grass,
-so that one is likely greatly to underestimate its
-former size. Once the seats rose far up toward the
-precinct of Asklepios, and the path that to-day traverses
-the slope passes through what was once the
-upper portion of the amphitheatre. It is only in the
-lower portions that the stones still remain in a fair
-state of preservation and serve to show us the manner
-of theatre that the Athenians knew—the same in
-<span class='pageno' title='99' id='Page_99'></span>which the earlier generations saw for the first time
-the tragedies of that famous trio of playwrights,
-Æschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides. This theatre
-has undergone manifold changes since its first construction,
-as one will discover from his archæological
-books. It is idle for us here to seek to recall the successive
-alterations which changed the present theatre
-from that which the ancients actually saw, or to point
-out the traces of each transformation that now remain,
-to show that the “orchestra” was once a complete
-circle and lay much farther back. It will, however,
-be found interesting enough to clamber down over
-the tiers of seats to the bottom and inspect at leisure
-the carved chairs once allotted to various dignitaries,
-and bearing to this day the names of the officers who
-used them. Particularly fine is the chief seat of all,
-the carved chair of the high priest of Dionysus, in
-the very centre of the row, with its bas-relief of fighting
-cocks on the chair-arms still plainly to be seen.
-It is well to remember, however, that most of what
-the visitor sees is of a rather recent period as compared
-with other Athenian monuments, for it is stated
-that very little of the present visible theatre is of
-earlier date than the third century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, while much
-is of even a more recent time and is the work of the
-Romans. This is true, especially, of the conspicuous
-carved screen that runs along behind the orchestra
-<span class='pageno' title='100' id='Page_100'></span>space, and which may have supported the stage—if
-there was a stage at all. The paved orchestra will
-also strike one as unusual, contrasting with the greensward
-to be seen in other similar structures, such as
-the theatre at Epidaurus.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The vexed question of the use of any elevated stage
-in Greek theatres so divides the skilled archæologists
-into warring camps even to-day that it ill becomes
-an amateur in the field to advance any opinion at all,
-one way or the other, upon the subject. There are
-eminent authorities who maintain that the use of a
-raised stage in such a theatre was utterly unknown
-by the ancients, and that any such development can
-only have come in comparatively modern times, under
-Roman auspices. Others insist, and with equal
-positiveness, that some sort of a stage was used by
-the more ancient Greeks. The arguments pro and
-con have waxed warm for several years, without convincing
-either side of its error. It is safe to say that
-American students generally incline to the view that
-there was no such raised stage, agreeing with the
-Germans, while English scholars appear generally to
-believe that the stage did exist and was used. As just
-remarked, the views of mere laymen in such a case
-are of small account, and I shall spare the reader
-my own, saying only that in the few reproductions of
-Greek plays that I myself have seen, there has been
-<span class='pageno' title='101' id='Page_101'></span>no confusion whatever produced by having the principal
-actors present in the “orchestra” space with
-the chorus—and this, too, without the aid of the
-distinguishing cothurnos, or sandal, to give to the
-principals any added height. From this it seems to
-me not unreasonable to contend that, if a stage did
-exist, it was hardly called into being by any pressing
-necessity to avoid confusion, as some have argued;
-while, on the contrary, it does seem as if the separation
-of the chief actors to the higher level would
-often mar the general effect. Such a play as the
-“Agamemnon” of Æschylus would, it seems to me,
-lose much by the employment of an elevated platform
-for those actors not of the chorus. In fact, there
-was no more need of any such difference in level, to
-separate chorus from principal, in ancient times than
-there is to-day. The ancients did, however, seek to
-differentiate the principals from the chorus players,
-by adding a cubit unto their stature, so to speak, for
-they devised thick-soled sandals that raised them
-above the ordinary height. Besides this they employed
-masks, and occasionally even mechanism for
-aerial acting, and also subterranean passages.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Whatever we may each conclude as to the existence
-or non-existence of an elevated stage at the
-time of Pericles, we shall all agree, no doubt, that our
-modern stagecraft takes its nomenclature direct from
-<span class='pageno' title='102' id='Page_102'></span>the Greek. The “orchestra,” which in the old Greek
-meant the circle in which the dancing and acting took
-place, we have taken over as a word referring to the
-floor space filled with the best seats, and by a still
-less justifiable stretch of the meaning we have come
-to apply it to the musicians themselves. Our modern
-“scene” is simply the old Greek word σκηνή (skèné),
-meaning a “tent,” which the ancient actors used as
-a dressing-room. The marble or stone wall, of varying
-height, and pierced by doors for the entrance
-and exit of actors, was called by the Greeks the “proskenion,”
-or structure before the skèné, serving to
-conceal the portions behind the scenes and add background
-to the action. The word is obviously the
-same as our modern “proscenium,” though the meaning
-to-day is entirely different. In ancient times the
-proskenion, instead of being the arch framing the
-foreground of a “scene,” was the background, or
-more like our modern “drop” scene. Being of permanent
-character and made of stone, it generally
-represented a palace, with three entrances, and often
-with a colonnade. At either side of the proskenion
-were broad roads leading into the orchestra space,
-called the “parodoi,” by means of which the chorus
-entered and departed on occasion, and through
-which chariots might be driven. Thus, for instance, in
-the “Agamemnon,” that hero and Cassandra drove
-<span class='pageno' title='103' id='Page_103'></span>through one of the parodoi into the orchestra, chariots
-and all—a much more effective entrance than
-would have been possible had they been forced to
-climb aloft to a stage by means of the ladder represented
-on some of the vases as used for the purpose.
-The side from which the actor entered often possessed
-significance, as indicating whether he came from the
-country or from the sea. As for disagreeable scenes,
-such as the murders which form the motif of the
-Oresteian trilogy, it may not be out of place to remark
-that they were almost never represented on the
-stage in sight of the orchestra or spectators, but were
-supposed always to take place indoors, the audience
-being apprized of events by groans and by the explanations
-of the chorus. The ordinary theatrical performance
-was in the nature of a religious ceremony,
-the altar of the god being in the centre of the orchestra
-space, and served by the priest before the
-play began. And in leaving the subject, one may add
-that many Greek plays required sequels, so that they
-often came in groups of three, each separate from
-the other, but bearing a relation to each other not
-unlike our several acts of a single piece. So much
-for Greek theatres in general, and the theatre of
-Dionysus in particular.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Leaving it by the iron gate above and plunging
-into a labyrinthine mass of houses just outside, one
-<span class='pageno' title='104' id='Page_104'></span>will speedily come upon an interesting monument
-called the “choragic monument of Lysicrates.” This
-is the only remaining representative of a series of
-pedestals erected by victors in musical or dancing
-fêtes to support tripods celebrating their victories.
-This one, which is exceedingly graceful, has managed
-to survive and is a thing of beauty still, despite
-several fires and vicissitudes of which it bears traces.
-The street is still called the “Street of the Tripods.”</p>
-
-<div id='i137' class='figcenter id009'>
-<img src='images/i_137.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>TEMPLE OF OLYMPIAN ZEUS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>A few steps farther, and one emerges from the narrower
-lanes into the broader avenues of the city, and
-is confronted at once by the arch of Hadrian, which
-stands in an open field across the boulevard of Amalia.
-It is frankly and outspokenly Roman, of course, and
-does not flatter the Latin taste as compared with the
-Greek. It need delay nobody long, however, for the
-tall remaining columns of the temple of Olympian
-Zeus are just before, and are commanding enough
-to inspire attention at once. To those who prefer the
-stern simplicity of the Doric order of columns, the
-Corinthian capitals will not appeal. But the few huge,
-weathered pillars, despite the absence of roof or of
-much of the entablature, are grand in their own
-peculiar way, and the vast size of the temple as it
-originally stood may serve to show the reverence in
-which the father of the gods was held in the city of
-his great daughter, Athena. The more florid Corinthian
-<span class='pageno' title='105' id='Page_105'></span>capital seems to have appealed to the Roman
-taste, and it is to be remembered that this great
-temple, although begun by Greeks, was completed
-in the time of Hadrian and after the dawn of the
-Christian era: so that if it disappoints one in comparison
-with the more classic structures of the Acropolis,
-it may be set down to the decadent Hellenistic
-taste rather than to a flaw in the old Hellenic. As
-for the Corinthian order of capital, it is supposed to
-have been devised by a Corinthian sculptor from a
-basket of fruit and flowers which he saw one day
-on a wall, perhaps as a funeral tribute. The idea inspired
-him to devise a conventionalized flower basket
-with the acanthus leaf as the main feature, and to
-apply the same to the ornamentation of the tops of
-marble columns, such as these.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the northern side of the Acropolis, down among
-the buildings and alleys of the so-called “Turkish”
-quarter, there exist several fragmentary monuments,
-which may be passed over with little more than a
-word. The most complete and at the same time the
-most interesting of these relics is unquestionably the
-“Tower of the Winds,” an octagonal building not
-unlike a windmill in shape and general size, but devoted
-originally to the uses of town clock and weather
-bureau. On its cornices, just below the top, are
-carved eight panels facing the different points of the
-<span class='pageno' title='106' id='Page_106'></span>compass, the figures in high relief representing the several
-winds. The appropriate general characteristics
-of each wind are brought out by the sculpture—here
-an old man of sour visage brings snow and storms;
-another, of more kindly mien, brings gentle rain;
-others bring flowers and ripening fruits. A weather-vane
-once surmounted the structure. Near by, scattered
-among the houses, are bits of old porticoes,
-sometimes areas of broken columns, and at others
-quite perfect specimens still bearing their pedimental
-stones, testifying to the former presence of ancient
-market places, or public meeting places, in large part
-belonging to the later, or Roman, period. It was in
-this general vicinity that the original agora, or market
-place, stood, no doubt. In some of the porticoes were
-often to be found teachers of one sort or another, and
-in one “stoa” of this kind, we are told, taught those
-philosophers who, from the location of their school,
-came to be called "stoics"—giving us an adjective
-which to-day has lost every vestige of its derivative
-significance. Nothing remains of the other famous
-structures that are supposed to have been located in
-this vicinity, or at least nothing has been unearthed as
-yet, although possibly if some of the congested and
-rather mean houses of the quarter could be removed,
-some vestiges of this important section of the classic
-city might be recovered. Nothing remains of the
-<span class='pageno' title='107' id='Page_107'></span>ancient “agora,” or market place, in which St. Paul
-said he saw the altar with this inscription, “To the
-unknown god.” But the Areopagus, or Mars Hill,
-where Paul is supposed to have stood when he made
-his noble speech to the men of Athens, is still left
-and well repays frequent visitation. Its ancient fame
-as the place where the god Ares, or Mars, was tried
-for his life, and as the place of deliberation over the
-gravest Athenian affairs, has been augmented by the
-celebrity it derived from the apostle’s eloquent argument,
-in which he commented on the activity of
-the Athenian mind and its fondness for theology, a
-characteristic rather inadequately brought out by the
-Bible’s rendering, “too superstitious.” The Areopagus
-to-day is a barren rock devoid of vegetation or of any
-trace of building, although rough-hewn steps here
-and there and a rude leveling of the top are visible.
-Of the great events that have passed on this rocky
-knoll not a trace remains. With reference to the
-Acropolis towering above and close at hand, Mars
-Hill seems small, but the ascent of it from the plain
-is long and steep enough. It is apparently no more
-than an outlying spur of the main rock of the Acropolis,
-from which it is separated by a slight depression;
-but it shares with the holy hill of Athena a celebrity
-which makes it the object of every thoughtful visitor’s
-attention. From its top one may obtain almost the
-<span class='pageno' title='108' id='Page_108'></span>best view of the afterglow of sunset on the temples
-and the Propylæa of the Acropolis, after the custodians
-of the latter have driven all visitors below; and
-sitting there as the light fades one may lose himself
-readily in a reverie in which the mighty ones of old,
-from Ares himself down to the mortal sages of later
-days, pass in grand review, only to fade away from
-the mind and leave the eloquent apostle of the newer
-religion saying to the citizens gathered around him,
-“Whom, therefore, ye ignorantly worship, Him declare
-I unto you.” Let us, if we will, believe that it
-was “in the midst of Mars Hill” that Paul preached his
-sonorous sermon, despite a tendency among scholars
-to suggest that he probably stood somewhere
-else, “close by or near to” rather than “in the midst
-of” the spot. If we paid undue heed to these iconoclastic
-theories of scientists, what would become of
-all our cherished legends? The traveler in Greece
-loses half the charm of the place if he cannot become
-as a little child and believe a good many things to be
-true enough that perhaps can hardly stand the severe
-test of archæology. And why should he not do this?</p>
-
-<div id='i143' class='figcenter id008'>
-<img src='images/i_143.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE AREOPAGUS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Peopled with ghostly memories also is the long,
-low ridge of rocky ground to the westward, across
-the broad avenue that leads from the plain up to
-the Acropolis, still bearing its ancient name of the
-“Pnyx.” In the valley between lie evidences of a
-<span class='pageno' title='109' id='Page_109'></span>bygone civilization, the crowded foundations of ancient
-houses, perhaps of the poorer class, huddled
-together along ancient streets, the lines of which are
-faintly discernible among the ruins, while here and
-there are traces of old watercourses and drains, with
-deep wells and cisterns yawning up at the beholder.
-Thus much of the older town has been recovered,
-lying as it does in the open and beyond the reach of
-the present line of dwellings. Above this mass of ruin
-the hill rises to the ancient assembling place of the
-enfranchised citizens—the “Bema,” or rostrum, from
-which speeches on public topics were made to the
-assembled multitude. The Bema is still in place,
-backed by a wall of huge “Cyclopean” masonry.
-Curiously enough the ground slopes downward from
-the Bema to-day, instead of upward as a good amphitheatre
-for auditors should do, giving the impression
-that the eloquence of the Athenian orators must literally
-have gone over the heads of their audiences.
-That this was anciently the case appears to be denied,
-however, and we are told that formerly the topography
-was quite the reverse of modern conditions,
-made so artificially with the aid of retaining walls,
-now largely destroyed. Until this is understood, the
-Bema and its neighborhood form one of the hardest
-things in Athens to reconstruct in memory. It is from
-the rocky platform of this old rostrum that one gets
-<span class='pageno' title='110' id='Page_110'></span>the ideal view of the Acropolis, bringing out the perfect
-subordination of the Propylæa to the Parthenon,
-and giving even to-day a very fair idea of the
-appearance of the Acropolis and its temples as the
-ancients saw them. Fortunate, indeed, is one who
-may see these in the afternoon light standing out
-sharply against a background of opaque cloud, yet
-themselves colored by the glow of the declining sun.
-Of all the magnificent ruins in Greece, this is the finest
-and best,—the Acropolis from the Bema, or from any
-point along the ridge of the Pnyx.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of course that temple which is called, though
-possibly erroneously, the Theseum, is one of the best
-preserved of all extant Greek temples of ancient date,
-and is one of the most conspicuous sights of Athens,
-after the Acropolis and the temples thereon. And yet,
-despite that fact, it somehow fails to arouse anything
-like the same enthusiasm in the average visitor.
-Just why this is so it may be rash to attempt to say,
-but I suspect it is chiefly because the Theseum is,
-after all, a rather colorless and uninspiring thing by
-comparison with the Parthenon, lacking in individuality,
-although doubtless one would look long before
-finding real flaws in its architecture or proportions.
-It simply suffers because its neighbors are so much
-grander. If it stood quite alone as the temple at
-Segesta stands, or as stand the magnificent ruins at
-<span class='pageno' title='111' id='Page_111'></span>Pæstum, it would be a different matter. As it is, with
-the Parthenon looking down from the Acropolis not
-far away, the Theseum loses immeasurably in the
-effect that a specimen of ancient architecture so obviously
-perfect ought, in all justice, to command. It
-seems entirely probable that the failure of this smaller
-temple to inspire and lay hold on Athenian visitors is
-due to the overshadowing effect of its greater neighbors,
-which it feebly resembles in form without at all
-equaling their beauty, and in part also, perhaps, to
-the uncertainty about its name. That it was really a
-temple of Theseus, an early king of Athens, seems
-no longer to be believed by any, although no very
-satisfactory substitute seems to be generally accepted.
-It will remain the Theseum for many years to come,
-no doubt, if not for all time. Theseus certainly deserved
-some such memorial as this, and it is not
-amiss to believe that the bones of the hero were
-actually deposited here by Cimon when he brought
-them back from Scyros. The services of Theseus to
-the city were great. If we may, in childlike trust, accept
-the testimony of legend, Theseus was the son
-of King Ægeus and Æthra, but was brought up
-in the supposition that he was a son of Poseidon,
-in the far city of Tr&oelig;zen. When he grew up, however,
-he was given a sword and shield and sent to
-Athens, where his father, Ægeus, was king. Escaping
-<span class='pageno' title='112' id='Page_112'></span>poisoning by Medea, he appeared at the Athenian
-court, was recognized by his armor, and was designated
-by Ægeus as his rightful successor. He performed
-various heroic exploits, freed Athens of her
-horrid tribute of seven boys and seven girls paid to
-the Cretan Minotaur, came back triumphant to Athens
-only to find that Ægeus, mistaking the significance
-of his sails, which were black, had committed suicide
-by hurling himself in his grief from the Acropolis;
-and thereupon, Theseus became king. He united the
-Attic cities in one state, instituted the democracy
-and generously abdicated a large share of the kingly
-power, devised good laws, and was ever after held in
-high esteem by the city—although he died in exile
-at Scyros, to which place he withdrew because of a
-temporary coolness of his people toward him. Cimon
-brought back his bones, however, in 469 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, and
-Theseus became a demi-god in the popular imagination.
-The Theseum owes its splendid preservation
-to the fact that it was used, as many other temples
-were, as a Christian church, sacred to St. George of
-Cappadocia.</p>
-
-<div id='i149' class='figcenter id008'>
-<img src='images/i_149.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE THESEUM</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Infinitely more pregnant with definite interest is
-the precinct of the Ceramicus, near the Dipylon, or
-double gate, of the city, which gave egress to the
-Eleusis road on the western side of the town, the remains
-of which are easily to be seen to-day. The
-<span class='pageno' title='113' id='Page_113'></span>excavations at this point have recently been pushed
-with thoroughness and some very interesting fragments
-have come to light, buried for all these centuries
-in the “Themistoclean wall” of the city. It will
-be recalled that the Spartans, being jealous of the
-growing power of Athens, protested against the rebuilding
-of the walls. Themistocles, who was not only
-a crafty soul but in high favor at Athens at the time,
-undertook to go to Sparta and hold the citizens of
-that town at bay until the walls should be of sufficient
-height for defense. Accordingly he journeyed down
-to Sparta and pleaded the non-arrival of his ambassadorial
-colleagues as an excuse for delaying the opening
-of negotiations on the subject of the wall. Days
-passed and still the colleagues did not come, much
-to the ostensible anxiety and disgust of Themistocles,
-who still asserted they must soon arrive. Meantime
-every man, woman, and child in Athens was working
-night and day to build those walls, heaping up
-outworks for the city from every conceivable material,
-sparing nothing, not even the gravestones of the
-Ceramicus district, in their feverish anxiety to get the
-walls high enough to risk an attack. The Roman consul
-worked no more assiduously at hewing down the
-famous bridge, nor did Horatius labor more arduously
-at his task, than did Themistocles in diplomatic duel
-with the men of Sparta. At last the news leaked out—but
-<span class='pageno' title='114' id='Page_114'></span>it was too late. The walls were high enough
-at last, and all further pretense of a delayed embassy
-was dropped. The diplomacy of the wily Themistocles
-had triumphed—and by no means for the first time.
-Out of this so-called Themistoclean wall there have
-recently been taken some of the grave “stelae,” or
-flat slabs sculptured in low relief, from the places
-where the harassed Athenians cast them in such
-haste more than four centuries before Christ. They
-are battered and broken, but the figures on them are
-still easily visible, and while by no means sculpturally
-remarkable the relics possess an undoubted historical
-interest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The tombs of the Ceramicus district, which form
-an important part of the sculptural remains of Athenian
-art, are still numerous enough just outside the
-Dipylon Gate, although many examples have been
-housed in the National Museum for greater protection
-against weather and vandals. Of those that fortunately
-remain <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>in situ</em></span> along what was the beginning
-of the Sacred Way to Eleusis, there are enough to
-give a very fair idea of the appearance of this ancient
-necropolis, while the entire collection of tombstones
-affords one of the most interesting and complete
-exhibits to be seen in Athens. The excellence of the
-work calls attention to the high general level of skill
-achieved by the artisans of the time, for it is hardly
-<span class='pageno' title='115' id='Page_115'></span>to be assumed that these memorials of the dead were
-any more often the work of the first Athenian artists
-of that day than is the case among our own people
-at present.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The whole question of the Greek tomb sculpture
-is a tempting one, and a considerable volume of literature
-already exists with regard to it. The artistic
-excellence of the stelae in their highest estate, the
-quaintness of the earlier efforts, the ultimate regulation
-of the size and style by statute to discourage
-extravagance, the frequent utilization of an older
-stone for second-hand uses, and a score of other
-interesting facts, might well furnish forth an entire
-chapter. As it is, we shall be obliged here briefly
-to pass over the salient points and consider without
-much pretense of detail the chief forms of tomb
-adornment that the present age has to show, preserved
-from the day when all good Athenians dying
-were buried outside the gates on the Eleusinian way.
-Not only carved on the stelae themselves, but also
-placed on top of them, are to be seen reliefs or reproductions
-of long-necked amphorae, or two-handled
-vases, in great numbers. These are now known to
-have had their significance as referring to the unmarried
-state of the deceased. They are nothing more
-nor less than reproductions of the vases the Greek
-maidens used to carry to the spring Callirrhoë for
-<span class='pageno' title='116' id='Page_116'></span>water for the nuptial bath, and the use of them in the
-tomb sculpture, on the graves of those who died unmarried,
-is stated to have grown out of the idea that
-“those who died unwed had Hades for their bridegroom.”
-These vases come the nearest to resembling
-modern grave memorials of any displayed at Athens,
-perhaps. The rest of the gravestones are entirely
-different both in appearance and in idea from anything
-we are accustomed to-day to use in our cemeteries,
-and it is likely to be universally agreed that
-they far eclipse our modern devices in beauty. The
-modern graveyard contents itself in the main with
-having its graves marked with an eye to statistics,
-rather than artistic effect, save in the cases of the very
-rich, who may invoke the aid of eminent sculptors to
-adorn their burial plots. In Athens this seems not
-to have been so. There is very little in the way of
-inscription on the stones, save for the name. The
-majority are single panels containing bas-reliefs,
-which may or may not be portraits of the departed.</p>
-
-<div id='i155' class='figcenter id010'>
-<img src='images/i_155.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>TOMB AMPHORA, CERAMICUS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The usual type of tomb relief of this sort seems
-to be a group of figures, sometimes two, sometimes
-three or four, apparently representing a leave-taking,
-or frequently the figure of a person performing some
-characteristic act of life. Of the latter the well-known
-tomb of Hegeso, representing a woman attended by
-her maid fingering trinkets in a jewel casket, is as
-<span class='pageno' title='117' id='Page_117'></span>good a type as any, and it has the added merit of
-standing in its original place in the street of the tombs.
-Others of this kind are numerous enough in the
-museum. The aversion to the representation of death
-itself among the ancient Greeks is well understood,
-and many have argued from it that these tomb reliefs
-indicate an intention to recall the deceased as he
-or she was in life, without suggestion of mourning.
-Nevertheless, the obvious attitudes of sorrowful parting
-visible in many of the tomb stelae seem to me to
-do violence to this theory in its full strength. Among
-those which seem most indicative of this is a very
-well-executed one showing three figures,—an old
-man, a youth, and a little lad. The old man stands
-looking intently, but with a far-away gaze, at a
-splendidly built but thoughtful-visaged young man
-before him, while the lad behind is doubled up in a
-posture plainly indicating extreme grief, with his face
-apparently bathed in tears. The calm face of the
-youth, the grave and silent grief of the paternal-looking
-man, and the unbridled emotion of the boy,
-all speak of a parting fraught with intense sorrow. It
-might be any parting—but is it not more reasonable
-to assume that it means the parting which involves
-no return?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The more archaic gravestones are best typified by
-the not unfamiliar sculpture, in low relief, of a warrior
-<span class='pageno' title='118' id='Page_118'></span>leaning on a spear, or by the well-known little
-figure of Athena, similarly poised, mourning beside
-what appears to be a gravestone of a hero. It was
-one of the former type that we saw exhumed from
-the Themistoclean wall, with the warrior’s figure and
-portions of the spear still easily discernible.</p>
-
-<div id='i159' class='figcenter id011'>
-<img src='images/i_159.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>TOMB RELIEF, CERAMICUS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It remains to speak, though very briefly and without
-much detail, of the National Museum itself, which
-is one of the chief glories of Athens, and which divides
-with the Acropolis the abiding interest and attention
-of every visitor. It is in many ways incomparable
-among the great museums of the world, although
-others can show more beautiful and more famous
-Greek statues. The British Museum has the Elgin
-marbles from the Parthenon, which one would to-day
-greatly prefer to see restored to Athens; the Vatican
-holds many priceless and beautiful examples of the
-highest Greek sculptural art; Munich has the interesting
-pedimental figures from the temple at Ægina;
-Naples and Paris have collections not to be despised;
-but nowhere may one find under a single roof so
-wide a range of Greek sculpture, from the earliest
-strivings after form and expression to the highest
-ultimate success, as in the Athenian National Museum,
-with its priceless treasures in marble and in bronze.
-The wealth of statues, large and small, quaintly primitive
-or commandingly lovely, in all degrees of relief
-<span class='pageno' title='119' id='Page_119'></span>and in the round, is stupendous. And while it may
-be heresy to pass over the best of the marbles for
-anything else, it is still a fact that many will turn from
-all the other treasures of the place to the “bronze
-boy” as we will call him for lack of a better name.
-This figure of a youth, of more than life size and
-poised lightly as if about to step from his pedestal,
-with one hand extended, and seemingly ready to
-speak, is far less well known than he deserves to be,
-chiefly because it is but a few years since the sponge
-divers found him in the bed of the ocean and brought
-him back to the light of day. At present nobody presumes
-to say whether this splendid figure represents
-any particular hero. He might be Perseus, or Paris,
-or even Hermes. His hand bears evidence of having
-at one time clasped some object, whether the head
-of Medusa, the apple, or the caduceus, it is impossible
-to say. But the absence of winged sandals appears
-to dismiss the chance that he was Hermes, and
-the other identifications are so vague as to leave it
-perhaps best to refer to him only as an “ephebus,”
-or youth. The bronze has turned to a dark green,
-and such restorations as had to be made are quite
-invisible, so that to all outward seeming the statue
-is as perfect as when it was first cast. The eyes, inlaid
-with consummate skill to simulate real eyes, surpass
-in lifelike effect those of the celebrated bronze
-<span class='pageno' title='120' id='Page_120'></span>charioteer at Delphi. That a more detailed description
-of this figure is given here is not so much that
-it surpasses the other statues of the museum, but
-because it is so recent in its discovery that almost
-nothing has been printed about it for general circulation.</p>
-
-<div id='i163' class='figcenter id012'>
-<img src='images/i_163.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p><span class='small'><em>National Museum, Athens</em></span><br />BRONZE EPHEBUS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It would be almost endless and entirely profitless
-to attempt any detailed consideration of the multitude
-of objects of this general sculptural nature which the
-museum contains, and volumes have been written
-about them all, from the largest and noblest of the
-marbles to the smallest of the island gems. It may
-not be out of place, however, to make brief mention
-of the spoils of Mycenæ which are housed here, and
-which reproductions have made generally familiar,
-because later we shall have occasion to visit Mycenæ
-itself and to discuss in more detail that once proud
-but now deserted city, the capital which Agamemnon
-made so famous. In a large room set apart for the
-purpose are to be seen the treasures that were taken
-from the six tombs, supposed to be royal graves, that
-were unearthed in the midst of the Mycenæan agora,
-including a host of gold ornaments, cups, rosettes,
-chains, death masks, weapons, and human bones.
-Whether Dr. Schliemann, as he so fondly hoped and
-claimed, really laid bare the burial place of the conqueror
-of Troy, or whether what he found was something
-<span class='pageno' title='121' id='Page_121'></span>far less momentous, the fact remains that he
-did exhume the bodies of a number of personages
-buried in the very spot where legend said the famous
-heroes and heroines were buried, together with such
-an array of golden gear that it seems safe to assert
-that these were at any rate the tombs of royalty. If
-one can divest his mind of the suspicions raised
-by the ever-cautious archæologist and can persuade
-himself that he sees perhaps the skeleton and sword
-of the leader of the Argive host that went to recapture
-Helen, this Mycenæan room is of literally
-overwhelming interest. Case after case ranged about
-the room reveals the cunningly wrought ornaments
-that gave to Mycenæ the well-deserved Homeric
-epithet “rich-in-gold.” From the grotesque death
-masks of thin gold leaf to the heavily embossed
-Vaphio cups, everything bears testimony to the high
-perfection of the goldsmith’s art in the pre-Homeric
-age. Of all this multitude of treasures, the chief objects
-are unquestionably the embossed daggers and
-the large golden cups, notably the two that bear the
-exceedingly well-executed golden bulls, and the so-called
-“Nestor” cup, which, with its rather angular
-shape and its double handle, reproduces exactly the
-cup that Homer describes as belonging to that wise
-and reverend counselor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As has been hinted, the scientific archæologists,
-<span class='pageno' title='122' id='Page_122'></span>less swept away by Homeric enthusiasm than was
-Schliemann, have proved skeptical as to the identification
-of the tombs which Schliemann so confidently
-proclaimed at first discovery. The unearthing of a
-sixth tomb, where the original excavator had looked
-for only five, is supposed to have done violence to
-the Agamemnonian theory. But what harm can it do
-if we pass out of the Mycenæan room with a secret,
-though perhaps an ignorant, belief that we have looked
-upon the remains and accoutrements of one who was
-an epic hero, the victim of a murderous queen, the
-avenger of a brother’s honor, and the conqueror of a
-famous city? It is simply one more of those cases in
-which one gains immeasurably in pleasure if he can
-dismiss scientific questionings from his mind and pass
-through the scene unskeptical of the heroes of the
-mighty past, if not of the very gods of high Olympus
-themselves. It may be wrong; to a scientific investigator
-such guileless trust is doubtless laughable.
-But on our own heads be it if therein we err!</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='123' id='Page_123'></span>
- <h2 id='chap07' class='c005'>CHAPTER VII. EXCURSIONS IN <br /> ATTICA</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id013'>
-<img src='images/i_167.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>As the admirable Baedeker well says, the stay
-in Athens is undoubtedly the finest part of a
-visit to Greece, and it is so not merely because of the
-many attractions and delights of the city itself, but
-because also of the numerous short trips aside which
-can be made in a day’s time, without involving a
-night’s absence. Such little journeys include the
-ascent of Pentelicus, whose massive peak rises only
-a few miles away, revealing even from afar the great
-gash made in his side by the ancients in quest of
-marble for their buildings and statues; the ride out
-to the battlefield of Marathon; the incomparable drive
-to Eleusis; the jaunt by rail or sea to Sunium; and
-last, but by no means least, the sail over to Ægina.
-Marathon has no ruins to show. Aside from the interest
-attaching to that famous battleground as a site,
-there is nothing to call one thither, if we except the
-tumulus, or mound, which marks the exact spot of
-<span class='pageno' title='124' id='Page_124'></span>the conflict which was so important to the history of
-western Europe. Neither Marathon nor Thermopylæ
-can offer much to-day but memories. But Sunium,
-Ægina, and Eleusis possess ruins decidedly worth a
-visit in addition to much scenic loveliness, and the
-last-named is a spot so interwoven with the highest
-and best in Greek tradition that it offers a peculiar
-charm.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It is perfectly possible to journey to Eleusis by train,
-but to elect that method of approach is to miss one
-of the finest carriage rides to be had in the vicinity of
-Athens. The road leads out of the city through its
-unpretentious western quarter, by the “street of the
-tombs” to the vale of the Cephissus, where it follows
-the line of the old “sacred way” to Eleusis, over
-which, on the stated festivals, the procession of torch-bearing
-initiates wended its way by night to the
-shrine of Demeter. From the river—which to-day is
-a mere sandy channel most of the year—the smooth,
-hard highway rises gradually from the Attic plain to
-the mountain wall of Parnes, making straight for a
-narrow defile still known as the Pass of Daphne.
-This pass affords direct communication between the
-Attic and Thriasian plains, and save for the loftier
-valley farther north, through which the Peloponnesian
-railroad runs, is the only break in the mountain barrier.
-Eleusis and Attica were always so near—and
-<span class='pageno' title='125' id='Page_125'></span>yet so far apart. When the Spartans invaded the
-region, Athens felt no alarm from their proximity
-until they had actually entered her own plain, so
-remote seemed the valley about Eleusis, despite its
-scant ten miles of distance, simply because it was so
-completely out of sight. As the carriage ascends the
-gentle rise to the pass, the plain of Attica stretches
-out behind, affording an open vista from the Piræus
-to the northern mountains, a green and pleasant vale
-despite its dearth of trees, while the city of Athens
-dominates the scene and promises a fine spectacle by
-sunset as one shall return from the pass at evening,
-facing the commanding Acropolis aglow in the after-light.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A halt of a few moments at the top of the pass
-gives an opportunity to alight and visit an old church
-just beside the road. It was once adjoined by some
-monastic cloisters, now in ruins. Unlike most of the
-Greek churches, this one possesses a quaint charm
-from without, and within displays some very curious
-old mosaics in the ceiling. On either side of its doorway
-stand two sentinel cypresses, their sombre green
-contrasting admirably with the dull brown tones of
-the building, while across the close, in a gnarled old
-tree, are hung the bells of the church. The use of
-the neighboring tree as a campanile is by no means
-uncommon in Greece, and a pretty custom it is. The
-<span class='pageno' title='126' id='Page_126'></span>groves were God’s first temples; and if they are no
-longer so, it is yet true in Greece at least that the
-trees still bear the chimes that call the devout to
-prayer. Inside the building, in addition to the quaint
-Byzantine decorations, one may find something of
-interest in the curious votive offerings, before referred
-to as common in Greek churches, suspended
-on the altar screen. Thanks for the recovered use of
-arms, eyes, legs, and the like seem to be expressed
-by hanging in the church a small white-metal model
-of the afflicted organ which has been so happily
-restored. I believe I have called attention to this
-practice as a direct survival of the old custom of
-the worshipers of Asklepios, which finds a further
-amplification in many churches farther west,—in
-Sicily, for example,—where pictures of accidents are
-often found hung in churches by those who have been
-delivered from bodily peril and who are desirous to
-commemorate the fact. In the church in Daphne Pass
-we found for the first time instances of the votive offering
-of coins, as well as of anatomical models. The
-significance of this I do not pretend to know, but by
-analogy one might assume that the worshiper was
-returning thanks for relief from depleted finances.
-The coins we saw in this church were of different
-denominations, all of silver, and representing several
-different national currency systems.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='127' id='Page_127'></span>Behind the church on either side rise the pine-clad
-slopes of the Parnes range, displaying a most
-attractive grove of fragrant trees, through the midst
-of which Daphne’s road permits us to pass. And
-in a brief time the way descends toward the bay of
-Salamis, shining in the sun, directly at one’s feet,
-while the lofty and extensive island of that immortal
-name appears behind it. So narrow are the straits
-that for a long time Salamis seems almost like a part
-of the mainland, while the included bay appears more
-like a large and placid lake than an arm of a tideless
-sea. The carriage road skirts the wide curve of the
-bay for several level miles, the village of Eleusis—now
-called Levsina—being always visible at the far
-extremity of the bay and marked from afar by prosaic
-modern factory chimneys. It lies low in the landscape,
-which is a pastoral one. The highway winds along
-past a score of level farms, and at least two curious
-salt lakes are to be seen, lying close to the road and
-said to be tenanted by sea fish, although supplied
-apparently from inland sources. They are higher in
-level than the bay, and there is a strong outflow from
-them to the sea waters beyond. Nevertheless, they
-are said to be salt and to support salt-water life.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Eleusis as a town is not attractive. The sole claim
-on the visitor is found in the memories of the place
-and in the ruined temples, which are in the heart of
-<span class='pageno' title='128' id='Page_128'></span>the village itself. The secret of the mysteries, despite
-its wide dissemination among the Athenians and
-others, has been well kept—so well that almost
-nothing is known of the ceremony and less of its
-teaching. In a general way there is known only the
-fact that it had to do with the worship of Demeter,
-the goddess of the harvest, and that the mysteries
-concerned in some way the legend of the rape of
-Kora (Proserpine) by Hades (Pluto). There are hints
-as to certain priests, sacred vessels, symbols and rites,
-some of which appear not to have been devoid of
-grossness—but nothing definite is known, and probably
-nothing definite ever will be. The general tone of
-the mysteries seems to have been high, for no less an
-authority than Cicero, who was initiated into the cult
-in the later and decadent days of the Greek nation,
-regarded the teachings embodied in the Eleusinian
-rites as the highest product of the Athenian culture,
-and averred that they “enabled one to live more
-happily on earth and to die with a fairer hope.” It
-was, of course, unlawful for anybody to reveal the
-secrets; and although the initiation was apparently
-open to any one who should seek it, so that the number
-of devotees was large during a long succession
-of years, the secret was faithfully kept by reason of
-the great reverence in which the mysteries were held.
-That some of the features verged on wanton license
-<span class='pageno' title='129' id='Page_129'></span>has been alleged, and it may have been this that
-inspired the wild and brilliant young Alcibiades to
-burlesque the ceremony, to the scandal of pious
-Athenians and to his own ultimate undoing. For it
-was a trial on this charge that recalled Alcibiades
-from Sicily and led to his disgrace.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The approach to the vast main temple is unusual,
-in that it is by an inclined plane rather than by steps.
-Even to-day the ruts of chariot wheels are to be
-distinguished in this approaching pavement. The
-temple itself was also most unusual, for instead of a
-narrow cella sufficient only for the colossal image of
-the deity, there was a vast nave, and room for a large
-concourse of worshipers. On the side next the hillock
-against which the temple was built there is a
-long, low flight of hewn steps, possibly used for seats,
-while the many column bases seem to argue either a
-second story or a balcony as well as a spacious roof.
-Much of the original building is distinguishable, despite
-the fact that the Romans added a great deal;
-for the Latin race seems to have found the rites to
-its liking, so that it took care to preserve and beautify
-the place after its own ideas of beauty. If the surviving
-medallion of some Roman emperor which is to
-be seen near the entrance of the Propylæa is a fair
-sample, however, one may doubt with reason the
-effectiveness of the later additions to the buildings on
-<span class='pageno' title='130' id='Page_130'></span>the spot. The Roman Propylæa was built by Appius
-Claudius Pulcher, but if the medallion portrait is his
-own, one must conclude that the “Pulcher” was gross
-flattery.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The ruins are extensive, but mainly flat, so that
-their interest as ruins is almost purely archæological.
-The ordinary visitor will find the chief charm in the
-memories of the place. Of course there is a museum
-on the spot, as in every Greek site. It contains a
-large number of fragments from the temples and
-Propylæa, bits of statuary and bas-relief having chiefly
-to do with Demeter and her attendant goddesses.
-By far the most interesting and most perfect of the
-Eleusinian reliefs, however, is in the national museum
-at Athens—a large slab representing Demeter and
-Proserpine bestowing the gift of seed corn on the
-youth Triptolemus, who is credited with the invention
-of the plow. For some reason, doubtless because of
-the hospitality of his family to her, Triptolemus won
-the lasting favor of Demeter, who not only gave him
-corn but instructed him in the art of tilling the stubborn
-glebe. It seems entirely probable that Triptolemus
-and Kora shared in the mystic rites at Eleusis.
-As for the dying with a “fairer hope” spoken of by
-Cicero as inculcated by the ceremonies of the cult,
-one may conjecture that it sprang from some early
-pagan interpretation of the principle later enunciated
-<span class='pageno' title='131' id='Page_131'></span>in the Scriptural “Except a grain of wheat fall into the
-ground and die.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Eleusis itself lies on a low knoll in the midst of the
-Thriasian plain, which in early spring presents a most
-attractive appearance of fertility on every side, appropriately
-enough to the traditions of the spot. From
-the top of the hillock behind the great temple and
-the museum, one obtains a good view of the vale
-northward and of the sacred way winding off toward
-Corinth by way of Megara. Where the plain stops
-and the mountain wall approaches once again close
-to the sea, this road grows decidedly picturesque,
-recalling in a mild way the celebrated Amalfi drive
-as it rises and falls on the face of the cliff. Nor should
-one pass from the subject of Eleusis without mentioning
-the numerous little kids that frisk over the ruins,
-attended by anxious mother-goats, all far from unfriendly.
-Kids are common enough sights in Greece,
-and to lovers of pets they are always irresistible; but
-nowhere are they more so than at Eleusis, where they
-add their mite of attractiveness to the scene. The
-grown-up goat is far from pretty, but by some curious
-dispensation of nature the ugliest of animals seem
-to have the most attractive young, and the frisking
-lambs and kids of Greece furnish striking examples
-of it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The ride back to the city must be begun in season
-<span class='pageno' title='132' id='Page_132'></span>to get the sunset light on the west front of the Acropolis,
-which is especially effective from the Eleusis
-road all the way from Daphne’s Pass to the city
-proper. As for Salamis, which is always in sight until
-the pass is crossed, it is enough to say that, like
-Marathon, it is a place of memories only. The bay
-that one sees from the Eleusis road is not the one in
-which the great naval battle was fought. That lies
-on the other side, toward the open gulf, and is best
-seen from the sea. Few care to make a special excursion
-to the island itself, which is rocky and barren,
-and after all the chief interest is in its immediate
-waters. The account of the battle in Herodotus is
-decidedly worth reading on the spot, and to this day
-they will show you a rocky promontory supposed to
-have been the point where Xerxes had his throne
-placed so that he might watch the fight which resulted
-so disastrously to his ships. The battle, by the way,
-was another monument to the wiles of Themistocles,
-who recognized in the bulwarks of the ships the
-“wooden walls” which the oracle said would save
-Athens, and who, when he found the commanders
-weakening, secretly sent word to the Persians urging
-them to close in and fight. This was done; and
-the navy being reduced to the necessity of conflict
-acquitted itself nobly.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of the other local excursions, that to Marathon is
-<span class='pageno' title='133' id='Page_133'></span>easily made in a day by carriage. There is little to
-see there, save a plain, lined on the one hand by the
-mountains which look on Marathon, and on the other
-by the sea, largely girt with marshes. The lion which
-once crowned the tumulus is gone, nobody knows
-whither. It is much, however, from a purely sentimental
-point of view, to have stood upon the site itself,
-the scene of one of the world’s famous battles.
-Some grudging critics, including the erudite Mahaffy,
-incline to believe that Marathon was a rather small
-affair, judged by purely military standards—a conflict
-of one undisciplined host with an even less disciplined
-one, in an age when battles ordinarily were
-won by an endurance of nerve in the face of a
-hand-to-hand charge rather than by actual carnage.
-These maintain that the chief celebrity of Marathon
-rests not on its military glories, but on the fame which
-the Athenians, a literary race, gave it in song and
-story. But even these have to admit that Marathon
-meant much to history, and that the psychological
-effect of it was enormous, as showing that the Persians
-were by no means invincible, so that ten years
-later Salamis put the finishing blow to Persian attempts
-on the west. For those who do not care to make the
-long ride to the field itself, it is quite possible to
-obtain a view of the plain from the summit of Pentelicus,
-something like fifteen miles away, although
-<span class='pageno' title='134' id='Page_134'></span>this does not reveal the mound marking the actual
-site.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That mountain’s chief celebrity is, of course, to be
-found in the great marble quarries from which came
-the stone for the Acropolis temples, and it is these
-rather than the view of Marathon that draw climbers
-to the famous height. The ancient quarries lie far
-up on the side of the slope, and the marks of the old
-chisels are still plainly to be discerned. The difficulties
-of getting out perfect stone in the ancient days
-seem to have been enormous; but that they were
-surmounted is obvious from the fact that the great
-blocks used in building the Parthenon and Propylæa
-were handled with comparative speed, as shown
-by the relatively few years occupied in erecting them.
-It seems probable that the stone was slid down the
-mountain side in chutes to the point where it was
-feasible to begin carting it. Inherent but invisible
-defects naturally occurred, and these the ancients
-managed to detect by sounding with a mallet. Samples
-of these imperfect blocks are to be seen lying
-where they fell when the builders rejected them, not
-only on the road by the quarries but on the Acropolis
-itself.</p>
-
-<div id='i179' class='figcenter id014'>
-<img src='images/i_179.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE TEMPLE AT SUNIUM</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sunium, the famous promontory at the extremity
-of the Attic peninsula, may be reached by a train
-on the road that serves the ancient silver mines of
-<span class='pageno' title='135' id='Page_135'></span>Laurium, but as the trains are slow and infrequent
-it is better, if one can, to go down by sea. Our own
-visit was so made, the vessel landing us accommodatingly
-at the foot of the promontory on which a
-few columns of the ancient temple are still standing.
-The columns that remain are decidedly whiter than
-those on the Acropolis, and the general effect is
-highly satisfying to one’s preconceived ideas of Greek
-ruins. Dispute is rife as to the particular deity to
-whom this shrine was anciently consecrated, and the
-rivalry lies between those traditional antagonists,
-Athena and Poseidon, each of whom advances plausible
-claims. How the case can be decided without
-another contest between the two, like that supposed
-to have taken place on the Acropolis itself and depicted
-by Pheidias, is not clear. For who shall decide
-when doctors of archæology disagree?</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The chief architectural peculiarity of the Sunium
-temple is the arrangement of its frontal columns "in
-antis,"—that is to say, included between two projecting
-ends of the side walls. And, in addition, one
-regrets to say that the ruin is peculiar in affording
-evidences of modern vandalism more common in our
-own country than in Hellas, namely, the scratching
-of signatures on the surface of the stone. All sorts of
-names have been scrawled there,—English, French,
-Italian, American, Greek,—and most famous of all,
-<span class='pageno' title='136' id='Page_136'></span>no doubt, the unblushing signature of no less a personage
-than Byron himself! Perhaps, however, it is
-not really his. There may be isolated instances of
-this low form of vandalism elsewhere, but I do not
-recall any that can compare with the volume of defacing
-scrawls to be seen at Sunium.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Lovelier far than Sunium is the situation of the
-temple in Ægina, occupying a commanding height
-in that large and lofty island on the other side of the
-gulf, opposite the Piræus and perhaps six or seven
-miles distant from that port. The journey to it is
-necessarily by sea, and it has become a frequent
-objective point for steamer excursions landing near
-the temple itself rather than at the distant town. In
-the absence of a steamer, it is possible to charter
-native boats for a small cost and with a fair breeze
-make the run across the bay in a comparatively brief
-time. From the cove where parties are generally
-landed the temple cannot be seen, as the slopes are
-covered with trees and the shrine itself is distant
-some twenty minutes on foot. Donkeys can be had,
-as usual, but they save labor rather than time, and the
-walk, being through a grove of fragrant pines, is far
-from arduous or fatiguing. The odor of the pines is
-most agreeable, the more so because after one has sojourned
-for a brief time in comparatively treeless Attica
-one is the more ready to welcome a scent of the
-<span class='pageno' title='137' id='Page_137'></span>forest. The pungency of the grove is due, however,
-less to the pine needles and cones than to the tapping,
-or rather “blazing,” of the trunks for their resin. Under
-nearly every tree will be found stone troughs, into
-which the native juice of the tree oozes with painful
-slowness. The resin, of course, is for the native wines,
-which the Greek much prefers flavored with that ingredient.
-The drinking of resinated wine is an acquired
-taste, so far as foreigners are concerned. Some solemnly
-aver that they like it,—and even prefer it to
-the unresinated kind; but the average man not to the
-manner born declares it to be only less palatable than
-medicine. The Greeks maintain that the resin adds to
-the healthfulness of the wines, and to get the gum they
-have ruined countless pine groves by this tapping
-process so evident in the Ægina woods, for the gashes
-cut in the trees have the effect of stunting the growth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>After a steady ascent of a mile or so, the temple
-comes suddenly into view, framed in a foreground of
-green boughs, which add immensely to the effectiveness
-of the picture, and which make one regret the
-passing of the Greek forests in other places. Once
-upon a time the ordinary temple must have gained
-greatly by reason of its contrast with the foliage of
-the surrounding trees; but to-day only those at Ægina
-and at Bassæ present this feature to the beholder. This
-Ægina temple is variously attributed to Athena and
-<span class='pageno' title='138' id='Page_138'></span>to Zeus Panhellenius, so that, as at Sunium, there is
-a chance for doubt. The chief peculiarity seems to be
-that the entrance door, which is as usual in the eastern
-side, is not exactly in the centre of the cella. The columns
-are still standing to a large extent, but the pedimental
-sculptures have been removed to Munich, so
-that the spot is robbed, as the Acropolis is, of a portion
-of its charm. It is a pity, because the Æginetan
-pedimental figures were most interesting, furnishing
-a very good idea of the Æginetan style of sculpture
-of an early date. The figures which survive, to the
-number of seventeen, in a very fair state of preservation,
-represent warriors in various active postures, and
-several draped female figures, including a large statue
-of Athena. Those who have never seen these at Munich
-are doubtless familiar with the reproductions in
-plaster which are common in all first-class museums
-boasting collections of Greek masterpieces.</p>
-
-<div id='i185a' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/i_185a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE APPROACH TO ÆGINA</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div id='i185b' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/i_185b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE TEMPLE AT ÆGINA</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The island of Ægina, which is large and mountainous,
-forms a conspicuous feature of the gulf in which
-it lies. It is close to the Peloponnesian shore, and from
-the temple a magnificent view is outspread in every
-direction, not only over the mountains of the Argolid
-but northward toward Corinth,—and on a clear day it
-is said that even the summit of Parnassus can be descried.
-Directly opposite lies Athens, with which city
-the island long maintained a successful rivalry. The
-<span class='pageno' title='139' id='Page_139'></span>chief celebrity of the spot was achieved under its independent
-existence, about the seventh century <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>,
-and before Athens subjugated it. It was then tenanted
-by colonists from Epidaurus, who had the commercial
-instinct, and who made Ægina a most prosperous
-place. The name is said to be derived from the nymph
-Ægina, who was brought to the island by Zeus. The
-hardy Æginetan sailors were an important factor in
-the battle of Salamis, to which they contributed not
-only men but sacred images; and they were not entirely
-expelled from their land by the Athenian domination
-until 431 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span> Thereafter the prominence of
-the city dwindled and has never returned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It remains to describe an excursion which we made
-to the north of Athens one day shortly after Easter, to
-witness some peasant dances. These particular festivities
-were held at Menidi, and were rather less extensive
-than the annual Easter dances at Megara, but
-still of the same general type; and as they constitute
-a regular spring feature of Attic life, well worth seeing
-if one is at Athens at the Easter season, it is not out
-of place to describe them here. Either Megara or
-Menidi may be reached easily by train, and Menidi
-is not a hard carriage ride, being only six miles or so
-north of Athens, in the midst of the plain. It may
-be that these dances are direct descendants of ancient
-rites, like so many of the features of the present
-<span class='pageno' title='140' id='Page_140'></span>Orthodox church; but whatever their significance and
-history, they certainly present the best opportunity to
-see the peasantry of the district in their richest gala
-array, which is something almost too gorgeous to
-describe.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The drive out to the village over the old north road
-was dusty and hot, and we were haunted by a fear
-that the dances might be postponed, as occasionally
-happens. These doubts were removed, however, when
-Menidi at last hove in sight as we drove over an undulation
-of the plain and came suddenly upon the village
-in holiday dress, flags waving, peasant girls and
-swains in gala garb, and streets lined with booths for
-the vending of sweetmeats, Syrian peanuts, pistachio
-nuts, loukoumi, and what the New England merchant
-would call “notions.” Indeed, it was all very
-suggestive of the New England county fair, save for
-the gorgeousness of the costumes. The streets were
-thronged and everybody was in a high good-humor.
-What it was all about we never knew. Conflicting
-reports were gleaned from the natives, some to the
-effect that it was, and some that it was not, essentially
-a churchly affair; but all agreed apparently that
-it had no connection with the Easter feast, although
-it was celebrated something like five days thereafter.
-Others mentioned a spring as having something to
-do with it,—suggesting a possible pagan origin.
-<span class='pageno' title='141' id='Page_141'></span>This view gained color from the energy with which
-lusty youths were manipulating the town pump in
-the village square, causing it to squirt a copious
-stream to a considerable distance,—a performance
-in which the bystanders took an unflagging and
-unbounded delight. That the celebration was not devoid
-of its religious significance was evident from
-the open church close by thronged with devout people
-coming and going, each obtaining a thin yellow
-taper to light and place in the huge many-branched
-candelabrum. The number of these soon became so
-great that the priests removed the older ones and
-threw them in a heap below, to make room for fresh-lighted
-candles. Those who deposited coins in the
-baptismal font near the door were rewarded with a
-sprinkling of water by the attendant priest, who constantly
-dipped a rose in the font and shook it over
-those who sought this particular form of benison.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Outside, the square was thronged with merrymakers,
-some dancing in the solemn Greek fashion,
-in a circle with arms extended on each others’ shoulders,
-moving slowly around and around to the monotonous
-wail of a clarionet. Others were seated under
-awnings sipping coffee, and to such a resort we were
-courteously escorted by the local captain of the gendarmerie,
-whose acquaintance we had made in Athens
-and who proved the soul of hospitality. Here we sat
-<span class='pageno' title='142' id='Page_142'></span>and drank the delicious thick coffee, accompanied by
-the inevitable huge beaker of water drawn from the
-rocky slopes of Parnes, and watched the dancers and
-the passing crowds. The dress of the men was seldom
-conspicuous. Many wore European clothes like our
-own, although here and there might be seen one in
-the national costume of full white skirts and close-fitting
-leggings, leather wallet, and zouave jacket.
-But the women were visions of incomparable magnificence.
-Their robes were in the main of white, but
-the skirts were decked with the richest of woolen
-embroideries, heavy and thick, extending for several
-inches upward from the lower hem, in a profusion of
-rich reds, blues, and browns. Aprons similarly adorned
-were worn above. Most impressive of all, however,
-were the sleeveless overgarments or coats, such as
-we had seen and bickered over in Shoe Lane,—coats
-of white stuff, bordered with a deep red facing
-and overlaid with intricate tracery in gold lace and
-gold braid. These were infinitely finer than any we had
-seen in the Athens shops, and they made the scene
-gay indeed with a barbaric splendor. To add to the
-gorgeousness of the display, the girls wore flat caps,
-bordered with gold lace and coins, giving the effect of
-crowns, flowing veils which did not conceal the face
-but fell over the shoulders, and on their breasts many
-displayed a store of gold and silver coins arranged as
-<span class='pageno' title='143' id='Page_143'></span>bangles—their dowries, it was explained. Most of
-these young women were betrothed, it developed,
-and custom dictated this parade of the marriage portion,
-which is no small part of the Greek wedding
-arrangement. The cuffs of the full white sleeves were
-embroidered like the aprons and skirt bottoms, and
-the whole effect was such as to be impossible of adequate
-description.</p>
-
-<div id='i191' class='figcenter id015'>
-<img src='images/i_191.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>PEASANT DANCERS AT MENIDI</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>One comely damsel, whose friends clamored us to
-photograph her, scampered nimbly into her courtyard,
-only to be dragged forth bodily by a proud
-young swain, who announced himself her betrothed
-and who insisted that she pose for the picture, willy-nilly,—which
-she did, joining amiably in the general
-hilarity, and exacting a promise of a print when the
-picture should be finished. The ice once broken, the
-entire peasant population became seized with a desire
-to be photographed, and it was only the beginning
-of the great dance that dissolved the clamoring
-throng.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The dance was held on a broad level space, just
-east of the town, about which a crowd had already
-gathered. We were escorted thither and duly presented
-to the demarch, or mayor, who bestowed upon
-us the freedom of the city and the hospitality of his
-own home if we required it. He was a handsome man,
-dressed in a black cut-away coat and other garments
-<span class='pageno' title='144' id='Page_144'></span>of a decidedly civilized nature, which seemed curiously
-incongruous in those surroundings, as indeed
-did his own face, which was pronouncedly Hibernian
-and won for him the sobriquet of "O'Sullivan" on
-the spot. His stay with us was brief, for the dance was
-to begin, and nothing would do but the mayor should
-lead the first two rounds. This he did with much
-grace, though we were told that he did not relish the
-task, and only did it because if he balked the votes
-at the next election would go to some other aspirant.
-The dance was simple enough, being a mere solemn
-circling around of a long procession of those gorgeous
-maidens, numbering perhaps a hundred or
-more, hand in hand and keeping time to the music
-of a quaint band composed of drum, clarionet, and
-a sort of penny whistle. The demarch danced best
-of all, and after two stately rounds of the green inclosure
-left the circle and watched the show at his
-leisure, his face beaming with the sweet consciousness
-of political security and duty faithfully performed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>How long the dance went on we never knew. The
-evening was to be marked by a display of fireworks,
-the frames for which were already in evidence and
-betokened a magnificence in keeping with the costumes
-of the celebrants. For ourselves, satiated with
-the display, we returned to our carriage laden with
-<span class='pageno' title='145' id='Page_145'></span>flowers, pistachio nuts, and strings of beads bestowed
-by the abundant local hospitality, and bowled home
-across the plain in time to be rewarded with a fine
-sunset glow on the Parthenon as a fitting close for a
-most unusual and enjoyable day.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='146' id='Page_146'></span>
- <h2 id='chap08' class='c005'>CHAPTER VIII. DELPHI</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id016'>
-<img src='images/i_196.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>The pilgrimage to Delphi, which used to be
-fraught with considerable hardship and inconvenience,
-is happily so no longer. It is still true that
-the Greek steamers plying between the Piræus and
-Itea, the port nearest the ancient oracular shrine, leave
-much to be desired and are by no means to be depended
-upon to keep to their schedules; but aside from this
-minor difficulty there is nothing to hinder the ordinary
-visitor from making the journey, which is far and away
-the best of all ordinary short rambles in Greece, not
-only because of the great celebrity of the site itself, but
-because of the imposing scenic attractions Delphi has
-to show. The old-time drawback, the lack of decent
-accommodation at Delphi itself, or to be more exact,
-at the modern village of Kastri, has been removed by
-the presence of two inns, of rather limited capacity, it
-is true, but still affording very tolerable lodging. Indeed,
-hearsay reported the newer of these tiny hostelries
-<span class='pageno' title='147' id='Page_147'></span>to be one of the best in Greece outside of Athens,
-while the other quaint resort, owned and operated by
-the amiable Vasili Paraskevas, one of the “local characters”
-of the place, has long been esteemed by Hellenic
-visitors. Vasili, in appearance almost as formidable as
-the ancient Polyphemus, but in all else as gentle as the
-sucking dove, has felt the force of competition, and his
-advertisements easily rival those of the Hotel Cecil.
-As a matter of fact, the establishment is delightfully
-primitive, seemingly hanging precariously to the very
-edge of the deep ravine that lies just under lofty Delphi,
-boasting several small rooms and even the promise of
-a bath-tub, although Vasili was forced to admit that
-his advertisement in that respect was purely prospective
-and indicative of intention rather than actuality.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The truly adventurous may still approach Delphi
-over the ancient road by land from the eastward, doubtless
-the same highway that was taken by old King
-Laios when he was slain on his way to the oracle, all
-unwitting of the kinship, by his own son &OElig;dipus,—possibly
-because of a dispute as to which should yield
-the road. For the old road was a narrow one, with
-deep ruts, suitable for a single chariot, but productive
-of frequent broils when two such haughty spirits met
-on the way. To come to Delphi over this road and
-to depart by sea is doubtless the ideal plan. That we
-elected not to take the land voyage was due to the
-<span class='pageno' title='148' id='Page_148'></span>early spring season, with its snows on the shoulder of
-Parnassus, around which the path winds. For those
-less hindered by the season, it is said that the journey
-overland from Livadià to Delphi, passing through
-the tiny hamlet of Arákhova and possibly spending
-a night in the open air on Parnassus, is well worth
-the trouble, and justifies the expense of a courier and
-horses, both of which are necessary.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The way which we chose, besides being infinitely
-easier, is far from being devoid of its interesting features.
-We set sail in the early afternoon from the Piræus,
-passing over a glassy sea by Psyttalea, and the
-famous waters in front of Salamis, to Corinth, where
-the canal proved sufficiently wide to let our little craft
-steam through to the gulf beyond. It was in the gathering
-dusk that we entered this unusual channel, but
-still it was light enough to see the entire length of the
-canal, along the deep sides of which electric lamps
-glimmered few and faint as a rather ineffectual illuminant
-of the tow-path on either hand. The walls towered
-above, something like two hundred feet in spots, and
-never very low, making this four-mile ribbon of water
-between the narrow seas a gloomy cavern indeed. It
-was wide enough for only one craft of the size of our
-own, therein resembling the land highway to Delphi;
-but fortunately, owing to the system of semaphore
-signals, no &OElig;dipus disputed the road with us, and we
-<span class='pageno' title='149' id='Page_149'></span>shot swiftly through the channel, between its towering
-walls of rock, under the spidery railroad bridge that
-spans it near the Corinth end, and out into the gulf
-beyond. It is rather a nice job of steering, this passage
-of the canal. Everybody was ordered off the bow, three
-men stood nervously at the wheel, and the jack staff
-was kept centred on the bright line that distantly
-marked the opening between the precipitous sides of
-the cleft, a line of light that gradually widened, revealing
-another sea and a different land as we drew near
-and looked out of our straight and narrow path of
-water into the Corinthian Gulf beyond. The magnificence
-of the prospect would be hard indeed to exaggerate.
-On either side of the narrow gulf rose billowy
-mountains, the northern line of summits dominated by
-the snowy dome of Parnassus, the southern by Cyllene,
-likewise covered with white. They were ghostly in
-the darkness, which the moon relieved only a little,
-shining fitfully from an overcast sky. The Corinthian
-Gulf is fine enough from the railway which skirts it
-all the way to Patras, but it is finer far from the sea,
-whence one sees both sides at once in all the glory of
-their steep gray mountains. Happily the night was
-calm, and the gulf, which can be as bad as the English
-Channel at its worst, was smooth for once as we swung
-away from the little harbor of modern Corinth and laid
-our course for the capes off Itea, something like forty
-<span class='pageno' title='150' id='Page_150'></span>miles away. And thus we went to rest, the steamer
-plowing steadily on through the night with Parnassus
-towering on the starboard quarter.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A vigorous blowing of the whistle roused the ship’s
-company at dawn. The vessel was at anchor off Itea,
-a starveling village not at all praised by those who
-have been forced to sample its meagre accommodations
-for a night. Fortunately it is no longer necessary
-to rely on these, for one may drive to Delphi in a few
-hours, and on a moonlight night the ride, while chilly,
-is said to be most delightful. Arriving as we did at
-early dawn, we were deprived of this experience, and
-set out from the village at once on landing to cover the
-nine miles to Kastri, some riding in carriages or spring
-carts,—locally called "sustas,"—some on mules,
-and others proceeding on foot. From afar we could
-already see the village, perched high on the side of the
-foothills of Parnassus, which rise abruptly some three
-miles away across a level plain. The plain proved to
-be delightful. Walled in on either hand by rocky cliffs,
-its whole bottom was filled with olive trees, through
-which vast grove the road wound leisurely along.
-Brooks babbled by through the grass of the great
-orchard, and the green of the herbage was spangled
-with innumerable anemones and other wild-flowers in
-a profusion of color. Far behind us in the background
-towered the Peloponnesian mountains, and before rose
-<span class='pageno' title='151' id='Page_151'></span>the forbidding cliffs that shut in Delphi. Above the
-distant Kastri, there was always the lofty summit of
-Parnassus, somewhat dwarfed by proximity and therefore
-a trifle disappointing to one whose preconceived
-notions of that classic mountain demanded splendid
-isolation, but still impressive.</p>
-
-<div id='i201' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_201.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE PLAIN BELOW DELPHI</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Naturally on this long, level plain the carriages soon
-passed us, and disappeared in the hills ahead, while
-the footpath left the highway and plunged off boldly
-into the olive grove in the general direction of Delphi.
-When it attained the base of the sharp ascent of the
-mountain-side, it went straight up, leaving the road to
-find its more gradual way by zigzags and détours,—windings
-so long that it soon developed that the carriages
-which so long ago had distanced us were in turn
-displaced and were later seen toiling up the steep behind
-us! The prospect rearward was increasingly lovely
-as we climbed and looked down upon the plain. It
-resembled nothing so much as a sea of verdure, the
-olive trees pouring into it from the uplands like a
-river, and filling it from bank to bank. No wonder
-this plain was deemed a ground worth fighting for by
-the ancients.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Despite the fact that the snows of Parnassus were
-apparently so near, the climb was warm. The rocky
-hillside gave back the heat of the April sun, although
-it was cloudy, and progress became necessarily slow,
-<span class='pageno' title='152' id='Page_152'></span>in part because of the warmth and in larger part because
-of the increasing splendor of the view. The path
-bore always easterly into a narrow gorge between two
-massive mountains, a gorge that narrowed and narrowed
-as the climb proceeded. Before very long we
-passed through a wayside hamlet that lies halfway up
-the road, exchanged greetings with the inhabitants,
-who proved a friendly people anxious to set us right
-on the way to Delphi, and speedily emerged from the
-nest of buildings on the path again, with Kastri always
-ahead and above, and seemingly as distant as ever. It
-was Palm Sunday, we discovered, and the populace of
-the tiny village all bore sprigs of greenery, which they
-pressed upon us and which later turned out to be more
-political than religious in their significance, since it was
-not only the day of the Lord’s triumphal entry but the
-closing day of the general elections as well.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Admiration for the green and fertile valley far behind
-now gave place to awe at the grim gorges before
-and the beetling cliffs towering overhead, up through
-which, like dark chimney flues, ran deep clefts in the
-rock, gloomy and mysterious, and doubtless potent in
-producing awe in the ancient mind by thus adding
-to the impressiveness of god-haunted Delphi. On the
-left the mountain rose abruptly and loftily to the
-blue; on the right the cliff descended sharply from
-the path to the dark depths of the ravine, while close
-<span class='pageno' title='153' id='Page_153'></span>on its other side rose again a neighboring mountain
-that inclosed this ever-narrowing gulch.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At last after a three-hour scramble over the rocks
-we attained Kastri, and found it a poor town lined
-with hovels, but, like Mount Zion, beautiful for situation.
-A brawling brook, fed by a spring above, dashed
-across the single street and lost itself in the depths of
-the ravine below. On either hand towered the steep
-sides of the surrounding cliffs, while before us the valley
-wound around a shoulder of the mountain and
-seemingly closed completely. Kastri did not always
-occupy this site, but once stood farther along around
-the mountain’s sharp corner, directly over the ancient
-shrine itself; and it was necessary for the French excavators
-who laid bare the ancient sites to have the
-village moved bodily by force and arms before any
-work could be done,—a task that was accomplished
-with no little difficulty, but which, when completed,
-enabled the exploration of what was once the most
-famous of all Pagan religious shrines. Curiously
-enough the restoration of the temples at Delphi fell
-to the hands of the French, the descendants of those
-very Gauls who, centuries before, had laid waste the
-shrines and treasuries of Loxias. We stopped long
-enough at Vasili’s to sample some "mastika,"—a
-native liqueur resembling anisette, very refreshing on
-a warm day,—and then walked on to the ruins which
-<span class='pageno' title='154' id='Page_154'></span>lie some few minutes’ walk farther around the shoulder
-of the mountain.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Nothing could well be more impressive than the
-prospect that opened out as we came down to the
-famous site itself. No outlet of the great vale was to
-be seen from this point, for the gorge winds about
-among the crags which rise high above and drop far
-below to the base of the rocky glen. Human habitation
-there is none. Kastri was now out of sight behind.
-On the roadside and in the more gradual slopes of the
-ravine below one might find olive trees, and here and
-there a plane. Beyond, through the mysterious windings
-of the defile runs the road to Arakhova. It was
-on this spot that Apollo had his most famous shrine,
-the abode of his accredited priestesses gifted with prophecy;
-and no fitter habitation for the oracle could
-have been found by the worshipers of old time than
-this gloomy mountain glen where nature conspires
-with herself to overawe mankind by her grandeur.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The legend has it that Apollo, born as all the world
-knows in far-off Delos, transferred his chief seat to
-Delphi just after his feat of slaying the Python. He is
-said to have followed that exploit by leaping into the
-sea, where he assumed the form of a huge dolphin
-(delphis), and in this guise he directed the course of
-a passing Cretan ship to the landing place at Itea, or
-Crissa. There, suddenly resuming his proper shape of
-<span class='pageno' title='155' id='Page_155'></span>a beautiful youth he led the wondering crew of the
-vessel up from the shore to the present site of Delphi,
-proclaimed himself the god, and persuaded the sailors
-to remain there, build a temple and become his priests,
-calling the spot “Delphi.” Tradition also asks us to
-believe that there then existed on the spot a cavern,
-from which issued vapors having a peculiar effect on
-the human mind, producing in those who breathed
-them a stupor in which the victim raved, uttering
-words which were supposed to be prophetic. Over this
-cave, if it existed, the temple was erected; and therein
-the priestess, seated on a tripod where she might inhale
-the vapors, gave out her answers to suppliants,
-which answers the corps of priests later rendered into
-hexameter verses having the semblance of sense, but
-generally so ambiguous as to admit of more than one
-interpretation. All sorts of tales are told of the effect
-of the mephitic gas on the pythoness—how she would
-writhe in uncontrollable fury, how her hair would rise
-on her head as she poured forth her unintelligible gibberish,
-and so forth; stories well calculated to impress
-a credulous race “much given to religion” as St. Paul
-so sagely observed. If there ever was any such cavern
-at all, it has disappeared, possibly filled with the débris
-of the ruins or closed by earthquake. Perhaps there
-never was any cave at all. In any event the wonders
-of the Delphic oracle were undoubtedly explicable,
-<span class='pageno' title='156' id='Page_156'></span>as such phenomena nearly always are, by perfectly
-natural facts. It has been pointed out that the corps
-of priests, visited continually as they were by people
-from all parts of the ancient world, were probably the
-best informed set of men on earth, and the sum total
-of their knowledge thus gleaned so far surpassed that
-of the ordinary mortal and so far exceeded the average
-comprehension that what was perfectly natural was
-easily made to appear miraculous. To the already awed
-suppliant, predisposed to belief and impressed by the
-wonderful natural surroundings of the place, it was
-not hard to pass off this world-wide information as inspired
-truth. Nor was it a long step from this, especially
-for clever men such as the priests seem to have been,
-to begin forecasting future events by basing shrewd
-guesses on data already in hand—these guesses being
-received with full faith by the worshiper as god-given
-prophecy. As an added safeguard the priests often
-handed down their predictions in ambiguous form, as,
-for example, in the famous answer sent to Cr&oelig;sus,
-when he asked if he should venture an expedition
-against Cyrus—“If Cr&oelig;sus shall attack Cyrus, he
-will destroy a great empire.” Such answers were of
-course agreeable to the suppliant, for they admitted
-of flattering interpretation; and it was only after trial
-that Cr&oelig;sus discovered that the “great empire” he
-was fated to destroy was his own. At other times the
-<span class='pageno' title='157' id='Page_157'></span>guesses, not in ambiguous form, went sadly astray—as
-in the case where the Pythian, after balancing probabilities
-and doubtless assuming that the gods were
-always on the side of the heaviest battalions, advised
-the Athenians not to hope to conquer the invading
-Persians. This erroneous estimate was the natural one
-for informed persons to make,—and it is highly probable
-that it was influenced in part by presents from
-the Persian king, for such corruption of the oracle was
-by no means unknown. In fact it led to the ultimate
-discrediting of the oracle, and it was not long before
-the shrine ceased to be revered as a fountain of good
-advice. Nevertheless for many hundred years it was
-held in unparalleled veneration by the whole ancient
-world. Pilgrims came and went. Cities and states
-maintained rich treasuries there, on which was founded
-a considerable banking system. Games in honor of
-Pythian Apollo were celebrated in the stadium which
-is still to be seen high up on the mountain-side above
-the extensive ruins of the sacred precinct. Temple
-after temple arose about the great main shrine of the
-god. Even distant Cnidus erected a treasury, and
-victorious powers set up trophy after trophy there for
-battles won by land or sea—the politeness of the
-time preventing the mention of any Hellenic victim
-by name.</p>
-
-<div id='i209' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_209.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE VALE OF DELPHI</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>All these remains have been patiently uncovered
-<span class='pageno' title='158' id='Page_158'></span>and laboriously identified and labeled, with the assistance
-of the voluminous writings of that patron saint
-of travelers, Pausanias. The work was done under the
-direction of the erudite French school, and the visitor
-of to-day, provided with the plan in his guide-book
-and aided by the numerous guide-posts erected on
-the spot, will find his way about with much ease. One
-of the buildings, the “treasury of the Athenians,” a
-small structure about the size of the Niké Apteros
-temple, is being “restored” by the excavators, but
-with rather doubtful success. Aside from this one instance,
-the ruins are mainly reconstructible only in the
-imagination from the visible ground-plans and from
-the fragments lying all about. In the museum close by,
-however, some fractional restorations indoors serve
-to give a very excellent idea of the appearance of at
-least two of the ancient buildings.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Space and the intended scope of this narrative alike
-forbid anything like a detailed discussion of the numerous
-ruins that line the zigzag course of the old
-“sacred way.” The visitor, thanks to the ability of
-the French school, is left in no doubt as to the identity
-of the buildings, and the wayfaring man, though no
-archæologist, need not err. One may remark in passing,
-however, the curious polygonal wall of curved
-stones still standing along a portion of the way and
-still bearing the remnant of a colonnade, with an inscription
-<span class='pageno' title='159' id='Page_159'></span>indicating that once a trophy was set up here
-by the Athenians,—possibly the beaks of conquered
-ships. Of course the centre and soul of the whole precinct
-was the great temple of Apollo, now absolutely
-flat in ruins, but once a grand edifice indeed. The
-Alcmæonidæ, who had the contract for building it,
-surprised and delighted everybody by building better
-than the terms of their agreement demanded, providing
-marble ends for the temple and pedimental adornment
-as well, when the letter of the contract would
-have been satisfied with native stone. Thus shrewdly
-did a family that was in temporary disfavor at Athens
-win its way back to esteem!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>However easy it may be to explain with some
-plausibility the ordinary feats of the oracle at Delphi
-as accomplished by purely natural means, there was
-an occasional <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>tour de force</em></span> that even to-day would
-pass for miraculous—supposing that there be any
-truth in the stories as originally told. The most
-notable instance was one in which Cr&oelig;sus figured.
-That wealthy monarch was extremely partial to oracles,
-and generally consulted them before any considerable
-undertaking. On the occasion in question
-he contemplated an expedition against Cyrus—the
-same which he eventually undertook because of the
-enigmatic answer before referred to—and made extraordinary
-preparations to see that the advice given
-<span class='pageno' title='160' id='Page_160'></span>him was trustworthy. For Cr&oelig;sus, with all his credulity,
-was inclined to be canny, and proposed to test
-the powers of the more famous oracular shrines by
-a little experiment. So he sent different persons, according
-to Herodotus, to the various oracles in
-Greece and even in Libya, "some to Phocis, some to
-Dodona, others to Amphiaraus and Trophonius, and
-others to Branchidæ of Milesia, and still others to
-Ammon in Libya. He sent them in different ways,
-desiring to make trial of what the oracle knew, in
-order that, if they should be found to know the truth,
-he might send a second time to inquire whether he
-should venture to make war on the Persians. He laid
-upon them the following orders: That, computing the
-days from the time of their departure from Sardis,
-they should consult the oracles on the hundredth
-day by asking what Cr&oelig;sus, the son of Alyattes, was
-then doing. They were to bring back the answer in
-writing. Now what the answers were that were given
-by the other oracles is mentioned by none; but no
-sooner had the Lydian ambassadors entered the
-temple at Delphi and asked the question than the
-Pythian spoke thus, in hexameter verse: 'I know
-the number of the sands and the measure of the sea;
-I understand the dumb and hear him that does not
-speak; the savor of the hard-shelled tortoise boiled
-in brass with the flesh of lambs strikes on my senses;
-<span class='pageno' title='161' id='Page_161'></span>brass is laid beneath it and brass is put over it.' Now
-of all the answers opened by Cr&oelig;sus none pleased him
-but only this. And when he had heard the answer from
-Delphi he adored it and approved it, and was convinced
-that the pythoness of Delphi was a real oracle
-because she alone had interpreted what he had done.
-For when he sent out his messengers to the several
-oracles, watching for the appointed day, he had recourse
-to the following contrivance, having thought
-of what it was impossible to discover or guess at. He
-cut up a tortoise and a lamb and boiled them himself
-together in a brazen caldron, and laid over it a
-cover of brass."<a id='r1' /><a href='#f1' class='c012'><sup>[1]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thus, on one occasion, the oracle is supposed to
-have performed a feat of what we should now set
-down as telepathy, and which, if it really happened,
-would be explicable in no other way. It sufficed to
-establish Delphi as a shrine to be revered, in the mind
-of Cr&oelig;sus, and to propitiate the god he sent magnificent
-gifts. And as these may serve to give some
-idea of the vast riches of the spot in bygone ages, it
-may be well to relate here what Cr&oelig;sus is supposed
-to have sent. Herodotus relates that he made a prodigious
-sacrifice, in the flames of which he melted
-down an incredible amount of gold and silver. "Out
-of the metal thus melted down he cast half-bricks, of
-<span class='pageno' title='162' id='Page_162'></span>which the longest was six palms in length, the shortest
-three; and in thickness, each was one palm.
-Their number was one hundred and seventeen. Four
-of these, of pure gold, weighed each two talents
-and a half. The other bricks, of pale gold, weighed
-two talents each. He made also the figure of a lion,
-of fine gold, weighing ten talents. This lion, when
-the temple at Delphi was burned down, fell from its
-pedestal of half-bricks, for it was placed upon them.
-It now lies in the treasury of the Corinthians, weighing
-only six talents and a half,—for three talents and
-a half were melted from it in the fire. Cr&oelig;sus, having
-finished these things, sent them to Delphi, and
-with them the following: two large bowls, one of gold
-and one of silver. The golden one was placed on the
-right as one enters the temple, and that of silver
-on the left; but they were removed when the temple
-was burning, and the gold bowl was set in the
-treasury of the Clazomenæ; while the silver one,
-which contains six hundred amphorae, lies in a corner
-of the Propylæa, and is used for mixing wine on
-the Theophanian festival. The Delians said it was the
-work of Theodorus the Samian, which was probably
-true, for it was no common work. He sent also four
-casks of silver, which also stand in the Corinthian
-treasury; and he dedicated two lustral vases, one
-of gold and the other of silver. The Spartans claim
-<span class='pageno' title='163' id='Page_163'></span>that the golden one was their offering, for it bears an
-inscription, ‘From the Lacedæmonians;’ but this
-is wrong, for Cr&oelig;sus gave it. He sent many other
-offerings, among them some round silver covers, and
-also a golden statue of a woman, three cubits high,
-which the Delphians say is the image of Cr&oelig;sus’s
-baking-woman. And to all these things he added
-the necklaces and girdles of his wife."<a id='r2' /><a href='#f2' class='c012'><sup>[2]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Such is the account given by Herodotus of the
-gifts bestowed by the king regarded as the richest of
-all the ancient monarchs. In return for his gifts he
-got the answer that “if Cr&oelig;sus shall make war on
-the Persians he will destroy a mighty empire.” Cr&oelig;sus
-was so delighted at this that he sent more gifts,
-“giving to each of the inhabitants of Delphi two
-staters of gold.” A further question as to how long
-he was destined to rule elicited the response, “When
-a mule shall become king of the Medes, then, tender-footed
-Lydian, flee over the pebbly Hermus; nor delay,
-nor blush to be a coward.” There is even less of
-apparent enigma about that statement; yet nevertheless
-Cr&oelig;sus lived to see the day when a man,
-whom he deemed a “mule,” did become ruler of the
-Medes, and he likewise saw his own mighty empire
-destroyed. The case of Cr&oelig;sus is typical in many
-ways of the attitude of the ancients toward the oracle,—their
-<span class='pageno' title='164' id='Page_164'></span>belief in it as inspired, and their frequent
-attempts to predispose it to favor by gifts of great
-magnificence. Not everybody could give such offerings
-as Cr&oelig;sus, to be sure. But the presents piled
-up in the buildings of the sacred precinct must have
-been of enormous value, and the contemplation of
-them somewhat overpowering. By the way, recent
-estimates have been published showing that the
-wealth of Cr&oelig;sus, measured by our modern standards,
-would total only about $11,000,000.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Doubtless the awe felt for the spot sufficed in the
-main to protect the treasures from theft. When
-Xerxes came into Greece and approached the shrine,
-the inhabitants proposed that the valuables be buried
-in the earth. Ph&oelig;bus, speaking through the priestess,
-forbade this, however, saying that “he was able
-to protect his own.” And, in fact, he proved to be so,
-for the approaching host were awed by the sight
-of the sacred arms of the god, moved apparently
-by superhuman means from their armory within the
-temple to the steps outside. And moreover while
-the invaders were approaching along the vale below,
-where the temple of Athena Pronoia still stands, a
-storm broke, and two great crags were dashed from
-the overhanging cliffs above, killing some and demoralizing
-the rest. A war shout was heard from the
-temple of Athena, and the Delians, taking heart at
-<span class='pageno' title='165' id='Page_165'></span>these prodigies, swept down from the hills and destroyed
-many of the fleeing Medes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The most successful attempt to prejudice and corrupt
-the oracle seems to have been that of the Alcmæonidæ,
-who have been referred to as the builders
-of the great temple after its destruction by fire. They
-had been driven out of Athens by the Pisistratidæ,
-and during their exile they contracted with the Amphictyons
-to rebuild the great shrine of Apollo. That
-they imported Parian marble for the front of the edifice
-when the contract would have been amply satisfied
-with Poros stone seems to have been less a disinterested
-act than an effort to win the favor of the
-god. The Athenians long maintained that the builders
-still further persuaded the oracle by gifts of
-money to urge upon the Spartans the liberation of
-Athens from the tyrants; and in the end the Pisistratidæ
-were driven out, in obedience to this mandate,
-while the Alcmæonidæ came back in triumph,
-as had been their design from the first.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was rather a relief at last to turn from the bewildering
-array of ruins to the museum itself. It is not
-large, but it contains some wonderfully interesting
-things, and chief of all, no doubt, the bronze figure of
-the charioteer. I cannot bring myself to believe that
-he surpasses the bronze “ephebus” at Athens, whom
-he instantly recalls both from the material and from
-<span class='pageno' title='166' id='Page_166'></span>the treatment of the eyes; but he is wonderful, nevertheless,
-as he stands slightly leaning backward as one
-might in the act of driving, the remnants of a rein still
-visible in one hand. His self-possession and rather
-aristocratic mien have often been remarked, and a
-careful examination will reveal what is doubtless the
-most curious thing about the whole statue—namely,
-the little fringe of eye-lashes, which those who cast the
-image allowed to protrude around the inlaid eye-ball.
-They might easily be overlooked by a casual observer,
-but their effect is to add a subtle something that gives
-the unusual naturalness to the eyes. One other statue,
-a marble replica of an original bronze by Lysippus,
-deserves a word of comment also, because it is held by
-good authorities to be a better example of the school
-of Lysippus than the far better known “Apoxyomenos”
-in the Braccio Nuovo at Rome. Each of the figures
-is the work of a pupil of Lysippus, but the claim
-is made that the copy of a youth at Delphi was doubtless
-made by a pupil working under the master’s own
-supervision, while the Apoxyomenos was carved after
-Lysippus had died. From this it is natural enough to
-infer that the Delphi example is a more faithful reproduction
-than the Vatican’s familiar figure. In this
-museum also is a carved stone which is known as the
-“omphalos,” because of its having marked the supposed
-navel of the earth. The legend is that Zeus
-<span class='pageno' title='167' id='Page_167'></span>once let fly two eagles from opposite sides of the world,
-bidding them fly toward one another with equal wing.
-They met at Delphi, which therefore shares this form
-of celebrity with Dodona in Epirus.</p>
-
-<div id='i221' class='figcenter id017'>
-<img src='images/i_221.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>CHARIOTEER—DELPHI</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of course we visited the Castalian spring, which
-still gushes forth from a cleft in the rock, as it did in
-the days when suppliants came thither first of all to
-purify themselves. After a long journey one is not
-loath to rest beside this ancient fount after washing
-and drinking deep of its unfailing supply, for the water
-is good and the chance to drink fresh water in Greece
-is rare enough to be embraced wherever met. The
-cleft from which the spring emerges is truly wonderful.
-It is narrow and dark enough for a colossal chimney,
-running far back into the bowels of the mountain
-heights behind. An old stone trough hewn out of the
-side of the cliff was once filled by this spring, but the
-flow has now been diverted and it runs off in a babbling
-stream over the pebbles. Not the least inspiring
-thing at Delphi is to stand here and reflect, as one enjoys
-the Castalian water, how many of the great in bygone
-ages stood on this very spot and listened to the
-same murmur of this brook which goes on forever.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Hard by the spring, under two great plane trees that
-we fondly believed were direct descendants of those
-planted on the spot by Agamemnon, we sat down to
-lunch, a stone khan across the way affording shelter
-<span class='pageno' title='168' id='Page_168'></span>and fire for our coffee. And in the afternoon we rambled
-among the ruins below on the grassy slopes of
-the lower glen, where are to be seen a ruined gymnasium,
-a temple of Athena Pronoia, and a fascinating
-circular “tholos,” all of which, though sadly shattered,
-still present much beauty of detail. If the site were
-devoid of every ruined temple it would still be well
-worth a visit, not merely from the importance it once
-enjoyed as Apollo’s chief sanctuary, but also for the
-grandeur and impressiveness of its setting, so typical
-of Greece at her best. Fortunate indeed are those
-who may tarry here awhile, now that local lodging
-has been robbed of its ancient hardships. To-day,
-as in the days of the priests, Delphi is in touch with
-the uttermost parts of the earth by means of the telegraph,
-the incongruous wires of which accompany
-the climber all the way from Itea, so that details of
-arrival, departure, or stay may be arranged readily
-enough from afar. Long sojourn, however, was not
-to be our portion, and we were forced to depart,
-though with reluctant steps, down along the rough
-side of the mountain, through the vast and silent olive
-groves, back into the world of men, to sordid Itea
-and our ship.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='169' id='Page_169'></span>
- <h2 id='chap09' class='c005'>CHAPTER IX. MYCENÆ AND THE <br /> PLAIN OF ARGOS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_225.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>We journeyed down to Mycenæ from Athens
-by train. The moment the railroad leaves
-Corinth it branches southward into the Peloponnesus
-and into a country which, for legendary interest,
-has few equals in the world. Old Corinth herself, mother
-of colonies, might claim a preëminent interest
-from the purely historical point of view, but she must
-forever subordinate herself to the half-mythical charm
-that surrounds ruined and desolate Mycenæ, the famous
-capital of Atreus and his two celebrated sons,
-Menelaus and Agamemnon. As for Corinth herself,
-the ancient site has lately been explored under the
-auspices of the American school at Athens, and these
-excavations, with the steep climb to the isolated and
-lofty Acrocorinth, furnish the attractions of the place
-to-day. The train runs fairly close to the mountain,
-so that even from the car window the fortifications
-on its top may be distinguished; but evidently they
-<span class='pageno' title='170' id='Page_170'></span>are Venetian battlements rather than old Greek remains
-that are thus visible. As a purely natural phenomenon
-the Acrocorinth is immensely impressive,
-resembling not a little the Messenian Acropolis at
-Ithome. It is a precipitous rock, high enough to deserve
-the name of a mountain, and sufficiently isolated
-to be a conspicuous feature of the landscape for
-miles as you approach Corinth from the sea or from
-Athens by train. Circumstances have never permitted
-us to ascend it, but the view from the summit over
-the tumbling surface of the mountainous Peloponnesus
-is said to be indescribably fine, giving the same
-effect as that produced by a relief map, while the
-prospect northward across the Gulf of Corinth is of
-course no less magnificent.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Fate ordained that we should stick to the line of
-the railway and proceed directly to the site of Mycenæ,
-in which interest had been whetted by the remarkable
-display of Mycenæan relics in the museum
-at Athens, as well as by the consciousness that we
-were about to visit the home of the conqueror of Troy
-and of his murderous queen. The train did some
-steep climbing as it rounded the shoulder of the
-Acrocorinth, and for two hours or so it was a steady
-up-grade, winding around long valleys in spacious
-curves, the old road from Sparta generally visible
-below. At every station the mail car threw off bundles
-<span class='pageno' title='171' id='Page_171'></span>of newspapers, which the crowds gathered on
-the platform instantly snatched and purchased with
-avidity. The love of news is by no means confined to
-Athenians, but has spread to their countrymen; and
-every morning the same scene is enacted at every
-railroad station in Hellas on the arrival of the Athens
-train. At every stop the air was vocal with demands
-for this or that morning daily, and each, having secured
-the journal of his choice, retired precipitately
-to the shade of a near-by tree, while those who could
-not read gathered near and heard the news of the
-world retailed by the more learned, at second-hand.
-The peasant costumes were most interesting, for we
-were now in the country of the shepherds, far from
-the madding crowd and dressed for work. The dress
-of each was substantially the same,—a heavy capote
-of wool, if it was at all chilly, the tight drawers gartered
-below the knee, the heavy leather wallet on the
-front of the belt, the curious tufted shoes whose pompons
-at the toe, if large denoted newly bought gear,
-or if sheared small meant that the footwear was old.
-For the custom is to cut down these odd bits of
-adornment as they become frayed, a process that is
-repeated until the tuft is entirely removed, when it is
-time to buy new shoes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The landscape was most striking now. The plains
-were small and separated from one another by walls of
-<span class='pageno' title='172' id='Page_172'></span>rugged hills, whose barriers were not to be despised
-in days when communication was primitive and slow,
-and which bore an important part in keeping the several
-ancient states so long apart, instead of allowing
-them permanently to unite. The neighboring peaks
-began to be increasingly redolent of mythology,
-chiefly relating to various heroic exploits of Herakles.
-Indeed the train stopped at Nemea itself, and the site
-of the struggle with the Nemean lion was indicated
-to us from afar, while a distant summit was said to be
-near the lake where were slain the Stymphalian birds.
-Shortly beyond the grade began to drop sharply, until,
-rushing through a pass of incredible narrowness,—the
-site of a bloody modern battle between the
-Greek patriots and the Turks,—the train dashed out
-into the broad plain of Argos, once famous as the
-breeder of horses. The narrow and rather sterile valleys
-hemmed in by bare hills of gray rock gave place
-to this immense level tract of sandy soil leading down
-to the sea, which gleamed in the distance under the
-noonday sun. On either side of the broad expanse of
-plain towered the mountain wall, always gray and
-bare of trees, though in the old days it was doubtless
-well wooded. With the departure of trees came the
-drouth, and to-day the rivers of the Argolid are mere
-sandy channels, devoid of water save in the season
-of the melting mountain snows.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='173' id='Page_173'></span>The train halted at Phychtia, the station for Mycenæ,
-and there we found waiting a respectable carriage
-that had seen better days in some city, but
-which was now relegated to the task of conveying
-the curious to various points in the Argolic plain.
-It was there in response to the inevitable telegraph,
-which we had the forethought to employ. Otherwise
-we should have had to go over to the site of Mycenæ
-on foot, a task which the heat of the day rather
-than the distance would have made arduous. Mycenæ
-to-day is absolutely deserted and desolate, lying perhaps
-two miles eastward from the railway, on the
-spurs of two imposing mountain peaks. Toward this
-point the road rises steadily, and before long we had
-passed through a starveling village of peasant huts
-and came suddenly upon a two-story structure bearing
-the portentous sign, “Grand Hotel of Helen and
-Menelaus!” To outward view it was in keeping with
-the rest of the hamlet, which was chiefly remarkable
-for its children and dogs. It proved, on closer inspection,
-to be a queer little inn, boasting a few sleeping
-rooms in its upper story, to be reached only by
-an outside stairway. On the ground floor—which
-was a ground floor in the most literal sense of that
-overworked expression—was a broad room, used
-partly as a dining-room and partly as a store and
-office. The actual eating-place was separated from
-<span class='pageno' title='174' id='Page_174'></span>the remainder of the apartment by a grill-work of
-laths, or pickets, with a wicket gate, through which
-not only the guests and the proprietor, but sundry
-dogs, chickens, and cats passed from the main hall
-to the table. This, being the only available hotel in
-the region, and bearing so resounding and sonorous
-a title, proved irresistible. Lunch, consisting of very
-excellent broiled chickens, and sundry modest concomitants,
-was promptly served by a tall slip of a
-girl, the daughter of the house, and probably named
-Helen, too. During the meal various hens, perhaps
-the ancestors of our <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>pièces de résistance</em></span>, clucked contentedly
-in and out, and a mournful hound sneaked
-repeatedly through the gate, only to be as repeatedly
-thrust into the outer darkness of the office by the
-cook and waitress. In former times, before the “Grand
-Hotel of Helen and Menelaus” sprang into being,
-it was necessary to carry one’s food and eat it under
-the shadow of the famous Lion Gate on the site of
-the old town itself—a place replete with thrills.
-Nevertheless it seems well that the vicinity now has
-a place of public entertainment, and doubly well that
-it has been so sonorously named.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It may not have been more than half a mile farther
-to the ruins, but it was up hill and very warm work
-reaching them. On either side of the high road, where
-presumably once lay the real every-day city of Mycenæ,
-<span class='pageno' title='175' id='Page_175'></span>there was little in the way of remains to be seen,
-save for the remarkable avenue leading to the subterranean
-tomb, or treasury, of which it will be best
-to speak somewhat later. The slopes were covered
-with grass, and here and there a trace of very old
-“Cyclopean” masonry was all that remained to bear
-witness to the previous existence of a city wall, or
-possibly an ancient highway with a primitive arch-bridge
-spanning a gully. Back over the plain the view
-was expansive. The several strongholds of Agamemnon’s
-kingdom were all in sight,—Mycenæ, Nauplia,
-Argos, and Tiryns,—at the corners of the great plain,
-which one might ride all around in a day; so that
-from his chief stronghold on the height at Mycenæ
-Agamemnon might well claim to be monarch of all he
-surveyed. Behind the valley, the twin peaks at whose
-base the stronghold lay rose abruptly, bearing no trace
-of the forests of oak that once covered them; and on
-a rocky foothill stood the acropolis of the city, admirably
-fitted by nature for defense. It was on this high
-ground that the ruins were found, and the visitor is
-informed that this was the citadel rather than the
-main town—the place to which the beleaguered inhabitants
-might flock for safety in time of war, and
-in which Atreus and his line had their palace. It was
-here that Dr. Schliemann conducted his remarkable
-researches, of which we shall have much to say. It is
-<span class='pageno' title='176' id='Page_176'></span>a remarkable fact that the events of the past twenty
-years or so have given a most astonishing insight into
-the dimness of the so-called “heroic” age—the age
-that long after was sung by Homer—so that it is
-actually possible now to say that we know more of
-the daily life and conditions of the time of Troy’s
-besiegers than we do of the time of Homer himself,
-and more about the heroes than about those who sang
-their exploits. Knowledge of the more remote periods
-seems to vary directly with the distance. The dark
-ages, as has been sagely remarked, were too dark
-altogether to admit men to read the story told by the
-ancient monuments such as survived at Mycenæ, and
-it is only lately that light has increased sufficiently
-to enable them to be understood with such clearness
-that the dead past has suddenly seemed to live
-again. From the remains at Mycenæ the savants
-have unearthed the houses, walls, palaces, reservoirs,
-ornaments, weapons, and daily utensils of the pre-Homeric
-age. Bones and other relics cast aside in
-rubbish heaps give an idea of the daily food of the
-people. The tombs have revealed how they were
-buried at death, and have yielded a wealth of gold
-ornaments showing a marvelous skill in working
-metals.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>This upper city of Mycenæ was built on a rock, which
-we soon discovered to be separated from the rest of
-<span class='pageno' title='177' id='Page_177'></span>the mountain by ravines, leaving the sides very steep
-and smooth, so that on nearly every hand the place
-was inaccessible. The gorges toward the mountains
-were natural moats, and wide enough to prevent
-assault or even the effective hurling of missiles from
-above into the citadel. The stronghold, however, was
-vastly strengthened by artificial construction and
-proved to be walled entirely about, the fortress being
-especially strong on the more exposed portions, and
-most especially at the main gate, where the enormous
-blocks of stone and the tremendous thickness of the
-wall were most in evidence. The road winds up the last
-steep ascent until it becomes a mere narrow driveway,
-scarcely wide enough for more than a single chariot,
-and right ahead appears suddenly the famed Lion
-Gate, flanked on one hand by a formidable wall facing
-the side of the native rock, and on the other by a projecting
-bastion of almost incredible thickness. The
-stones are of remarkable size, hewn to a sort of rough
-regularity by the Cyclopean builders, and the wonder
-is that, in so rude and primitive an age, men were able
-to handle such great blocks with such skill. No wonder
-the tale gained currency that it was the work of
-the Cyclopes, imported from abroad—and indeed
-the tale is not without its abiding plausibility, since
-there are evidences enough in scattered Ph&oelig;nician
-sites elsewhere to warrant the assumption that the
-<span class='pageno' title='178' id='Page_178'></span>builders of these numerous fortresses in Argolis did
-come from over seas.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of all the ruins at Mycenæ the “gate of the lions”
-is unquestionably the most impressive. It spans the
-end of the long and narrow vestibule between the walls
-of rock, its jambs made of huge upright stones that
-even to-day show the slots cut for hinges and the deep
-holes into which were shot the ancient bolts. Over the
-top is another massive single stone, forming the lintel.
-It is a peculiarity of the Cyclopean doorways at Mycenæ
-that the weight on the centre of the lintel is
-almost invariably lightened by leaving a triangular
-aperture in the stonework above, and in the main gate
-the immense blocks of the wall were so disposed as to
-leave such an opening. Even the massive lintel of this
-broad gate would probably have failed to support the
-pressure of the walls had not some such expedient
-been devised. As it is, the light stone slab that was
-used to fill the triangular opening is still in place, and
-it is what gives the name to the gateway, from the
-rudely sculptured lions that grace it. These two lions,
-minus their heads, are sitting facing each other—“heraldically
-opposed,” as the phrase is—each with
-his fore feet resting on the base of an altar bearing a
-sculptured column, which marks the centre of the slab.
-The column is represented as larger at the top than
-at the base, a peculiarity of the stone columns of the
-<span class='pageno' title='179' id='Page_179'></span>Mycenæan age, and recalling the fact that the first
-stone pillars were faithful copies of the sharpened
-stakes that had been used as supports in a still earlier
-day. The missing heads of the lions were doubtless
-of metal,—bronze, perhaps,—and were placed so as
-to seem to be gazing down the road. They are gone,
-nobody knows whither. It used to be stated that this
-quaint bas-relief was the “oldest sculpture in Europe,”
-but this is another of the comfortable delusions that
-modern science has destroyed. Nobody, however, can
-deny that the Gate of the Lions is vastly impressive, or
-that it is so old that we may, without serious error,
-feel that we are looking on something that Agamemnon
-himself perhaps saw over his shoulder as he set
-out for Troy. Just inside the gate we found a narrow
-opening in the stones, leading to a sort of subterranean
-chamber, presumably for the sentry. The impression
-produced by the gate and its massive flanking walls
-is that of absolute impregnability, and it was easy
-enough to fancy the Argive javelin-men thronging the
-bastion above and pouring death and destruction
-down upon the exposed right hands of the invaders
-jammed tight in the constricted vestibule below.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Inside the gate, the old market-place opens out, and
-it was here that were discovered the tombs from which
-came the numerous relics seen at Athens. The market
-place is still encircled by a curious elliptical structure,
-<span class='pageno' title='180' id='Page_180'></span>which is in effect a double ring of flat stones, with slabs
-laid flat across the top, forming what looks like a sort
-of oval bench all around the inclosure. We were asked
-to believe that these actually were seats to be occupied
-by the old men and councilors of the city; but if that
-is the truth, there were indeed giants in the land in
-those times. Other authorities conjecture that it was
-a retaining wall for a sort of mound heaped up over
-the graves within—an hypothesis which it seems
-almost as hard to adopt. Whatever the purpose of
-this remarkable circle of stone slabs, it is hardly to
-be doubted that it did once inclose an “agora,” and
-it was within this space that Schliemann sunk his
-shafts and brought up so much that was wonderful
-from the tombs below. Tombs in so central a spot,
-and filled with such a plethora of gold, certainly might
-well be deemed to have been the last resting-place of
-royalty, and it is agreeable to believe that they were
-sovereigns of the Agamemnonian line, if the “prince
-of men” himself be not one of them. It is the fashion to
-aver that Schliemann was too ready to jump at conclusions
-prompted by his own fond hopes and preconceived
-ideas, and to make little of his claim that
-he had unearthed the grave of the famous warrior
-who overcame Priam’s city; and perhaps this is
-justified. But one cannot forget that the old legend
-insisted that Atreus, Agamemnon, Cassandra, Electra,
-<span class='pageno' title='181' id='Page_181'></span>Eurymedon, and several others were buried in the
-market place of Mycenæ,—which was doubtless what
-prompted the excavation at this point; excavations
-which moreover proved to be so prolific of royal reward.</p>
-
-<div id='i237' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_237.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>AGORA—MYCENÆ</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>On the heights above, where it was far too steep for
-chariots to follow, there is a pathway direct to the
-royal palace itself, which it will doubtless do no harm
-to call Agamemnon’s. Of course it is practically flat
-to-day, with little more than traces of the foundation,
-save for a bit of pavement here and there, or a fragment
-of wall on which possibly one may detect a
-faint surviving touch of fresco. All around the citadel
-below are traces of other habitations, so congested
-as to preclude any application of Homer’s epithet,
-“Mycenæ of the broad streets,” to this particular
-section of the city. All around the summit ran the
-wall, even at points where it would seem no wall was
-necessary. As we explored the site the guide kept
-gathering handfuls of herbage that grew all about,
-and speedily led us to a curious Cyclopean “arch,”
-made by allowing two sloping stones to fall toward
-each other at the top of an approaching row of wall-blocks,
-which it developed was the entrance to a
-subterranean gallery that led down to the reservoir
-of the fort. It was a dark and tortuous place, and its
-descent to the bowels of the hill was quite abrupt, so
-<span class='pageno' title='182' id='Page_182'></span>that we did not venture very far, but allowed the
-guide to creep gingerly down until he was far below;
-whereupon he set fire to the grasses he had been
-accumulating and lighted up this interior gallery for
-us. The walls of this passageway had been polished
-smooth for centuries by passing goats which had
-rubbed against the stone, and it gleamed and glittered
-in the firelight, revealing a long tunnel leading
-downward and out of sight to a cavern far below,
-where was once stored the water supply conveyed
-thither from a spring north of the citadel. Stones
-cast down the tunnel reverberated for a long distance
-along its slippery floor, and at last apparently came
-against a final obstacle with a crash. Then came the
-upward rush of smoke from the impromptu torch,
-and we were forced hastily to scramble out into the
-open air. We returned later, however, for a passing
-shower swept down from the mountains and threatened
-a drenching, which rendered the shelter of the
-ancient aqueduct welcome indeed. It was soon over,
-however, and afforded us a chance to sit on the topmost
-rock of the acropolis, looking down over what
-was once the most important of the Greek kingdoms,
-from the mountains on the north and west down to
-the sea—a pleasing sight, which was cut short only
-by the reflection that we had still to visit the so-called
-“treasury of Atreus” beside the road below.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='183' id='Page_183'></span>This is one more of the odd structures of the place
-over which controversy has raged long and fiercely,
-the problem being whether or not it was a tomb. There
-are a number of these underground chambers near
-by, but the most celebrated one just mentioned is the
-common type and is completely excavated so that it
-is easily to be explored. The approach is by a long
-cut in the hillside, walled on both sides with well-hewn
-stone, the avenue terminating only when a sufficient
-depth had been reached to excavate a lofty subterranean
-chamber. A tall and narrow door stands at
-the end of this curious lane, placed against the hill, its
-lintel made of a noticeably massive flat stone, with
-the inevitable triangular opening over it; but in this
-case the block which presumably once closed it is
-gone, and nobody knows whether it, like its mate
-at the main gateway, bore sculptured lions or not.
-Within, the tomb is shaped like an old-fashioned straw
-beehive, lined throughout with stone, which bears
-marks indicating that it in turn was once faced
-with bronze plates. It is a huge place, in which the
-voice echoes strangely, and it is lighted only from the
-door and its triangular opening above. Just off the
-northern side is a smaller chamber, where light is only
-to be had by lighting some more of the dry grasses
-gathered without. Those who adhere to the idea that
-this was a tomb maintain that the real sepulchre was
-<span class='pageno' title='184' id='Page_184'></span>in the smaller adjoining chamber. Respectable authority
-exists, however, for saying that these chambers
-were not tombs at all, but treasuries, and a vast
-amount of controversial literature exists on the subject,
-over which one may pore at his leisure if he desires.
-If it was a tomb, it is obvious from the other burial-place
-discovered on the acropolis above that there
-must have been at least two different styles of burial,—and
-the tombs above appear to have contained
-people of consequence, such as might be expected to
-have as honorable and imposing sepulchres as there
-were. No bones were found in the “treasury of
-Atreus,” and plenty of bones were found elsewhere, a
-fact which might seem significant and indeed conclusive
-if it were not known that bones had been found
-in beehive tombs like this elsewhere in Greece, notably
-near Menidi, where six skeletons were discovered in
-a similar structure. Of course it might be true that
-the bodies found on the heights at Mycenæ and taken
-to Athens belonged to an entirely different epoch from
-those that were buried in the beehive tombs, and that
-the beehive tombs might easily have been looted long
-before the existence of any such booty as the marketplace
-graves yielded had even been suspected. The
-layman is therefore left to suit himself, whether he will
-call this underground chamber a tomb or a treasury,
-and devote his time to admiring the ingenuity with
-<span class='pageno' title='185' id='Page_185'></span>which the stone lining of the place was built, each tier
-of stone slightly projecting above its lower fellow so
-as at last to converge at the top in a point. The perfection
-of this subterranean treasure-house seems no
-less remarkable than the ease with which the ancient
-builders managed large masses of rock.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As for the history of Mycenæ, its greatest celebrity
-is unquestionably that which it achieved in the time
-of the Atreidai, when it was the home of the kings of
-Argos. It is supposable that in the palace on the height
-Clytæmnestra spent the ten years of her lord’s absence
-at Troy, and that therein she murdered him on his return.
-The poets have woven a great web of song and
-story about the place, largely imaginative and legendary,
-to be sure. But the revelations of the later excavations
-have revealed that the poets came exceedingly
-close to fact in their descriptions of material things.
-The benches before the doors, the weapons and shields
-of heroes, the cups,—such as Nestor used, for example,—all
-these find their counterparts in the recently discovered
-actualities and give the more color to the
-events that the ancient writers describe. That Mycenæ
-was practically abandoned soon after her great
-eminence doubtless accounts for the wealth of relics
-that the excavators found, and her low estate during
-the centuries of neglect curiously but not unnaturally
-insured her return to celebrity, with a vast volume
-<span class='pageno' title='186' id='Page_186'></span>of most interesting testimony to her former greatness
-quite unimpaired.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From Mycenæ down to the Argive Heræum, the
-ancient temple of Hera which was once the chief
-shrine of this region, is something like two miles;
-but as it was over a rough ground, and as time failed
-us, it was found necessary to eliminate this, which to a
-strenuous archæologist might doubtless prove highly
-interesting as an excursion, and more especially so
-to Americans, since it was a site explored by the
-American school. It lies off on the hills that border
-the plain of Argos on the east, on the direct line
-between Mycenæ and Nauplia. Our own road led
-us back to Phychtia again and down the centre of
-the plain over a very good carriage road, passing
-through broad fields of waving grain, in the midst
-of which, breast deep, stood occasional horses contentedly
-munching without restraint. Almost the only
-buildings were isolated stone windmills, some still
-in use and others dismantled. At last the road
-plunged down a bank and into the sandy bed of
-what was doubtless at some time of year a river,—but
-at this season, and probably most of the year as
-well, a mere broad flat expanse of sand as destitute of
-water as the most arid part of Sahara. The railroad,
-which had borne us friendly company for a few miles,
-was provided with an iron bridge, spanning this
-<span class='pageno' title='187' id='Page_187'></span>broad desert with as much gravity as if it were a
-raging torrent, which doubtless it sometimes is. Just
-beyond we rattled into Argos.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Argos is a rather large place, but decidedly unattractive
-save for its many little gardens. Nearly every
-house had them, and from our high seats in the respectable
-but superannuated depot carriage we were
-able to look into the depths of many such, to marvel
-at their riot of roses and greenery. As for the houses,
-they were little and not over-clean. The populace,
-however, was exceeding friendly, sitting <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>en masse</em></span>
-along the highway, the young women blithely saluting
-and the children bombarding us with nosegays
-in the hope of leptà. Over Argos towers a steep hill,
-known as a “larisa” or acropolis, from the top of
-which we could imagine a wonderful view over the
-whole kingdom of the Argives and over the mountains
-as well, not to mention the Gulf of Nauplia; but
-as time was speeding on toward the dusk and we
-were still far from Nauplia, we had to be content
-with the imagination alone, and with the news that
-a little monastery about halfway up the hillside had
-been set on fire on the Easter Sunday previous by
-too enthusiastic celebrants, who had been over-free
-with the inevitable rockets and Roman candles. Also
-we had to give short shrift to the vast theatre, hewn
-out of the solid rock at the foot of the larisa, and said
-<span class='pageno' title='188' id='Page_188'></span>to be one of the largest in Greece. It was sadly grass-grown,
-however, and infinitely less attractive than
-the smallest at Athens, not to mention the splendid
-playhouse at Epidaurus, which we promised ourselves
-for the morrow. So we were not reluctant to
-swing away from old Argos, with her shouting villagers
-and high-walled gardens, and to skirt the
-harbor, now close at hand along the dusty Nauplia
-road. Across the dancing waters lay Nauplia herself,
-a white patch at the foot of a prodigious cliff far
-around the bay. By the roadside the country seaward
-was marshy, while inland rolled the great plain back
-to the gray hills which showed the northern bounds
-of the old kingdom, and the lofty rock of Mycenæ
-from which the sons of Atreus had looked down over
-their broad acres.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was not long before we were aware that “well-walled”
-Tiryns was at hand and that we were not to
-close a day already well marked by memories of Cyclopean
-masonry without adding thereto the most stupendous
-of all, the memory of the great stones piled
-up in prehistoric ages at this ancient palace whose
-size impressed even that hardened sight-seer Pausanias.
-Tiryns proved to be a highly interesting place;
-in general appearance much like Mycenæ, but in detail
-sufficiently different to keep us exclaiming. It lies
-on what is little more than an isolated hillock beside
-<span class='pageno' title='189' id='Page_189'></span>the highroad, and there is nothing imposing about its
-height or length. It is a long, low rock, devoid of any
-building save for the solid retaining walls that may go
-back to the days of Herakles himself.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Whoever built the fortress at Tiryns had seen fit to
-make the front door face the plain rather than the
-sea; so that it was necessary to leave the road and go
-around to the north side of the rock, where a gradual
-incline afforded an easy approach to a sort of ramp,
-or terrace, defended by walls of the most astonishing
-Cyclopean construction. It has been stated that
-these great and rudely squared blocks of native rock,
-taken from the quarries in the hills northward, were
-once bonded together with a rude clay mortar, which
-has since entirely disappeared. How such enormous
-blocks were quarried in those primitive days, or how
-they were handled, is a good deal of a mystery. But
-it is claimed that swelled wedges of wet wood were
-used to separate the stones from their native bed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As a ruin, Tiryns is rather difficult to reconstruct in
-the imagination from the visible remains. The inclined
-ramp and the gateway, remains of which are still
-standing, are interesting, but chiefly from the remarkable
-size of the stones employed in their construction.
-Within, the old palace is in a state of complete and
-comprehensive ruin. The lines of the former palace
-walls may, however, be seen on the rocky floor, with
-<span class='pageno' title='190' id='Page_190'></span>here and there a trace of an ancient column which has
-left its mark on the foundation rock. The outer and
-inner courts, megaron, men’s and women’s apartments,
-and even the remnants of a “bathroom” are
-to be made out, the last-named bearing testimony to
-the fact that even in the remote Mycenæan age the disposition
-of waste water was carefully looked to—perhaps
-more carefully than was the case with the later
-Greeks. The Tirynthian feature which eclipses everything
-else for interest, however, is the arrangement of
-covered galleries of stone on two sides of the palace,
-from which at intervals radiate side chambers supposed
-to have been used for storage. To-day they recall
-rather more the casements of our own old-fashioned
-forts. In these galleries the rude foreshadowings
-of the arch principle are even more clearly to be seen
-than in the underground conduit at Mycenæ which
-leads to the sunken reservoir. The sides of the corridor
-are vertical for only a short distance, and speedily
-begin to slope inward, meeting in an acute angle
-overhead. The side chambers are of a similar construction.
-Nowhere does it appear that the “Cyclopes,”
-if we may call them such, recognized the
-principle of the keystone, although they seem to have
-come very close to it by accident here and there, and
-notably so in the case of the little postern gate which
-is to be seen on the side of the citadel toward the
-<span class='pageno' title='191' id='Page_191'></span>modern highroad. As for the galleries, at the present
-day they are polished to a glassy smoothness within
-by the rubbing of sheltering flocks of sheep and goats.
-And they are interesting, not only because of the
-massive stones used in building them, but because
-the similarity of these corridors and storage chambers
-to the arrangements found near old Carthage and
-other Ph&oelig;nician sites may well argue a common paternity
-of architecture, and thus give color to the tale
-that the ancient kings of Argos secured artisans of
-marvelous skill and strength from abroad. The immense
-size of the roughly hewn rocks easily enough
-begot the tradition that these alien builders were men
-of gigantic stature, called “Cyclopes” from the name
-of their king, Cyclops, and supposed to be a race of
-Thracian giants; quite distinct, of course, from the
-other mythological Cyclopes who served Hephaistos,
-or the Sicilian ones who made life a burden for Odysseus
-on his wanderings. It seems to be a plausible
-opinion now widely held that the foreign masons who
-erected the Cyclopean walls in the Argolid were not
-from Thrace, but from the southern shores of the
-Ægean—perhaps from Lycia. And it is interesting
-to know that there are examples of the same sort of
-stone work, bearing a similar name, to be found as
-far away as Peru.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A somewhat lower hillock just west of the main
-<span class='pageno' title='192' id='Page_192'></span>acropolis—if it deserves that name—is shown as
-once being the servants’ quarters. And we descended,
-as is the common practice, from the main ruin to
-the road, by a rude stone stairway at what was formerly
-the back of the castle, to the narrow postern, the
-stones of which form an almost perfect, but doubtless
-quite accidental, archway; and thence to our carriage,
-which speedily whirled us away to Nauplia. The road
-thither lay around a placid bay, sweeping in a broad
-curve through a landscape which was happily marked
-by some very creditable trees. Nauplia herself made
-a pleasant picture to the approaching eye, lying on
-her well-protected harbor at the base of an imposing
-cliff, on the top of which the frowning battlements of
-an old Venetian fortress proclaimed the presence of
-the modern state prison of Greece. The evening sun
-brought out the whiteness of the city against the forbidding
-rock behind, while far away westward across
-the land-locked bay the evening light touched with a
-rosy glow the snowy summit of Cyllene, and brought
-out the rugged skyline of the less lofty Peloponnesian
-mountains. And it was these that lay before us as our
-carriage rattled out of a narrow street and upon the
-broad esplanade of the quay at the doors of our hotel.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='193' id='Page_193'></span>
- <h2 id='chap10' class='c005'>CHAPTER X. NAUPLIA AND <br /> EPIDAURUS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_251.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-
-<p class='c006'>We were awakened in the morning by an unaccustomed
-sound,—a subdued, rapid, rhythmic
-cadence coming up from the esplanade below, accompanied
-by the monotonous undertone of a voice saying
-something in time with the shuffle of marching
-feet, the whole punctuated now and then by a word
-of command and less frequently by the unmistakable
-clang of arms. The soldiers from the fortress were
-having their morning drill. The words of command
-sounded strangely natural, although presumably in
-Greek, doubtless because military men the world over
-fall into the habit of uttering “commands of execution”
-in a sort of unintelligible grunt. The counting
-of “fours” sounded natural, too, despite the more
-marked Hellenism of the numbers. So far from being
-a disturbance, the muffled tread of the troops was
-rather soporific, which is fortunate, because I have
-been in Nauplia on several occasions, and this early
-<span class='pageno' title='194' id='Page_194'></span>drill appears to be the regular thing under the windows
-of the <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr">Hôtel des Étrangers</span>.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The fine open space along the water front makes
-a tempting parade-ground, and at other hours an
-attractive place for general assemblage, especially at
-evening, when the people of Nauplia are to be seen
-lounging along the wharves or drinking their coffee
-in the shade under the white line of buildings. The
-quay curves for a long distance around the bay, and
-alongside it are moored many of those curious hollow
-schooners that do the coastwise carrying in Greece.
-Nauplia appears still to be something of a port, although
-infinitely smaller and less busy than either the
-Piræus or Patras. Her name, of course, is redolent
-of the sea. The beauty of her situation has often
-reminded visitors of Naples, but it is only a faint
-resemblance to the Italian city. In size she is little
-indeed. Scenically, however, her prospects are magnificent,
-with their inclusion of a panorama of distant
-and imposing peaks towering far away across the inner
-bay, so admirably sheltered from the outer seas
-by the massive promontory, on the inner shelf of
-which the city stands. The town is forced to be narrow
-because of the little space between the water and
-the great cliff rising precipitously behind. There is
-room for little more than three parallel streets, and in
-consequence Nauplia is forced to make up in length
-<span class='pageno' title='195' id='Page_195'></span>what she lacks in breadth, and strings along eastward
-in a dwindling line of buildings to the point where
-the marshy shore curves around toward Tiryns, or
-loses herself in the barren country that lies in the gray
-valleys that lead inland to Epidaurus.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the windows of the hotel the most conspicuous
-object in the middle distance was a picturesque
-islet in the midst of the bay, almost entirely covered
-by a yellow fort of diminutive size and Venetian appearance—the
-home of an interesting functionary,
-though a gruesome one; to wit, the national executioner.
-For Nauplia at the present day is above all
-else the Sing-Sing of Hellas,—the site of the national
-prison, where are confined the principal criminals of
-the kingdom, and more especially those who are under
-sentence of death. The medieval fortifications on the
-summit behind the town have been converted to the
-base uses of a jail, and are locally known as the Palamide.
-We did not make the ascent to the prison,
-although it cannot be a hard climb, but contented
-ourselves with purchasing the small wares that are
-vended by street dealers in the lower town,—strings
-of “conversation beads,” odd knives, and such like
-things, which you are assured were made by “brigands”
-confined in the prison above. Somehow a string
-of beads made by a Greek “brigand” seems a possession
-to be coveted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='196' id='Page_196'></span>“M. de Nauplia,” if that is the proper way of referring
-to the headsman, is a criminal himself. He is
-generally, and probably always, one who has been
-convicted of murder, but who has accepted the post
-of executioner as the price of escaping the extreme
-penalty of the law. It is no small price to pay, for
-while it saves the neck of the victim it means virtual
-exile during the term of the service, and aversion of
-all good people forever. We were told that the executioner
-at the time was a man who had indulged in a
-perfect carnival of homicide—so much so that in almost
-any other country he would have been deemed
-violently and irreclaimably insane and would have
-escaped death by confinement in an asylum. But not
-so he. Instead he was sentenced to a richly deserved
-beheading by the guillotine, and the penalty was only
-commuted by his agreement to assume the unwelcome
-task of dispatching others of his kind—an
-office carrying with it virtual solitary imprisonment
-for a term variously stated as from five to eight years,
-and coupled with lasting odium. For all those years
-he must live on the executioner’s island, unattended
-save by the corporal’s guard of soldiers from the fort,
-which guard is changed every day or two, lest the
-men be contaminated or corrupted into conniving at
-the prisoner’s escape. Others told us that the term
-of his sanguinary employ was as long as twenty-five
-<span class='pageno' title='197' id='Page_197'></span>years, but this was far greater than the average story
-set as his limit. On liberation, it is said to be the
-ordinary practice for these unhappy men to go abroad
-and seek spots where their condition is unknown. On
-days when death sentences are to be executed the
-headsman is conveyed with solemn military pomp to
-the Palamide prison above the city, and there in the
-prison yard the guillotine is found set up and waiting
-for the hand that releases its death-dealing knife.
-Whether or not the executioner is paid a stated pittance
-in any event, or whether, as we were told by
-some, he was paid so much “per head,” we never
-found out. Meantime the executioner’s island undeniably
-proves one of the features of Nauplia, quaint
-to see, and shrouded with a sort of awesome mystery.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The narrow streets of Nauplia furnished diversion
-for a short time. They proved to be fairly clean, and
-the morning hours revealed a picturesque array of
-barbaric colored blankets and rugs hung out of the
-upper balconies to air. In one street a dense throng
-about an open door drew attention to the morning
-session of the municipal court. The men roaming the
-streets were mainly in European dress, although here
-and there a peasant from the suburbs displayed his
-quaint capote and pomponed shoes. It was one of
-these native-garbed gentry who approached us with
-a grin and stated in excellent English, that sorted
-<span class='pageno' title='198' id='Page_198'></span>strangely with his Hellenic clothes, that he was once
-employed in an electric light plant in Cincinnati. Did
-he like it? Oh, yes! In fact, he was quite ready to go
-back there, where pay was better than in Nauplia.
-And with an expressive shrug and comprehensive
-gesture that took in the whole broad sweep of the
-ancient kingdom of the Atreidai, he added, “Argos is
-broke; no good!” One other such deserves mention,
-perhaps; one who broke in on a reverential
-reverie one day, as we were contemplating a Greek
-dance in a classic neighborhood, with some English
-that savored of the Bowery brand, informing us that
-he had been in America and had traveled all over
-that land of plenty in the peregrinations of Barnum’s
-circus, adding as a most convincing passport to our
-friendship, "I was wit' old man Barnum w'en he
-died." Greeks who speak English are plentiful in the
-Peloponnesus, and even those who make no other
-pretensions to knowledge of the tongue are proud of
-being able to say “all right” in response to labored
-efforts at pidgin Greek.</p>
-
-<div id='i257' class='figcenter id018'>
-<img src='images/i_257.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>WOMAN SPINNING ON THE ROAD TO EPIDAURUS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It did not take long to exhaust the interest of the
-city of Nauplia itself, including a survey of the massive
-walls that survive from the Middle Ages. And it
-was fortunate, too, because we had planned to spend
-the day at Epidaurus, which lies eighteen miles or
-so away, and was to be reached only by a long and
-<span class='pageno' title='199' id='Page_199'></span>arduous ride in a carriage—the same highly respectable
-old landau in which we had ridden the length of
-Agamemnon’s kingdom the day before. Owing to
-the grade and the considerable solidity of our party
-a third horse was in some miraculous way attached
-by ropes to the carriage, the lunch was loaded in the
-hood forward, and we rattled away through the narrow
-streets toward the open country east of the town—a
-country that we soon discovered to be made up
-of narrow valleys winding among gray and treeless
-hills, whose height increased steadily as the highway
-wound along. It was a good highway—the distances
-being marked in “stadia,” as the Greek classically
-terms his kilometres, and the stadium posts constantly
-reminding us that this was an “Odos Ethniké,” or
-national road. But we missed sadly the large trees
-that are to be seen in the close neighborhood of the
-city as we jogged out on the dusty road in the heat
-of the increasing April day.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The grade, while not steep, was mainly upward
-through the long valleys, making the journey a matter
-of more than three hours under the most favorable
-of conditions; and the general sameness of the scenery
-made it a rather monotonous drive. Of human habitation
-there was almost none, for although here and
-there one might find a vineyard, the greater part of
-the adjacent land is little more than rocky pasture. It
-<span class='pageno' title='200' id='Page_200'></span>soon developed, however, that the modern Greek
-shepherd is not afraid to play his pipes at noonday
-through any fear of exciting the wrath or jealousy of
-Pan, as was once the case; for from the mountain-sides
-and from under the scanty shade of isolated
-olive trees we kept hearing the plaintive wailing of
-the pipes, faint and far away, where some tender of
-the flocks was beguiling the time in music. This distant
-piping is indescribable. The tone is hardly to be
-called shrill, for it is so only in the sense that its pitch
-is high like the ordinary human whistling; in quality
-it is a soft note, apparently following no particular
-tune but wavering up and down, and generally ending
-in a minor wail that soon grows pleasant to hear.
-Besides, it recalls the idyls of Theocritus, and the pastorals
-and bucolics take on a new meaning to anybody
-who has heard the music of the shepherd lads
-of Greece. Nothing would do but we must buy pipes
-and learn to play upon them; so a zealous inquiry
-was instituted among the wayfaring men we met, with
-a view to securing the same. It was not on this day,
-however, but on the next that we finally succeeded
-in buying what certainly looked like pipes, but which
-turned out to be delusions and snares so far as music
-was concerned. They were straight wooden tubes, in
-which holes had been burned out at regular intervals
-to form “stops” for varying the tone. No reed
-<span class='pageno' title='201' id='Page_201'></span>was inserted in them, and if they were to be played
-upon at all it must be by reason of a most accomplished
-“lip.” We derived considerable amusement
-from them, however, by attempting to reproduce on
-them the mellifluous whistling of the natives; but
-the nearest approach to awakening any sound at all
-which any of our party achieved was so lugubriously
-melancholy that he was solemnly enjoined and commanded
-never to try it again, on pain of being turned
-over to “M. de Nauplia” as the only fitting punishment.
-Later we found that the flute-like notes that
-we heard floating down over the vales from invisible
-shepherds came from a very different sort of wind
-instrument—a reed pipe of bamboo not unlike the
-American boy’s willow whistle, with six or seven
-stops bored out of the tube.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The wayfarers were decidedly the most interesting
-sights on the Epidaurus road. Several stadia out of
-Nauplia a stalwart man came striding down a hill
-from his flocks and took the road to town. He was
-dressed in the peasant garb, and across his shoulders
-he bore a yoke, from either end of which depended
-large yellow sacks containing freshly made cheese,
-the moisture draining through the meshes of the cloth
-as he walked along to market. These cheeses we had
-met with in the little markets at Athens and found
-not unpleasant, once one grows accustomed to the
-<span class='pageno' title='202' id='Page_202'></span>goat’s milk flavor and the “freshness;” although it
-is probable that a taste for Greek cheese, like that for
-the resinated wine, is an acquired one.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Groups of shepherds were encountered now and
-then, especially at the few points along the way where
-buildings and shade were to be found. They were all
-picturesque in their country dress, but more especially
-the women, who spin flax as they walk and who probably
-ply a trade as old as Hellenic civilization itself
-in about the same general way that their most remote
-ancestors plied it. These little knots of peasants readily
-enough posed for the camera, and were contented
-with a penny apiece for drink-money. Not the least
-curious feature of these peasant herdsmen was the
-type of crook carried—not the large, curved crook
-that the ordinary preconceived ideal pictures, but
-straight sticks with a queer little narrow quirk in the
-end, with which the shepherd catches the agile and
-elusive goat or lamb by the hind leg and thus holds
-it until he is able to seize the animal in some more
-suitable part. These herdsmen proved hospitable
-folk, ready enough with offers of milk fresh from the
-herd, which is esteemed a delicacy by them, whatever
-it might have seemed to our uneducated palates.</p>
-
-<div id='i263' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_263.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>EPIDAURIAN SHEPHERDS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Perhaps halfway out to Epidaurus one passes another
-remnant of the most remote time—a lofty
-fortification on a deserted hill. It is of polygonal
-<span class='pageno' title='203' id='Page_203'></span>masonry—that is, of angular stones fitted together
-without mortar, instead of being squared after the
-manner of the Cyclopes. Hard by, spanning a ravine
-which has been worn by centuries of winter torrents,
-there was a Cyclopean bridge, made of huge rocks
-so arranged as to form an enduring arch, and on this
-once ran no doubt the great highway from Epidaurus
-to the plain of Argos.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was long after the noontide hour when the gray
-theatre of Epidaurus, a mere splash of stone in the
-distant side of a green hill, came in sight, lying a mile
-or so away across a level field, in which lay scattered
-the remnants of what was once the most celebrated
-hospital in the world. For Epidaurus boasted herself
-to be the birthplace of Æsculapius,—or, as we are on
-Greek soil, Asklepios,—and held his memory in deep
-reverence forever after by erecting on the site a vast
-establishment such as to-day we might call a “sanitarium.”
-After the heat and dust of the ride it was
-pleasant to stretch out in the shade of the scanty local
-trees, on the fragrant grass of the rising ground near
-the theatre, and look back down the long valley, with
-its distant blue mountains framed in a vista of massive
-gray hills. The nearer ones were impressive in
-their height, but absolutely denuded of vegetation,
-like the hills around Attica; and it was these mountains
-that formed the sole scenery for the background
-<span class='pageno' title='204' id='Page_204'></span>of plays produced in the great theatre close by. The
-theatre, of course, is the great and central attraction
-at Epidaurus to-day, for it is in splendid preservation
-while all else is a confusing mass of flat ruins.
-No ancient theatre is better preserved, or can surpass
-this one for general grace of lines or perfection of
-acoustic properties. Many were doubtless larger, but
-among all the old Greek theatres Epidaurus best preserves
-to the modern eye the playhouse of the ancients,
-circular orchestra and all. The acoustics anybody
-may test easily enough. We disposed ourselves
-over the theatre in various positions, high and low,
-along the half-a-hundred tiers of seats, and listened
-to an oration dealing with the points of interest in the
-theatre’s construction delivered in a very ordinary
-tone, from the centre of the orchestra, but audible in
-the remotest tier.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The circle of the orchestra is not paved, as had
-been the case with the theatres seen at Athens, but is
-a green lawn, in the centre of which a stone dot reveals
-the site of the ancient altar. It was stated that
-the circle is not actually as perfect as it looks, being
-shorter in one set of radii by something like two feet.
-But to all appearance it is absolutely round, and is
-easily the most beautiful type of the circular orchestra
-in existence to-day, if indeed it is not the only perfect
-one. The immense amphitheatre surrounding it was
-<span class='pageno' title='205' id='Page_205'></span>evidently largely a natural one, which a little artificial
-stonework easily made complete; and it is so perfect
-to-day that a very little labor would make it entirely
-possible to give a play there now before a vast audience.
-Some such plan was actually talked of a few
-years ago, but abandoned,—no doubt, because of the
-apparent difficulty of getting any very considerable
-company of auditors to the spot, or of housing them
-while there. It would be necessary, also, to rebuild
-the proskenion, the foundations of which are still to
-be seen behind the orchestra, and one may tremble
-to think of what might happen in the process should
-the advocates of the stage theory and their opponents
-fail to agree better than they have hitherto done.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the inspection of the theatre and the enjoyment
-of the view across the plain to the rugged hills
-our dragoman called us to lunch, which was spread
-in a little rustic pergola below. He had thoughtfully
-provided fresh mullets, caught that morning off the
-Nauplia quay, and had cooked them in the little house
-occupied by the local <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>custode</em></span>. Hunger, however, was
-far less a matter of concern than thirst. We had been
-warned not to drink of the waters of the sacred well
-of Asklepios in the field below, and as there was no
-spring vouched for with that certitude that had attended
-the waters of Castalia, we were thrown back,
-as usual, on the bottled product of the island of Andros—a
-<span class='pageno' title='206' id='Page_206'></span>water which is not only intrinsically pure
-and excellent, but well worth the price of admission
-from the quaint English on its label. In rendering
-their panegyric on the springs of Andros into the
-English tongue, the translators have declared that it
-“is the equal of its superior mineral waters of Europe.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The sacred well of the god, however, proved later
-in the day that it had not lost all its virtues even under
-the assaults of the modern germ theory; for while
-we were wandering through the maze of ruins in the
-strong heat of the early afternoon one of our company
-was decidedly inconvenienced by an ordinary "nose-bleed"—which
-prompt applications of the water,
-drawn up in an incongruous tin pail, instantly stopped.
-And thus did we add what is probably the latest cure,
-and the only one for some centuries, worked by the
-once celebrated institution patronized by the native
-divinity. It is related that the god was born on the
-hillside just east of the meadow, but this story is sadly
-in conflict with other traditions. It seems that Asklepios
-was not originally a divinity, but a mere human,
-as he seems to be in the Homeric poems. His
-deification came later, as not infrequently happened
-in ancient times, and with it came a network of
-legends ascribing a godlike paternity to him and assigning
-no less a sire than Apollo. Indeed, it is stated
-<span class='pageno' title='207' id='Page_207'></span>by some authorities that the worship of Asklepios did
-not originate in Epidaurus at all, but in Thessaly; and
-that the cult was a transplanted one in its chief site
-in the Peloponnesus, brought there by Thessalian
-adventurers.</p>
-
-<div id='i269' class='figcenter id019'>
-<img src='images/i_269.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THEATRE AT EPIDAURUS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>All over the meadow below the great theatre are
-scattered the remains of the ancient establishment.
-The ceremony of healing at Epidaurus seems to have
-been in large part a faith-cure arrangement, although
-not entirely so; for there is reason to believe that, as
-at Delphi, there was more or less natural common
-sense employed in the miracle-working, and that the
-priests of the healing art actually acquired not a little
-primitive skill in medicine. It was a skill, however,
-which was attended by more or less mummery and
-circumstance, useful for impressing the mind of the
-patient; but this is not even to-day entirely absent
-from the practice of medicine with its “placebos” and
-“therapeutic suggestion” elements. The custom of
-sending the patient to rest in a loggia with others,
-where he might expect a nocturnal visitation of the
-god himself, has been referred to in these pages before,
-and survives even to-day in the island of Tenos at the
-eve of the Annunciation. The tales of marvelous cures
-at Epidaurus were doubtless as common and as well
-authenticated as the similar modern stories at Lourdes
-and Ste. Anne de Beaupré.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='208' id='Page_208'></span>In addition to the actual apartments devoted to the
-sleeping patients, which were but a small part of the
-sanitarium’s equipment, there was the inevitable great
-temple of the god himself,—a large gymnasium suggestive
-of the faith the doctors placed in bodily exercise
-as a remedy, and a large building said to be
-the first example of a hospital ward, beside numerous
-incidental buildings devoted to lodgment. Satirical
-commentators have called attention to the presence
-of shrines to the honor of Aphrodite and Dionysus as
-bearing enduring witness to the part that devotion to
-those divinities seems to have been thought to bear
-in afflicting the human race. The presence of the
-magnificent theatre and the existence of a commodious
-stadium testify that life at Epidaurus was not
-without its diversions to relieve the tedium of the medical
-treatment. And in its day it must have been a
-large and beautiful agglomeration of buildings. To-day
-it is as much of a maze as the ruins at Delphi or
-at Olympia. The non-archæological visitor will probably
-find his greatest interest in the theatre and in
-the curious circular "tholos"—a remarkable building,
-the purpose of which is not clear, made of a number
-of concentric rings of stone which once bore colonnades.
-It stands in the midst of the great precinct,
-and in its ruined state it resembles nothing so much
-as the once celebrated “pigs-in-clover” puzzle. In the
-<span class='pageno' title='209' id='Page_209'></span>little museum on the knoll above, a very successful
-attempt has been made to give an idea of this beautiful
-temple by a partial restoration. Being indoors, it
-can give no idea either of the diameter or height of
-the original; but the inclusion of fragments of architrave
-and columns serve to convey an impression of
-the general beauty of the structure, as we had seen to
-be the case with similar fractional restorations at Delphi.
-The extensive ruins in the precinct itself do not
-lend themselves to non-technical description. They
-are almost entirely flat, and the ground plans serve
-to identify most of the buildings, without giving any
-very good idea of their appearance when complete.
-Pavements still remain intact in some of the rooms,
-and altar bases and exedral seats lie all about in apparent
-confusion. Nevertheless the discoveries have
-been plotted and identified with practical completeness,
-and it is easy enough with the aid of the plans
-to pass through the precinct and get a very good idea
-of the manifold buildings which once went to make
-up what must have been a populous and attractive
-resort for the sick. Whatever may be thought of the
-religious aspects of the worship of Asklepios, it is
-evident that the regimen prescribed by the cult
-at Epidaurus, with its regard for pure mountain air
-and healthful bodily exercise, not to mention welcome
-diversion and amusement for the mind, was furthered
-<span class='pageno' title='210' id='Page_210'></span>by ample facilities in the way of equipment of this
-world-famous hospital.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When we were there the Greek School of Archæology
-was engaged in digging near the great temple
-of the god, the foundations of which have now been
-completely explored to a considerable depth, and it
-was interesting to see the primitive way in which the
-excavation was being carried on. Men with curiously
-shaped picks and shovels were loosening the earth
-and tossing it into baskets of wicker stuff, which in
-turn were borne on the heads of women to a distance
-and there dumped. It was slow work, and apparently
-nothing very exciting was discovered. Certainly nothing
-was unearthed while we were watching this
-laborious toil.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='211' id='Page_211'></span>
- <h2 id='chap11' class='c005'>CHAPTER XI. IN ARCADIA</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_275.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>With the benison of the landlord, who promised
-to send our luncheon over to the station “in
-a little boy,” we departed from Nauplia on a train
-toward noontime, headed for the interior of the Peloponnesus
-by way of Arcadia. The journey that we
-had mapped out for ourselves was somewhat off the
-beaten path, and it is not improbable that it always
-will be so, at least for those travelers who insist on
-railway lines and hotels as conditions precedent to an
-inland voyage, and who prefer to avoid the primitive
-towns and the small comforts of peasants’ houses.
-Indeed our own feelings verged on the apprehensive
-at the time, although when it was all over we wondered
-not a little at the fact. Our plan was to leave
-the line of the railway, which now entirely encircles
-the Peloponnesus, at a point about midway in the
-eastern side, and to strike boldly across the middle
-of the Peloponnesus to the western coast at Olympia,
-visiting on the way the towns of Megalopolis and
-<span class='pageno' title='212' id='Page_212'></span>Andhritsæna, and the temple at Bassæ. This meant
-a long day’s ride in a carriage and two days of horseback
-riding over mountain trails; and as none of us,
-including the two ladies, was accustomed to equestrian
-exercises, the apprehensions that attended our
-departure from the Nauplia station were perhaps not
-unnatural.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It had been necessary to secure the services of a
-dragoman for the trip, as none of us spoke more than
-Greek enough to get eggs and such common necessaries
-of life, and we knew absolutely nothing of the
-country into the heart of which we were about to
-venture. The dragoman on such a trip takes entire
-charge of you. Your one duty is to provide the costs.
-He attends to everything else—wires ahead for carriages,
-secures horses, guides, and muleteers, provides
-all the food, hotel accommodation, tips, railway tickets,
-and even afternoon tea. This comprehensive service
-is to be secured at the stated sum of ten dollars
-a day per person, and in our case it included
-not only the above things, but beds and bedding and
-our own private and especial cook. To those accustomed
-to traveling in luxury, ten dollars a day does
-not seem a high traveling average. To those like ourselves
-accustomed to seeing the world on a daily expenditure
-of something like half that sum, it is likely
-to seem at first a trifle extravagant. However, let it be
-<span class='pageno' title='213' id='Page_213'></span>added with all becoming haste, it is the only way to
-see the interior of Greece with any comfort at all, and
-the comfort which it does enable is easily worth the
-cost that it entails.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the moment we left Nauplia we were devoid
-of any care whatever. We placed ourselves unreservedly
-in the keeping of an accomplished young Athenian
-bearing the name of Spyros Apostolis, who came
-to us well recommended by those we had known in
-the city, and who contracted to furnish us with every
-reasonable comfort and transportation as hereinbefore
-set forth, and also to supply all the mythology,
-archæology, geography, history, and so forth that we
-should happen to require. For Spyros, as we learned
-to call him, was versed not only in various languages,
-including a very excellent brand of English, but
-boasted not a little technical archæological lore and
-a command of ancient history that came in very aptly
-in traversing famous ground. It came to pass in a
-very few days that we regarded Spyros in the light
-of an old friend, and appealed to him as the supreme
-arbiter of every conceivable question, from that of
-proper wearing apparel to the name of a distant peak.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was in the comfortable knowledge that for the
-next few days we had absolutely no bargaining to do
-and that for the present Spyros, who was somewhere
-in the train, had first-class tickets for our transportation,
-<span class='pageno' title='214' id='Page_214'></span>that we settled back on the cushions and watched
-the receding landscape and the diminishing bulk of
-the Nauplia cliffs. The train religiously stopped at the
-station of Tiryns—think of a station provided for a
-deserted acropolis!—and then jogged comfortably
-along to Argos, where we were to change cars. It
-was here that we bought our shepherd pipes; and we
-were practicing assiduously on them with no result
-save that of convulsing the gathered populace on the
-platform, when an urchin of the village spied a puff
-of steam up the line and set all agog by the classic
-exclamation, “ἔρχεται,” equivalent to the New England
-lad’s "she’s comin'!"</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The comfort of being handed into that train by
-Spyros and seeing our baggage set in after us without
-a qualm over the proper fee for the <span lang="it" xml:lang="it"><em>facchini</em></span> can
-only be realized by those who have experienced it.
-And, by the way, the baggage was reduced to the
-minimum for the journey, consisting of a suit case
-apiece. Our party was composed of those who habitually
-“travel light,” even on the regular lines of traffic;
-but for the occasion we had curtailed even our usual
-amount of impedimenta by sending two of our grips
-around to the other end of our route by the northern
-rail. Nobody would care to essay this cross-country
-jaunt with needless luggage, where every extra tends
-to multiply the number of pack mules.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='215' id='Page_215'></span>The train, which was fresh from Athens and bound
-for the southern port of Kalamata, soon turned aside
-from the Ægean coast and began a laborious ascent
-along the sides of deep valleys, the line making immense
-horseshoes as it picked its way along, with
-frequent rocky cuts but never a tunnel. I do not
-recall that we passed through a single tunnel in all
-Greece. The views from the windows, which were
-frequently superb as the train panted slowly and
-painfully up the long grades, nevertheless were of
-the traditional rocky character—all rugged hills
-devoid of greenery, barren valleys where no water
-was, often suggesting nothing so much as the rocky
-heights of Colorado. It tended to make the contrast
-the sharper when the train, attaining the heights at
-last, shot through a pass which led us out of the
-barren rocks and into the heart of the broad plain
-of Arcady. It was the real Arcadia of the poets
-and painters, utterly different from the gray country
-which we had been sojourning in and had come to
-regard as typical of all Greece. It was the Arcadia of
-our dreams—a broad, peaceful, fertile plain, green
-and smiling, peopled with pastoral folk, tillers of the
-fields, shepherds, and doubtless poets, pipers, and
-nymphs. There is grandeur and beauty in the rugged
-hills and narrow valleys of the north, but it would be
-wrong to assume that Greece is simply that and nothing
-<span class='pageno' title='216' id='Page_216'></span>more. At least a portion of Arcadia is exactly
-what the poets sing. The hills retreated suddenly to
-the remote distance and left the railway running along
-a level plain dotted with farms. Water ran rejoicing
-through. Trees waved on the banks of the brooks.
-Far off to the south the rugged bulk of Taÿgetos
-marked from afar the site of Sparta, the long ridge
-of the mountain still covered with a field of gleaming
-snow.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Arcadia boasts two of these large, oval plains, the
-one dominated by Tripolis and the other by Megalopolis.
-Into the first-mentioned the train trundled
-early in the afternoon and came to a halt amid a shouting
-crowd of carriage drivers clamoring for passengers
-to alight and make the drive down to Sparta.
-The road is said to be an excellent one, and that
-we had not planned to lengthen our journey to that
-point, and thence westward by the Langada Pass to
-the country which we later saw, has always been one
-of the regrets which mark our Hellenic memories.
-Sparta has made little appeal to the modern visitor
-through any surviving remains of her ancient greatness,
-and has fallen into exactly the state that Thucydides
-predicted for her. For he sagely remarked,
-in comparing the city with Athens, that future ages
-were certain to underestimate Sparta’s size and
-power because of the paucity of enduring monuments,
-<span class='pageno' title='217' id='Page_217'></span>whereas the buildings at Athens would be
-likely to inspire the beholder with the idea that she
-was greater than she really was. That is exactly true
-to-day, although the enterprising British school has
-lately undertaken the task of exploring the site of the
-ancient Lacedæmonian city and has already uncovered
-remains that are interesting archæologically,
-whatever may be true of their comparison with Athenian
-monuments for beauty. In any event, Sparta,
-with her stern discipline, rude ideals, and martial
-rather than intellectual virtues, can never hope to
-appeal to modern civilization as Athens has done,
-although her ultimate overwhelming of the Athenian
-state entitles her to historical interest. Sparta lies
-hard by the mountain Taÿgetos, and to this day they
-show you a ravine on the mountain-side where it is
-claimed the deformed and weakly Spartan children
-were cast, to remove them from among a race which
-prized bodily vigor above every other consideration.
-It is a pity that Sparta, which played so vast a part
-in early history, should have left so little to recall her
-material existence. If she was not elegant or cultured,
-she was strong; and her ultimate triumph went to
-prove that the land where wealth accumulates and
-men decay has a less sure grip on life than the ruder,
-sterner nations.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So it was that we passed Sparta by on the other
-<span class='pageno' title='218' id='Page_218'></span>side and journeyed on from the smiling plain of Tripolis
-to the equally smiling one of Megalopolis, entering
-thoroughly into the spirit of Arcadia and vainly
-seeking the while to bring from those shepherd pipes
-melody fit to voice the joy of the occasion. It was
-apparent now that we had crossed the main watershed
-of Hellas, for the train was on a downward
-grade and the brakes shrieked and squealed shrilly
-as we ground into a tiny junction where stood the
-little branch-line train for Megalopolis. And in the
-cool of the afternoon we found ourselves in that misnamed
-town, in the very heart of Arcadia, the late
-afternoon light falling obliquely from the westering
-sun as it sank behind an imposing row of serrated
-mountains, far away.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To one even remotely acquainted with Greek roots,
-the name Megalopolis must signify a large city. As
-a matter of fact, it once was so. It was erected deliberately
-with the intention of making a large city,
-founded by three neighboring states, as a make-weight
-against the increasing power of the Lacedæmonians;
-but, like most places built on mere fiat, it
-dwindled away, until to-day it is a village that might
-more appropriately be called Mikropolis—if, indeed,
-it is entitled to be called a “polis” of any sort. The
-railway station, as usual, lay far outside the village,
-and in the station yard the one carriage of the town
-<span class='pageno' title='219' id='Page_219'></span>was awaiting us. Into it we were thrust; Spyros
-mounted beside the driver, a swarthy native; and
-with a rattle that recalled the famous Deadwood
-coach we whirled out of the inclosure and off to the
-town. The village itself proved to be but a sorry
-hole, to put it in the mildest form. It was made up
-of a fringe of buildings around a vacant common,
-level as a floor and sparsely carpeted with grass and
-weeds. As we passed house after house without turning
-in, hope grew, along with thankfulness, that we
-had at least escaped spending the night in any hovel
-hitherto seen. Nevertheless we did eventually stop
-before a dingy abode, and were directed to alight and
-enter there. Under a dark stone archway and over a
-muddy floor of stone pavement we picked our gingerly
-way, emerging in a sort of inner court, which
-Spyros pointed out was a "direct survival of the
-hypæthral megaron of the ancient Mycenæan house"—a
-glorified ancestry indeed for a dirty area around
-which were grouped the apartments of the family pig,
-cow, and sundry other household appurtenances and
-attachés. It was an unpromising prelude for a night’s
-lodging, but it made surprise all the greater when we
-emerged, by means of a flight of rickety stairs, on a
-little balcony above, and beheld adjoining it the apartments
-destined for our use. They had been swept
-and garnished, and the floors had been scrubbed
-<span class='pageno' title='220' id='Page_220'></span>until they shone. The collapsible iron beds had been
-erected and the bedding spread upon them, while
-near by stood the dinner table already laid for the
-evening meal; and presiding over it all stood the
-cook, to whose energy all these preparations were
-due, smiling genially through a forest of mustache,
-and duly presented to us as “Stathi.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the twilight we whetted our appetites for dinner
-by a brisk walk out of the village, perhaps half a mile
-away, to the site of the few and meagre ruins that
-Megalopolis has to show. Our progress thither was
-attended with pomp and pageantry furnished by the
-rabble of small boys and girls whose presence was at
-first undesirable enough, but who later proved useful
-as directing us to the lane that led to the ruins and
-as guards in stoning off sundry sheep dogs that disputed
-the way with us. The usual disbursement of
-leptá ensued, and we were left to inspect the remains
-of ancient greatness in peace. Those remains were
-few and grass-grown. They included little more than
-a theatre, once one of the greatest in Greece, with the
-structures behind the orchestra still largely visible,
-and a few foundations of buildings behind these, on
-the bank of a winding river. Aside from these the
-old Megalopolis is no more.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That night we sat down to a dinner such as few
-hotels in Athens could have bettered. The candlesticks
-<span class='pageno' title='221' id='Page_221'></span>on the table were of polished silver, which bore
-the monogram of the ancestors of Spyros. Our tablecloth
-and napkins were embroidered. Our dishes
-were all of a pattern, and we afterwards discovered
-that every piece of our household equipment, from
-soup plates to the humblest “crockery” of the family
-supply, bore the same tasteful decoration. Many a
-time we have laughed at the incongruity between
-our surroundings and the culinary panorama that
-Stathi conjured up from his primitive kitchen outside
-and served with such elegance. It was a masterpiece
-of the chef’s art, six courses following each
-other in rapid succession, all produced in the narrow
-oven where a charcoal fire blazed in answer to the
-energetic fanning of a corn broom. Soup gave place
-to macaroni; macaroni to lamb chops and green
-peas; chickens followed, flanked by beans and new
-potatoes from the gardens of the neighborhood; German
-pancakes wound up the repast; and coffee was
-served in an adjoining coffee-house afterward—the
-whole accompanied by copious draughts of the water
-of Andros, which cheers without inebriating, and
-beakers of the red wine of Solon, which I suspect
-is capable of doing both. A very modern-looking oil
-lamp helped furnish heat as well as light, for we were
-high above the sea and the night was chilly. Even to
-this remote district the product of the Rockefeller industry
-<span class='pageno' title='222' id='Page_222'></span>has penetrated, and no sight is more common
-than the characteristic square oil cans, with a wooden
-bar across the centre for carrying, which the peasants
-use for water buckets when the original oil is exhausted.
-They are useful, of course—more so than
-the old-fashioned earthen amphorae. But they are
-not as picturesque.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>My companion, whom it will be convenient to call
-the Professor, and I adjourned to the coffee-house
-below for our after-dinner smoke, and demanded coffee
-in our best modern Greek, only to evoke the hearty
-response, “Sure,” from our host. It seemed he had
-lived in New York, where he maintained an oyster
-bar; and, like all who have ever tasted the joys of
-Bowery life, he could not be happy anywhere else,
-but yearned to hear the latest news from that land of
-his heart’s desire. We tarried long over our cups,
-and had to force payment on him. Thence we retired
-through the low-browed arch that led to our abode,
-barred and locked it with ponderous fastenings that
-might have graced the Lion Gate itself, and lay down
-to repose on our collapsible beds, which happily did
-not collapse until Spyros and Stathi prepared them
-for the next day’s ride. This they did while we breakfasted.
-The morning meal came into the bedrooms
-bodily on a table propelled by our faithful servitors,
-the food having been prepared outside; and as we
-<span class='pageno' title='223' id='Page_223'></span>ate, the chamber work progressed merrily at our table
-side, so that in short order we were ready for the road.
-The carriage for the journey stood without the main
-gate, manned by a dangerous-looking but actually
-affable native, and behind it lay a spring cart of two
-wheels, wherein were disposed our beds, cooking
-utensils, and other impedimenta. The word of command
-was given, and the caravan set out blithely for
-the western mountains, bowed out of town by the
-beaming face of the man who had kept an oyster bar.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The road had an easy time of it for many a level
-mile. It ran through a fertile plain, watered by
-the sources of the famous Alpheios River, which we
-skirted for hours, the hills steadily converging upon
-us until at last they formed a narrow gorge through
-which the river forced its way, brawling over rocks,
-to the Elian plains beyond. Beside the way was an
-old and dismantled winepress, which we alighted
-long enough to visit. Disused as it was, it was easy
-to imagine the barefooted maidens of the neighborhood
-treading out the juices of the grapes in the
-upper loft, the liquid flowing down through the loose
-flooring into the vats beneath. It is the poetic way of
-preparing wine; but having seen one night of peasant
-life already, we were forced to admit that modern
-methods of extracting the juice seem rather to be
-preferred.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='224' id='Page_224'></span>Just ahead lay the gateway of Arcadia, guarded
-by a conspicuous conical hill set in the midst of the
-narrowing plain between two mountain chains and
-bearing aloft a red-roofed town named Karytæna.
-Time was too brief and the sun too hot to permit us
-to ascend thereto, but even from the highway below it
-proved an immensely attractive place, recalling the
-famous hill towns of Italy. Behind it lay the broadening
-plain of Megalopolis and before the narrow
-ravine of the Alpheios, walled in by two mighty hills.
-Karytæna seems like an inland Gibraltar, and must
-in the old days have been an almost impregnable
-defense of the Arcadian country on its western side,
-set as it is in the very centre of a constricted pass.
-But for some reason, possibly because the enemies
-of Greece came chiefly from the east, it seems not
-to have figured prominently as a fortress in history.
-Below the town the road wound down to the river’s
-edge and crossed the stream on a quaint six-arched
-bridge, against one pier of which some thankful persons
-had erected a shrine of Our Lady. And beyond
-the road began a steady ascent. We had left the
-plain for good, it appeared. Before us lay the deep
-and tortuous defile through which the river flows to
-the western seas, the roar of its rushing waters growing
-fainter and fainter below as the panting horses
-clambered upward with their burdens, until at last
-<span class='pageno' title='225' id='Page_225'></span>only a confused murmuring of the river was heard
-mingling with the rustle of the wind through the
-leaves of the wayside trees. The road was not provided
-with parapets save in a few unusually dangerous
-corners, and the thought of a plunge down that
-steep incline to the river so far below was not at all
-pleasant. Fortunately on only one occasion did we
-meet another wagon, and on that one occasion our
-party incontinently dismounted and watched the careful
-passage of the two with mingled feelings. It was
-accomplished safely and easily enough, but we felt
-much more comfortable to be on the ground and see
-the wheels graze the edge of the unprotected outside
-rim of the highway.</p>
-
-<div id='i289' class='figcenter id020'>
-<img src='images/i_289.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>AN OUTPOST OF ARCADY</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Every now and then a cross ravine demanded an
-abrupt descent of the road from its airy height, and
-down we would go to the bottom of a narrow valley,
-the driver unconcernedly cracking his whip, the bells
-of our steeds jangling merrily, and our party hanging
-on and trying hard to enjoy the view in a nervous
-and apprehensive way, although increasingly mindful
-of the exposed right-hand edge of the shelf. It
-bothered Stathi, the cook, not at all. He was riding
-behind on the baggage cart which followed steadily
-after, and at the steepest of the descent he was swaying
-from side to side on the narrow seat, his cigarette
-hanging neglected from his lips—sound asleep.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='226' id='Page_226'></span>These occasional ravines appeared to be due to
-centuries of water action, and their banks, which were
-well covered with woods, were marked here and there
-by tiny threads of cascades which sang pleasantly
-down the cliffs from above, crossed the road, and disappeared
-into the wooded depths of the river valley
-below. Bædeker had mentioned a huge plane tree
-and a gushing spring of water as a desirable place
-to lunch, but we looked for them in vain. Instead we
-took our midday meal beside a stone khan lying
-deserted by the roadside, in which on the open hearth
-Stathi kindled a fire and produced another of his
-culinary miracles, which we ate in the open air by
-the road, under a plane tree that was anything but
-gigantic. We have never quite forgiven Bædeker that
-“gushing spring.” When one has lived for a month
-or more on bottled waters, the expectation of drinking
-at nature’s fount is not lightly to be regarded.</p>
-
-<div id='i293' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_293.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THE GORGE OF THE ALPHEIOS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The remainder of the ride was a steady climb to
-Andhritsæna, varied by few descents, although this
-is hardly to be deemed a drawback. The knowledge
-that one has two thousand feet to climb before the
-goal is reached does not conduce to welcome of a
-sudden loss of all the height one has by an hour’s hard
-climb attained. The tedium of the hours of riding was
-easily broken by descending to walk, the better thus
-to enjoy the view which slowly opened out to the
-<span class='pageno' title='227' id='Page_227'></span>westward. We were in the midst of the mountains of
-the Peloponnesus now, and they billowed all around.
-It was a deserted country. Distant sheep bells and
-occasional pipes testified that there was life somewhere
-near, but the only person we met was a woman
-who came down from a hill to ask the driver to get
-a doctor for her sick son when he should reach
-Andhritsæna. At last, well toward evening, the drivers
-pointed to a narrow cut in the top of the hill which
-we were slowly ascending by long sweeping turns of
-road and announced the top of the pass. And the
-view that greeted us as we entered the defile was one
-not easy to forget. Through the narrow passage in
-the summit lay a new and different country, and in
-the midst of it, nestling against the mountain-side, lay
-Andhritsæna, red roofed and white walled, and punctuated
-here and there by pointed cypress trees. Below
-the town, the hills swept sharply away to the valleys
-beneath, filled with green trees, while above the rocks
-of the mountain-side rose steeply toward the evening
-sky. In the western distance we saw for the first
-time Erymanthus and his gigantic neighbors, the
-mountains that hem in the plain about Olympia,
-the taller ones snow-clad and capped with evening
-clouds. We straightened in our seats. Stathi came
-out of his doze. The whips cracked and we dashed
-into the town with the smartness of gait and poise
-<span class='pageno' title='228' id='Page_228'></span>that seem to be demanded by every arrival of coach
-and four from Greece to Seattle. And thus they
-deposited us in the main square of Andhritsæna,
-under a huge plane tree, whose branches swept over
-the entire village street, and whose trunk lost itself in
-the buildings at its side. The carriage labored away.
-The dragoman and his faithful attendant sought our
-lodging house to set it in order. And in the meantime
-we stretched our cramped limbs in a walk
-around the town, attended as usual by the entire idle
-population of youths and maidens, to see the village
-from end to end before the sun went down.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>I should, perhaps, add the remark that in my
-spelling of “Andhritsæna” I have done conscious
-violence to the word as it stands on the map—the
-added “h” representing a possibly needless attempt
-to give the local pronunciation of the name. It is
-accented on the second syllable.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='229' id='Page_229'></span>
- <h2 id='chap12' class='c005'>CHAPTER XII. ANDHRITSÆNA AND <br /> THE BASSÆ TEMPLE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_297.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>We found the village of Andhritsæna fascinating
-in the extreme, from within as well as from
-without. It was obviously afflicted with a degree of
-poverty, and suffers, like most Peloponnesian towns,
-from a steady drain on its population by the emigration
-to America. Naturally it was squalid, as Megalopolis
-had been, but in a way that did not mar the
-natural beauty of its situation, and, if anything, increased
-its internal picturesqueness. This we had
-abundant opportunity to observe during our initial
-ramble through the place, starting from the gigantic
-plane tree which forms a sort of nucleus of the entire
-village, and which shelters with its spreading branches
-the chief centre of local activity,—the region immediately
-adjacent to the town pump. It was not exactly
-a pump, however. The term is merely conventional,
-and one must understand by it a stone fountain, fed
-by a spring, the water gushing out by means of two
-<span class='pageno' title='230' id='Page_230'></span>spouts, whither an almost continuous stream of townsfolk
-came with the inevitable tin oil-cans to obtain
-water for domestic uses.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The main, and practically the only, street of the
-town led westward from the plane, winding along
-through the village in an amiable and casual way. It
-was lined close on either side by the houses, which
-were generally two stories in height, and provided
-with latticed balconies above to make up for the
-necessary lack of piazzas below. Close to the great
-central tree these balconies seemed almost like the
-arboreal habitation made dear to the childish heart
-by the immortal Swiss Family Robinson; and in these
-elevated stations the families of Andhritsæna were
-disporting themselves after the burden and heat of
-the day, gossiping affably to and fro across the street,
-or in some cases reading.</p>
-
-<div id='i299' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_299.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>ANDHRITSÆNA</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We found it as impossible to disperse our body
-guard of boys and girls as had been the case the
-evening before at Megalopolis. Foreign visitors in
-Andhritsæna are few enough to be objects of universal
-but not unkindly curiosity to young and old;
-and the young, being unfettered by the insistent demands
-of coffee-drinking, promptly insisted on attending
-our pilgrimage <span lang="fr" xml:lang="fr"><em>en masse</em></span>. It was cool, for the
-sun was low and the mountain air had begun to take
-on the chill of evening. We clambered up to a lofty
-<span class='pageno' title='231' id='Page_231'></span>knoll over the town and looked down over its slanting
-tiles to the wooded valley beneath, the evening
-smoke of the chimneys rising straight up in thin,
-curling wisps, while from the neighboring hills came
-the faint clatter of the herd bells and occasionally the
-soft note of some boy’s piping. Far away to the north
-we could see the snowy dome of Erymanthus, rising
-out of a tumbling mass of blue mountains, while between
-lay the opening and level plain of the Alpheios,
-widening from its narrows to form the broad meadows
-of Elis on the western coasts of the Peloponnesus.
-Here and there the house of some local magnate,
-more prosperous than the rest, boasted a small yard
-and garden, adorned with the sombre straightness of
-cypresses. Behind the town rose the rocky heights
-of the neighboring hills, long gorges running deep
-among them. Whichever way the eye turned, there
-was charm. The body guard of infantry retired to a
-respectful distance and stood watching us, finger bashfully
-to mouth in silent wonderment. Mothers with
-babies came out of near-by hovels to inspect us, and
-enjoyed us as much as we enjoyed the prospect that
-opened before.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the aspect of the houses of the town we had
-adjudged it prudent to allow Spyros and Stathi a
-decent interval for the preparation of our abode before
-descending to the main street again and seeking
-<span class='pageno' title='232' id='Page_232'></span>out the house. Apparently the exact location of it
-was known by the entire population by this time,
-for, as we descended, willing natives pointed the way
-by gesticulations, indicating a narrow and not entirely
-prepossessing alley leading down from the
-central thoroughfare by some rather slimy steps, to
-a sort of second street, and thence to another alley,
-if anything less prepossessing than the first, where a
-formidable wooden gateway gave entrance to a court.
-Here the merry villagers bade adieu and retired to
-their coffee again. Once within, the prospect brightened.
-It was, of course, the fore-court of a peasant’s
-house, for hotels are entirely lacking in Andhritsæna.
-It was paved with stone flagging, and above the
-courtyard rose a substantial veranda on which stood
-the host—a bearded man, gorgeous in native dress,
-the voluminous skirt of which was immaculate in its
-yards and yards of fustanella. From tasseled fez to
-pomponed shoes he was a fine type of peasant, contrasting
-with his wife, who wore unnoticeable clothes
-of European kind. She was a pleasant-faced little
-body, and evidently neat, which was more than all.
-And she ushered us into the house to the rooms
-where Spyros and the cook were busily engaged in
-making up the beds, discreetly powdering the mattresses,
-and setting things generally to rights. The
-embroidered bed linen which had given us such delight
-<span class='pageno' title='233' id='Page_233'></span>by its contrast with the surroundings at Megalopolis
-at once caught the eye of the peasant woman,
-and she promptly borrowed a pillow-case to learn the
-stitch with which it was adorned. As for the rooms,
-they were scrubbed to a whiteness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Just outside, overlooking the narrow by-way
-through which we had entered, was the inevitable
-balcony, whence the view off to the northern mountains
-was uninterrupted; and while supper was preparing
-we wrapped ourselves in sweaters and shawls and
-stood in mute admiration of the prospect—the deep
-valley below, the half-guessed plain beyond, and the
-rugged line of peaks silhouetted against the golden
-afterglow of the sunset. From this view our attention
-was distracted only by the sudden clamor of a church
-bell close at hand, which a priest was insistently ringing
-for vespers. The bell was hung, as so often happens,
-in a tree beside the church; and to prevent the
-unauthorized sounding of it by the neighborhood
-urchins the wise priest had caused the bell-rope to
-be shortened so that the end of it hung far up among
-the branches, and was only to be reached for the purposes
-of the church by a long iron poker, which the
-holy man had produced from somewhere within his
-sanctuary and which he was wielding vigorously to
-attract the attention of the devout. It may have been
-a sort of Greek angelus, designed to mark the hour
-<span class='pageno' title='234' id='Page_234'></span>of general sunset prayer; for nobody appeared in response
-to its summons, and after clanging away for
-what seemed to him a sufficient interval the priest
-unshipped the poker and retired with it to the inner
-recesses of the church, to be seen no more. The
-nipping and eager evening air likewise drove us to
-shelter, and the heat of the lamp and candles was
-welcome as lessening, though ever so slightly, the
-cold which the night had brought. It was further
-temporarily forgotten in the discussion of the smiling
-Stathi’s soups and chickens and flagons of
-Solon.</p>
-
-<div id='i305' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_305.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>AN ARBOREAL CAMPANILE. ANDHRITSÆNA</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The professor and I stumbled out in the darkness
-of the yard after the evening meal in search of a
-coffee-house, for the better enjoyment of our postprandial
-cigarettes, but we got no farther than the
-outer court before deciding to return for a lantern.
-Andhritsæna turned out to be not only chilly, but intensely
-dark o' nights. Its serpentine by-ways were
-devoid of a single ray of light, and even the main
-street, when we had found it, was relieved from utter
-gloom only by the lamps which glimmered few and
-faint in wayside shops that had not yet felt the force
-of the early-closing movement. The few wayfarers
-that we met as we groped our way along by the ineffectual
-fire of a square lantern, wherein a diminutive
-candle furnished the illuminant, likewise carried
-<span class='pageno' title='235' id='Page_235'></span>similar lights, and looked terrible enough hooded in
-their capotes. Diogenes-like, we sought an honest
-man,—and speedily discovered him in the proprietor
-of a tiny “kaffeneion,” who welcomed us to his tables
-and set before us cups of thick coffee, fervently disclaiming
-the while his intention to accept remuneration
-therefor. Indeed this generosity bade fair to be
-its own reward, for it apparently became known in a
-surprisingly short time that the foreign visitors were
-taking refreshment in that particular inn, with the
-result that patronage became brisk. The patrons,
-however, apparently cared less for their coffee than
-for the chance to study the newcomers in their midst
-at close range, and after we had basked for a sufficient
-time in the affable curiosity of the assembled
-multitude we stumbled off again through the night
-to our abode, the lantern casting gigantic and awful
-shadows on the wayside walls the while.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Now the chief reason for our visiting this quaint
-and out-of-the-way hamlet was its contiguity to the
-mountain on the flat top of which stands the ancient
-Bassæ temple. The correct designation, I believe, is
-really the “temple at Bassæ,” but to-day it stands
-isolated and alone, with no considerable habitation
-nearer than Andhritsæna, whatever was the case when
-it was erected. The evidence tended to show that
-Bassæ might be reached with about the same ease
-<span class='pageno' title='236' id='Page_236'></span>on foot as on horseback, or at least in about the
-same time; but as we were entirely without experience
-in riding, it was voted best that we begin our training
-by securing steeds for this minor side trip, in
-order to have some slight preparation for the twelve
-hours in the saddle promised us for the day following—a
-portentous promise that had cast a sort of indefinite
-shadow of apprehension over our inmost souls
-since leaving Nauplia. It was a wise choice, too, because
-it revealed to us among other things the difficulty
-of Greek mountain trails and the almost absolute
-sure-footedness of the mountain horse.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We were in the saddle promptly at nine, and in
-Indian file we set out through the village street, filled
-with the tremors natural to those who find themselves
-for the first time in their lives seated on horseback.
-But these tremors were as nothing to what beset us
-almost immediately on leaving the town and striking
-into the narrow ravine that led up into the hills behind
-it. It developed that while the prevailing tendency of
-the road was upward, this did not by any means preclude
-several incidental dips, remarkable alike for
-their appalling steepness and terrifying rockiness,
-for which their comparative brevity only partially
-atoned. The sensation of looking down from the
-back of even a small horse into a gully as steep as a
-sharp pitch roof, down which the trail is nothing but
-<span class='pageno' title='237' id='Page_237'></span>the path of a dried-up torrent filled with boulders,
-loose stones, smooth ledges, sand, and gravel, is anything
-but reassuring. It was with silent misgivings
-and occasional squeals of alarm that our party encountered
-the first of these descents. We had not yet
-learned to trust our mounts, and we did not know that
-the well-trained mountain horse is a good deal more
-likely to stumble on a level road than on one of those
-perilous downward pitches. From the lofty perches on
-top of the clumsy Greek saddles piled high with rugs,
-it seemed a terrifying distance to the ground; and
-the thought of a header into the rocky depth along
-the side of which the path skirted or down into which
-it plunged was not lightly to be shaken off. It was
-much better going up grade, although even here we
-found ourselves smitten with pity for the little beasts
-that scrambled with so much agility up cruel steeps of
-rock, bearing such appreciable burdens of well-nourished
-Americans on their backs. Spyros did his best to
-reassure us. He was riding ahead and throwing what
-were intended as comforting remarks over his shoulder
-to Mrs. Professor, who rode next in line. And as
-he was not aware of the exact make-up of the party’s
-mounts, he finally volunteered the opinion that horses
-were a good deal safer than mules for such a trip, because
-mules stumbled so. Whereupon Mrs. Professor,
-who was riding on a particularly wayward and mountainous
-<span class='pageno' title='238' id='Page_238'></span>mule, emitted a shriek of alarm and descended
-with amazing alacrity to the ground, vowing that
-walking to Bassæ was amply good enough for her.
-Nevertheless the mule, although he did stumble a
-little now and then, managed to stay with us all the
-way to Olympia, and no mishap occurred.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The saddles lend themselves to riding either
-astride or sidesaddle, and the ordinary man we met
-seemed to prefer the latter mode. The saddle frame
-is something the shape of a sawhorse, and after it
-is set on the back of the beast it is piled high with
-blankets, rugs, and the like, making a lofty but fairly
-comfortable seat. For the ladies the guides had
-devised little wooden swings suspended by rope to
-serve as stirrups for the repose of their soles. The
-arrangement was announced to be comfortable
-enough, although it was necessary for the riders to
-hold on fore and aft to the saddle with both hands,
-while a muleteer went ahead and led the beasts. In
-some of the steeper places the maintenance of a seat
-under these conditions required no little skill. As for
-the men, there were no special muleteers. We were
-supposed to know how to ride, and in a short time
-we had discovered how to guide the horses with the
-single rein provided, either by pulling it, or by pressing
-it across the horse’s neck. To stop the modern
-Greek horse you whistle. That is to say, you whistle
-<span class='pageno' title='239' id='Page_239'></span>if you can muster a whistle at all, which is sometimes
-difficult when a panic seizes you and your
-mouth becomes dry and intractable. In the main
-our progress was so moderate that no more skill was
-needed to ride or guide the steeds than would be
-required on a handcar. Only on rare occasions, when
-some of the beasts got off the track or fell behind,
-was any real acquaintance with Greek horsemanship
-required. This happened to all of us in turn before
-we got home again, and in each case the muleteers
-came to our aid in due season after we had completely
-lost all recollection of the proper procedure
-for stopping and were seeking to accomplish it by
-loud “whoas” instead of the soothing sibilant which
-is the modern Greek equivalent for that useful, and
-indeed necessary, word.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We found it highly desirable now and then to alight
-and walk, for to the unaccustomed rider the strain of
-sitting in a cramped position on a horse for hours at
-a time is wearying and benumbing to the lower limbs.
-On the ride up to Bassæ, those who did no walking
-at all found it decidedly difficult to walk when they
-arrived. The one deterrent was the labor involved in
-dismounting and the prospective difficulty of getting
-aboard again. In this operation the muleteers assisted
-our clumsiness not a little, and we discovered that
-the way to attract their attention to a desire to alight
-<span class='pageno' title='240' id='Page_240'></span>was to say “ka-tò,” in a commanding tone—the
-same being equivalent to “down.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>So much for our experiences as we wound along
-the sides of rocky ravines and gorges in the heart of
-the hills behind Andhritsæna. When we had grown
-accustomed to the manipulation of the horses and had
-learned that the beasts really would not fall down and
-dash us into the depths below, we began to enjoy the
-scenery. It was rugged, for the most part, although
-at the bottoms of the valleys there was frequently
-meadow land spangled with innumerable wildflowers
-and shrubbery, watered by an occasional brook. It
-was a lovely morning, still cool and yet cloudless. The
-birds twittered among the stunted trees. We passed
-from narrow vale to narrow vale, and at last, when
-no outlet was to be seen, we ceased to descend and
-began a steady climb out of the shady undergrowth
-along the side of a rocky mountain, where there was
-no wood at all save for scattered groves of pollard
-oaks—curious old trees, low and gnarled, covered
-with odd bunches, and bearing an occasional wreath
-of mistletoe. At the ends of their branches the trees
-put forth handfuls of small twigs, which we were
-told the inhabitants are accustomed to lop off for
-fagots. It is evident that the trees do not get half a
-chance to live and thrive. But they manage in some
-way to prolong their existence, and they give to the
-<span class='pageno' title='241' id='Page_241'></span>region at Bassæ and to the temple there a certain
-weird charm.</p>
-
-<div id='i313' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_313.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THRESHING FLOOR AT BASSÆ</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Off to the west as we climbed there appeared a
-shining streak of silver which the guides saw and
-pointed to, shouting “Thalassa! Thalassa!” (the
-sea). And, indeed, it was the first glimpse of the
-ocean west of Greece. Shortly beyond we attained
-the summit and began a gentle descent along a sort
-of tableland through a sparse grove of the stunted
-oaks, among which here and there appeared round
-flat floors of stone used for threshing. Many of these
-could be seen on the adjacent hills and in the valleys,
-and the number visible at one time proved to be
-something like a score. All at once, as we wound
-slowly down through the avenue of oaks, the temple
-itself burst unexpectedly into view, gray like the surrounding
-rocks, from which, indeed, it was built. To
-approach a shrine like this from above is not common
-in Greece, and this sudden apparition of the
-temple, which is admirably preserved, seems to have
-struck every visitor who has described it as exceedingly
-beautiful, particularly as one sees it framed in
-a foreground of these odd trees. We were high
-enough above the structure to look down into it, for
-it is of course devoid of any roof; and unlike most
-of the other temples, it was always so, for it was of
-the “hypæthral” type, and intended to be open to
-<span class='pageno' title='242' id='Page_242'></span>the sky. Nor was this the only unusual feature of the
-temple at Bassæ. It was peculiar among the older
-shrines in that it ran north and south instead of east
-and west, which was the regular custom among the
-roofed structures of the Greeks. Of course this difference
-in orientation has given rise to a great deal
-of discussion and speculation among those whose
-opinions are of weight in such matters. Probably the
-casual visitor in Greece is well aware of the custom
-of so fixing the axes of temples as to bring the eastern
-door directly in line with the rising sun on certain
-appropriate days, for the better illumination of
-the interior on those festivals. Although such expedients
-as the use of translucent marble roofs were
-resorted to, the lighting of the interior of roofed temples
-was always a matter of some little difficulty, and
-this arrangement of the doorways was necessary to
-bring out the image of the god in sufficiently strong
-light. From this system of orientation it has occasionally
-been possible to identify certain temples
-as dedicated to particular deities, by noting the
-days on which the rising sun would have come exactly
-opposite the axis of the shrine. No such consideration
-would apply with the same force to a
-hypæthral temple, whatever else might have figured
-in the general determination of the orientation. But
-even at Bassæ, where the length of the temple so
-<span class='pageno' title='243' id='Page_243'></span>obviously runs north and south, it is still true that
-one opening in it was eastward, and it is supposed
-that in the end of the temple space was an older
-shrine to Apollo, which, like other temples, faced the
-rising sun. This older precinct was not interfered
-with in erecting the greater building, and it is still
-plainly to be seen where the original sacred precinct
-was.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The members of the single encircling row of columns
-are still intact, although in some cases slightly
-thrown out of alignment; and they still bear almost
-the entire entablature. The cella wall within is also
-practically intact, and inside it are still standing large
-sections of the unusual engaged half-columns which
-encircled the cella, standing against its sides. The great
-frieze in bas-relief, which once ran around the top,
-facing inward, is now in the British Museum, where it
-is justly regarded as one of the chief treasures of the
-Greek collection. It hardly needs the comment that
-such arrangement of the frieze was highly unusual,
-inside the building, instead of on the outer side of
-the cella, as was the case in the Parthenon. Ictinus,
-the architect of the Parthenon, also built the temple
-at Bassæ, which was dedicated by the Phigalians to
-“Apollo the Helper,” in gratification for relief from a
-plague. That fact has given rise to the conjecture that
-it was perhaps built at the same time that the plague
-<span class='pageno' title='244' id='Page_244'></span>ravaged Athens, during the early part of the Peloponnesian
-War. However that may be, it is evidently
-true that it belongs to the same golden age that gave
-us the Parthenon and the Propylæa at Athens. Unlike
-them, it does not glow with the varied hues of the
-weathered Pentelic marble, but is a soft gray, due to
-the native stone of which it was constructed. And this
-gray color, contrasting with the sombreness of the
-surrounding grove, gives much the same satisfactory
-effect as is to be seen at Ægina, where the temple is
-seen, like this, in a framework of trees.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Needless to say, the outlook from this lofty site—something
-like four thousand feet above the sea—is
-grand. The ocean is visible to the south as well as
-to the west. The rolling mountains to the east form
-an imposing pageant, culminating in the lofty Taÿgetos
-range. Looming like a black mound in the
-centre of the middle distance to the southward is the
-imposing and isolated acropolis of Ithome, the stronghold
-of the ancient Messenians. As usual, the builders
-of the temple at Bassæ selected a most advantageous
-site for their shrine. It was while we were enjoying
-the view after lunch that a solitary German appeared
-from the direction of Ithome, having passed through
-the modern Phigalia. He had a boy for a guide, but
-aside from that he was roaming through this deserted
-section of Greece alone. He knew nothing of the language.
-<span class='pageno' title='245' id='Page_245'></span>He had no dragoman to make the rough
-places smooth. He had spent several sorry nights in
-peasants’ huts, where vermin most did congregate.
-But he was enjoying it all with the enthusiasm of the
-true Philhellene, and on the whole was making his
-way about surprisingly well. We sat and chatted for
-a long time in the shade of the temple, comparing it
-with the lonely grandeur of the temple at Segesta, in
-Sicily. And as the sun was sinking we took the homeward
-way again, but content to walk this time rather
-than harrow our souls by riding down the excessively
-steep declivity that led from the mountain to the
-valleys below.</p>
-
-<div id='i319a' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/i_319a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>TEMPLE AT BASSÆ, FROM ABOVE</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div id='i319b' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/i_319b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>TEMPLE AT BASSÆ, FROM BELOW</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>At dinner that night in Andhritsæna an old man
-appeared with wares to sell—curiously wrought and
-barbaric blankets, saddlebags, and the like, apparently
-fresh and new, but really, he claimed, the dowry
-of his wife who had long been dead. He had no further
-use for the goods, but he did think he might
-find uses for the drachmæ they would bring. Needless
-to say, our saddlebags were the heavier the next
-day when our pack-mules were loaded for the journey
-over the hills to Olympia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>One other thing deserves a word of comment before
-we leave Andhritsæna, and that is the cemetery.
-We had seen many funeral processions at Athens,
-carrying the uncoffined dead through the streets, but
-<span class='pageno' title='246' id='Page_246'></span>we had never paid much attention to the burial places,
-because they are still mainly to be found outside the
-city gates, and not in the line commonly taken by
-visitors. At Andhritsæna we came upon one, however,
-and for the first time noticed the curious little
-wooden boxes placed at the heads of the graves,
-resembling more than anything else the bird-houses
-that humane people put on trees at home. Inside of
-the boxes we found oil stains and occasionally the
-remains of broken lamps, placed there, we were told,
-as a "mnemeion"—doubtless meaning a memorial,
-which word is a direct descendant. The lamps appear
-to be kept lighted for a time after the death of the person
-thus honored, but none were lighted when we saw
-the cemetery of Andhritsæna, and practically all had
-fallen into neglect, as if the dead had been so long
-away that grief at their departure had been forgotten.
-A little chapel stood hard by, and on its wall a metal
-plate and a heavy iron spike did duty for a bell.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Then the cold night settled down upon Andhritsæna,
-and we retired to the warmth of our narrow
-beds, ready for the summons which should call us
-forth to begin our fatiguing ride to the famous site
-of old Olympia.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='247' id='Page_247'></span>
- <h2 id='chap13' class='c005'>CHAPTER XIII. OVER THE HILLS <br /> TO OLYMPIA</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_323.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>At five o'clock the persistent thumping of Spyros
-on the bedroom doors announced the call of
-incense-breathing morn, though Ph&oelig;bus had not yet
-by any means driven his horses above the rim of the
-horizon. The air outside was thick o' fog,—doubtless a
-low-lying cloud settling on the mountain,—and it was
-dark and cheerless work getting out of our narrow
-beds and dressing in the cold twilight. Nevertheless
-it was necessary, for the ride to Olympia is long, and
-Spyros had promised us a fatiguing day, with twelve
-hours in the saddle as a minimum. To this forecast
-the pessimistic Baedeker lent much plausibility by his
-reference to the road as being unspeakably bad; and
-besides we ourselves had on the previous day gathered
-much personal experience of the mountain trails
-of the region. Breakfast under these circumstances
-was a rather hasty meal, consumed in comparative
-silence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='248' id='Page_248'></span>By the time the last of the rolls and jam had disappeared
-and the task of furling up the beds was well
-advanced, a clatter of hoofs in the village street drew
-one of the party to the door, whence word was speedily
-returned that the street outside was full of horses.
-And it was. There were ten steeds, including four for
-our party, two for Spyros and Stathi, one for a muleteer
-relief conveyance, and the rest for the baggage—the
-latter being small and seemingly quite inadequate
-burros or donkeys, who proved more notable for their
-patient indifference than for size or animation. While
-these were being laden, four other beasts drew near,
-bearing our solitary German of the day before and
-another of his countrymen who had materialized during
-the night, with their impedimenta. They were
-welcomed to the caravan, which, numbering fourteen
-beasts and almost as many humans, took the road out
-of town with commendable promptitude at sharp six
-o'clock. The cloud had lifted as we rounded the western
-edge of the valley and looked back at Andhritsæna,
-glimmering in the morning light. We were
-streaming off in Indian file along a very excellent
-road, like that on which we had ridden up from
-Megalopolis two days before, and which promised well
-for a speedy removal of the apprehensions awakened
-by Bædeker. But the road did not last long. Before
-we had fairly lost Andhritsæna in the hills behind,
-<span class='pageno' title='249' id='Page_249'></span>the leading guide turned sharply to the left, through
-a rocky defile in the hillside, and precipitated us down
-one of those rocky torrent beds, with the nature of
-which we had become only too familiar the day before.
-It was the less disturbing this time, however,
-because we had learned to trust implicitly to the careful
-feet of our horses, with no more than a firm grip
-on bridle and pommel and an occasional soft whistle,
-or murmured "ochs', ochs'," to the intelligent beasts
-as an outward and audible sign of inward and spiritual
-perturbation. It was steep but short, and we came out
-below upon the road again, to everybody’s unconcealed
-delight.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The road, however, soon lost itself in a meadow.
-When it is ultimately finished, the journey will be
-much easier than we found it. In a few years I suppose
-it will be perfectly possible to ride to Olympia
-in a carriage, and the horseback problem will cease
-to deter visitors to Bassæ from continuing their journey
-westward. The way now lay along a pleasant
-and rolling meadow country, dotted with primitive
-farms, which glowed under the bright morning sun.
-We splashed through a narrow upland river and up
-another rocky ascent, beyond which another downward
-pitch carried us to a still lower meadow. Meantime
-the cold of morning gave place to a growing
-warmth, and the wraps became saddle blankets in
-<span class='pageno' title='250' id='Page_250'></span>short order. We rode and walked alternately, choosing
-the level stretches through the grass for pedestrianism
-and riding only when we came to sharp
-upward climbs, thus easing the fatigue that we should
-otherwise have found in continued riding. Always
-we could see the imposing peaks to the north, and
-the downward tendency of the trail soon brought out
-the altitude of the hills behind Andhritsæna. The immediate
-vicinity of our path was pastoral and agricultural,
-in the main, for the recurring ridges over
-which we scrambled served only as boundaries between
-well-watered vales in which small trees and
-bushes flourished, and where the occasional sharp
-whir of pressure from a primitive penstock called
-attention to the presence of a water mill. Aside from
-these isolated mills there was little sign of habitation,
-for the fields seemed mostly grown up to grass. In
-the far distance we could see the valley of the Alpheios,
-broadening out of its confining walls of rock to what
-seemed like a sandy reach in the plain far below, and
-we were told that at nightfall we should be ferried
-across it close to Olympia, provided we caught the
-boatmen before they left for home. It was this anxiety
-to be on time that led Spyros to urge us along, lest
-when we came out at the bank of the river we should
-find no response to the ferryman’s call of "Varka!
-Varka!"—the common mode of hailing boatmen in
-<span class='pageno' title='251' id='Page_251'></span>Greece. With this for a spur we wasted little time on
-the way, but proceeded steadily, now riding, now
-walking, up hill and down dale, through groves of
-low acacias or Judas trees, or along grassy meadows
-where a profusion of wild flowers added a touch of
-color to the green.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The pleasant valley, however, proved not to be
-the road for very long. In an hour or so the guides
-branched off again into a range of hills that seemed
-as high as those we had left, and there entered a tortuous
-ravine worn by a mountain brook, along which
-the path wound higher and higher toward a distant
-house which the muleteers pointed out and pronounced
-to be a "ξενοδοχεῖον,"—the Professor had
-long ago learned to call it "Senator Sheehan,"—at
-which wayside inn the mistaken impression prevailed
-that we were speedily to lunch. It was not so to be,
-however. When we had achieved the height and
-rested under two leafy plane trees that we found
-there, Spyros repeated his tale about the ferrymen
-and their departure at sundown; and we must away
-at once, with no more refreshment than was to be
-drawn from some crackers and a bottle of Solon.
-And so we pressed on again, still climbing, though
-more gradually. The path was not so bad after all,
-despite the Bædeker, and in one place we voted it
-easily the finest spot we had found in all our Peloponnesian
-<span class='pageno' title='252' id='Page_252'></span>rambles. We were riding along at the time
-through a shady grove when we came suddenly upon
-a collection of mammoth planes, whose branches
-spread far and wide, and from the midst of the cleft
-side of one of them a spring bubbled forth joyously,
-flooding the road. It was here that the king on one
-of his journeys the year before had stopped to rest
-and partake of his noonday meal. It seemed to us,
-famished by six hours of hard riding, that the king’s
-example was one all good citizens should follow; but
-Spyros was inexorable, and reminded us that ferrymen
-might wait for the King of Greece, but not for
-any lesser personages whatsoever. We must not halt
-until we got to Gremka; for at Gremka we should
-find a good road, and beyond there it was four hours
-of travel, and we might judge exactly how much time
-we had for rest by the hour of our reaching the place.
-So we obediently proceeded, joined now by two more
-beasts so laden with the empty oil-cans common to
-the region that only their legs were visible. These
-furnished the comedy element in the day’s experiences,
-for the donkeys thus loaded proved to be contrary
-little creatures, always getting off the trail and
-careering down the mountain-side through the scrubby
-trees and bushes, their deck-loads of tin making a
-merry din as they crashed through the underbrush,
-while our guides roared with derisive laughter at the
-<span class='pageno' title='253' id='Page_253'></span>discomfiture of the harassed attendants. When not
-engaged in ridiculing the owners of those numerous
-and troublesome oil-cans, the muleteers sang antiphonally
-some music in a minor key which Spyros
-said was a wedding song wherein the bridegroom
-and the bride’s family interchange sentiments. This
-seems to be the regular diversion of muleteers, judging
-by the unanimity with which travelers in Greece
-relate the experience. Anon our muleteers would likewise
-find amusement by stealing around behind and
-administering an unexpected smack on the plump
-buttocks of the horses, with the inevitable result of
-starting the beast out of his meditative amble into
-something remotely resembling a canter, and eliciting
-an alarmed squeal from the rider—at which the
-muleteer, with the most innocent face in the world,
-would appear under the horse’s nose and grasp the
-bridle, assuring the frightened equestrian that the
-beast was "kalà"—or “all right.”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All the steeds were small with the exception of the
-altitudinous mule ridden by one of the ladies, and
-they were not at all bothered by the low branches of
-the trees through which we wended our way. Not
-so, however, the riders. The thorny branches that
-just cleared the nonchalant horse’s head swept over
-the saddle with uncompromising vigor, and the
-effort to swing the beast away from one tree meant
-<span class='pageno' title='254' id='Page_254'></span>encountering similar difficulties on the other side of
-the narrow path. Through this arboreal Scylla and
-Charybdis it was extremely difficult navigation and
-the horses took no interest in our plight at all, so
-that long before we emerged from the last of the
-groves along the way we were a beraveled and
-bescratched company.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Shortly after noon two villages appeared far ahead,
-and we were engaged in speculating as to which
-one was Gremka, when the guides suddenly turned
-again and shot straight up the hill toward a narrow
-defile in the mountain wall we had been skirting. It
-proved as narrow as a chimney and almost as steep,
-and for a few moments we scrambled sharply, our
-little horses struggling hard to get their burdens up
-the grade; but at last they gained the top, and we
-emerged from between two walls of towering rock
-into another and even fairer landscape. The plain of
-the Alpheios spread directly below, but we were not
-allowed to descend to it. Instead we actually began
-to climb, and for an hour or two more we rode along
-the side of the range of hills through the midst of
-which we had just penetrated. The path was pleasantly
-wooded, and the foliage was thick enough to
-afford a grateful shade above and a soft carpeting
-of dead leaves below. The air was heavy with the
-balsamic fragrance of the boughs, and the birds sang
-<span class='pageno' title='255' id='Page_255'></span>merrily although it was midday. Through the vistas
-that opened in this delightful grove we got recurring
-glimpses of the Erymanthus range, now separated
-from us only by the miles of open plain, and vastly
-impressive in their ruggedness.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The sides of the range of hills along which our
-path wound were corrugated again and again by
-ravines, worn by the brooks, and our progress was
-a continual rising and falling in consequence. The
-footing was slippery, due to the minute particles of
-reddish gravel and sand, so that here even our
-mountain horses slipped and stumbled, and we were
-warned to dismount and pick our own way down,
-which we did, shouting gayly “Varka! Varka!” at
-the crossing of every absurd little three-inch brook,
-to the intense enjoyment of the muleteers. And thus
-by two in the afternoon we arrived at Gremka, a
-poor little hamlet almost at the edge of the great
-plain, and were told that we had made splendid time,
-so that we might have almost an hour of rest, while
-Stathi unlimbered the sumpter mules and spread
-luncheon under two pleasant plane trees beside a
-real spring.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From Gremka on, we found the road again. It was
-almost absolutely level after we left the minor foothill
-on which Gremka sits, and for the remainder of
-our day we were to all intents and purposes in civilization
-<span class='pageno' title='256' id='Page_256'></span>again. Curiously enough, it was here that our
-little horses, that had been so admirably reliable in
-precipitous trails of loose rock and sand, began to
-stumble occasionally, as if careless now that the road
-was smooth and doubtless somewhat weary with the
-miles of climbing and descending. The guides and
-muleteers, refreshed with a little food and a vast
-amount of resinated wine, began to sing marriage
-music louder than ever, and the most imposing figure
-of all, a man who in every-day life was a butcher and
-who carried his huge cleaver thrust in his leathern
-belt, essayed to converse with us in modern Greek,
-but with indifferent success. The landscape, while no
-longer rugged, was pleasant and peaceful as the road
-wound about the valley through low hillocks and
-knolls crowned with little groves of pine, the broad
-lower reaches of the rivers testifying that we were
-nearing the sea. And at last, toward sunset, we swung
-in a long line down over the sands that skirt the rushing
-Alpheios and came to rest on the banks opposite
-Olympia, whose hotels we could easily see across the
-swelling flood.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Alpheios is not to be despised as a river in
-April. It is not especially wide, but it has what a
-good many Greek rivers do not,—water, and plenty
-of it, running a swift course between the low banks
-of the south and the steeper bluffs that confine it on
-<span class='pageno' title='257' id='Page_257'></span>the Olympia side. The ferry was waiting. It proved
-to be a sizable boat, of the general shape of a coastwise
-schooner, but devoid of masts, and mainly hollow,
-save for a little deck fore and aft. Three voluble
-and, as it proved, rapacious natives manned it, the
-motive power being poles. With these ferrymen Spyros
-and Stathi almost immediately became involved
-in a furious controversy, aided by our cohort of muleteers.
-It did not surprise us greatly, and knowing that
-whatever happened we should be financially scathless,
-we sat down on the bank and skipped pebbles in the
-water. It developed that the boatman had demanded
-thrice his fee, and that Spyros, who had no illusions
-about departed spirits, objected strenuously to being
-gouged in this way and was protesting vehemently
-and volubly, while Stathi, whose exterior was ordinarily
-so calm, was positively terrible to behold as he
-danced about the gesticulating knot of men. It finally
-became so serious that the Professor and I, looking
-as fierce as we could, ranged ourselves alongside, mentioning
-a wholly mythical intimacy with the head of
-the Hellenic police department in the hope of promoting
-a wholesome spirit of compromise, but really more
-anxious to calm the excited cook, who was clamoring
-for the tools of his trade that he might dispatch
-these thrice-qualified knaves of boatmen then and
-there. Eventually, as tending to induce a cessation
-<span class='pageno' title='258' id='Page_258'></span>of hostilities, we cast off the mooring—whereat the
-dispute suddenly ended and the beasts of burden went
-aboard. So also did the Professor, who was anxious
-to establish a strategic base on the opposite bank;
-and the rest of us sat and watched the craft pushed
-painfully out into the stream and well up against the
-current, until a point was reached whence the force of
-the river took her and bore her madly down to her
-berth on the Olympia bank. Here fresh difficulties
-arose,—not financial but mechanical. The heavily
-loaded little donkeys proved utterly unable to step
-over the gunwale and get ashore. It was an inspiring
-sight to watch, the Professor tugging manfully at the
-bridle and the remainder of the crew boosting with
-might and main; but it was of no avail, although they
-wrought mightily, until at the psychological moment
-and in the spot most fitted to receive it, a muleteer
-gave the needed impetus by a prodigious kick, which
-lifted the patient ass over the side and out on the
-bank. The rest was easy. We were ferried over in
-our turn and disappeared from the view of the boatmen,
-each side expressing its opinion of the other in
-terms which we gathered from the tones employed
-were the diametrical reverse of complimentary. It was
-twelve hours to a dot from the time of our departure
-from Andhritsæna when we strolled into our hotel—at
-which fact Spyros plumed himself not a little.</p>
-
-<div id='i335' class='figcenter id001'>
-<span class='pageno' title='259' id='Page_259'></span>
-<img src='images/i_335.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>HERÆUM. OLYMPIA</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It had not been an unduly fatiguing day, after all.
-The frequent walking that we had done served to
-break up the tedium of long riding, which otherwise
-would have been productive of numb limbs and stiff
-joints. It is well to bear this in mind, for I have seen
-unaccustomed riders assisted from their saddles after
-too long jaunts utterly unable to stand, and of course
-much less to walk, until a long period of rest had
-restored the circulation in the idle members. Fortunately,
-too, we had been blessed with an incomparable
-day. Spyros confessed that he had secretly dreaded
-a rain, which would have made the path dangerous
-in spots where it was narrow and composed of clay.
-As it was, we arrived in Olympia in surprisingly good
-condition, and on schedule time, though by no means
-unready to welcome real beds again and the chance
-for unlimited warm water.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Olympia, like Delphi, is a place of memories
-chiefly. The visible remains are numerous, but so
-flat that some little technical knowledge is needed to
-restore them in mind. There is no village at the modern
-Olympia at all,—nothing but five or six little inns
-and a railway station,—so that Delphi really has
-the advantage of Olympia in this regard. As a site
-connected with ancient Greek history and Greek religion,
-the two places are as similar in nature as they
-are in general ruin. The field in which the ancient
-<span class='pageno' title='260' id='Page_260'></span>structures stand lies just across the tiny tributary
-river Cladeus, spanned by a footbridge.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Even from the opposite bank, the ruins present
-a most interesting picture, with its attractiveness
-greatly enhanced by the neighboring pines, which
-scatter themselves through the precinct itself and
-cover densely the little conical hill of Kronos close
-by, while the grasses of the plain grow luxuriantly
-among the fallen stones of the former temples and
-apartments of the athletes. The ruins are so numerous
-and so prostrate that the non-technical visitor is
-seriously embarrassed to describe them, as is the case
-with every site of the kind. All the ruins, practically,
-have been identified and explained, and naturally
-they all have to do with the housing or with the contests
-of the visiting athletes of ancient times, or with
-the worship of tutelary divinities. Almost the first
-extensive ruin that we found on passing the encircling
-precinct wall was the Prytaneum—a sort of
-ancient training table at which victorious contestants
-were maintained gratis—while beyond lay other
-equally extensive remnants of exercising places, such
-as the Palæstra for the wrestlers. But all these were
-dominated, evidently, by the two great temples, an
-ancient one of comparatively small size sacred to
-Hera, and a mammoth edifice dedicated to Zeus,
-which still gives evidence of its enormous extent,
-<span class='pageno' title='261' id='Page_261'></span>while the fallen column-drums reveal some idea of
-the other proportions. It was in its day the chief
-glory of the inclosure, and the statue of the god
-was even reckoned among the seven wonders of the
-world. Unfortunately this statue, like that of Athena
-at Athens, has been irretrievably lost. But there is
-enough of the great shrine standing in the midst of
-the ruins to inspire one with an idea of its greatness;
-and, in the museum above, the heroic figures from
-its two pediments have been restored and set up in
-such wise as to reproduce the external adornment of
-the temple with remarkable success. Gathered around
-this central building, the remainder of the ancient
-structures having to do with the peculiar uses of the
-spot present a bewildering array of broken stones
-and marbles. An obtrusive remnant of a Byzantine
-church is the one discordant feature. Aside from this
-the precinct recalls only the distant time when the
-regular games called all Greece to Olympia, while
-the “peace of God” prevailed throughout the kingdom.
-Just at the foot of Kronos a long terrace and
-flight of steps mark the position of a row of old treasuries,
-as at Delphi, while along the eastern side of
-the precinct are to be seen the remains of a portico
-once famous for its echoes, where sat the judges who
-distributed the prizes. There is also a most graceful
-arch remaining to mark the entrance to the ancient
-<span class='pageno' title='262' id='Page_262'></span>stadium, of which nothing else now remains. Of the
-later structures on the site, the “house of Nero” is
-the most interesting and extensive. The Olympic
-games were still celebrated, even after the Roman
-domination, and Nero himself entered the lists in his
-own reign. He caused a palace to be erected for him
-on that occasion—and of course he won a victory, for
-any other outcome would have been most impolite,
-not to say dangerous. Nero was more fortunately
-lodged than were the other ancient contestants, it
-appears, for there were no hostelries in old Olympia
-in which the visiting multitudes could be housed, and
-the athletes and spectators who came from all over
-the land were accustomed to bring their own tents
-and pitch them roundabout, many of them on the
-farther side of the Alpheios.</p>
-
-<div id='i341' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_341.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>ENTRANCE TO THE STADIUM. OLYMPIA</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The many treasuries, to which reference has been
-made as running along the terrace wall at the very
-foot of the hill of Kronos, are spoken of by Pausanias.
-Enough of them is occasionally to be found to enable
-one to judge how they appeared—somewhat, no
-doubt, like the so-called “treasury of the Athenians”
-that one may see in a restored form at Delphi. In
-these tiny buildings were kept the smaller votive
-gifts of the various states and the apparatus for the
-games. Not far from this row of foundations and
-close by the terrace wall that leads along the hill
-<span class='pageno' title='263' id='Page_263'></span>down to the arch that marks the stadium entrance,
-are several bases on which stood bronze statues of
-Zeus, set up by the use of moneys derived from fines
-for fracturing the rules of the games. Various ancient
-athletes achieved a doubtful celebrity by having to
-erect these “Zanes,” as they were called, one of them
-being a memorial of the arrant coward Sarapion of
-Alexandria, who was so frightened at the prospect of
-entering the pankration for which he had set down
-his name that he fled the day before the contest.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Within the precinct one may still see fragments
-of the pedestal which supported Phidias’s wonderful
-gold-and-ivory image of Zeus. The god himself is
-said to have been so enchanted with the sculptor’s
-work that he hurled a thunderbolt down, which struck
-near the statue; and the spot was marked with a vase
-of marble. Just how approval was spelled out of so
-equivocal a manifestation might seem rather difficult
-to see; but such at any rate was the fact. Of the
-other remaining bases, the most interesting is doubtless
-the tall triangular pedestal of the Niké of Pæonius,
-still to be seen <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>in situ</em></span>, though its graceful statue
-is in the museum.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Just above the meadows on the farther bank, there
-runs a range of hills, through which we had but recently
-ridden. And it was there that the ancients found
-a convenient crag from which to hurl the unfortunate
-<span class='pageno' title='264' id='Page_264'></span>women who dared venture to look on at the games.
-The law provided that no woman’s eye should see
-those contests, and so far as is known only one woman
-caught breaking this law ever escaped the penalty
-of it. She was the mother of so many victorious
-athletes that an unwonted immunity was extended to
-her. Other women, whose disguise was penetrated,
-were made stern examples to frighten future venturesome
-maids and matrons out of seeking to view what
-was forbidden.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The games at Olympia were celebrated during a
-period of about a thousand years, throughout which time
-they furnished the one recognized system of dates.
-They recurred at four-year intervals. Long before the
-appointed month of the games, which were always
-held in midsummer, duly accredited ambassadors
-were sent forth to all the cities and states of Hellas to
-announce the coming of the event and to proclaim the
-“peace of God,” which the law decreed should prevail
-during the days of the contest, and in which it was
-sacrilege not to join, whatever the exigency. On the
-appointed date the cities of all Greece sent the flower
-of their youth to Olympia, runners, wrestlers, discus
-throwers, chariot drivers, boxers, and the like, as well
-as their choicest horses, to contend for the coveted
-trophy. During the first thirteen Olympiads there was
-but one athletic event,—a running race. In later times
-<span class='pageno' title='265' id='Page_265'></span>the number was added to until the race had grown
-to a “pentathlon,” or contest of five kinds, and still
-later to include twenty-four different exercises. None
-but Greeks of pure blood could contest, at least until
-the Roman times, and nobles and plebeians vied in
-striving for the victor’s wreath, although the richer
-were at a decided advantage in the matter of the horse
-races. The prize offered, however, was of no intrinsic
-value at all, being nothing but a crown of wild olive,
-and it astonished and dismayed the invading Persians
-not a little to find that they were being led against a
-nation that would strive so earnestly and steadfastly
-for a prize that seemed so little. As a matter of fact
-it was not as slight a reward as it appeared to be, for
-in the incidental honors that it carried the world has
-seldom seen its equal. The man who proved his right
-to be crowned with this simple wreath was not only
-regarded as honored in himself, but honor was imputed
-to his family and to his city as well; and the
-city generally went wild with enthusiasm over him,
-some even going so far as to raze their walls in token
-that with so gallant sons they needed no bulwarks.
-Special privileges were conferred upon him at home
-and even abroad. In many cities the victor of an
-Olympic contest was entitled to maintenance at the
-public charge in the utmost honor, and the greatest
-poets of the day delighted to celebrate the victors in
-<span class='pageno' title='266' id='Page_266'></span>their stateliest odes. Thus, although games in honor
-of the gods were held at various other points in
-Greece, as for example at Delphi and at the isthmus
-of Corinth, none surpassed the Olympic as a national
-institution, sharing the highest honors with the oracle
-at Delphi as an object of universal reverence.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of course the origin of these great games is
-shrouded in mystery, which has, as usual, crystallized
-into legend. And as the pediment in one end
-of the temple of the Olympian Zeus, preserved in the
-museum near by, deals with this story, it may be
-in order to speak of it. Tradition relates that King
-&OElig;nomaus had a splendid stud of race horses of which
-he was justly proud, and likewise was possessed of
-a surpassingly beautiful daughter whom men called
-Hippodameia, who was naturally sought in marriage
-by eligible young men from all around. The condition
-precedent set by &OElig;nomaus to giving her hand
-was, however, a difficult one. The suitor must race
-his horses against those of &OElig;nomaus, driving the
-team himself; and if he lost he was put to death. One
-version relates that &OElig;nomaus, if he found himself
-being distanced, was wont to spear the luckless swains
-from behind. At any rate nobody had succeeded
-in winning Hippodameia when young Pelops came
-along and entered the contest. He had no doubt
-heard of the king’s unsportsmanlike javelin tactics,
-<span class='pageno' title='267' id='Page_267'></span>for he adopted some subterfuges of his own,—doing
-something or other to the chariot of his opponent,
-such as loosening a linchpin or bribing his charioteer
-to weaken it in some other part,—with the result that
-when the race came off &OElig;nomaus was thrown out
-and killed, and Pelops won the race and Hippodameia—and
-of course lived happily ever after.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The pedimental sculptures from the great temple
-reproduce the scene that preceded the race in figures
-of heroic size, with no less a personage than Zeus
-himself in the centre of the group, while &OElig;nomaus
-and Pelops with their chariots and horses and their
-attendants range themselves on either side, and Hippodameia
-stands expectantly waiting. The restorations
-have been liberal, but on the whole successful;
-and besides giving a very good idea of the legend
-itself, they are highly interesting from a sculptural
-point of view as showing a distinctive style of carving
-in marble. The other pediment, preserved in about the
-same proportion, is less interesting from a legendary
-standpoint, but is full of animation and artistic interest.
-It represents the contest between the Centaurs
-and Lapiths, with Apollo just in the act of intervening
-to prevent the rape of the Lapith women. This
-episode had little appropriateness to the Olympic site,
-so far as I know, but the ease with which the Centaur
-lent himself to the limitations of pedimental sculpture
-<span class='pageno' title='268' id='Page_268'></span>might well explain the adoption of the incident here.
-The head of Apollo is of the interesting type with
-which one grows familiar in going through museums
-devoted to early work, the most notable thing being
-the curious treatment of hair and eyes.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The precinct about the great temple was once filled
-with votive statues, and Pliny relates that he counted
-something like three thousand. Of these it appears
-that few remain sufficiently whole to add much interest.
-But out of all the great assemblage of sculptures
-there is one at least surviving that must forever assuage
-any grief at the loss of the rest. That, of course,
-is the inimitable Hermes of Praxiteles, which everybody
-knows through reproductions and photographs,
-but which in the original is so incomparably beautiful
-that no reproduction can hope to give an adequate
-idea of it, either in the expression of body and features,
-its poise and grace, or in the exquisite sheen
-of marble. They have wisely set it off by itself in a
-room which cannot be seen from the great main hall
-of the museum, and the observer is left to contemplate
-it undistracted. It seems generally to be agreed
-that it is the masterpiece of extant Greek sculpture.
-It is nearly perfect in its preservation, the upraised
-arm and small portions of the legs being about all
-that is missing. The latter have been supplied, not
-unsuccessfully, to join the admirable feet to the rest.
-<span class='pageno' title='269' id='Page_269'></span>No effort has been made, and happily so, to supply
-the missing arm. The infant Dionysus perched on
-the left arm is no great addition to the statue, and
-one might well wish it were not there; but even this
-slight drawback cannot interfere with the admiration
-one feels for so perfect a work. Hermes alone fully
-justifies the journey to Olympia, and once seen he
-will never be forgotten. The satin smoothness of
-the marble admirably simulates human (or god-like)
-flesh, doubtless because of the processes which the
-Greeks knew of rubbing it down with a preparation
-of wax. No trace of other external treatment survives,
-save a faint indication of gilding on the sandals. If
-the hair and eyes were ever painted, the paint has
-entirely disappeared in the centuries that the statue
-lay buried in the sands that the restless Alpheios and
-Cladeus washed into the sacred inclosure. For the
-rivers frequently left their narrow beds in former times
-and invaded the precincts of the gods, despite the
-efforts of man to wall them out. They have done
-irreparable damage to the buildings there, but since
-they at the same time preserved Hermes almost intact
-for modern eyes to enjoy, perhaps their other
-vandalisms may be pardoned.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The museum also includes among its treasures a
-number of the metopes from the great temple of Zeus,
-representing the labors of Hercules. But probably next
-<span class='pageno' title='270' id='Page_270'></span>after the incomparable Hermes must be reckoned the
-Niké of Pæonius, standing on a high pedestal at one
-end of the great main hall, and seemingly sweeping
-triumphantly through space with her draperies flowing
-free—a wonderful lightness being suggested despite
-the weight of the material. This Niké has always
-seemed to me a fair rival of her more famous sister
-from Samothrace, suggesting the idea of victory even
-more forcibly than the statue on the staircase of the
-Louvre, which has an Amazonian quality suggestive
-of actual conflict rather than a past successful issue.
-The unfortunate circumstance about the Niké at Olympia
-is that her head is gone, and they have sought to
-suspend the recovered portion of it over the body by
-an iron rod. A wrist is in like manner appended to
-one of the arms, and the two give a jarring note, by
-recalling Ichabod Crane and Cap'n Cuttle in most
-incongruous surroundings. Nevertheless the Niké is
-wonderful, and would be more so if it were not for
-these lamentable attempts to restore what is not possible
-to be restored.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of all the many little collections in Greece, that
-in Olympia is doubtless the best, and it is fittingly
-housed in a building in the classic style, given by a
-patriotic Greek, M. Syngros. Aside from the artistic
-remnants, there are a number of relics bearing on the
-athletic aspect of Olympia—its chief side, of course.
-<span class='pageno' title='271' id='Page_271'></span>And among these are some ancient discs of metal and
-stone, and a huge rock which bears an inscription relating
-that a certain strong man of ancient times was
-able to lift it over his head and to toss it a stated distance.
-It seems incredible—but there were giants in
-the land in those days.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The modern Olympic games, such as are held in
-Athens every now and then, are but feeble attempts to
-give a classic tone to a very ordinary athletic meet of
-international character. There is none of the significance
-attached to the modern events that attended the
-old, and the management leaves much to be desired.
-Former visitors are no longer maintained at the Prytaneum;
-but, on the contrary, are even denied passes
-to witness the struggles of their successors. The
-games fill Athens with a profitable throng and serve to
-advertise the country, but aside from this they have
-no excuse for being on Greek soil, and mar the land
-so far as concerns the enjoyment of true Philhellenes.
-Fortunately there is no possible chance of holding
-any such substitute games at Olympia herself. Her
-glory has departed forever, save as it survives in
-memory.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='272' id='Page_272'></span>
- <h2 id='chap14' class='c005'>CHAPTER XIV. THE ISLES OF <br /> GREECE: DELOS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_352.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>It was a gray morning—for Greece. The sky was
-overcast, the wind blew chill from the north, and
-anon the rain would set in and give us a few moments
-of downpour, only to cease again and permit a brief
-glimpse ahead across the Ægean, into which classic
-sea our little steamer was thrusting her blunt nose,
-rising and falling on the heavy swell. We had borne
-around Sunium in the early dawn, and our course was
-now in an easterly direction toward the once famous
-but now entirely deserted island of Delos, the centre
-of the Cyclades. Ahead, whenever the murk lifted, we
-could see several of the nearer and larger islands of
-the group,—that imposing row of submerged mountain
-peaks that reveal the continuation of the Attic
-peninsula under water as it streams away to the southeast
-from the promontory of Sunium. The seeming
-chaos of the Grecian archipelago is easily reducible
-to something like order by keeping this fact in mind.
-It is really composed of two parallel submerged mountain
-<span class='pageno' title='273' id='Page_273'></span>ranges, the prolongations of Attica and of Eub&oelig;a
-respectively, the summits of which pierce the surface
-of the water again and again, forming the islands
-which every schoolboy recalls as having names that
-end in “os.” Just before us, in a row looming through
-the drifting rain, we saw Kythnos, Seriphos, and Siphnos,
-while beyond them, and belonging to the other
-ridge, the chart revealed Andros, Tenos, Naxos, Mykonos,
-and Paros, as yet impossible of actual sight.
-This galaxy of islands must have proved highly useful
-to the ancient mariners, no doubt, since by reason
-of their numbers and proximity to each other and to
-the mainland, as well as by reason of their distinctive
-shapes and contours, it was possible always to keep
-some sort of landmark in sight, as was highly desirable
-in days when sailors knew nothing of compasses
-and steered only by the stars. Lovers of Browning will
-recall the embarrassment that overtook the Rhodian
-bark that set sail with Balaustion for Athens, only to
-lose all reckoning and bring up in Syracuse. No ancient
-ship was at all sure of accurate navigation without
-frequent landfalls, and even the hardy mariners of
-Athens were accustomed, when en route to Sicily, to
-hug the rugged shores of the Peloponnesus all the way
-around to the opening of the Corinthian Gulf, and
-thence to proceed to Corfu before venturing to strike
-off westward across the Adriatic to the “heel” of
-<span class='pageno' title='274' id='Page_274'></span>Italy, where one could skirt the shore again until Sicily
-hove in sight near the dreaded haunts of Scylla. Of
-course other considerations, such as food and water,
-added to the desirability of keeping the land in sight
-most of the time on so long a voyage; but not the least
-important of the reasons was the necessity of keeping
-on the right road.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We had set sail on a chartered ship, in a party
-numbering about forty, most of whom were bent on
-the serious consideration of things archæological,
-while the inconsiderable remainder were unblushingly
-in search of pleasure only slightly tinged by
-scientific enthusiasm. In no other way, indeed, could
-such a journey be made in anything like comfort.
-The Greek steamers, while numerous, are slow and
-small, and not to be recommended for cleanliness or
-convenience; while their stated routes include much
-that is of no especial interest to visitors, who are
-chiefly eager to view scenes made glorious by past
-celebrity, and are less concerned with the modern seaports
-devoted to a prosaic traffic in wine and fruits.
-To one fortunate enough to be able to number himself
-among those who go down to the sea in yachts,
-the Ægean furnishes a fruitful source of pleasure. To
-us, the only recourse was to the native lines of freight
-and passenger craft, or to join ourselves to a party
-of investigators who were taking an annual cruise
-<span class='pageno' title='275' id='Page_275'></span>among the famous ancient sites. We chose the latter,
-not merely because of the better opportunity to
-visit the islands we had long most wished to see,
-but because of the admirable opportunity to derive
-instruction as well as pleasure from the voyage. So
-behold us in our own ship, with our own supplies,
-our own sailing master and crew, sailing eastward
-over a gray sea, through the spring showers, toward
-the barren isle where Ph&oelig;bus sprung.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Delos is easy enough to find now, small as it is.
-It long ago ceased to be the floating island that legend
-describes. If we can permit ourselves a little
-indulgence in paganism, we may believe that this
-rocky islet was a chip, broken from the bed of the
-ocean by Poseidon, which was floating about at random
-until Zeus anchored it to afford a bed for Leto,
-that she might be comfortably couched at the birth
-of Apollo, despite the promise of Earth that the guilty
-Leto should have no place to lay her head. Thus the
-vow which the jealousy of Hera had procured was
-brought to naught, and in Delos was born the most
-celebrated of the sons of Zeus, together with his twin
-sister, Artemis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Delos is in fact a double island, divided by a narrow
-strait into Greater and Lesser Delos. And it was
-with the lesser portion that we had to do, as also did
-ancient history. For despite its insignificant size and
-<span class='pageno' title='276' id='Page_276'></span>remoteness, Delos the Less was once a chief seat of
-empire and a great and flourishing city, as well as the
-repository of vast wealth. Distant as it seems from
-Athens, the island is really quite central with reference
-to the rest of the archipelago, and from its low summit
-may be seen most of the Cyclades on a clear
-day. The narrow strait before referred to furnishes
-about all the harbor that is to be found at Delos
-to-day. Into this sheltered bit of water we steamed
-and dropped anchor, happy in the favoring wind that
-allowed us a landing where it is occasionally difficult
-to find water sufficiently smooth for the small boats;
-for here, as in all Greek waters, small boats furnish
-the only means of getting ashore. There was a shallow
-basin just before what was once the ancient city,
-and doubtless it was considered good harborage for
-the triremes and galleys of small draught; but for even
-a small steamer like ours it was quite insufficient in
-depth, and we came to rest perhaps a quarter of a
-mile from the landing, while the clouds broke and
-the afternoon sun came out warm and bright as
-we clambered down to the dories and pulled for the
-shore.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There proved to be little or no habitation save for
-the French excavators and their men, who were completing
-a notable work in uncovering not only the ancient
-precincts of Apollo and of the headquarters of the
-<span class='pageno' title='277' id='Page_277'></span>Delian league, but the residence portion of the ancient
-city as well, which we later discovered to lie off to the
-east on the high ground. We landed on a sort of
-rocky mole erected along the edge of what was once
-the sacred harbor and picked our way along a narrow-gauge
-track used by the excavators, to the maze of
-ruins that lay beyond. It proved as bewildering a
-mass of fallen marbles as that at Olympia. The main
-part of the ruin is apparently a relic of the religious
-side of the place, dominated, of course, by the cult of
-Apollo. Centuries of reverence had contributed to the
-enrichment of the environs of the shrine. All about
-the visitor finds traces of porticoes and propylæa, the
-largest of these being erected by Philip V. of Macedon,
-as is testified to by an extant inscription. Little
-remains standing of any of the buildings, but the
-bits of capital and entablature that lie strewn about
-serve to give a faint idea of the nature of the adornment
-that attended the temples in their prime. It is
-not difficult to trace the course of the sacred way leading
-from the entrance around the sacred precinct to
-the eastern façade of the main temples, lined throughout
-most of its course by the bases of statues, altars,
-and remnants of the foundations of small rectangular
-buildings which are supposed to have been treasuries,
-as at Delphi and Olympia. Not far away from the
-main temple of the god is still to be seen the base of
-<span class='pageno' title='278' id='Page_278'></span>his colossal statue, an inscription reciting that the
-Naxians made it, and that they carved statue and base
-from the same stone. Whether this means that the
-figure and base were actually a single block, or only
-that the figure and base were made of the same specific
-material, has caused some little speculation. As for
-the statue itself, there are at least two large fragments
-on the ground not far away, easily identified by the
-modeling as parts of the huge back and breast of the
-colossus. One of his feet is preserved in the British
-Museum, and a hand is at the neighboring island of
-Mykonos. The rest is either buried in the earth near
-by, or has been carried off by vandals. That the earth
-has many treasures still to yield up is evident by the
-occasional accidental discoveries recently made on the
-site by the diggers. When we were there the construction
-of a trench for the diminutive car-track had
-unearthed a beautifully sculptured lion deep in the
-soil; and since that time I have heard that several
-other similar finds have been made. So it may be
-that the lime burners have not made away with the
-great Apollo entirely.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There are three temples, presumably all devoted
-to the cult of Apollo, and one of them no doubt to
-the memory of his unfortunate mother, Leto, who
-bore him, according to tradition, on the shores of the
-sacred lake near by. Not far from the Apollo group
-<span class='pageno' title='279' id='Page_279'></span>are two other ruined shrines, supposed to have been
-sacred to Artemis. More interesting than either, however,
-to the layman is the famous “hall of the bulls,”
-which is the largest and best preserved of all the
-buildings, and which takes its name from the carved
-bullocks on its capitals. It is not saying much, however,
-to say that it is better preserved than the others.
-It is only so in the sense that its extent and general
-plan are easier to trace. Its altar, known as the
-“horned altar of Apollo,” from the rams’ heads with
-which it was adorned, was accounted by the ancients
-one of the seven wonders of the world. We were well
-content to leave the sacred precinct, and to wander
-along toward the north, past the Roman agora, in the
-general direction of the sacred lake. It proved to
-be a sorry pool, stagnant and unattractive compared
-with what it must have been when it was in its prime,
-with its banks adorned with curbing. Not far from
-its shores we were shown the remains of several ancient
-houses, also of the Roman period, in which the
-rooms were still divided by walls of a considerable
-height. These walls gave occasional evidence of
-having been adorned with stucco and frescoes, and
-the rooms revealed fragments of tessellated pavement,
-while under each house was a capacious cistern
-for the preservation of rain water. Of course these
-dwellings, while recalling Pompeii, were far less perfect
-<span class='pageno' title='280' id='Page_280'></span>in the way of artistic revelations, being so much
-older.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>These houses, interesting as they were, did not compare
-with those which we were later shown on the
-hill above the precinct. These we passed on our way
-up to the theatre, and to those of us who were unskilled
-in archæological science they proved to be the
-most absorbing of all the ruins on the little island.
-There are a good many of them, lining several old
-streets, as at Pompeii. Their walls are of sufficient
-altitude to give even an idea of the upper stories,
-and in one case, at least, we were able to mount, by
-a sadly ruined stone staircase, to what was once
-the upper landing. The general arrangement of the
-rooms was quite similar to that made familiar by the
-excavated houses at Pompeii, the great central court,
-or atrium, being adorned with a most remarkable
-mosaic representing Dionysos riding on a dragon
-of ferocious mien. It is kept covered, but a guard
-obligingly raised the heavy wooden door that shields
-it from the weather, and propped it up with a stick
-so that it resembled nothing so much as a huge piano
-lid. The coloring of the mosaic was lively in spite of
-its sombreness, and the eyes of the figures were admirably
-executed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>All around the atrium were traces of a colonnade,
-pieces of the columns remaining intact. The walls
-<span class='pageno' title='281' id='Page_281'></span>were apparently decorated with bits of stone set deep
-in a coating of mortar, and once adorned with a colored
-wash of red, yellow, and blue. Mural paintings
-naturally were wanting, for these houses were not
-only older than those of the Neapolitan suburb, but
-they perished by a slow weathering process instead
-of by a sudden overwhelming such as overtook Pompeii.
-What traces of painting there are left on the
-Delian walls are indistinct and rather unsatisfactory,
-and recall the childish scrawls of our own day. But
-the houses themselves, with their occasional pavements
-and the one admirable mosaic, leave little to
-be desired. Particularly interesting was the revelation
-of the drainage system. The houses were not
-only carefully provided with deep cisterns for preserving
-rain water; they had also well-designed channels
-for carrying waste water away. Every house in
-these streets had its drain covered with flat stones
-running out to the main sewer of the street, while
-those in turn converged in a trunk sewer at the foot
-of the slope. It is evident enough that Delos was a
-dry sort of place, both by nature and by artifice, and
-that in the period of the city’s greatest celebrity it
-would be impossible for the historian to refer to the
-muddy condition existing at that period of the month
-just before the streets underwent their regular cleaning.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='282' id='Page_282'></span>We had passed well up toward the theatre on the
-slopes of the height called Kythnos before we cleared
-the ancient dwellings. The theatre itself proved to
-be roomy, but largely grass-grown and exceedingly
-steep to clamber over. The portion devoted to seats
-was chiefly notable for occupying considerably more
-than the traditional semicircle, and for having its
-ends built up with huge walls of masonry. Only the
-lower seats are preserved. The colonnaded proskenion,
-which may have supported a stage, is, however,
-highly unusual and interesting.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Sundry venturesome spirits climbed to the summit
-of Kythnos, but it was no day for the view for which
-that eminence is celebrated. On a clearer day a
-great many of the Cyclades could be seen, no doubt,
-because of the central location of the island and the
-marvelous clarity of the Greek atmosphere, when it
-is clear at all. We were unfortunate enough to meet
-with a showery April day, which promised little in the
-way of distant prospects. Halfway down the side of
-Kythnos, however, was easily to be seen the grotto
-of Apollo. In fact, it is the most constantly visible
-feature of the island. It is a sort of artificial cave in
-the side of the hill toward the ruins, and here was
-the earliest of the temples to the god. Ancient hands
-added to what natural grotto there was by erecting a
-primitive portal for it. Two huge slabs of stone seem
-<span class='pageno' title='283' id='Page_283'></span>to have been allowed to drop toward one another
-until they met, forming a mutual support, so that the
-effect is that of a gable. Other slabs have been arranged
-to form a pitch roof over the spot, and a marble
-lintel and gate posts have also been added,—presumably
-much later than the rest. It is even probable
-that this venerable shrine was also the seat of an
-oracle, for certain of the internal arrangements of the
-grotto bear a resemblance to those known to have
-existed at Delphi; but if there was one in Delos, it
-never attained to the reputation that attended the
-later chief home of the far-darting god.</p>
-
-<div id='i363a' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/i_363a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>DELOS, SHOWING GROTTO</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div id='i363b' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/i_363b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>GROTTO OF APOLLO. DELOS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The births of Apollo and Artemis appear to have
-been deemed quite enough for the celebrity of Delos;
-for in after years, when the Athenians felt called upon
-to “purify” the city, they enacted that no mortal in
-the future should be permitted to be born or to die
-on the island. In consequence, temporary habitations
-were erected across the narrow strait on the shores
-of Greater Delos for the use of those <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>in extremis</em></span> or
-those about to be confined. Aside from this fact, the
-larger island has little or no interest to the visitor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is, of course, a museum at Delos. Some day
-it will be a very interesting one indeed. At the time
-of our visit it was only just finished, and had not been
-provided with any floor but such as nature gave. In
-due season it will probably rank with any for its
-<span class='pageno' title='284' id='Page_284'></span>archæological value, although it will be infinitely less
-interesting than others to inexpert visitors, who generally
-prefer statues of fair preservation to small fragments
-and bits of inscription. Of the notable sculptures
-that must have abounded in Delos once, comparatively
-little remains; certainly nothing to compare
-with the charioteer and the Lysippus at Delphi, or
-with the Hermes and pedimental figures at Olympia.
-The great charm of Delos to the unskilled mind
-is to be found in its history and in its beautiful surroundings.
-As a birthplace of one of the major gods
-of high Olympus, the seat of the Delian league against
-the Persians, and the original treasury of the Athenian
-empire, Delos has history enough to satisfy an
-island many times her size. Traces still remain of the
-dancing place where the Delian maidens performed
-their wonderful evolutions during the annual pilgrimage,
-which was a feature during the Athenian supremacy;
-and the temples and treasuries, ruined as
-they are, forcibly recall the importance which once
-attached to the spot. The memory still survives of
-the so-called “Delian problem” of the doubling of
-the cube, a task that proved a poser for the ancient
-mathematicians when the oracle propounded, as the
-price of staying a plague, that the Delians should
-double the pedestal of Parian marble that stood in
-the great temple. But it is almost entirely a place of
-<span class='pageno' title='285' id='Page_285'></span>memories, deserted by all but the excavators and an
-occasional shepherd. To-day it is little more than the
-bare rock that it was when Poseidon split it from the
-bed of the sea. Apollo gave it an immortality, however,
-which does not wane although Apollo himself is
-dead. Athens and Corinth gave it a worldly celebrity,
-which proved but temporary so far as it depended on
-activity in the world of affairs. Delos, washed by the
-Ægean, has little to look forward to but to drowse
-the long tides idle, well content with her crowded
-hour of glorious life, and satisfied that her neighbors
-should have the age without a name.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='286' id='Page_286'></span>
- <h2 id='chap15' class='c005'>CHAPTER XV. SAMOS AND THE <br /> TEMPLE AT BRANCHIDÆ</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_368.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>The stiff north wind, which was known to be
-blowing outside, counseled delaying departure
-from Delos until after the evening meal, for our course
-to Samos lay through the trough of the sea. In the
-shelter of the narrow channel between Greater and
-Lesser Delos the water was calm enough to enable
-eating in comfort, and it was the commendable rule
-of the cruise to seek shelter for meals, owing to the
-lack of “racks” to prevent the contents of the tables
-from shifting when the vessel rolled. Hence it was
-well along in the evening before the anchor was
-weighed; and as the engines gave their first premonitory
-wheezes, word was passed from the bridge that
-all who did not love rough weather would better retire
-at once, as we were certain to “catch it” as soon
-as we rounded the capes of the neighboring Mykonos
-and squared away for Samos across a long stretch of
-open water. The warning served to bring home to us
-one of the marked peculiarities about cruising in the
-<span class='pageno' title='287' id='Page_287'></span>Ægean, namely, the succession of calm waters and
-tempestuous seas, which interlard themselves like the
-streaks of fat and lean in the bacon from the Irishman’s
-pig, which was fed to repletion one day and
-starved the next. This, of course, is due to the numerous
-islands, never many miles apart, which are forever
-affording shelter from the breezes and waves, only to
-open up again and subject the craft to a rolling and
-boisterous sea as it crosses the stretches of open channel
-between them. When the experiences due to these
-sudden transitions were not trying, they were likely
-to be amusing, we discovered, as was the case on one
-morning when the tables had been laid for breakfast
-rather imprudently just before rounding a windy
-promontory. The instant the ship felt the cross seas
-she began to roll heavily, and the entire array of breakfast
-dishes promptly left the unprotected table, only
-to crash heavily against the stateroom doors that lined
-the saloon, eliciting shrieks from those within; while
-the following roll of the vessel sent the débris careering
-across the floor to bring up with equal resonance
-against the doors on the other side, the stewards meantime
-being harassed beyond measure to recover their
-scudding cups and saucers.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the morning of our arrival off Samos we found
-ourselves moving along on an even keel, under the
-lee of that extensive island and close also to the
-<span class='pageno' title='288' id='Page_288'></span>shores of Asia Minor, the famous promontory of
-Mykale looming large and blue ahead. We coasted
-along the Samian shore, close enough to distinguish
-even from a distance the ruins of the once famous
-Heræum, which was among the objects of our visit.
-It was marked from afar by a single gleaming column,
-rising apparently from the beach. For the present
-we passed it by, the ship heading for the little
-white town farther ahead and just opposite the bay
-made by the great bulk of Mykale. It was historic
-ground, for it was at Mykale that the pursuing
-Greeks, under Leotychides and Xantippus, made the
-final quietus of the Persian army and navy in the
-year 479 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, just after Salamis, by the final defeat
-of Tigranes. Mykale, however, we viewed only from
-afar. The ship rounded the mole protecting the harbor
-of what was once the chief city of Samos, and
-came to anchor for the first time in Turkish waters.
-While the necessary official visits and examination
-of passports were being made, there was abundant
-opportunity to inspect the port from the deck. It lay
-at the base of a rugged mountain, and the buildings
-of the city lined the diminutive harbor on two sides,
-curving along a low quay. In general appearance
-the town recalled Canea, in Crete, by the whiteness
-of its houses and the pale greenness of its shutters
-and the occasional slender tower of a mosque. Technically
-<span class='pageno' title='289' id='Page_289'></span>Samos is a Turkish island. Practically it is so
-only in the sense that it pays an annual tribute to
-the Sultan and that its Greek governor is nominated
-by that monarch. It was sufficiently Turkish, in any
-event, to require passports and the official call of a
-tiny skiff flying the crescent flag and bearing a resplendent
-local officer crowned with a red fez. The
-formalities were all arranged by proxy ashore, and in
-due time the ship’s boat returned, bearing the freedom
-of the city and a limited supply of Samian cigarettes,
-which retailed at the modest sum of a franc and
-a half the hundred.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Herodotus devotes a considerable space to the history
-of the Samians in the time of the Persian supremacy
-and especially to the deeds of the tyrant Polycrates,
-who seized the power of the island and proved
-a prosperous ruler. In fact the rampant successes of
-Polycrates alarmed his friend and ally, King Amasis
-of Egypt, who had the wholesome dread of the ancients
-for the “jealousy” of the gods; and in consequence
-Amasis sent a messenger up to Samos to tell
-Polycrates that he was too successful for his own good.
-Amasis was afraid, according to the messenger, that
-some evil would overtake the Samian ruler, and he
-advised Polycrates to cast away whatever thing he
-valued the most as a propitiation of the gods. The
-advice so impressed Polycrates that he recounted his
-<span class='pageno' title='290' id='Page_290'></span>possessions, selected a certain emerald seal-ring that
-he cherished exceedingly, took it aboard a fifty-oared
-galley and, when sufficiently far out at sea, hurled the
-treasured ring into the water. Whereat he returned
-content that he had appeased the presumably jealous
-gods. In less than a week a fisherman, who had taken
-an unusually beautiful fish in those waters, presented
-it as a great honor to Polycrates, and in dressing it
-for the table the servants found in its belly the ring
-that Polycrates had tried so hard to cast away! The
-event was held to be superhuman, and an account of
-it was promptly sent to Amasis in Egypt. He, however,
-judging from it that Polycrates was inevitably
-doomed by heaven, ended his alliance with Samos on
-the naïve plea that he should be sorry to have anything
-happen to a friend, and therefore proposed to make of
-Polycrates an enemy, that he need not grieve when
-misfortune overtook him! Misfortune did indeed overtake
-Polycrates, and Herodotus describes at some
-length how it occurred, ending his discourse with the
-remark that he feels justified in dealing at such length
-with the affairs of the Samians because they have accomplished
-"three works, the greatest that have been
-achieved by all the Greeks. The first is of a mountain,
-one hundred and fifty orgyiæ in height, in which is dug
-a tunnel beginning at the base and having an opening
-at either side of the mountain. The length of the
-<span class='pageno' title='291' id='Page_291'></span>tunnel is seven stadia, and the height and breadth are
-eight feet respectively. Through the whole length of
-the tunnel runs another excavation three feet wide and
-twenty cubits deep, through which cutting the water,
-conveyed by pipes, reaches the city, being drawn from
-a copious fount on the farther side of the mountain.
-The architect of this excavation was a Megarian, Eupalinus
-the son of Naustrophus. This, then, is one
-of the three great works. The second is a mound
-in the sea around the harbor, in depth about a hundred
-orgyiæ and in length about two stadia. The
-third work of theirs is a great temple, the largest we
-ever have seen, of which the architect was Rh&oelig;cus,
-son of Phileos, a native Samian. On account of these
-things I have dwelt longer on the affairs of the
-Samians."<a id='r3' /><a href='#f3' class='c012'><sup>[3]</sup></a></p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was, then, inside this mole, two stadia in length,
-that we were anchored. Doubtless the modern mole is
-still standing on the ancient foundation, but it would
-not be considered anything remarkable in the way of
-engineering to-day, whatever it may have been deemed
-in the childhood of the race. Something in the air of
-Samos must have bred a race of natural engineers,
-no doubt, for not only were these artificial wonders
-constructed there, but Pythagoras, the mathematical
-philosopher, was born in the island.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='292' id='Page_292'></span>From the city up to the remnants of the ancient
-aqueduct in the mountain is not a difficult climb, and
-the tunnel itself affords a great many points of interest.
-In an age when tunneling was not a common or well-understood
-art, it must indeed have seemed a great
-wonder that the Samians were able to pierce the bowels
-of this considerable rocky height to get a water supply
-that could not be cut off. The source of the flowage
-was a spring located in the valley on the side of the
-mountain away from the town, and it would have been
-perfectly possible to convey the water to the city without
-any tunnel at all, merely by following the valley
-around. For some reason this was deemed inexpedient—doubtless
-because of the evident chance an enemy
-would have for cutting off the supply. The obvious
-question is, what was gained by making the tunnel,
-since the spring itself was in the open and could have
-been stopped as readily as an open aqueduct? And the
-only answer that has been suggested is that the spring
-alone is so concealed and so difficult to find that, even
-with the clue given by Herodotus, it was next to impossible
-to locate it. And in order to conceal the source
-still further, the burial of the conduit in the heart of the
-mountain certainly contributed not a little. Nevertheless
-it is a fact that the farther end of the tunnel was
-discovered some years ago by tracing a line from the
-site of this spring, so that now the aqueduct has been
-<span class='pageno' title='293' id='Page_293'></span>relocated and is found to be substantially as described
-by Herodotus in the passage quoted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Most visitors, possessed of comparatively limited
-time like ourselves, are content with inspecting only
-the town end of the tunnel, which lies up in the side
-of the mountain. It is amply large enough to enter,
-but tapers are needed to give light to the feet as one
-walks carefully, and often sidewise, along the ledge
-that borders the deeper cutting below, in which once
-ran the actual water pipes. The depth of the latter,
-which Herodotus calls “twenty cubits,” is considerably
-greater at this end of the tunnel than at the
-other,—a fact which is apparently accounted for by
-the necessity of correcting errors of level, after the
-tunnel was finished, to give sufficient pitch to carry
-the water down. In those primitive days it is not
-surprising that such an error was made. There is
-evidence that the tunnel was dug by two parties
-working from opposite ends, as is the custom to-day.
-That they met in the centre of the mountain with
-such general accuracy speaks well for the engineering
-skill of the time, and that they allowed too little
-for the drop of the stream is not at all strange. The
-result of this is that, in the end commonly visited
-by travelers, there is need of caution lest the unwary
-slip from the narrow ledge at the side into the supplementary
-cut thirty feet below—a fall not to be
-<span class='pageno' title='294' id='Page_294'></span>despised, either because of its chance of injury or
-because of the difficulty of getting the victim out
-again. So much, as Herodotus would say, for the
-water-conduit of the Samians.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the tunnel down to the ancient Heræum,
-whither our ship had sailed to await us, proved to
-be a walk of something over two miles along a curving
-beach, across which occasional streams made
-their shallow way from inland to the sea. It was a
-pleasant walk, despite occasional stony stretches; for
-the rugged mountain chain inland presented constantly
-changing views on the one hand, while on
-the other, across the deep blue of the Ægean, rose
-the commanding heights of Asia Minor, stretching
-away from the neighboring Mykale to the distant,
-and still snow-crowned, peaks of the Latmian range.
-Under the morning sun the prospect was indescribably
-lovely, particularly across the sea to the bold
-coasts of Asia, the remote mountains being revealed
-in that delicate chiaroscuro which so often attends
-white peaks against the blue. Ahead was always the
-solitary column which is all that remains standing of
-the once vast temple of Hera, “the largest we ever
-have seen,” according to the ingenuous and truthful
-Herodotus.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There is a reason for holding the spot in an especial
-manner sacred to Hera, for it is said by legend
-<span class='pageno' title='295' id='Page_295'></span>that she was born on the banks of one of the little
-streams whose waters we splashed through in crossing
-the beach to her shrine. The temple itself we
-found to lie far back from the water’s edge, its foundations
-so buried in the deposited earth that considerable
-excavation has been necessary to reveal them.
-The one remaining column is not complete, but is
-still fairly lofty. It bears no capital, and its drums
-are slightly jostled out of place, so that it has a rather
-unfinished look, to which its lack of fluting contributes;
-for, as even the amateur knows, the fluting of
-Greek columns was never put on until the whole pillar
-was set up, and every joint of it ground so fine
-as to be invisible. We walked up to the ruin through
-the inevitable cutting, in which lay the inevitable narrow-gauge
-track for the excavator’s cars, but there
-was no activity to be seen. The excavation had progressed
-so far as to leave little more to be done, or
-there was no more money, or something had intervened
-to put an end to the operations for the time.
-Not far away, however, along the beach, lay a few
-houses, which constituted the habitation of the diggers
-and of a few fishermen, whose seine boats were
-being warped up as we passed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The exploration of the great temple of Hera has revealed
-the not unusual fact that there had been two
-temples on the same spot at successive periods. They
-<span class='pageno' title='296' id='Page_296'></span>were not identical in location, but the later overlapped
-the earlier, traces of the latter being confined to its
-lowest foundation stones. Of the ruins of the later
-temple there was but slightly more visible, save for
-the one standing column and a multitude of drums,
-capitals, and bases lying about. The latter were of a
-type we had not previously seen. They were huge lozenges
-of marble ornamented with horizontal grooves
-and resembling nothing so much as great cable drums
-partially wound—the effect of a multitude of narrow
-grooves in a slightly concave trough around the column.
-They were of a noticeable whiteness, for the
-marble of which this temple was composed was not
-so rich in mineral substances as the Pentelic, and
-gave none of that golden brown effect so familiar in
-the Athenian temples.</p>
-
-<div id='i379a' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_379a.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>COLUMN BASES. SAMOS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div id='i379b' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_379b.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>CARVED COLUMN-BASE. BRANCHIDÆ</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was in this great Heræum, which in size rivaled
-the great temples at Ephesus and at Branchidæ, that
-the Samians deposited the brazen bowl filched from
-the Spartans, of which the ancients made so much.
-It appears that because of Cr&oelig;sus having sought an
-alliance with Lacedæmonia, the inhabitants of that
-land desired to return the compliment by sending him
-a present. They caused a huge brass bowl to be made,
-adorned with many figures and capable of holding
-three hundred amphoræ. This they dispatched to
-Sardis. But as the ship bearing it was passing Samos
-<span class='pageno' title='297' id='Page_297'></span>on her way, the Samians came out in force, seized the
-ship, and carried the great bowl off to the temple,
-where it was consecrated to the uses of the goddess.
-That the Samians stole it thus was of course indignantly
-denied,—the islanders retorting that the bowl
-was sold them by the Spartans when they discovered
-that Cr&oelig;sus had fallen before Cyrus and was no
-longer an ally to be desired. No trace of any such
-relic of course is to be seen there now. In fact there
-is very little to recall the former greatness of the place
-but the silent and lonely column and a very diminutive
-museum standing near the beach, which contains disappointingly
-little. It is, as a matter of fact, no more
-than a dark shed, similar in appearance to the rest
-of the houses of the hamlet.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The steamer was waiting near by in the sheltered
-waters of the sound, and as we were desirous of visiting
-the temple at Branchidæ that same afternoon,
-we left Samos and continued our voyage. Under
-that wonderfully clear sky the beauty of both shores
-was indescribable. The Asian coast, toward which we
-now bore our way, was, however, the grander of the
-two, with its foreground of plains and meadows and
-its magnificent background of imposing mountains
-stretching far into the interior and losing themselves
-in the unimagined distances beyond. The sun-kissed
-ripples of the sea were of that incredible blue that one
-<span class='pageno' title='298' id='Page_298'></span>never ceases to marvel at in the Mediterranean, and
-it was the sudden change from this color to a well-defined
-area of muddy yellow in the waters through
-which we glided that called attention to the mouth
-of the Mæander on the shore. That proverbially
-crooked and winding stream discharges so large a
-bulk of soil in projecting itself into the sea that the
-surface is discolored for a considerable distance off
-shore; and through this our steamer took her way,
-always nearing the low-lying beach, until we descried
-a projecting headland, and rounded it into waters as
-calm as those of a pond. Here we dropped anchor
-and once again proceeded to the land, setting our
-feet for the first time on the shores of Asia.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Samos was, of course, still to be seen to the northwest,
-like a dark blue cloud rising from a tossing sea.
-Before us, glowing in the afternoon sun, stretched a
-long expanse of open seashore meadow, undulating
-here and there, almost devoid of trees, but thickly
-covered with tracts of shrubs and bushes, through
-which we pushed our way until we came upon an
-isolated farmhouse and a path leading off over the
-moor. It was a mere cart-track through the green of
-the fields, leading toward a distant hillock, on which
-we could from afar make out the slowly waving arms
-of windmills and indications of a small town. None
-of the many rambles we took in the Greek islands
-<span class='pageno' title='299' id='Page_299'></span>surpassed this two-mile walk for pure pleasure. The
-air was balmy yet cool. The fields were spangled
-with flowers,—wild orchids, iris, gladioli, and many
-others. There were no gray hills, save so far in the
-distance that they had become purple and had lost
-their bareness. All around was a deserted yet pleasant
-and pastoral country—deserving, none the less,
-the general name of moor.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>What few people we met on the way were farmers
-and shepherds, leading pastoral lives in the little brush
-wigwams so common in Greek uplands in the summer
-months. They gave us the usual cheerful good-day,
-and looked after our invading host with wondering
-eyes as we streamed off over the rolling country
-in the general direction of Branchidæ.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That ancient site appeared at last on a hillock overlooking
-the ocean. A small and mean hamlet had
-largely swallowed up the immediate environs of the
-famous temple that once stood there, contrasting
-strangely with the remaining columns that soon came
-into view over the roofs, as we drew near, attended
-by an increasing army of the youth. The name of
-the little modern village on the spot we never knew.
-Anciently this was the site of the temple of Apollo
-Didymeus, erected by the Branchidæ,—a clan of the
-neighborhood of ancient Miletus who claimed descent
-from Branchus. The temple of Apollo which had formerly
-<span class='pageno' title='300' id='Page_300'></span>stood upon the site was destroyed in some way
-in the sixth century before Christ, and the Branchidæ
-set out to erect a shrine that they boasted should rival
-the temple of Diana at Ephesus in size and in ornamentation.
-Nor was this an inappropriate desire, since
-Apollo and Diana—or Artemis, as we ought to call
-her—were twins, whence indeed the name “Didymeus”
-was applied to the temple on the spot. Unfortunately
-the great temple which the Branchidæ
-designed was never completed, simply because of the
-vastness of the plan. Before the work was done,
-Apollo had ceased to be so general an object of veneration,
-and what had been planned to be his most
-notable shrine fell into gradual ruin and decay.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It has not been sufficient, however, to destroy the
-beauty of much that the Branchidæ accomplished
-during the centuries that the work was progressing,
-for it is stated that several hundred years were spent
-in adorning the site. The fact that one of the few
-columns still standing and still bearing its crowning
-capital is unfluted bears silent testimony to the fact
-that the temple never was completed. Of the finished
-columns it is impossible to overstate their grace and
-lightness or the elegance of the carving on their bases,
-which apparently were designed to be different one
-from another. The pillars that remain are of great
-height and remarkable slenderness. Nineteen drums
-<span class='pageno' title='301' id='Page_301'></span>were employed in building them. The bases, of which
-many are to be seen lying about, and some <span lang="la" xml:lang="la"><em>in situ</em></span>,
-display the most delicate tracery and carving imaginable,
-some being adorned with round bands of
-relief, and others divided into facets, making the base
-dodecagonal instead of round, each panel bearing a
-different and highly ornate design. Close by we found
-the remains of a huge stone face, or mask, apparently
-designed as a portion of the adornment of the cornice
-and presumably one of the metopes of the temple.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The mass of débris of the great structure has been
-heaped up for so long that a sort of conical hill rises
-in the midst of it; and on this has been built a tower
-from which one may look down on the ground plan
-so far as it remains. The major part of the ruin,
-however, is at its eastern end, the front, presumably,
-where the only standing columns are to be seen, rising
-gracefully from a terrace which has been carefully
-uncovered by the explorers. Enough remains
-to give an idea of the immense size projected for the
-building, and better still enough to give an idea
-of the elegance with which the ancients proposed
-to adorn it, that the Ephesians need not eclipse the
-Milesians in honoring the twin gods. Of the rows of
-statues that once lined the road from the sea to the
-shrine, one is to be seen in the British Museum—a
-curious sitting colossus of quaintly archaic workmanship,
-<span class='pageno' title='302' id='Page_302'></span>and somewhat suggestive, to my own mind, of
-an Egyptian influence in the squat modeling of the
-figure.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As one might expect of a shrine sacred to Apollo,
-there seems to have been an oracle of some repute
-here; for Cr&oelig;sus, who was credulous in the extreme
-where oracles were concerned, sent hither for advice
-on various occasions, and dedicated a treasure here
-that was similar to the great wealth he bestowed
-upon the shrine at Delphi. Furthermore one Neco,
-who had been engaged in digging a canal to connect
-the Nile with the Red Sea,—a prototype of the Suez,—dedicated
-the clothes he wore during that period
-to the god at the temple of the Branchidæ. Thus
-while the site never attained the fame among Grecians
-that was accorded the Delphian, it nevertheless
-seems to have inspired a great deal of reverence
-among the inhabitants of Asia Minor and even of
-Egypt, which may easily account for the elaborate
-care the Branchidæ proposed to bestow and did
-bestow upon it.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Our inspection of the temple and the surrounding
-town was the source of immense interest upon the part
-of the infantile population, of which the number is enormous.
-The entire pit around the excavations was lined
-three deep with boys and girls, the oldest not over
-fifteen, who surveyed our party with open-mouthed
-<span class='pageno' title='303' id='Page_303'></span>amazement. They escorted us to the city gates, and
-a small detachment accompanied us on the way back
-over the moor to the landing, hauling a protesting
-bear-cub, whose mother had been shot the week before
-somewhere in the mountains of Latmos by some
-modern Nimrod, and whose wails indicated the presence
-of a capable pair of lungs in his small and furry
-body. He was taken aboard and became the ship’s
-pet forthwith, seemingly content with his lot and decidedly
-partial to sweetmeats.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The walk back over that vast and silent meadow in
-the twilight was one never to be forgotten. There was
-something mystical in the deserted plain, in the clumps
-of bushes taking on strange shapes in the growing
-dusk, in the great orb of the moon rising over the serrated
-tops of the distant mountains of the interior—and
-last, but not least, in the roaring fire which the
-boatmen had kindled on the rocks to indicate the landing
-place as the dark drew on. We pushed off, three
-boatloads of tired but happy voyagers, leaving the fire
-leaping and crackling on the shore, illuminating with
-a red glare the rugged rocks, and casting gigantic and
-awful shadows on the sea.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='304' id='Page_304'></span>
- <h2 id='chap16' class='c005'>CHAPTER XVI. COS AND CNIDOS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_388.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>From the little harbor where we had found shelter
-for our landing to visit Branchidæ it proved but
-a few hours’ steaming to Cos, which was scheduled as
-our next stopping place. Like Samos, Cos lies close
-to the Asia Minor shore. The chief city, which bears
-the same name as the island, unchanged from ancient
-times, proved to be a formidable looking place by reason
-of its great walls and moles, recalling the Cretan
-cities much more forcibly than the Samos town had
-done; for the yellowish-white fortresses which flank
-the narrow inner harbor of Cos resemble both in color
-and architecture the outworks that were thrown up to
-protect the ports of Candia and Canea. Later in the
-day it was borne in upon us that these walls were by
-no means uncommon in the vicinity, and that they bore
-witness to the visits of the Crusaders; for the great
-walls and castle at Halicarnassus not far away were
-very similar to the forts of Cos, and with the best of
-reasons, since they were the work of the same hands,—of
-<span class='pageno' title='305' id='Page_305'></span>the so-called “Knights of Rhodes,” who once
-settled in these regions and built strongholds that for
-those times were impregnable enough. Our next day
-or two brought us often in contact with the relics of
-these stout old knights, who were variously known as
-of Rhodes, or of St. John, and, last of all, of Malta.
-As far as Cos was concerned, the knightly fortress was
-chiefly remarkable from the water, as we steamed past
-the frowning battlements of buff and dropped anchor
-in the open roadstead before the city; for, as is generally
-the case with these old towns, there is at Cos no
-actual harborage for a steamer of modern draught,
-whatever might have been the case anciently when
-ships were small.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The morning sun revealed the city itself spreading
-out behind the fortress, in a great splash of dazzling
-white amidst the green of the island verdure, its domes
-and minarets interspersed with the tops of waving
-trees. Behind the city, the land rose gradually to the
-base of a long range of green hills stretching off to the
-southward and into the interior of the island. It was
-easily the most fertile and agreeable land we had yet
-encountered in our Ægean pilgrimage, and so lovely
-that we almost forgot that it was Turkish and that we
-had been warned not to separate far from one another
-on going ashore for fear of complications and loss of
-the road. However it was Turkish, this time, pure and
-<span class='pageno' title='306' id='Page_306'></span>unadulterated, and the examination of our papers and
-passports was no idle formality, but was performed
-with owl-like solemnity by a local dignitary black-mustachioed
-and red-fezzed. While this was proceeding
-the members of our party stood huddled behind
-a wicket gate barring egress from the landing
-stage and speculated on the probability of being haled
-to the dungeons, which might easily be imagined as
-damp and gloomy behind the neighboring yellow
-walls of stone.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The Sultan’s representative being fully satisfied
-that we might safely be permitted to enter the island,
-the gate was thrown back, and in a quaking body we
-departed through a stone arcade in which our feet
-echoed and reëchoed valiantly, past rows of natives
-sipping coffee and smoking the nargileh in the shade,
-and thence through a stone archway into a spacious
-public square, paved with cobble-stones and dominated
-by the most gigantic and venerable plane tree
-imaginable. Its enormous trunk stood full in the centre
-of the square, rising from a sort of stone dais, in
-the sides of which were dripping stone fountains,
-deeply incrusted with the green mildew of age. Overhead,
-even to the uttermost parts of the square, the
-branches spread a curtain of fresh green leaves. They
-were marvelous branches—great, gnarled, twisted
-limbs, that were as large in themselves as the trunk of
-<span class='pageno' title='307' id='Page_307'></span>a very respectable tree, and shored up with a forest
-of poles. Actual measurement of the circumference of
-the trunk itself revealed it to be something over forty
-feet in girth, and it was not difficult to believe the legend
-that this impressive tree really did date back to
-the time of Hippocrates, the great physician of Cos,
-who was born in the island long before the dawn of
-the Christian era. In any event, the great plane of Cos
-is called to this day the “tree of Hippocrates,” whether
-it has any real connection with that eminent father of
-medicine or not.</p>
-
-<div id='i391' class='figcenter id018'>
-<img src='images/i_391.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>TREE OF HIPPOCRATES. COS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We left the shady square by a narrow and roughly
-paved street, little wider than an alley and lined with
-whitewashed houses, closely set. It wound aimlessly
-along through the thickly settled portion of the city,
-and at last opened out into the country-side, where
-the houses grew fewer and other splendid trees became
-more numerous, generally shading wayside fountains,
-beside which crouched veiled native women gossiping
-over their water-jars. A pair of baggy-trousered
-soldiers went with us on the road, partly as overseers,
-no doubt, but chiefly as guides and protectors—the
-latter office proving quite needless save for the occasional
-expert kicking of a barking cur from some
-wayside hovel. They proved to be a friendly pair,
-although of course conversation with them was impossible,
-and a lively exchange of cigarettes and tobacco
-<span class='pageno' title='308' id='Page_308'></span>was kept up as we walked briskly along out of
-the city and into the open country that lay toward
-the hills. Their chief curiosity was a kind of inextinguishable
-match, which proved exceedingly useful
-for smokers bothered by the lively morning breeze.
-They were flat matches, seemingly made of rude
-brown paper such as butchers at home used to employ
-for wrapping up raw meat. The edges were serrated,
-and when once the match was lighted it burned
-without apparent flame and with but little smoke until
-the entire fabric was consumed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The object of this walk, which proved to be of something
-like three or four miles into the suburbs of
-Cos, was to view the remnants of the famous health
-temple, sacred, of course, to Asklepios. We found it
-situated on an elevation looking down across a smiling
-plain to the sea, with the white walls and roofs
-of Cos a trifle to one side. It was not a prospect to
-be forgotten. It was a bright day, but with sufficient
-haze in the air to give to the other islands visible
-across the intervening water an amethystine quality,
-and to make the distant summits in Asia Minor faint
-and ethereal. The nearer green of the fields, the
-purple of the sea, and the delicate hues of the islands
-and far-away peaks, held us for a long time before
-turning to the curious ruin of the temple, which, as
-usual, was less a temple than a hospital.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='309' id='Page_309'></span>Little remains of it, save for the foundations. Three
-enormous terraces, faced with flights of steps of easy
-grade, led up to the main sanctuary of the god, comparatively
-little of which remains to be seen. Various
-smaller buildings, shrines for allied divinities, porticoes
-for the sick, apartments for the priests, treasuries and
-the like, are readily distinguishable, and serve to reveal
-what an extensive establishment the health temple
-was in its time. Restorations of it, on paper, reveal
-it as having been probably most impressive, both
-architecturally and by reason of its commanding position,
-which was not only admirable by nature but
-accentuated by the long approach over the three successive
-terraces to the many-columned main building
-above.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of the numerous smaller structures lying about the
-precinct, the most curious and interesting were the
-subterranean treasuries—if that is the proper name
-for them—which have been discovered at the foot
-of the slope. They apparently consist of vaults in the
-earth, each covered over with a massive stone slab.
-The slab is removable, but only at great pains. A
-circular hole pierces it through the centre, suitable for
-dropping money or other valuables into the receptacle
-beneath and for inserting the tackle with which
-to lift the rock when the treasury was to be opened.
-The vast weight of the stone and the time required
-<span class='pageno' title='310' id='Page_310'></span>for raising it would have been ample guarantee
-against unauthorized visits to the treasury. Other
-theories accounting for these underground chambers
-and their curious coverings have been advanced—the
-most fantastic one being the supposition that these
-were the chambers devoted to housing the sacred
-serpents of the god, the holes serving for their emergence
-and for the insertion of food! But while the
-cult of Asklepios certainly does appear to have made
-use of the sacred snakes as a part of its mummery, it
-seems hardly likely that these subterranean cavities
-were used for any such purpose.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As for the practice of medicine in Cos, it is widely
-believed to have been of a sensible and even of an
-“ethical” sort, largely devoid of mere reliance on
-idle superstition or religious formalism for its curative
-effects, though unquestionably employing these,
-as was not only the case in ancient times, but as even
-persists to-day in some localities of the archipelago.
-The religious ceremonies, which generally took the
-form of sleeping in the sacred precincts in the hope
-of being divinely healed, appear to have been supplemented
-at Cos by the employment of means of
-healing that were rudely scientific. Hippocrates, the
-most celebrated of the Coan physicians, has left abundant
-proof that he was no mere charlatan, but a
-common-sense doctor, whose contributions to medical
-<span class='pageno' title='311' id='Page_311'></span>science have not by any means entirely passed out of
-esteem. Reference has been made hitherto to the custom
-of depositing in the temple anatomical specimens
-representing the parts healed, as votive offerings from
-grateful patients—a custom which persists in the
-modern Greek church, as everybody who examines
-the altar-screen of any such church will speedily
-discover.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The extreme veneration of Asklepios at Cos is
-doubtless to be explained by the fact that Cos was
-an Epidaurian colony; for the Epidaurians claimed
-that the healing god was born in the hills overlooking
-their valley in the Peloponnesus. At any rate the
-health temple at Cos and the great sanitarium at Epidaurus
-shared the highest celebrity in ancient times
-as resorts for the sick; and in each case there are
-traces to show that they were sites devoted not only
-to the worship of a deity, but to the ministration unto
-the ailing by physical means, as far as such means
-were then understood.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Cos, however, was far from basing her sole claim
-to ancient celebrity on her physicians and hospitals.
-Her embroideries rivaled the more famous Rhodian
-work, and she was an early home of culture and resort
-of noted students, not only of medicine, but of
-rhetoric, grammar, poetry, philosophy, and science.
-Ptolemy II, otherwise known as Ptolemy Philadelphus,
-<span class='pageno' title='312' id='Page_312'></span>is known to have studied here, and it is not at
-all improbable that the Sicilian poet, Theocritus, was
-a fellow student with him. For it is known that Theocritus
-was a student at Cos at some time, and he
-was later summoned to Ptolemy’s Egyptian court,
-where he wrote the epithalamium for the unholy marriage
-between Philadelphus and his sister. Not a little
-of the present knowledge of ancient Cos is due to
-the writings that Theocritus left as the result of his
-student days in the island.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The curator of antiquities in charge of the excavations
-at the Asklepeion took us in charge on our return
-walk and led us through the city to his own
-home, where, although we were on Turkish soil, we
-had a taste of real Greek hospitality. Our party was
-numerous enough to appall any unsuspecting hostess,
-but we were ushered into the great upper room of
-the house, with no trace of dismay on the part of the
-wife and daughter. It was a huge room, scrupulously
-neat and clean, and the forty or so included in our
-number found chairs ranged in line about the apartment,
-where we sat at ease examining the fragments
-that the curator had to show from the mass of inscriptions
-recovered from the temple. Meantime, after the
-national custom, the eldest daughter served refreshment
-to each in turn, consisting of preserved quince,
-glasses of mastika, and huge tumblers of water. It
-<span class='pageno' title='313' id='Page_313'></span>was a stately ceremony, each helping himself gravely
-to the quince from the same dish, and sipping the
-cordial, while the mother bustled about supplying
-fresh spoons. And with a general exchange of cards
-and such good wishes as were to be expressed in
-limited traveler’s Greek, we departed to the landing
-and again embarked.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We designed to push on to Cnidos at once, and to
-climb the heights of that ancient promontory of Asia
-Minor in the late afternoon. But inasmuch as Halicarnassus,
-the native city of Herodotus, lay directly
-on the way, we sailed into its capacious harbor and
-out again without stopping, for the sake of such
-glance at the site as might be had from the water.
-The bay on which the city lies—it is now called
-Boudrun—is wonderfully beautiful, running well into
-the mainland, while the city itself, with its great white
-castle of the Knights of St. John as the central feature,
-lies at the inmost end. Of the castle we were able to
-get a very good view, going close enough to arouse
-the violent excitement of a gesticulating Turkish
-official who came out in a tiny boat, bravely decked
-with the crescent flag, to show us where to anchor if
-we so desired. The site of the famous Mausoleum
-was pointed out from the deck, and most of us were
-confident that we saw it, although it was not easy to
-find. The remains of this incomparably magnificent
-<span class='pageno' title='314' id='Page_314'></span>tomb, designed for King Mausolus, are, as everybody
-knows, to be seen in the British Museum to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was but a few miles farther to the promontory
-of Cnidos, and we dropped anchor there in mid-afternoon,
-in one of the double bays for which the
-ancient naval station was famous. The bays are still
-separated by a narrow isthmus—the same which the
-ancients tried in vain to sever. The story goes that
-the drilling of the rocks caused such a flying of fragments
-as to endanger the eyes of the workmen, and
-the oracle when questioned dissuaded them from continuing
-the work, saying “Zeus could have made the
-land an island if he had intended so to do.” Hence
-the two little harbors remain, one on either side
-of the neck of land that juts into the sea. They were
-used as anchorage for triremes and merchant ships
-respectively, when Cnidos was a power in the world.
-To-day the spot is absolutely deserted, and we found
-both the diminutive bays devoid of all trace of life,
-until at evening a passing fisherman came in and
-made all snug for the night.</p>
-
-<div id='i401' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_401.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>CNIDOS, SHOWING THE TWO HARBORS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Above the waters of the harbor towered the commanding
-rock of the Cnidian acropolis, something
-like twelve hundred feet in height—a bare and forbidding
-rock, indeed. Of the town and the temples
-that once clustered along its base nothing was to be
-seen. Man has long ago abandoned this spot and left
-<span class='pageno' title='315' id='Page_315'></span>it absolutely untenanted save by memories. It was in
-ancient times a favorite haunt of Aphrodite, and three
-temples did honor to that goddess on the knolls above
-the sea. Here also stood the marble Aphrodite carved
-by Praxiteles, and esteemed his masterpiece by many.
-It was carried off to Constantinople centuries ago, and
-perished miserably in a fire in that city in 1641.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Our three boatloads landed with no little difficulty
-on the abrupt rocks of the shore, being somewhat put
-to it to avoid sundry submerged boulders lying just
-off the land. It was a sharp scramble from the water’s
-edge to the narrow and ascending shelf above, on
-which the temples had stood. The ruins of them lay
-buried in tall grasses and in huge clumps of daisies,
-the latter growing in the most remarkable profusion.
-With a single sweep of the knife I cut a prodigious
-armful of them, and the dining saloon that night was
-made a perfect bower by the wild flowers that the returning
-party brought back with them.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was one of the days when the non-archæological
-section of the party hastily left the remnants of ancient
-greatness below and set out precipitately for a
-climb, for the prospect of a view from the overshadowing
-cliff above was promising. It proved the most
-formidable ascent that we undertook in all our Ægean
-cruising. Anciently there was a gradual ascent by
-means of a zigzag causeway to the fortified heights
-<span class='pageno' title='316' id='Page_316'></span>above, but the majority of us disregarded it and struck
-off up the steep toward the summit. It is not a wise
-plan for any but hardened climbers, for the slope soon
-became so sharp that it made one giddy to look back
-down the mountain, and the footing was often difficult
-because of the shelving stone and fragments of
-loose rock. Small bushes were the only growth, and
-they were often eagerly seized upon to give the needful
-purchase to lift us onward and upward. The summit,
-however, amply rewarded our toil. It was easier
-going toward the top, for we found the old road and
-rose more gradually toward the point where the ancient
-walls began.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the pinnacle of the rock the sweep of the view
-was indescribably fine. The sun was sinking rapidly
-to the horizon, illuminating the islands and the sea.
-The wind had dropped, the haze had disappeared, and
-the shore line of Asia Minor stretched away, clear cut,
-in either direction. We were practically at the southwest
-corner of the peninsula. The rugged headlands
-retreated to the north and to the east from our feet,
-while inland piled the impressive interior mountains
-rearing their snow-capped heads against the blue
-evening dusk. Over the Ægean, dark blue and violet
-islands rose from a sea of molten gold. At our feet lay
-the twin harbors and our steamer, looking like a toy
-ship, the thin smoke of her funnel rising in a blue wisp
-<span class='pageno' title='317' id='Page_317'></span>into the silent evening air. The fishermen from the
-tiny smack that had sought a night’s berth there had
-kindled a gleaming fire on the beach. Along the sharp
-spine of the promontory we could see the ancient line
-of wall, rising and falling along the summit and flanked
-here and there by ruined towers—a stupendous engineering
-work of a nation long dead. It was all impressively
-silent, and deserted save for ourselves. The
-course of empire had indeed taken its westward way
-and left once powerful Cnidos a barren waste.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>But the darkness coming suddenly in these latitudes
-at this season warned us to descend in haste to the
-fire that was signaling us from the landing, and we
-slipped and slid down the old causeway to the boats.
-That night the moon was at the full, and we sat late
-on the after-deck enjoying the incomparable brilliancy
-of the light on sea and cliffs, shining as of old on a time-defying
-and rock-bound coast, but on a coast no longer
-teeming with life and harbors no longer alive with
-ships. And at midnight the wheezing of the engines
-and the jarring of the screw gave notice that we were
-slipping out of the harbor of Cnidos and out into the
-sea, to Rhodes.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='318' id='Page_318'></span>
- <h2 id='chap17' class='c005'>CHAPTER XVII. RHODES</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_406.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>It was our purpose to land on Rhodes the isle, not
-at Rhodes the town. To visit the famous northern
-city where once stood the Colossus would have
-been highly agreeable had opportunity presented
-itself; but as it was we planned to coast along the
-southeasterly side of Rhodes and make our landing
-at the little less celebrated and probably even more
-picturesque site of Lindos. So in the morning we
-woke to find our vessel rolling merrily in a cross sea
-just off the entrance to the little bay that serves Lindos
-for a harbor,—a sea that stripped our breakfast
-table of its few dishes and converted the floor of the
-saloon into a sea of broken crockery. The waters of
-the bay proved calm enough when we had slid past
-the imposing promontory on which stood the acropolis
-of ancient Lindos, and felt our way across the
-rapidly shoaling waters to a safe anchorage. The water
-was of a wonderful clarity as well as of remarkable
-blueness, the bottom being visible for many fathoms
-<span class='pageno' title='319' id='Page_319'></span>and seeming much more shoal than was the case in
-fact. We were able to go quite close to shore before
-anchoring, and found ourselves in good shelter
-from the wind that was then blowing, although well
-outside the tiny inner port which lay at the foot of a
-steep bluff. Towering above the whole town stood
-the precipitous and seemingly inaccessible acropolis,
-its steep sides running down to the sea, the rich
-redness of the rock contrasting on the one hand
-with the matchless blue of the Ægean, and on the
-other with the pure whiteness of the buildings of
-the town. The summit of the promontory was
-crowned with the ruin of a castle of the Knights of
-Rhodes, who had once made this a famous stronghold
-in the Middle Ages. In fact the residence of the
-knights had obliterated the more ancient remnants
-of the classic period, which included a temple of
-Athena; and the work of exhuming the Greek ruins
-from under the débris of the Crusaders’ fortress was
-only just beginning when we landed there.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the ship, the most conspicuous object on the
-heights was the ruined castle of St. John, the portal of
-which, giving the sole means of access to the plateau
-on top of the promontory, was plainly to be seen as
-we sailed in. It gave the impression of yellowish-brown
-sandstone from below, a color which it shared
-with the goodly battlements that frowned down from
-<span class='pageno' title='320' id='Page_320'></span>all sides of the citadel, even where the abruptness of
-the declivity for something like three hundred feet
-made battlements a seeming work of supererogation.
-Nestling under the shadow of the mighty rock on the
-landward side lay the modern village of Lindos itself,
-apparently freshly whitewashed and gleaming in the
-sun wherever the rock failed to shelter it from the
-morning warmth. It was one of those marvelously
-brilliant days that have made the Greek atmosphere
-so famous—cloudless and clear, with that clearness
-that reveals distant objects so distinctly, yet so softly
-withal. As for the nearer prospects, they were almost
-trying to the eyes, under the forenoon glare beating
-down on that immaculate array of close-set white
-houses and shops.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Our boats set off shoreward across a placid sheet of
-water that varied from a deep indigo at the ship to
-the palest of greens as it surged among the fringes of
-slippery rock along the foot of the bluff. The landing
-stage was but a narrow shelf of pebbly beach, from
-which a rough paved way led steeply up to the town
-just above the sea. The contrast of the blue sky and
-the white purity of the town was dazzling in the extreme,
-and the glare accounted in a measure for the
-veiled women and sore-eyed children we met in the
-courtyards of the town. Our own eyes soon ached
-sufficiently to make us walk in single file along the
-<span class='pageno' title='321' id='Page_321'></span>shady side of the high-walled streets, looking chiefly
-at the shadow and only occasionally at the houses and
-shops as we wound along into the heart of the village.
-But even these occasional glimpses revealed the most
-fascinating of little details in the local architecture,
-curious Gothic and Moorish windows surviving from
-a bygone day and ornamented with the border of
-“rope” pattern worked in the stone. Almost everything
-had been covered with the dazzling whitewash,
-save here and there a relic of former days which
-was allowed to retain the natural color of the native
-rock.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In most of the cases the actual dwellings were set
-well back from the streets, which were extremely narrow
-and crooked. Between the highway and the house
-was invariably a tiny courtyard, screened from the view
-of passers by a lofty wall, always of white. The yards
-were occasionally to be peered into, however, through
-a gate left temptingly ajar. These diminutive courts
-were floored with pebble work in black and white designs
-throughout their extent, save where the matron
-of the house had a flower bed under cultivation. These
-beds and boxes of flowers were a riot of color and
-filled the air with fragrance, while the green foliage
-furnished a lively contrast with the dead white of the
-walls behind.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the doorways of the dwellings within could be
-<span class='pageno' title='322' id='Page_322'></span>seen groups of bashful women, and shy children hiding
-in their mothers’ skirts, who looked furtively at us
-as we stopped hesitatingly before their gates. Growing
-bolder we finally ventured to set foot within the
-courtyards now and then, charmed with the sweetness
-of the tiny gardens; and at length we made bold to
-enter and to walk over the pleasant firmness of the
-pebbly pavements of white and black tracery to the
-doorways, where the women gave a timid but welcoming
-good-day and bade us come in. The absence
-of men was notable. We were later told that the male
-population of Lindos was temporarily away, being
-largely employed in the construction of the great dam
-at Assouan, on the Nile; and that in consequence the
-women had practically the sole charge in Lindos at
-the time, which may have accounted for the immaculateness
-of everything. We were likewise told that in
-the evening a certain hour was reserved for the sole
-use of the women, who might be free to wander at will
-through the streets, chiefly to get water for their households,
-without fear of molestation. Lindos for the time
-was an Adamless Eden, and as spick and span a town
-as it would be possible to find on earth.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The houses into which we were welcomed proved
-to be as clean within as without. The lower story apparently
-consisted as a general thing of a single great
-room, with possibly a smaller apartment back of it for
-<span class='pageno' title='323' id='Page_323'></span>cooking. This large room was the living room and
-sleeping room as well. The floor was scrubbed until
-its boards shone. The walls were of the universal
-white. On one side of the room—and occasionally on
-both sides—was to be seen a sort of dais, or elevated
-platform, which apparently served for the family bed.
-The bedding, including blankets and rugs of barbaric
-splendor, was neatly piled on the platform or hung
-over the railing of it. And it was here, according to
-all appearance, that the entire household retired to rest
-in a body at night, in harmonious contiguity.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>What interested us most of all, however, was the
-decoration of the rooms. Nearly every one that we
-entered was adorned with numerous plates hung on
-the wall in great profusion, seldom more than two
-being of the same pattern, and including all sorts of
-designs, from the valuable Rhodian down to the common
-“willow” patterns of our own grandmothers’
-collections at home. This heterogeneous array of
-plates puzzled us not a little at first. It was so universal
-among the householders, and representative of
-so wide a field of the ceramic art, that some explanation
-of the presence of these plates seemed necessary.
-Later it developed that the Rhodian custom
-has long been to mark the birth of each child by the
-addition of a plate to the family collection, the fewer
-duplicates the better. The agglomeration of these
-<span class='pageno' title='324' id='Page_324'></span>dishes that we saw represented the family trees for
-generations. Despite the connection presumably existing
-between the plates and the family history, however,
-we found the women not reluctant to part with
-specimens for a price, and we carried away not a few.
-The comparatively rare instances in which we found
-any of the genuine and celebrated Rhodian ware, however,
-proved that its great value was well known by
-the native women. Their prices in such cases proved
-prohibitive, especially in view of the risk of breakage
-involved in getting the plates home from so distant
-an island. These plates, notable for the beauty of their
-design and for the distinguishing rose pattern in the
-centre, are often to be found in museum collections,
-and their great rarity and consequent value unfits
-them for other uses than those of the collector. The
-few that we found in Lindos were to be had for
-prices equivalent to about eighty dollars apiece in our
-money, which seemed exorbitant until we were later
-told that even one hundred dollars would have been
-reasonable enough for some of the finer specimens.
-Indeed, it is getting to be rather unusual to find one
-of these for sale at all.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There are opportunities enough, as we discovered,
-to purchase the famous Rhodian embroidery; but we
-were cautioned to leave the bargaining to experts
-familiar with values, for the infrequent visitor is almost
-<span class='pageno' title='325' id='Page_325'></span>certain to be imposed upon in any such transaction.
-These embroideries, or at least the older ones,
-are very elaborate creations of colored wools on a
-background of unbleached linen, the colors being remarkably
-rich and fresh despite their age, an age
-that is eloquently testified to by the stains and worn
-places in the cloth. The subject of Rhodian embroidery
-is a most interesting one, but too intricate
-and technical to be gone into here. The study of the
-growth of certain well-defined groups of conventionalized
-figures might well furnish material for a considerable
-body of literature, if it has not already done
-so. We were informed that the wealth of Rhodian
-embroidery was due to the ancient custom—which
-may still exist among the Rhodian girls—to begin
-the preparation of the nuptial gear at a tender age,
-they plying their needles almost daily, until by the
-time they are marriageable they have accumulated a
-surprising amount of bizarre blankets, cloths, and bits
-of finery for their dower chests.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The leisurely progress through the town required
-some time, occupied as we were by frequent visits to
-the odd little houses in the quest of curious wares to
-carry away. And by the time we had reached the
-centre of the town, the hot sun made us glad indeed
-to step under a spacious arch, washed underneath
-with a sky-blue tint which was restful to our tired
-<span class='pageno' title='326' id='Page_326'></span>eyes, and thence to go into the cool and aromatic
-quiet of a very old Greek church, where the glare of
-the sun on the white buildings could be forgotten.
-Most notable of all the curious things shown us by
-the attendant priest was the quaintly carved roof,
-which, after so much excessive light out of doors, it
-was decidedly difficult to see at all in the grateful
-gloom of the church.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We delayed but a little while there, for the acropolis
-above was the ultimate goal of our visit to the
-spot. Thither we were conducted by the Danish gentleman
-who had charge of the investigations being
-prosecuted there. The way led out of the dense buildings
-of the town and along the base of the overhanging
-cliff to the side toward the open sea, always
-upward and above the flat roofs of the little town
-below, until we came to the foot of the stairway of
-stone leading up through a defile in the rock to the
-arched portal of the castle on the height. It was a
-long flight of steps, one side against the smooth face
-of the rock, the other unprotected. And at the foot
-of the impressive approach to the citadel was one of
-the most interesting of the discoveries made on the
-site. It was a gigantic sculpture in bas-relief hewn out
-of the face of the cliff itself and representing, in “life
-size,” so to speak, the stern of an ancient trireme. The
-relief was sufficiently high to give a flat space on what
-<span class='pageno' title='327' id='Page_327'></span>was intended to be the deck of the ship, supposably
-as a pedestal for some statue which has disappeared.
-The curved end of the trireme with its sustaining
-bolt, the seat of the helmsman, and a blade of one of
-the oars, were still intact, and as a large representation
-of a classic ship the sculpture is doubtless unique,
-To all intents and purposes it is as perfect to-day as
-when the artists first carved it.</p>
-
-<div id='i415' class='figcenter id003'>
-<img src='images/i_415.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>SCULPTURED TRIREME IN ROCK AT LINDOS<br /><span class='small'><em>From a Sketch by the Author</em></span></p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the grateful shade of the rock we sat and listened
-<span class='pageno' title='328' id='Page_328'></span>to the description of the archæological work done on
-the spot by the Danes, which has not, at this writing,
-been officially published, and therefore seems not
-proper matter for inexpert discussion here. One interesting
-fact, however, which we were told, was that,
-by means of certain records deciphered from tablets
-found on the acropolis, it had been possible to fix
-definitely the date of the statue of the Laocoön as
-a work of the first century before Christ. This was
-established by the list of the names of the priests,
-and of the sculptors who worked for them, at periods
-which it proved possible to fix with a remarkable
-degree of exactness.</p>
-
-<div id='i417' class='figcenter id021'>
-<img src='images/i_417.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>ARCHED PORTAL OF ACROPOLIS. LINDOS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>We ascended to the height above, where we were
-permitted to wander at will among the ruins. As
-from below, the chief features were those of the medieval
-period, which had so largely swallowed up the
-temple of Athena. Nevertheless the excavators had
-restored enough of the original site from its covering
-of débris to reveal the vestiges of the old temple
-and an imposing propylæa, with traces enough in
-fragmentary form to enable making drawings of the
-structures as they probably appeared to the ancient
-eye. For the rest the chief interest centred in the
-relics of the abode of the knights. Just at the head
-of the grand entrance stairway was the tower which
-defended the acropolis on its one accessible side. The
-<span class='pageno' title='329' id='Page_329'></span>arched portal is very nearly perfect still, and one
-passes under it, across a sort of moat, by means of an
-improvised bridge of planks, where once, no doubt,
-a drawbridge served to admit or to bar out at the
-will of the Grand Master of the ancient commandery.
-Beyond the entrance hall lay a succession of vaulted
-halls and chambers leading around to the open precincts
-of the acropolis, the most evidently well-preserved
-buildings being the chapel of St. John and the
-house once occupied by the Grand Master himself.
-All were of the brownish native rock, and were unmistakably
-medieval in their general style of architecture.
-On the open terraces above the entrance,
-little remained to be seen save the heaps of débris
-and the faint traces of the classic temples. But most
-impressive of all was the sheer drop of the rock on
-all sides around the acropolis and the views off to
-sea and inland over Rhodes. The precipices everywhere,
-save at the entrance alone, fell away perpendicularly
-to the sea, which murmured two or three
-hundred feet below. Nevertheless, despite the evident
-hopelessness of ever scaling the height, the painstaking
-knights had built a wall with battlements all
-about, less serviceable as protecting the inhabitants
-against assault than for preserving them from falling
-over to a certain and awful death themselves.
-The drop on the landward side was considerably less,
-<span class='pageno' title='330' id='Page_330'></span>but quite as steep and quite as impregnable to would-be
-scaling parties. Even a few munitions of war, in
-the shape of rounded stones about the size of old-fashioned
-cannon balls seen in our modern military
-parks, were to be found about the summit.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The views from this elevated height were superb,
-not only off across the sea to the mountainous land
-of Asia Minor, but inland toward the rocky interior
-of Rhodes herself. The land just across the little depression
-in which the white town lay, rose to another
-though less commanding height, in the slopes
-of which the excavator said they had but recently
-unearthed some ancient rock tombs. Beyond, the
-country rolled in an undulating sea of green hills—a
-pleasant land as always, and doubtless as flowery as
-of old when she took her name from the rose (rhodos)
-and when the wild pomegranate flower gave Browning’s
-“Balaustion” her nickname. As a colony of
-the Athenian empire she stood loyal to the Attic city
-down to 412 <span class='fss'>B.C.</span>, in those troublous days of the Peloponnesian
-war, when the star of Athens waned and
-most of the Rhodians at last revolted. Those who still
-clung to Athens probably went away as Balaustion
-did, and returned, if at all, only after Athens had been
-laid waste to the sound of the flute. Under the Roman
-domination Rhodes enjoyed a return to high favor,
-and Tiberius selected the smiling isle as his place of
-<span class='pageno' title='331' id='Page_331'></span>banishment. For siding with Cæsar, Cassius punished
-the island by plundering it. For centuries after, it was
-overrun by the Arabs; and from them it was taken
-by the Byzantines, who turned it over to the Knights
-of St. John, who took the new name of the Knights
-of Rhodes, fortified the spot as we saw, and held it for
-a long time against all comers, down to 1522, when
-the Sultan Solyman II. reduced it. It is still Turkish
-territory, and of the finds made by the archæologists
-on the site of Lindos, the great bulk have been
-sent to Constantinople, including several hundred
-terra cotta figurines. The zealous Turks, the excavators
-complained, had taken away their books on
-landing, with the result that they had led a lonely life
-of it, their only diversion being their labors on the
-acropolis.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We had no chance to inspect the interior of the
-island, which other visitors have described in glowing
-colors as most attractive in the profusion of its
-almost tropic verdure and its growths of cactus, oleander,
-myrtle, figs, and pomegranates. Like Cos,
-Rhodes was an ancient seat of culture, greatly favored
-by students, and the site of a celebrated university.
-Æschines founded here a famous school of oratory,
-and in later years the institution was honored by the
-patronage of no less a personage than the Roman
-Cicero. Of these, of course, we saw no trace.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='332' id='Page_332'></span>Neither had we any opportunity to visit the ancient
-capital, “Rhodes the town,” which boasts the ruins of
-a very similar castle of the knights. As for the famous
-Colossus, which nearly everybody remembers first of
-all in trying to recall what were the wonders of the
-world, it no longer exists. But in passing one may
-remark that the notion that this gigantic statue bestrode
-the harbor has been exploded, destroying one
-of the most cherished delusions of childhood which
-the picture in the back of Webster’s Unabridged contributed
-not least of all in producing, in the past two
-generations.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There were three celebrated cities in Rhodes in its
-golden age—Lindos, Ialysos, and Kameiros—which,
-with Cos, Cnidos, and Halicarnassus, formed the ancient
-Dorian “hexapolis,” or six cities, four of which
-it had been our good fortune to visit within the past
-two days. The city of Rhodes was formed comparatively
-late by inhabitants from the three original cities
-of the island, and became a prosperous and influential
-port. The inhabitants were seafaring people and
-developed a high degree of skill in navigation, with
-an interesting corollary in their code of maritime law,
-from which a faint survival is found in the doctrine
-of “general average” in our own admiralty practice,
-sometimes referred to as the Rhodian law, and having
-to do with the participation of all shippers in such
-<span class='pageno' title='333' id='Page_333'></span>losses as may be occasioned by throwing a part of
-the cargo overboard to save the whole from loss. To
-visit Kameiros and the interior would have been interesting
-but impossible, and we found our consolation
-for the inability to visit other Rhodian sites in the
-loveliness of Lindos, with its acropolis above and its
-pure white walls below, its gardens, its courtyards, and
-its collections of plates. And we left it with regret—a
-regret which was shared no doubt by the lonely
-Danish explorer whom we left waving adieu to us
-from the shore as we pulled away across the shallow
-waters of the harbor to the steamer, and turned our
-faces once more toward the west and that Athens of
-which Balaustion dreamed.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='334' id='Page_334'></span>
- <h2 id='chap18' class='c005'>CHAPTER XVIII. THERA</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_424.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>No island that we visited in our Ægean cruise
-was more interesting than Thera proved to
-be, when we had steamed across the intervening
-ocean from Rhodes and into the immense basin that
-serves Thera—or modern Santorin—for a harbor.
-No more remarkable harbor could well be conceived.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>If Vesuvius could be imagined to sink into Naples
-bay until there were left protruding only about a
-thousand feet of the present altitude; if the ocean
-should be admitted to the interior of the volcano
-by two great channels or fissures in the sides—one
-at the point where the ubiquitous Mr. Cook has—or
-did have—his funicular railway, and the other
-in the general locality represented by the ill-starred
-Bosco Trecase; and if the present awesome crater,
-into which so many thousand visitors have peered,
-should thus be filled throughout its extent by the
-cooling waters, so as to form a great and placid bay
-within the mountain,—then we should have an almost
-<span class='pageno' title='335' id='Page_335'></span>exact reproduction of what happened at Thera
-something like four thousand years ago. Furthermore,
-if we may add to our Vesuvian hypothesis the
-supposition that there be built along the eastern lip
-of the crater a long white town, stretching for perhaps
-a mile along the sharp spine of the summit, we
-should have an equally exact reproduction of what
-exists at Thera to-day.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Thera lies at the end of the chain of submerged
-peaks that reveal the continuation of the Attic peninsula
-under the waters of the Ægean. The same
-rocky range of mountains that disappears into the
-sea at Sunium rises again and again as it stretches
-off to the southeast to form the islands of Cythnos,
-Seriphos, Siphnos, and their fellows, and the series
-closes, apparently, in the volcanic island of Santorin,
-under which name the moderns know the island
-which the ancients called successively Kallista (most
-beautiful) and Thera. Considering her beauty as an
-island and her comparative nearness to the mainland
-of Greece or to Crete, Thera is surprisingly little
-known. Historically Thera had small celebrity compared
-with her neighbors; but in every other way it
-seemed to us that she surpassed them all. Legend
-appears to have left the island comparatively unhonored,
-and poetry has permitted her to remain unsung.
-No Byron has filled high his bowl with Theran wine.
-<span class='pageno' title='336' id='Page_336'></span>No burning poetess lived or sang in her single tortuous
-street. No god of Olympus claimed the isle
-for his birthright. But for beauty of every kind, from
-the pastoral to the sublimely awful, Thera has no
-fellow in the Ægean; and for extraordinary natural
-history and characteristics, it is doubtful if it has a
-fellow in the world. For it is a sunken volcano, with
-a bottomless harbor, where once was the centre of
-fiery activity,—a harbor, rimmed about with miles
-of encircling precipices, on the top of one of which
-<span class='pageno' title='337' id='Page_337'></span>lies the town of Thera, a thousand feet straight up
-above the sea, and reachable only by a steep and
-winding mule track which connects it with the diminutive
-landing stage below.</p>
-
-<div id='i426' class='figcenter id006'>
-<img src='images/i_426.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>Santorin</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>There appears to be a wide divergence of opinion
-as to the exact date when the original mountain was
-blown to pieces and sunk in the ocean, but it may be
-roughly stated to have occurred in the vicinity of the
-sixteenth century before Christ, although some authorities
-incline to believe the eruption to have come
-to pass at a still earlier period. As to the inhabitants
-before the time of that extraordinary upheaval, little
-is known save what may be gleaned from a multitude
-of pottery vases left behind by those early settlers,
-and bearing ornamentation of a rude sort that
-stamps them as belonging to the remote pre-Mycenæan
-age, the age that preceded the greatness of
-Agamemnon’s city and the sack of Troy. It seems
-entirely probable that the early Therans were from
-Ph&oelig;nicia, and tradition says that they came over
-under the leadership of no less a personage than
-Cadmus himself. What we know for a certainty,
-however, is that at some prehistoric time the original
-volcano underwent a most remarkable change and
-subsided, with a blaze of glory that can hardly be
-imagined, into the waters of the Ægean, until only
-the upper rim and three central cones are now to be
-<span class='pageno' title='338' id='Page_338'></span>seen above the water’s edge. Through two enormous
-crevices torn in the northern and southern slopes the
-irresistible ocean poured into the vast central cavity,
-cooling to a large extent the fiery ardor of the mountain
-and leaving it as we found it, a circle of frowning
-cliffs, nearly a thousand feet in height and something
-like eighteen miles in periphery, inclosing a
-placid and practically bottomless harbor in what was
-once the volcano’s heart, the surface of the bay pierced
-by only three diminutive islands, once the cones of
-the volcano, and not entirely inert even to-day. In
-fact one of these central islands appeared as recently
-as 1866 during an eruption that showed the fires of
-Santorin not yet to be extinguished by any means—a
-fact that is further testified to by the heat of certain
-portions of the inclosed waters of the basin.</p>
-
-<div id='i429' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_429.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>LANDING-PLACE AT THERA</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Into this curious harbor our little chartered ship
-glided in the early light of an April morning, which
-dimly revealed the walls of forbidding stone towering
-high above in cliffs of that black, scarred appearance
-peculiar to volcanic formation, marred by the ravages
-of the ancient fires, yet none the less relieved from
-utter sullenness here and there by strata of rich red
-stone or by patches of grayish white tufa. Nevertheless
-it was all sombre and forbidding, especially in
-the early twilight; for the sun had not yet risen above
-the horizon, much less penetrated into the cavernous
-<span class='pageno' title='339' id='Page_339'></span>depths of Thera’s harbor. High above, however,
-perched on what looked like a most precarious position
-along the summit of the cliff, ran the white line
-of the city, already catching the morning light on its
-domes and towers, but seeming rather a Lilliputian
-village than a habitation of men; while far away to the
-north, on another portion of the crater wall, a smaller
-city seemed rather a lining of frost or snow gathered
-on the crater’s lip.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>A few shallops made shift to anchor close to the foot
-of the precipice, where a narrow submarine shelf projects
-sufficiently to give a precarious holding ground
-for small craft; and near them were grouped a few
-white buildings showing duskily in the morning half-light
-and serving to indicate the landing stage. In
-the main, however, there is little anchorage in the
-entire bay, which is practically bottomless. No cable
-could fathom the depth of the basin a few rods off
-shore, and fortunately none is needed, since the shelter
-is perfect. The steamer held her own for hours
-by a mere occasional lazy turning of her screw. To
-the southward lay the broad channel through which
-our ship had entered, and to the north lay the narrow
-passage through which at nightfall we proposed
-to depart for Athens. Everywhere else was the encircling
-wall of strangely variegated rock, buttressed
-here and there by enormous crags of black lava,
-<span class='pageno' title='340' id='Page_340'></span>which sometimes seemed to strengthen it and sometimes
-threatened to fall crashing to the waters directly
-below. Indeed landslides are by no means uncommon
-in Thera, and several persons have been killed even
-at the landing place by masses of stone falling from
-above.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>As the light increased at the base of the cliff, it
-became possible to see the donkey track leading in
-a score or more of steep windings up the face of the
-rock from the landing to the city high above, arched
-here and there over old landslips or ravines, while
-near by were to be seen curious cave-dwellings, where
-caverns in the tufa had been walled up, provided with
-doors and windows, and inhabited.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There was some little delay in landing, even after
-our small boats had set us ashore on the narrow quay,
-slippery with seaweed and covered with barnacles.
-We were herded in a rather impatient group behind
-a row of shore boats drawn up on the landing stage,
-and detained there until “pratique” had been obtained,
-which entitled us to proceed through the devious
-byways of the tiny village close by to the beginning
-of the ascent. The wharf was covered with
-barrels, heaps of wood, carboys covered with wicker,
-and all the paraphernalia to be expected of the port
-of a wine-exporting, water-importing community; for
-Thera has to send abroad for water, aside from what
-<span class='pageno' title='341' id='Page_341'></span>she is able to collect from the rains, and also relies
-largely on her neighbors for wood. There are almost
-no native trees and no springs at all; and one French
-writer apparently has been greatly disturbed by this
-embarrassing difficulty, saying, “One finds there
-neither wood nor water, so that it is necessary to go
-abroad for each—and yet to build ships one must
-have wood, and to go for water ships are necessary!”</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>On emerging from the cluster of small buildings at
-the base of the cliff and entering upon the steep path
-which leads to the city above, we at once encountered
-the trains of asses that furnish the only means of communication
-between the village of Thera above and
-the ships below—asses patiently bearing broad deck-loads
-of fagots, or of boards, or of various containers
-useful for transporting liquids. It was easily possible
-to hire beasts to ride up the winding highway to Thera,
-but as the grade was not prohibitive and as the time
-required for a pedestrian to ascend was predicted to be
-from twenty minutes to half an hour, these were voted
-unnecessary, especially as it was still shady on the bay
-side of the cliff and would continue so for hours. So
-we set out, not too briskly, up the path. It proved to
-be utterly impracticable for anything on wheels, being
-not only steep but frequently provided with the
-broad steps so often to be seen in Greek and Italian
-hill towns, while it was paved throughout with blocks
-<span class='pageno' title='342' id='Page_342'></span>of basalt which continual traffic had rendered slippery
-in the extreme. The slipperiness, indeed, renders
-the ascent to Thera if anything easier than the
-coming down, for on the latter journey one must exercise
-constant care in placing the feet and proceed
-at a pace that is anything but brisk, despite the
-downward grade.</p>
-
-<div id='i435' class='figcenter id001'>
-<img src='images/i_435.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>THERA</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The only care in going up was to avoid the little
-trains of donkeys with their projecting loads and their
-mischievous desire to crowd pedestrians to the parapet
-side of the road, a propensity which we speedily
-learned to avoid by giving the beasts as wide a berth
-as the constricted path would allow, choosing always
-the side next the cliff itself; for the sheer drop from
-the parapet soon became too appalling to contemplate
-as the way wound higher and higher, turn after turn,
-above the hamlet at the landing. The view speedily
-gained in magnificence, showing the bay in its full
-extent, with the two entrance channels far away and
-the detached portion of the opposite crater wall, now
-called Therasia, as if it were, as it appears to be, an
-entirely separate island of a small local archipelago,
-instead of one homogeneous but sunken mountain.
-Directly below lay the landing stage with its cluster
-of white warehouses, the scattered cave-dwellings, and
-the tiny ships moored close to the quay—small enough
-at close range, but from this height like the vessels in
-<span class='pageno' title='343' id='Page_343'></span>a toy-shop. So precipitous is the crater wall that one
-could almost fling a pebble over the parapet and strike
-the settlement at the foot of the path. The varying
-colors of the rock, when brought out by the growing
-sunlight, added a sombre liveliness to the view, the
-red tones of the cliff preponderating over the forbidding
-black of the lava, while here and there a long
-gash revealed the ravages of a considerable landslip.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was, indeed, a half-hour’s hard climb to Thera.
-But when the town did begin, it stole upon us ere we
-were aware, isolated and venturesome dwellings of the
-semi-cave type dropping down the face of the cliff to
-meet the highway winding painfully up, these in turn
-giving place to more pretentious dwellings with flat
-or domed roofs, all shining with immaculate whitewash
-and gleaming in the morning sun, in sharp
-contrast with the dark rocks on which they had their
-foundation. The scriptural architect who built his
-house upon the sand might well have regarded that
-selection as stable and secure compared with some
-of these Theran dwellings; for although they are
-founded upon a rock and are in some cases half sunk
-in it, there seems to be little guarantee that the rock
-itself may not some day split off and land them down
-among the ships.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>When the winding path finally attained the summit,
-it was found to debouch into a narrow public square,
-<span class='pageno' title='344' id='Page_344'></span>flanked by the inevitable museum of antiquities and a
-rather garish church; the latter painfully new, and, like
-all Greek houses of worship, making small pretense
-of outward and visible signs of inward and spiritual
-grace. It may be sacred to St. Irene, and very likely
-is, for the island takes its modern name from that saint
-and boasts innumerable shrines to her memory. We
-take credit to ourselves that, although Thera called
-loudly with manifold charms, we first sought the sanctuary;
-but to our shame we did not remain there long.
-A venerable priest, perspiring under a multitude of
-gorgeous vestments, was officiating in the presence of
-a very meagre congregation, composed of extremely
-young boys and a scant choir. Fortunately for our
-peace of mind, this particular church’s one foundation
-was on the side of the square away from the precipice,
-giving a sense of security not otherwise to be gained.
-But the mountain, even on its gentler side, is far from
-being gradual, and is only less steep than toward the
-inner basin. The “blessed mutter of the mass” in
-Greek is so unintelligible to foreign ears that it soon
-drove us forth into the air outside and then to the little
-museum next door, where were displayed the rather
-overwhelming antiquities of the place,—mainly vases
-that had been made and used long before the eruption
-which destroyed the island’s original form so many
-thousand years before. Many of these were graceful
-<span class='pageno' title='345' id='Page_345'></span>in form, and some are in quite perfect preservation
-despite their fragility and the enormous lapse of time,
-revealing still the rude efforts of the early artist’s brush
-in geometric patterns, lines, angles, and occasionally
-even primitive attempts to represent animal shapes.
-Doubtless these relics are no more ancient than those to
-be seen by the curious in the palace of Minos in Crete,
-and are paralleled in antiquity by pottery remnants in
-other pre-Mycenæan sites; but for some reason the
-lapse of ages since they were made and used comes
-home to one with more reality in Thera than elsewhere,
-I suppose because of the impressive story of
-the eruption at such a hazy distance before the dawn
-of recorded history. So overpowering did these silent
-witnesses of a bygone day prove, that we disposed
-of them with a celerity that would have shocked an
-archæologist, and betook ourselves straightway to the
-modern town without, which ran temptingly along
-the ridge of the summit northward, presenting, like
-Taormina, a single narrow street lined with the whitest
-of shops and dwellings, with here and there narrow
-byways of steps leading up or down, as the case
-might be, to outlying clusters of buildings. This main
-thoroughfare, hardly wider than a city sidewalk, follows
-the uneven line of the mountain top, winding
-about and dodging up and down, sometimes by inclined
-planes and sometimes by flights of steps, such
-<span class='pageno' title='346' id='Page_346'></span>as are common enough in side streets of Italian or
-Greek hill towns.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the higher points the city presented a sea of
-undulating white, the roofs divided almost evenly
-between the flat, parapeted style, designed to catch
-the falling rain, which is doubly precious in the island,
-and the dome, or half-barrel style, which bears witness
-to the local scarcity of timber, making necessary
-this self-supporting arch of cement. Thus over and
-over again is the lack of wood and water brought to
-mind. At a turn in the main street there disclosed itself
-a fascinating vista of white walls, inclosing neat
-courtyards, pebble-paved in black and white after the
-island manner, and framing in the distance a many-arched
-campanile in clear relief against the brilliant
-sky, the glare of the whiteness mitigated by the
-strong oblique shadows and the bronze green of the
-bells.</p>
-
-<div id='i441' class='figcenter id022'>
-<img src='images/i_441.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>A THERAN STREET</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>Two things prevented our tarrying in Thera indefinitely.
-One was the urgent need of returning to
-our steamer and pursuing our cruise through the
-Ægean; the other was the lack of suitable lodging.
-However, it is likely that the latter would have proved
-anything but an insuperable obstacle if tested by an
-irresistible force of intrepid determination, for lodging
-we could have found, despite the fact that Thera
-boasts no hotel. Wandering along the street and
-<span class='pageno' title='347' id='Page_347'></span>stopping now and then to inspect the curious wayside
-shops, or to gaze in wonder through gaps in the
-walls of dwellings at the incredible gulf yawning beyond
-and beneath, we came suddenly upon a coffee-house
-which completed our capture. The proprietor,
-as it developed, spoke Italian enough to give us
-common ground, ushered us out upon a balcony that
-looked toward the water, and produced a huge flagon
-of the wine of the country. Ah, the wine of the country!
-It was yellow. It was not sickish sweet, like the
-Samian that Byron praised so. It was warming to
-the midriff and made one charitable as one sipped.
-Overhead flapped a dingy awning in the lazy western
-breeze. Below wound the donkey path, with its
-trains of asses silently ascending and descending
-through the shimmering heat of the April morning.
-Far, far beneath, and indeed almost directly at our
-feet, lay the toy-ships and the steamer, close by the
-little hamlet of the landing stage, where tiny people,
-like ants, scurried busily, but at this distance made no
-sound. Across the sea of rising and falling roofs came
-the tinkle of an insistent church bell, calling the congregation
-of some church of St. Irene. Bliss like this
-is cheap at three drachmas, with a trifling addition
-of Greek coppers for good-will! It was on this narrow
-balcony overlooking the bay that we fell in love with
-Thera. Before we had been merely prepossessed.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='348' id='Page_348'></span>The Greek word for hotel sounds suspiciously like
-“Senator Sheehan” in the mouth of the native, as we
-had long ago learned; so we instituted inquiry as to
-that feature of the town, in the hope some day of returning
-thither for a more extended stay, with opportunity
-to explore the surrounding country. A distant
-and not unpromising edifice was pointed out, a coffee-house
-like our own, but provided with a large room
-where rather dubious beds were sometimes spread
-for the weary, according to our entertainer; and it
-may be that his shrug was the mere product of professional
-jealousy. Inexorable fate, however, decreed
-that we should not investigate, but content ourselves
-with rambling through the town from end to end,
-enjoying its quaint architecture, its white walls relieved
-only by touches of buff or the lightest of light
-blues, its incomparable situation on this rocky saddle,
-and its views, either into the chasm of the harbor or
-outward across the troubled expanse of the Ægean
-to other neighboring islands.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>At the north end of the city, where the houses
-ceased and gave place to the open ridge of the
-mountain, there stood an old mill, into the cavernous
-depths of which we were bidden enter by an
-aged crone. It revealed some very primitive machinery,
-the gearing being hewn out of huge slices
-of round logs in which rude cogs were cut. Just outside
-<span class='pageno' title='349' id='Page_349'></span>stood a sooty oven, for the miller not only ground
-the neighborhood corn, but converted it into bread.
-Beyond the mill there was nothing in the way of habitation,
-although on a distant bend of the crater there
-was visible a white patch of basalt that bore the appearance
-of a populous city with towers and battlements.
-Still farther to the north, at the cape next the
-channel out to sea, lies an inconsiderable town, similarly
-situated on the ridge, while along the bay to the
-south are occasional settlements and windmills. But
-Thera town is the only congested centre of population.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In attempting to analyze the impression that Thera
-made on us, we have come to the conclusion that its
-chief charm, aside from its curious position, is its color;
-and that the difficulty of describing it is due in large
-part to the inability to paint in words the amazing
-contrasts of rock, city, and sky, not to mention the sea.
-One may depict, although feebly, the architectural
-charm, with the aid of his camera, or, if duly gifted,
-may chant the praise of Theran wine. With the aid
-of geological statistics one may tell just how the mountain
-would appear if we could draw off the ocean and
-expose its lower depths, leaving a circle of mountain
-inclosing a three-thousand foot cup, and jagged central
-cones. One might, by a superhuman effort, do
-justice to the importunity of the begging children of
-<span class='pageno' title='350' id='Page_350'></span>the town. But to give a true account of Thera demands
-the aid of the artist with his pigments, while
-best of all is a personal visit, involving little time and
-trouble to one visiting Greece—little trouble, that is to
-say, in comparison with the charms that Thera has to
-show. And it is safe to say that every such visitor will
-pick his way gingerly down over the slippery paving
-stones to the landing below with a poignant sense of
-regret at leaving this beauty spot of the Ægean, and
-sail out of the northern passage with a sigh, looking
-back at the lights of Thera, on the rocky height
-above the bay, mingling their blinking points with
-the steady stars of the warm Mediterranean night.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='351' id='Page_351'></span>
- <h2 id='chap19' class='c005'>CHAPTER XIX. NIOS; PAROS; <br /> A MIDNIGHT MASS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_447.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>We spent Easter Sunday at Paros. It proved to
-be a mild and not especially remarkable day
-in the local church, which was old and quaint and
-possessed of many highly interesting features within
-and without, of which we must speak later on, for some
-of its portions date back to the pagan days. Its floor
-was littered with the aromatic leaves which had been
-dropped and trampled under foot the night before
-by the worshipers at the midnight mass; for it appeared
-that the chief observance of the feast in the
-Greek church was on the night before Easter, rather
-than on the day itself. Indeed we ourselves had been
-so fortunate, on the previous evening, as to attend
-this quaint nocturnal ceremony at the neighboring
-island of Ios, or Nios, as it is variously called.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Our little ship, as is the usual custom among the
-Greeks, had a shrine in the end of its saloon, with an
-icon, and a lamp was perpetually burning before it.
-<span class='pageno' title='352' id='Page_352'></span>The Greek takes his religion seriously, and makes it
-a part of his life afloat and ashore, it would seem. On
-Good Friday, for example, our national flag was lowered
-to half-mast and kept there in token of mourning
-for the crucified Lord, until the church proclaimed
-His rising from the dead, when it once again mounted
-joyously to the peak. The men seemed religiously
-inclined, and it was in deference to a request of the
-united crew, preferred while we lay in the harbor of
-Santorin, that it was decided to run north from that
-island to Nios, which was not far away and which
-possessed one of the best harbors in the Ægean, in
-order that the native sailors and the captain might
-observe the churchly festival according to custom—a
-request that was the more readily granted because we
-were all rather anxious to see the Easter-eve ceremony
-at its climax. Those who had witnessed it in previous
-years vouched for it as highly interesting, and such
-proved to be the fact; for between the ceremony
-itself and the excitement of reaching the scene, this
-evening furnished one of the most enjoyable of all our
-island experiences.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In reply to questions touching upon the remoteness
-of the church at Nios from the landing, the second
-officer, who spoke Italian, had assured us with a high
-disregard of the truth that it was “vicino! vicino!”
-It was pitch dark before we neared Nios, however,
-<span class='pageno' title='353' id='Page_353'></span>and as the moon was due to be late in rising that night
-we got no warning glimpse of the land, but were made
-aware of its approach only by a shapeless bulk in the
-dark which suddenly appeared on either hand, the
-entrance to the harbor being vaguely indicated by a
-single light, past which we felt our way at little more
-than a drifting pace until we were dimly conscious of
-hills all about, half-guessed rather than visible in the
-gloom. Then, faint and far away, we began to hear
-the clamor of the village bells, rung with that insistent
-clatter so familiar to those acquainted with southern
-European churches. That their notes sounded so distant
-gave us some idea at the outset that the mate’s
-“vicino” might prove to be a rather misleading promise,
-but very little was to be told by the sound, save
-that the churches from which the bells were pealing
-lay off somewhere to the right and apparently up a
-hill. Light there was none, not even a glimmer; and
-our three dories put off for the shore over an inky sea
-in becoming and decorous silence, toward the point
-where a gloom even more dense than the sky showed
-that there was land. The effect of it all was curious and
-had not a little of solemnity in it, as we groped our way
-to shore with careful oars and then felt about in the
-dark for the landing. The forward boat soon announced
-that some stone steps leading upward from the water
-had been found, and the rowers immediately raised
-<span class='pageno' title='354' id='Page_354'></span>a shout for lights, as one by one we were handed up
-the slimy stairs to the top of a broad stone quay, on
-which some white buildings could be dimly seen. A
-lantern did materialize mysteriously from some nook
-among the ghostly houses, and came bobbing down
-to the water’s edge, serving little purpose, however,
-save to make the rest of the darkness more obscure.
-By its diminished ray the party were assembled in a
-compact body, and received admonition to keep together
-and to follow as closely as possible the leader,
-who bore the light.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>These instructions, while simple enough to give,
-proved decidedly difficult to follow. The moon was
-far below the horizon, and the stars, while numerous
-and brilliant, gave little aid to strangers in a strange
-land, who could see no more than that they were on
-a deserted pier flanked by dim warehouses, and a
-long distance from the bells which were calling the
-devout to midnight prayer. The lantern set off along
-the flagstones of the deserted hamlet; and after it in
-single file clattered the rest of us, keeping up as best
-we could. We emerged in short order from the little
-group of huts by the wharf and came out into a vast
-and silent country, where all was darker than before,
-save where the leading lantern pursued its fantastic
-way upward over what turned out to be a roughly
-paved mule track leading into a hill. Like most mule
-<span class='pageno' title='355' id='Page_355'></span>tracks, it mounted by steps, rather than by inclines,
-and the progress of the long file of our party was slow
-and painful, necessitating frequent halts on the part
-of the guide with the lantern, while a warning word
-was constantly being passed back along the stumbling
-line of pedestrians as each in turn stubbed his toes
-over an unlooked-for rise in the grade. There was
-little danger of wandering off the path, for it was bordered
-by high banks. The one trouble was to keep
-one’s feet and not to stumble as we climbed in the
-dark, able scarcely to see one another and much less
-to see anything of the path. The bells ceased to ring
-as we proceeded, and even that dim clue to the distance
-of the town was lost. Decidedly it was weird,
-this stumbling walk up an unknown and unfrequented
-island path in the dead of night; for it was long past
-eleven of the clock, and the Easter mass, as we knew,
-should reach its most interesting point at about twelve.
-Knowing this we made such haste as we could and
-the little town of Nios stole upon us ere we were
-aware, its silent buildings of gray closing in upon the
-road and surrounding us without our realizing their
-presence, until a sudden turning of the way caused
-the lantern far ahead to disappear entirely from our
-view in the mazes of the town.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was as deserted as the little wharf had been.
-Moreover it was as crooked as it was dark. Here and
-<span class='pageno' title='356' id='Page_356'></span>there an open doorway gave out across the way a
-single bar of yellow light, but most of the habitations
-were as silent as the tomb, their owners and occupants
-being in church long before. On and on through
-a seeming labyrinth of little streets we wound, the
-long thread of the party serving as the sole clue to
-the way, as did Ariadne’s cord; for the lantern was
-never visible to the rear guard now, owing to the
-turns and twists of the highway. Twice we met belated
-church-goers coming down from side paths with
-their tiny lanterns, and the utter astonishment on
-their faces at beholding this unexpected inundation
-of foreigners at that unearthly hour of night was as
-amusing as it was natural. Once the thread of the
-party was broken at a corner, and for an anxious
-moment there was a council of war as to which street
-to take. It was a lucky guess, however, for a sudden
-turn brought the laggards out of the obscurity and
-into a lighted square before the doors of the church
-itself—a tiny church, white walled and low roofed,
-and filled apparently to its doors, while from its open
-portals trickled the monotonous chant of a male choir,
-the voices always returning to a well-marked and not
-unmelodious refrain.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In some mysterious way, room was made for us in
-the stifling church, crowded as it was with men and
-women. Candles furnished the only light. On the
-<span class='pageno' title='357' id='Page_357'></span>right a choir of men and boys, led by the local schoolmaster,
-chanted their unending, haunting minor litany.
-An old and bespectacled priest peered down
-over the congregation from the door of the iconostasis.
-Worshipers came and went. The men seemed
-especially devout, taking up the icon before the entrance
-and kissing it passionately and repeatedly.
-On each of us as we entered was pressed a slender
-taper of yellow wax, perhaps a foot in length, and we
-stood crowded in the little auditorium holding these
-before us expectantly, and regarded with lively and
-good-humored curiosity by the good people within.
-Presently the priest came forward from the door of
-the altar-screen with his candle alight, which was the
-signal for an excited scramble by a dozen small boys
-nearest him to get their tapers lighted first—after
-which the fire ran from candle to candle until everybody
-bore his tiny torch; and following the old priest,
-we all trooped out into the square before the church,
-where the service continued.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>That was a sight not easily to be forgotten—the
-tiny square, in the centre of which stood the catafalque
-of Christ, while all around stood the throng of
-worshipers, each bearing his flaring taper, the whole
-place flooded with a yellow glow. The monotone of
-the service continued as before. The gentle night
-breeze sufficed now and then to put out an unsheltered
-<span class='pageno' title='358' id='Page_358'></span>candle here and there, but as often as this
-occurred the bystanders gave of their fire, and the
-illumination was renewed as often as interrupted.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The quaint service culminated with the proclamation
-of the priest that Christ had risen,—"Christos
-anéste,"—at which magic words all restraint was
-thrown off and the worshipers abandoned themselves
-to transports of holy joy. A stalwart man seized
-the bell-rope that dangled outside the church and rang
-a lively toccata on the multiple bells above, while exuberant
-boys let fly explosive torpedoes at the walls
-of neighboring houses, making a merry din after the
-true Mediterranean fashion; for the religious festivals
-of all southern countries appear to be held fit
-occasions for demonstrations akin unto those with
-which we are wont to observe our own national birthday.
-We were soon aware that other churches of the
-vicinity had reached the “Christos anéste” at about
-the same hour, for distant bells and other firecrackers
-and torpedoes speedily announced the rising of the
-Lord.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Doubtless a part of the Easter abandon is due to
-the reaction from the rigorous keeping of Lent among
-the Greeks, as well as to a devout sentiment that renews
-itself annually at this festival with a fervor that
-might well betoken the first novel discovery of eternal
-salvation as a divine truth. The Greek Lent is an
-<span class='pageno' title='359' id='Page_359'></span>austere season, in which the abstinence from food and
-wine is astonishingly thorough. Indeed, it has been
-reported by various travelers in Hellas in years past
-that they were seriously inconvenienced by the inability
-they met, especially in Holy Week, to procure
-sufficient food; for the peasantry were unanimously
-fasting, and unexpected wayfarers in the interior could
-find but little cheer. The native manages to exist on
-surprisingly little sustenance during the forty days.
-On the arrival of Easter it is not strange that he casts
-restraint to the winds and manifests a delight that is
-obviously unbounded. However, it need not be inferred
-from this that undue license prevails, for this
-apparently was not the case—not in Nios, at any
-rate. The service, after the interruption afforded by
-bells and cannonading, resumed its course, and was
-said to endure until three o'clock in the morning; a
-fact which might seem to indicate that the Easter
-pleasuring was capable of a decent restraint and postponement,
-although the Lord had officially risen and
-death was swallowed up in victory.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Our own devotion was not equal to the task of
-staying through this long mass, as it was already well
-past the midnight hour, and we had made a long and
-strenuous day of it. So, with repeated exchanges of
-“Christos anéste” between ourselves and the villagers,
-we set out again through the narrow byways
-<span class='pageno' title='360' id='Page_360'></span>of the town, and down over the rough mule path to
-the ship, each of us bearing his flaring taper and
-shielding it as well as possible from the night wind;
-for the sailors were bent on getting some of that
-sacred flame aboard alive, and in consequence saw to
-it that extinguished candles were promptly relighted
-lest we lose altogether the precious fire. We made a
-long and ghostly procession of winking lights as we
-streamed down over the hillside and out to the boats—a
-fitting culmination to one of the most curious
-experiences which the Ægean vouchsafed us.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>We found the “red eggs” peculiar to the Greek
-Easter awaiting us when we came aboard—eggs,
-hard-boiled and colored with beet juice or some similar
-coloring matter, bowls of which were destined to
-become a familiar sight during the week or two that
-followed the Easter season. The Greeks maintain that
-this is a commemoration of a miracle which was once
-performed to convince a skeptical woman of the reality
-of the resurrection. She was walking home, it
-seems, with an apron full of eggs which she had
-bought, when she met a friend whose countenance
-expressed unusual rejoicing, and who ran to meet
-her, crying, “Have you heard the news?” “Surely
-not,” was the reply. “What is this news?” “Why,
-Christ the Lord is risen!” “Indeed,” responded the
-skeptic, "that I cannot believe; nor shall I believe it
-<span class='pageno' title='361' id='Page_361'></span>unless the eggs that I carry in my apron shall have
-turned red." And red they proved to be when she
-looked at them!</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Owing to the exhaustion due to the festivities of
-the night before, we found Easter Sunday at Paros a
-quiet day indeed. The streets of the little town proved
-to be practically deserted, for it was a day of homekeeping,
-and no doubt one of feasting. The occasional
-vicious snap of a firecracker was to be heard
-as we landed on the mole that serves the chief town
-of Paros for a wharf and started for a short Sunday
-morning ramble through the streets. From the landing
-stage the most conspicuous object in Paros was
-a large white church not far from the water, rejoicing
-in the name of the “Virgin of a Hundred Gates,” as
-we were told we should interpret the epithet “hekatonpyliani.”
-It proved to be a sort of triple church,
-possessing side chapels on the right and left of the
-main auditorium, and almost as large. In that at the
-right was to be seen a cruciform baptismal font, very
-venerable and only a little raised from the level of
-the floor, indicating the uses to which this apartment
-of the church was put. The presence of ancient marble
-columns incorporated into this early Christian
-edifice was likewise striking. In the main church the
-most noticeable thing was the employment of a stone
-altar-screen, or iconostasis, with three doors leading
-<span class='pageno' title='362' id='Page_362'></span>into the apse behind instead of the customary single
-one, an arrangement which has often been commented
-upon as resembling the proskenion of the
-ancient theatre. It was all deserted, and the air was
-heavy with old incense and with the balsamic perfume
-of the leaves and branches that had fallen to
-the floor and been trampled upon during the mass of
-the previous night. It was all very still, very damp
-and cool, and evidently very old, doubtless supplanting
-some previous pagan shrine.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the court before the church stood a sort of abandoned
-monastery, as at the pass of Daphne, only this
-one was spotless white, and with its walls served to
-shut in completely the area in front of the church
-itself. In a portion of the buildings of this inclosure
-is a small museum, chiefly notable for inscriptions,
-one of which refers to Archilochus, the writer of Iambic
-verse, who lived in Paros in the seventh century
-before the birth of Christ.</p>
-
-<div id='i459' class='figcenter id023'>
-<img src='images/i_459.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>OLD COLUMNS IN CHURCH. PAROS</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The chief fame of Paros was, of course, for its marbles.
-The quarries whence these superb blocks came
-lay off to the northeast, we were aware; and had time
-only allowed, they might have been explored with
-profit. The Parian marble was the favorite one for
-statues, owing to its incomparable purity and translucence,
-and the facility with which it could be worked
-up to a high finish. It was quarried under ground,
-<span class='pageno' title='363' id='Page_363'></span>and thus derived its designation, “lychnites,” or
-“quarried-by-candlelight.” Those who have visited
-the subterranean chambers formed by the men who
-anciently took marble from the spot relate that the exploration
-of the quarries is fraught with considerable
-interest and with not a little danger, owing to the
-complex nature of the galleries and the varying levels.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In wandering around the little modern town which
-occupies the site of the ancient city of Paros, and bears
-the name of Paroikia, we found not a little color to
-delight the eye, although the streets were generally
-rather muddy and squalid. On the southerly side of
-the harbor, where the basic rock of the island rises
-to a considerable height, there was anciently a small
-acropolis, which is still crowned with a rather massive
-tower built by the Franks out of bits of ancient
-marble structures. From the outside, the curious log-cabin
-effect caused by using marble columns for the
-walls, each drum laid with ends outward, was most
-apparent and striking. Within we found a tiny shrine,
-deserted as the great church had been, but still giving
-evidence of recent religious activity. Aside from
-the remnants of old temples, serving as the marble
-logs of this Frankish stronghold, there seemed to be
-little in Paros to recall the days when she was one of
-the richest of all the Athenian tributaries. A few prehistoric
-houses have been uncovered and several ancient
-<span class='pageno' title='364' id='Page_364'></span>tombs. But the most lasting of all the classic
-monuments are the quarries, now deserted, but still
-revealing the marks of the ancient chisels, whence
-came the raw material for most of the famous Greek
-sculptures preserved to us.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>To us, seated on the pebbly beach and idly listening
-to the lapping of the Ægean waves, as we sunned
-ourselves and awaited the time for embarking, there
-appeared a native, gorgeous in clothes of a suspiciously
-American cut. He drew near, smiling frankly,
-and with a comprehensive gesture which explicitly
-included the ladies in his query, said: “Where do
-you fellers come from?” He had served in the American
-navy, it appeared, and had voyaged as far as
-the Philippines. Other Parians ranged themselves at
-a respectful distance and gazed in open-mouthed
-admiration at their fellow townsman who understood
-how to talk with the foreigners, and who walked along
-with a lady on either side, whom he constantly addressed
-as “you fellers” to their unbounded amusement
-and delight. We convoyed him to a wayside
-inn near the quay, under two spindling plane trees,
-and plied him with coffee as a reward for his courtesy
-and interest; and later we left him standing with bared
-head watching our little ship steam away westward,
-toward the setting sun and that land to which he
-hoped one day to follow us once more.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='365' id='Page_365'></span>Our return to Athens from our island cruise was
-by way of the southeastern shore of the Peloponnesus,
-touching at Monemvasía, a rocky promontory
-near the most southern cape, and connected with the
-mainland by a very narrow isthmus, which it has
-even been necessary to bridge at one point; so that,
-strictly speaking, Monemvasía is an island, rather
-than a promontory or peninsula. It is a most striking
-rock, resembling Gibraltar in shape, though
-vastly smaller. In fact, like Gibraltar, it has the history
-of an important strategic point, though it is such
-no longer. Its summit is still crowned by a system
-of defenses built by the Franks, and the inclosure,
-which includes the entire top of the rock, also contains
-a ruined church. A narrow and not unpicturesque
-town straggles along the shore directly beneath
-the towering rock itself, much as the town of Gibraltar
-does, and in it may be seen other ruined churches,
-belonging to the Frankish period largely, and unused
-now. The entrance to this village is through a formidable
-stone gateway in the wall, which descends
-from the sheer side of the cliff above. A steep zig-zag
-path leads up from the town to the fort, which
-although deserted is kept locked, so that a key must
-be procured before ascending.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Those who have seen the Norman defenses at the
-promontory of Cefalù, on the northern coast of Sicily,
-<span class='pageno' title='366' id='Page_366'></span>will recognize at once a striking similarity between
-that place and this Grecian one, not only from a topographical
-standpoint, but from the arrangement of
-the walls at the top and lower down at the gateway
-that bars the upward path. Cefalù, however, is in a
-more ruinous condition than this Frankish fortress
-to-day. In point of general situation and view from
-the summit the two are certainly very similar, with
-their broad outlook over sea and mainland. The
-sheer sides of the promontory made it a practically
-inaccessible citadel from nearly every direction, save
-that restricted portion up which the path ascends,
-and the defense of it against every foe but starvation
-was an easy matter. Even besiegers found it no easy
-thing to starve out the garrison, for it is on record
-that the stout old Crusader Villehardouin sat down
-before the gates of Monemvasía for three years before
-the inhabitants were forced to capitulate.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The name of Monemvasía is derived from the fact
-that the isolated rock crowned with the fortress is
-connected with the mainland by a single narrow neck
-affording the only entrance. Hence the Greek μόνη ἔμβασις
-(moné emvasis) was combined in the modern
-pronunciation to form the not unmusical name of the
-place and has a perfectly natural explanation. Moreover
-the same name, further shortened, lives again in
-the name of “Malmsey” wine, which is made from
-<span class='pageno' title='367' id='Page_367'></span>grapes grown on rocky vineyards and allowed to
-wither before gathering, as was the custom in the old
-Monemvasía wine industry.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Of course the village at the base of the cliff is wholly
-unimportant now. Malmsey wine is no longer the chief
-product of this one solitary spot, but comes from Santorin,
-Portugal, Madeira, and a dozen other places,
-while Monemvasía and the derivation of the word are
-largely forgotten. The town has sunk into a state of
-poverty, and as for the fort, it is capable neither by
-artifice nor by natural surroundings of defending anything
-of value, and hence is of no strategic importance.
-It has had its day and probably will never have
-another. It is, however, ruggedly beautiful, and the
-town, if degraded and half ruined, is still highly
-picturesque, though unfortunately seldom visited by
-Greek pilgrimages. It formed a fitting close for our
-island cruise, and indeed it is, as we discovered, really
-an island itself, the ribbon of isthmus connecting it
-with the Peloponnesus having been severed years ago,
-when Monemvasía was worthy to be counted a stronghold.
-The gap in the land is now spanned by a permanent
-bridge, so that practically Monemvasía is a
-promontory still, lofty and rugged, but not ungraceful;
-and its imposing bulk loomed large astern as we
-steamed back along the coast toward the Piræus and
-home.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='368' id='Page_368'></span>
- <h2 id='chap20' class='c005'>CHAPTER XX. CORFU</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='figcenter id004'>
-<img src='images/i_466.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-</div>
-<p class='c006'>The city of Patras, from which port we are about
-to take leave of Greece, is probably the most
-incongruous city in the kingdom. To be sure it is
-second in importance to Piræus, and the latter city is
-quite as frankly commercial. But the proximity of the
-Piræus to Athens and the presence of the Acropolis,
-crowned with its ruined temples always in the field of
-view, conspire to take a little of the modern gloss off
-the major port, and thus prevent it from displaying
-an entire lack of harmony with those classic attributes
-which are the chief charm of Hellas. Patras
-has no such environment. It has no such history. It
-is a busy seaport town, a railroad centre, and it is
-about everything that the rest of Greece is not. It
-even has a trolley line, which no other Greek city
-at this writing has, although of course the years
-will bring that convenience to Athens, as they have
-already brought the third-rail inter-urban road to the
-sea.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='369' id='Page_369'></span>Patras appears to have been as uninteresting in
-antiquity as it is to-day, though doubtless from its advantageous
-position on the Gulf of Corinth it was always
-a more or less prosperous place. A very dubious
-tradition says that the Apostle Andrew was crucified
-here; and whether he was or not, St. Andrew has remained
-the patron saint of the town. In any event,
-Patras shares with Corinth the celebrity of being one
-of the earliest seats of Christianity in Greece, although
-it is a celebrity which Corinth so far overshadows that
-poor Patras is generally forgotten. It probably figures
-to most Hellenic travelers, as it has in our own case,
-as either an entrance or an exit, and nothing more.
-Still, after one has spent a fortnight or more in the
-wilds of the Peloponnesian mountains, an evening
-stroll through the brilliantly lighted streets of the
-city comes not amiss, and gives one the sense of civilization
-once more after a prolonged experience of
-the pastoral and archaic.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>It was stated early in this book that probably the
-ideal departure from Greece is by way of the Piræus,
-as by that route one leaves with the benediction of
-the Acropolis, which must be reckoned the crowning
-glory of it all. But since we have elected to enter by
-the eastern gate in voyaging through these pages, it
-is our lot to depart by the western, and to journey
-back to Italy by way of Corfu, the island of Nausicaa.
-<span class='pageno' title='370' id='Page_370'></span>It is not to be regretted, after all. One might look far
-for a lovelier view than that to be had from the harbor
-of Patras. The narrow strait that leads into the Corinthian
-Gulf affords a splendid panorama of mountain
-and hill on the farther side, as the northern coast
-sweeps away toward the east; while outside, toward
-the setting sun, one may see the huge blue shapes of
-“shady Zakynthos,” and “low-lying” Ithaca—which
-it has always struck me is not low-lying at all, but
-decidedly hilly. Through the straits and past these
-islands the steamers thread their way, turning northward
-into the Adriatic and heading for Corfu—generally,
-alas, by night.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The redeeming feature of this arrangement is that,
-while it robs one of a most imposing view of receding
-Greece, it gives a compensatingly beautiful approach
-to Corfu on the following morning; and there is not
-a more charming island in the world. It lies close to
-the Albanian shore, and with reference to the voyage
-between Patras and Brindisi it is almost exactly half
-way. In Greek it still bears the name of Kerkyra, a
-survival of the ancient Corcyra, the name by which
-it was known in the days when Athens and Corinth
-fought over it. The ancients affected to believe it the
-island mentioned in the Odyssey as “Scheria,” the
-Phæacian land ruled over by King Alcinoös; and
-there is no very good reason why we also should not
-<span class='pageno' title='371' id='Page_371'></span>accept this story and call it the very land where the
-wily Odysseus was cast ashore, the more especially
-since his ship, converted into stone by the angry Poseidon,
-is still to be seen in the mouth of a tiny bay not
-far from the city! We may easily drive down to it
-and, if we choose, pick out the spot on shore where
-the hero was wakened from his dreams by the shouts
-of Nausicaa and the maids as they played at ball on
-the beach while the washing was drying.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>In the ancient days, when navigation was conducted
-in primitive fashion without the aid of the mariner’s
-compass, and when the only security lay in creeping
-from island to island and hugging the shore, Corcyra
-became a most important strategic point. In their
-conquest of the west, the Greeks were wont to sail
-northward as far as this island, skirting the mainland
-of Greece, and thence to strike off westward to
-the heel of Italy, where the land again afforded them
-guidance and supplies until they reached the straits
-of Messina. So that the route of Odysseus homeward
-from the haunts of Scylla and Charybdis and the isle
-Ortygia was by no means an unusual or roundabout
-one. This course of western navigation gave rise
-to continual bickering among the great powers of
-old as to the control of Corcyra, and Thucydides
-makes the contention over the island the real starting-point
-of the difficulties that culminated in the Peloponnesian
-<span class='pageno' title='372' id='Page_372'></span>war and in the overthrow of the Athenian
-empire.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Modern Corfu has a very good outer harbor, suitable
-for large craft, although landing, as usual, is
-possible only by means of small boats. The declaration
-in Bædeker that the boatmen are insolent and
-rapacious appears no longer to be true. The matter
-of ferriage to shore seems to have been made the
-subject of wise regulation, and the charge for the
-short row is no longer extortionate. From the water
-the city presents a decidedly formidable appearance,
-being protected by some massive fortifications which
-were doubtless regarded as impregnable in their day,
-but which are unimportant now. They are of Venetian
-build, as are so many of the fortresses in Greek
-waters. Aside from the frowning ramparts of these
-ancient defenses, the town is a peaceful looking place
-in the extreme, with its tall white and gray houses,
-green-shuttered and trim. It is a town by no means
-devoid of picturesqueness, although it will take but
-a few moments’ inspection to convince the visitor that
-Corfu is by nature Italian rather than Greek, despite
-its incorporation in the domains of King George.
-Corfu has always been in closer touch with western
-Europe than with the East, and it is doubtless because
-she has enjoyed so intimate a connection with Italy
-that her external aspects are anything but Hellenic.
-<span class='pageno' title='373' id='Page_373'></span>Moreover the English were for some years the suzerains
-of the island, and have left their mark on it, for
-the island’s good, although it is many years since the
-British government honorably surrendered the land
-to Greece, in deference to the wish of the inhabitants.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>Despite the Venetian character of the fortresses, they
-remind one continually of Gibraltar, although of course
-infinitely less extensive. Particularly is this true of the
-"<span lang="it" xml:lang="it">fortezza nuova</span>," which it is well worth while to explore
-because of the fine view over the city and harbor
-to be had from its highest point. A custodian resides
-in a tiny cabin on the height and offers a perfectly
-needless telescope in the hope of fees, although it is
-doubtful that many ever care to supplement the eye
-by recourse to the glass. The prospect certainly is incomparably
-beautiful. Below lies the city with its narrow
-streets and lofty buildings, and before it the bay
-decked with white ships, contrasting with the almost
-incredible blue of the water, for the ocean is nowhere
-bluer than at Corfu. Across the straits not many miles
-away rises the bluff and mountainous mainland of Albania
-and Epirus, stretching off north and south into
-illimitable distances. Behind the town the country rolls
-away into most fertile swales and meadows, bounded
-on the far north by a high and apparently barren
-mountain. All the narrow southern end of the island is
-<span class='pageno' title='374' id='Page_374'></span>a veritable garden, well watered, well wooded, covered
-with grass and flowers, and rising here and there into
-low, tree-clad hills. Trim villas dot the landscape, and
-on a distant hill may be seen from afar the gleaming
-walls of the palace which belonged to the ill-fated
-Empress of Austria.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>From the fortress southward toward the bay where
-lies the “ship of Ulysses,” there runs a beautiful esplanade
-along the water front, lined with trees and
-flanked on the landward side by villas with most luxuriant
-gardens. Even though the British occupation
-came to an end as long ago as 1865, the roadways of
-the island bear the marks of the British thoroughness,
-and make riding in Corfu a pleasure. The houses
-along the way are largely of the summer-residence
-variety, the property of wealthy foreigners rather
-than of native Corfiotes; and their gardens, especially
-in the springtime, are a riot of roses, tumbling over
-the high walls, or clambering all over the houses
-themselves, and making the air heavy with their fragrance.
-The trees are no less beautiful, and the roads
-are well shaded by them. After a month or so of the
-comparatively treeless and often barren mainland of
-Greece, this exuberant Eden is a source of keen enjoyment
-with its wanton profligacy of bloom.</p>
-
-<div id='i473' class='figcenter id024'>
-<img src='images/i_473.jpg' alt='' class='ig001' />
-<div class='ic001'>
-<p>“SHIP OF ULYSSES.” CORFU</p>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>It cannot be more than two miles, and perhaps it
-is rather less, over a smooth road and through a continuous
-<span class='pageno' title='375' id='Page_375'></span>succession of gardens, from the town of Corfu
-out to the little knoll which overlooks the bay and
-“ship of Ulysses,” and the view down on that most
-picturesque islet and across the placid waters of the
-narrow arm of the sea in which it lies, furnishes one
-of the most beautiful prospects in the island. The
-“ship” itself is a rather diminutive rock not far from
-shore, almost completely enshrouded in sombre, slender
-cypresses, which give it its supposed similarity to
-the Phæacian bark of the wily Ithacan. Nor is it a
-similarity that is entirely imaginary. Seen from a distance,
-the pointed trees grouped in a dark mass on
-this tiny isle do give the general effect of a vessel.
-Those who know the picture called the “Island of
-Death” will be struck at once with the similarity between
-the “ship” and the painter’s ideal of the abode
-of shades; and with the best of reasons, for it is said
-that this island was the model employed. Amidst
-the dusk of the crowded trees one may distinguish a
-monastery, tenanted we were told by a single monk,
-while on a neighboring island, closer to the shore
-and connected therewith by a sort of rocky causeway,
-there is another monastery occupied by some band
-of religious brothers. This island also is not without
-its charms, but the eye always returns to that mournful
-abandoned “ship,” which surpasses in its weird
-fascination any other thing that Corfu has to show.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='376' id='Page_376'></span>The Villa Achilleion, which lies off to the southward
-on a lofty hill, shares with the ship of Ulysses
-the attention of the average visitor, and worthily so,
-not only because of the great beauty of the villa itself,
-with its mural paintings of classic subjects and its
-wonderful gardens, but because of the exquisite view
-that is to be had over the island from the spot. The
-lively verdure, the vivid blueness of the sea, and the
-gloomy rocks of the Turkish shore, all combine to
-form a picture not soon to be forgotten. As for the
-Achilleion itself, it was built for the Empress of Austria,
-who was assassinated some years ago, and the
-estate has now, I believe, passed into private hands.
-The road to it is excellent, and occasional bits of the
-scenery along the way are highly picturesque, with
-now and then an isolated and many-arched campanile,
-adorned with its multiple bells in the Greek manner,
-obtruding itself unexpectedly from the trees.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>There are unquestionably many rides around the
-island that are quite as enjoyable as this, but the ordinary
-visitor is doubtless the one who stops over for
-a few hours only, during the stay of his steamer in
-the port, and therefore has little time for more than
-the sights described. Those who are able to make the
-island more than a brief way-station on the way to
-or from Greece express themselves as enchanted with
-it, and the number of attractive villas built by foreigners
-<span class='pageno' title='377' id='Page_377'></span>of means would seem to emphasize the statement.
-Corfu as an island is altogether lovely.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The city itself has already been referred to as more
-Italian than Greek in appearance. Nevertheless it is
-really Greek, and its shops are certainly more like those
-of Athens than like those of Italy, while the ordinary
-signboards of the street are in the Greek characters.
-It is the height of the houses, the narrowness of the
-streets, the occasional archways, and the fact that almost
-everybody can speak Italian, that give the unmistakable
-Italian touch to Corfu after one has seen
-the broader highways and lower structures of Athens.
-But Greco-Italian as it is, one cannot get away from
-the fact that, after all, it reminds one quite as much of
-Gibraltar as of anything. The town does this, quite as
-much as the fortresses, with its narrow ways and its
-evident cosmopolitanism. The shops, although devoted
-largely to Greek merchandise, are a good deal like
-the Gibraltar bazaars, and make quite as irresistible an
-appeal to the pocket, with their gorgeous embroidered
-jackets, blue and gold vestments, and other barbaric
-but incredibly magnificent fripperies, fresh from the
-tailor’s hand, and not, as at Athens, generally the
-wares of second-hand dealers. To see peasant jackets
-and vests of red and blue, and heavily ornamented
-with gold tracery, go to Corfu. Nothing at Athens
-approaches the Corfiote display.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'><span class='pageno' title='378' id='Page_378'></span>There are some archæological remains at Corfu,
-but not of commanding prominence; and the average
-visitor, busied with the contemplation of the loveliness
-of the country and the quaintness of the town for a few
-brief hours, probably omits to hunt them up, as we
-ourselves did. The most obvious monuments of the past
-are those of the medieval period, the Venetian strongholds
-that served to protect Corfu when the island was
-an important bulwark against the Saracens. Of the
-days when the rival powers of classic Greece warred
-over the Corcyreans and their fertile island, little trace
-has survived. There is a very old tomb in the southerly
-suburb of Kastradès and the foundation of an
-ancient temple, but neither is to be compared for interest
-with the host of monuments of equal antiquity
-to be seen in Greece and even in Sicily. Corfu, like
-Italy, has suffered a loss of the evidences of her antiquity
-by being so constantly on the great highway to
-western Europe. She has never been left to one side,
-as Greece so long was. Her fertility prevented her degenerating
-into mere barren pasturage, as happened
-in Hellas proper, and her situation made her important
-all through the Middle Ages, just as it made her
-important during the expansion period of the Athenian
-empire. And as Rome, through active and continuous
-existence, has gradually eaten up her own ancient
-monuments before they achieved the value of great
-<span class='pageno' title='379' id='Page_379'></span>age, so Corfu has lost almost entirely all trace of what
-the ancient Corcyreans built; while Athens, through
-her long ages of unimportance, preserved much of her
-classic monumental glories unimpaired, and thanks to
-an awakened appreciation of them will cherish them
-for all time.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The long years in which Greece lay fallow and deserted
-now appear not to have been in vain. Through
-that period of neglect her ancient sites and monuments
-lay buried and forgotten, but intact. Men were
-too busy exploring and expanding elsewhere to waste
-a thought on the dead past. Even the revival of learning,
-which exhumed the classic writings from the oblivion
-of monkish cells and made the literature of
-Greece live again, was insufficient to give back to the
-world the actual physical monuments of that classic
-time. It has remained for the present day, when the
-earth has been all but completely overrun and when
-men have found a dearth of new worlds to conquer,
-that we have had the time and the interest to turn back
-to Greece, sweep away the rubbish of ages, and give
-back to the light of day the palaces of Agamemnon,
-the strongholds of Tiryns, and the hoary old labyrinth
-of Minos. On the fringes of Magna Græcia, where the
-empire was in touch with the unceasing tides of western
-civilization, as in Sicily and at Corfu, the remnants of
-the older days fared but ill. It was in the mountain fastnesses
-<span class='pageno' title='380' id='Page_380'></span>of the Peloponnesus and in the gloomy glens
-of Delphi that so much of the ancient, and even of the
-prehistoric and preheroic days, survived as to give us
-moderns even a more definite knowledge of the times
-of the Achæans and Trojans than perhaps even Homer
-himself had.</p>
-<div class='pbb'>
- <hr class='pb c001' />
-</div>
-
-<div class='chapter'>
- <span class='pageno' title='381' id='Page_381'></span>
- <h2 id='index' class='c005'>INDEX</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c004'>
- <div><span class='pageno' title='382' id='Page_382'></span><span class='large'>INDEX</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Acrocorinth, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Acropolis, of Athens, first views of, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>description of, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>approach to, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>;</li>
- <li>gates of, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>;</li>
- <li>view from, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Acropolis Museum, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Ægina, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>-139.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Agamemnon, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Agora, at Athens, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Alcmæonidæ, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Alpheios, <a href='#Page_223'>223</a>, <a href='#Page_256'>256</a>-258.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Andhritsæna, <a href='#Page_227'>227</a>, <a href='#Page_229'>229</a>-246.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Aphrodite, of Praxiteles, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Apollo, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>, <a href='#Page_278'>278</a>, <a href='#Page_299'>299</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Apoxyomenos, of Lysippus, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Aqueduct, at Samos, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>-294.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Arcadia, <a href='#Page_211'>211</a>-228.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Arch, development of, <a href='#Page_181'>181</a>, <a href='#Page_192'>192</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Areopagus, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Argive Heræum, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Argos, <a href='#Page_187'>187</a>, <a href='#Page_172'>172</a>-192.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Ariadne, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Artemis, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>, <a href='#Page_300'>300</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Asklepios, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>, <a href='#Page_97'>97</a>, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>, <a href='#Page_203'>203</a>, <a href='#Page_207'>207</a>, <a href='#Page_308'>308</a>-311.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Athena, birth of, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>strife of, with Poseidon, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>;</li>
- <li>sacred image of, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>;</li>
- <li>Archaic representations of, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>;</li>
- <li>Pronoia, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>,168.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Athens, approaches to, <a href='#Page_46'>46</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>modern city, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>-75;</li>
- <li>ancient traditions of, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>;</li>
- <li>growth and history, <a href='#Page_51'>51</a>, <a href='#Page_52'>52</a>;</li>
- <li>street venders, <a href='#Page_55'>55</a>;</li>
- <li>street names, <a href='#Page_57'>57</a>;</li>
- <li>stadium, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;</li>
- <li>street car system, <a href='#Page_58'>58</a>;</li>
- <li>climate of, <a href='#Page_59'>59</a>, <a href='#Page_60'>60</a>;</li>
- <li>street scenes, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>-68;</li>
- <li>newspapers, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>;</li>
- <li>Shoe Lane, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;</li>
- <li>shopping, <a href='#Page_64'>64</a>;</li>
- <li>street of the coppersmiths, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>;</li>
- <li>giaourti, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>;</li>
- <li>modern architecture, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</li>
- <li>churches, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>;</li>
- <li>icons, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>;</li>
- <li>soldiery, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>;</li>
- <li>funerals, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>;</li>
- <li>conversation beads, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>;</li>
- <li>Acropolis, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>;</li>
- <li>destruction of, by Persians, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Atreus, treasury of, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>“Balaustion,” 273, <a href='#Page_330'>330</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Bassæ, <a href='#Page_235'>235</a>-245.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Bee-hive tombs, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Bema, <a href='#Page_109'>109</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Beulé gate, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Branchidæ, <a href='#Page_297'>297</a>-303.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Burial customs, <a href='#Page_73'>73</a>, <a href='#Page_246'>246</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Candia, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>-29.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Canea, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>-26.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Caryatid portico, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Castalian spring, <a href='#Page_167'>167</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Cephissus, <a href='#Page_50'>50</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Ceramicus, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>-118.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Charioteer, statue of, at Delphi, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Choragic monument of Lysicrates, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Churches, Greek, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Cnidos, <a href='#Page_314'>314</a>-317.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Cnossos, <a href='#Page_29'>29</a>-36.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Coffee, <a href='#Page_66'>66</a>, <a href='#Page_67'>67</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Coffee-houses, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Corcyra (Kerkyra) 370.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Corfu, <a href='#Page_368'>368</a>-380.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Corinth, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>, <a href='#Page_170'>170</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'><span class='pageno' title='383' id='Page_383'></span>Corinthian canal, <a href='#Page_148'>148</a>, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Corinthian capitals, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Corinthian Gulf, <a href='#Page_149'>149</a>, <a href='#Page_150'>150</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Cos, <a href='#Page_304'>304</a>-313.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Crete, <a href='#Page_18'>18</a>-36.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Cr&oelig;sus, <a href='#Page_156'>156</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>trial of oracles by, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>;</li>
- <li>gifts to oracle at Delphi, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>-163.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Cyclopean masonry, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_189'>189</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Cyclopes, <a href='#Page_191'>191</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Dances, of peasants, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>-145.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Daphne, pass of, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>convent of, <a href='#Page_125'>125</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Delos, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>-285;
- <ul>
- <li>legend of, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>;</li>
- <li>dual nature, <a href='#Page_276'>276</a>;</li>
- <li>excavations at, <a href='#Page_277'>277</a>;</li>
- <li>ancient houses, <a href='#Page_279'>279</a>-281.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Delphi, <a href='#Page_146'>146</a>-168;
- <ul>
- <li>excavations at, <a href='#Page_153'>153</a>-158;</li>
- <li>legend of, <a href='#Page_154'>154</a>, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>;</li>
- <li>oracle at, <a href='#Page_155'>155</a>-157, <a href='#Page_159'>159</a>-165;</li>
- <li>gifts of Cr&oelig;sus to oracle, <a href='#Page_161'>161</a>-163;</li>
- <li>great temple at, <a href='#Page_165'>165</a>;</li>
- <li>corruption of oracle, <a href='#Page_157'>157</a>-165;</li>
- <li>statue of charioteer, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Demeter, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>, <a href='#Page_130'>130</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Dipylon, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Drachma, fluctuation of, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>-73.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Dragoman, <a href='#Page_212'>212</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Dress, of peasants, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Easter eggs, <a href='#Page_360'>360</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Eleusinian mysteries, <a href='#Page_128'>128</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Eleusis, <a href='#Page_124'>124</a>-132.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Elgin marbles, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Embroideries, <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>, <a href='#Page_325'>325</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Ephebus, bronze statue at Athens, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>, <a href='#Page_119'>119</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Epidaurus, <a href='#Page_198'>198</a>-210.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Erechtheum, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>sacred precinct of, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Erechtheus, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Giaourti, <a href='#Page_68'>68</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Greece, traveling in, <a href='#Page_1'>1</a>-17;
- <ul>
- <li>entrances to, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>-49;</li>
- <li>landing in, <a href='#Page_44'>44</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Greek churches, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Greek language, <a href='#Page_9'>9</a>-13.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Greek people, character of, <a href='#Page_14'>14</a>, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_53'>53</a>, <a href='#Page_54'>54</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Gremka, <a href='#Page_255'>255</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Hadrian, arch of, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Halicarnassus, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Hera, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a>, <a href='#Page_294'>294</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Heræum, Argive, <a href='#Page_186'>186</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>at Olympia, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>;</li>
- <li>at Samos, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>-294.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Hermes, of Praxiteles, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_269'>269</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Herodotus, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>, <a href='#Page_160'>160</a>-163, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Hippocrates, tree of, at Cos, <a href='#Page_307'>307</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Hippodameia, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Hymettus, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Icons, <a href='#Page_69'>69</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Ictinus, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>, <a href='#Page_243'>243</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Ios (Nios) 352-360.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Islands, of the Ægean, <a href='#Page_272'>272</a>-367;
- <ul>
- <li>geographical arrangement, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>;</li>
- <li>communication with, <a href='#Page_274'>274</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Karytæna, <a href='#Page_224'>224</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>King George, <a href='#Page_74'>74</a>, <a href='#Page_75'>75</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Knights of Rhodes, <a href='#Page_305'>305</a>, <a href='#Page_319'>319</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Labyrinth, of Minos, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Lindos, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Lion Gate, at Mycenæ, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Long walls, at Athens, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Loukoumi, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Lycabettus, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Lysippus, <a href='#Page_166'>166</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Malmsey wine, <a href='#Page_367'>367</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Marathon, <a href='#Page_133'>133</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'><span class='pageno' title='384' id='Page_384'></span>Mars Hill, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Mausoleum, <a href='#Page_313'>313</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Megalokastron, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Megalopolis, <a href='#Page_218'>218</a>-223.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Menidi, dances at, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>-145.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Midnight mass, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>-361.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Minoan age, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Minos, <a href='#Page_27'>27</a>-31;
- <ul>
- <li>throne of, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Minotaur, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_32'>32</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_112'>112</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Monemvasía, <a href='#Page_365'>365</a>-367.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Mycenæ, <a href='#Page_169'>169</a>-186;
- <ul>
- <li>accommodation at, <a href='#Page_173'>173</a>;</li>
- <li>excavations at, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>;</li>
- <li>acropolis of, <a href='#Page_177'>177</a>;</li>
- <li>Lion Gate, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>;</li>
- <li>Cyclopean masonry, <a href='#Page_175'>175</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>, <a href='#Page_179'>179</a>;</li>
- <li>inverted columns, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>;</li>
- <li>tombs at, <a href='#Page_180'>180</a>;</li>
- <li>reservoir, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>;</li>
- <li>treasury of Atreus, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Mycenæan age, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>stone pillars of, <a href='#Page_33'>33</a>, <a href='#Page_178'>178</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Mycenæan relics at Athens, <a href='#Page_120'>120</a>-122.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Mykale, <a href='#Page_288'>288</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>National Museum, at Athens, <a href='#Page_118'>118</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Nauplia, <a href='#Page_193'>193</a>-198.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Nausicaa, <a href='#Page_371'>371</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Navigation, in ancient times, <a href='#Page_273'>273</a>, <a href='#Page_371'>371</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Newspapers, <a href='#Page_10'>10</a>, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Niké Apteros, temple of, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>binding sandal, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>;</li>
- <li>of Pæonius, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>, <a href='#Page_270'>270</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Odeon of Herodes Atticus, <a href='#Page_96'>96</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Odysseus, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>, <a href='#Page_17'>17</a>, <a href='#Page_370'>370</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>&OElig;nomaus, legend of, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Olympia, overland route to, <a href='#Page_247'>247</a>-258;
- <ul>
- <li>site of, <a href='#Page_259'>259</a>-271;</li>
- <li>temple of Zeus at, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Olympian Zeus, temple of, at Athens, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Olympic games, <a href='#Page_264'>264</a>-266;
- <ul>
- <li>modern, <a href='#Page_271'>271</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Orientation of temples, <a href='#Page_242'>242</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Paganism, traces of, in Greek church, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Painting, of statues, <a href='#Page_91'>91</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Panathenaic festival, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Parian marble, <a href='#Page_362'>362</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Parnassus, <a href='#Page_145'>145</a>, <a href='#Page_151'>151</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Paros, <a href='#Page_351'>351</a>, <a href='#Page_361'>361</a>-365.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Parthenon, <a href='#Page_3'>3</a>, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>destruction by Morosini, <a href='#Page_77'>77</a>, <a href='#Page_85'>85</a>;</li>
- <li>description of, <a href='#Page_82'>82</a>-88;</li>
- <li>pedimental sculptures of, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>;</li>
- <li>curious architectural devices, <a href='#Page_84'>84</a>-86;</li>
- <li>restorations of, <a href='#Page_86'>86</a>;</li>
- <li>frieze of, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Patras, <a href='#Page_368'>368</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Paul, sermon to the Athenians, <a href='#Page_107'>107</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Peasant dances, <a href='#Page_139'>139</a>-145.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Peasant dress, <a href='#Page_142'>142</a>, <a href='#Page_171'>171</a>, <a href='#Page_201'>201</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Pedestal of Agrippa, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Pedimental sculptures, of Parthenon, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>at Olympia, <a href='#Page_267'>267</a>, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Pelops, <a href='#Page_266'>266</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Pentelic marble, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Pentelicus, <a href='#Page_38'>38</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Pericles, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Persians, invasion by, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>at Delphi, <a href='#Page_164'>164</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Phalerum, <a href='#Page_45'>45</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Philopappos, monument of, <a href='#Page_47'>47</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Piraeus, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>-46.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Pnyx, <a href='#Page_108'>108</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Political customs, <a href='#Page_61'>61</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Polychrome decoration of temples, <a href='#Page_92'>92</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Polycrates, <a href='#Page_290'>290</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Poseidon, strife with Athena, <a href='#Page_83'>83</a>, <a href='#Page_90'>90</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Praxiteles, <a href='#Page_268'>268</a>, <a href='#Page_315'>315</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'><span class='pageno' title='385' id='Page_385'></span>Propylæa, <a href='#Page_79'>79</a>, <a href='#Page_80'>80</a>, <a href='#Page_81'>81</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Ptolemy II., <a href='#Page_311'>311</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Pythagoras, <a href='#Page_291'>291</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Religious anniversaries, <a href='#Page_62'>62</a>, <a href='#Page_353'>353</a>-361.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Reservoir, at Mycenæ, <a href='#Page_182'>182</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Resinated wine, <a href='#Page_137'>137</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Rhodes, <a href='#Page_318'>318</a>-333;
- <ul>
- <li>Colossus of, <a href='#Page_332'>332</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Rhodian plates, <a href='#Page_323'>323</a>, <a href='#Page_324'>324</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Routes to Greece, <a href='#Page_15'>15</a>, <a href='#Page_16'>16</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>St. Elias, successor of ancient Helios, <a href='#Page_5'>5</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Salamis, <a href='#Page_39'>39</a>, <a href='#Page_43'>43</a>, <a href='#Page_132'>132</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Samos, <a href='#Page_286'>286</a>-297.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Santorin, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>-350.</li>
- <li class='c013'>“Ship of Ulysses,” <a href='#Page_375'>375</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Shoe Lane, at Athens, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>-65.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Shopping in Athens, <a href='#Page_63'>63</a>-65.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Soldiery, <a href='#Page_70'>70</a>, <a href='#Page_71'>71</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Sparta, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Stage, use of, in Greek theatre, <a href='#Page_100'>100</a>, <a href='#Page_101'>101</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Stoa, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Stoics, <a href='#Page_106'>106</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Suda Bay, <a href='#Page_19'>19</a>, <a href='#Page_25'>25</a>, <a href='#Page_26'>26</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Sunium, <a href='#Page_37'>37</a>, <a href='#Page_134'>134</a>-138.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Taÿgetos, <a href='#Page_216'>216</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Temples, survival of, as Christian churches, <a href='#Page_4'>4</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Theatre of Dionysus, <a href='#Page_98'>98</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>of Epidaurus, <a href='#Page_204'>204</a>.</li>
- </ul>
- </li>
- <li class='c013'>Theatres, <a href='#Page_99'>99</a>-103.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Themistoclean wall, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Themistocles, <a href='#Page_42'>42</a>, <a href='#Page_113'>113</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Theocritus, <a href='#Page_312'>312</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Thera, <a href='#Page_334'>334</a>-350.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Theseum, <a href='#Page_110'>110</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Theseus, <a href='#Page_31'>31</a>, <a href='#Page_89'>89</a>, <a href='#Page_111'>111</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Tiryns, <a href='#Page_188'>188</a>-192.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Tomb-sculpture, <a href='#Page_114'>114</a>-118.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Tombs, at Mycenæ, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>, <a href='#Page_184'>184</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Tower of the Winds, <a href='#Page_105'>105</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Treasury of Atreus, <a href='#Page_183'>183</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Troy, <a href='#Page_28'>28</a>, <a href='#Page_36'>36</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Villa Achilleion, <a href='#Page_376'>376</a>.</li>
- <li class='c013'>“Virgin of a Hundred Gates,” 361.</li>
- <li class='c013'>Votive offerings, <a href='#Page_126'>126</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Xerxes, <a href='#Page_87'>87</a>, <a href='#Page_88'>88</a>.</li>
-</ul>
-
-<ul class='index c004'>
- <li class='c013'>Zeus, legends of, in Crete, <a href='#Page_30'>30</a>;
- <ul>
- <li>temple in Athens, <a href='#Page_48'>48</a>, <a href='#Page_76'>76</a>, <a href='#Page_104'>104</a>;</li>
- <li>temple at Olympia, <a href='#Page_260'>260</a>;</li>
- <li>statue at Olympia, <a href='#Page_263'>263</a>;</li>
- <li>see also, <a href='#Page_275'>275</a> <em>et seq.</em></li>
- </ul>
- </li>
-</ul>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
-<div class='nf-center c002'>
- <div><span class='pageno' title='387' id='Page_387'></span><span class="blackletter">The Riverside Press</span></div>
- <div class='c001'>CAMBRIDGE · MASSACHUSETTS</div>
- <div class='c001'>U · S · A</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class='c014' />
-<div class='footnote' id='f1'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r1'>1</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Herodotus, Book I, sections 46-48.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f2'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r2'>2</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Herodotus, Book I, sections 50-51.</p>
-</div>
-<div class='footnote' id='f3'>
-<p class='c000'><span class='label'><a href='#r3'>3</a>.&nbsp;&nbsp;</span>Herodotus, Book III, section 60.</p>
-</div>
-<p class='c015'><a id='endnote'></a></p>
-<div class='tnotes'>
-
-<div class='nf-center-c1'>
- <div class='nf-center'>
- <div><span class='large'>Transcriber’s Note</span></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-
-<p class='c000'>The table at the end of this note summarizes any corrections to the text that
-have been deemed to be printer’s errors.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The spelling of Greek place-names may occasionally use the terminal ‘-us’
-interchangeably with the Greek ‘-os’, especially in the Index. Both are
-retained.</p>
-
-<p class='c000'>The latinized Greek word ‘lepta’ is occasionally given with an accented ‘a’,
-either ‘à’ or ‘á’. All have been retained as printed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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